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

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II. Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 2. Reciting the Act of 17 Car. 1. cap. 27. for disinabling all persons in holy orders to exercise any temporal jurisdiction or authority and that the same having made several alterations prejudicial to the ancient rights of Parliament and contrary to the laws of the land and by experience is found inconvenient doth repeal and adnull the said recited Act to all intents and purposes whatsoever III. Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 12. An explanation of a clause contained in the Act of 17 Car. 1. cap. 11. touching the repeal of a branch of the Statute of 1 El. cap. 2. viz. It is declared That neither the said Act nor any thing therein contained doth take away any ordinary power or authority from the said Arch-bishops Bishops or persons therein named but that they may use all Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as formerly in causes belonging to the same IV. Proviso and enacted that it shall not be lawfull for any Arch-Bishop Bishop Chancellor or other Ecclesiastical Judge Officer or person having or exercising spiritual or Ecclesiastical jurisdiction to tender or administer unto any person whatsoever the oath Ex officio or any other oath whereby such persons to whom the same is administred may be charged or compelled to confess or accuse or purge him or her self of any criminal matter or thing whereby he or she may be liable to censure or punishment V. Proviso Not to give any other jurisdiction to any Arch-Bishops c. then they had by law before the year 1639. nor to abridge or diminish the King's supremacy in Ecclesiastical matters nor to confirm the Canons made in the year 1640. nor any laws or Canons not formerly confirmed or enacted by Parliament or established by the Laws as they stood in the year 1639. ☞ Cross-bows and Hand-guns * I. Stat. 33 H. 8.6 None shall shoot in or keep in his house any Cross-bow Hand-gun Hagbut or Demihake unless his lands be of the value of 100 l. per annum in pain to forfeit 10 l. for every such offence II. None shall shoot in or have any Hand-gun under the length of one yard nor Hagbut or Demihake under the length of three quarters of a yard in pain to forfeit 10 l. And it shall be lawfull for any man having lands of 100 l. per annum to seize any such Gun or any Cross-bow used or kept contrary to the form of this Statute but then he ought to break them within 20 days after in pain of 40 s. III. None shall travell with a Cross-bow bent or Gun charged except in time of war or shoot within a quarter of a mile of a City Borough or Market-Town except for the defence of himself or his house or at a dead mark in pain of 10 l. IV. None shall command his servant to shoot in any Gun or Cross-bow except at a dead mark or in time of war in pain of 10 l. V. The penalties abovesaid shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor VI. Howbeit the followers of Lords Spiritual or Temporal Knights Esquires Gentlemen and the inhabitants of Cities Burroughs or Market-towns may keep in their houses and use to shoot but at a dead mark onely with Guns not under the lengths abovesaid so may the Owner of a Ship for the defence of his Ship and also he that dwells two furlongs distant from a Town or within five miles of the Sea-coast and this last may shoot at any wilde beast or fowl save onely Deer Heron Shovelard Fesant Partridge wild Swan or wilde Elke VII Those which have power from the King to take away Guns and Cross-bows in Forests Parks and Chases may retain the same notwithstanding this Act so likewise may Smiths and Merchants that make or sell them the several lengths abovesaid being duly observed ☞ VIII It shall be lawfull for any person to convey the party offending against this Act before the next Justice of Peace who upon due examination and proof shall have power to commit him to prison there to remain till he hath satisfied the penalty which in this case shall be divided betwixt the King and the party that so takes the offender IX Every Placart granted by the King which expresseth not at what beasts or fowl the Grantee shall shoot and where the Grantee entreth not into a Recognisance of 20 l. in the Chancery to shoot at no other shall be adjudged void X. Justices of Peace in Sessions and Stewards of Leets have power to hear and determine these offences XI When the conviction is in Sessions the whole forfeiture is to be levied to the King's use when in a Leet the one half is the King 's and the other half ought to be divided betwixt the Lord and the prosecutor XII Here if a Jury shall willingly conceal any thing the Justices or Steward have power to impannel another Jury by whom if the first Jury be found guilty of concealment they shall forfeit 20 s. a piece viz. to the King if it be in Sessions but if in a Leet then the one half to the Lord and the other half to the prosecutor XIII Forfeitures arising by this Act shall be sued for viz. by the King within one year and by a common person within six months otherwise they shall be lost XIV A servant upon command may use his Master's Cross-bow or Gun not prohibited by this Act so as he shoot at no fowl Deer or other game and may also by a license in writing carry it to any place to be mended * ☞ XV. Stat. 2. 3. E. 6.14 None under the degree of a Baron shall shoot in any Hand-gun within any City or Town at any fowl whatsoever or with any hail-shot in pain of 10 l. and 3 months imprisonment XVI This Act shall not restrain those who according to the value of their land are authorized to shoot by 33 H. 8.6 so that they forbear to use any hail-shot and all other that presume to shoot shall present their own names viz. in a Corporation to the Mayor or Head-officer and in the County to the next Justice of Peace in pain of 20 s. and the said Justice or Head-officer is to see them recorded at the next Sessions in like pain of 20 s. which forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Crosses I. West 2.33 13 E. 1. Lands where Crosses be set with purpose that the tenants thereof should defend themselves against the chief Lord or Lords by the Privileges of Templars and Hospitallers shall be forfeited as lands aliened in Mortmain ☞ Crown I. Stat. 14 E. 3. The Realm and people of England shall not be subject or obedient to the King or kingdom of France II. Stat. 7 H. 4.2 The Crown of England and France were intailed to the King and his four sons by name III. Stat. 35 H. 8.1 The Crown of England is intailed to the King's daughter the Lady Mary the remainder to the Lady Elizabeth the
of 40 s. for every cloth LXVI None shall convey any cloth beyond Sea not fully watered and after it is so watered it shall not be set or drawn in length or breadth in pain of forty shillings for every cloth so conveyed LXVII None shall retail cloth before it be fully watered and being so watered it shall not be set or drawn as aforesaid in pain that the seller shall forfeit the said cloth or the value thereof LXVIII None shall keep in his house any tentor or other engine whereby cloth may be drawn in length or breadth in pain of 20 l. but tentors shall be set in open places and used onely for the due stretching of cloth after it cometh from the Mill and before it be rowen And all head officers shall take care that cloth put upon tentors shall not be unduly drawn in length or breadth LXIX No stranger shall buy any wool which shall pass through the Straits of Marroke forted clacked or barked nor any wooll whereof any locks or refuse shall be made but such as is clipped and purely wound without deceit and Merchantable according to the growing of the Country without such sorting clacking or refuse as aforesaid in pain to forfeit such wooll and the double value thereof LXX No Dler shall dy any cloth with Orchel or Cork in pain of 40 s. neither shall any put to sale any cloth so dyed in pain to forfeit the same Howbeit cork made within this Realm may be used in dying upon woolwards so that the wool and cloth be perfectly boyled and maddered also such English cork may be Put upon cloth that is edrfectly boyled and maddered LXXI Every Dyer shall dy both the cloth and the list with one and the same colour in pain to forfeit the same LXXII None shall put to sale any cloth deceitfully dyed in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof LXXIII Faulty cloth shall be brought to the chief Officer of the place where it is seized and shall be cut into three parts whereof the seizor shall have one another shall be by him caried into the Exchequer and the third the said Officer shall have for the use of the Commonalty LXXIV All other forfeitures of this Act shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor LXXV The Statute shall not extend to cloth called Ray or joyned with Ray Plonkets Turkins Celestrines Packing whites Vesses Cogware Worsteds Florences Bastards Kendals sailing ware or Frize ware The said clothes being perfectly made according to their nature and true making * LXXVI Stat. 3 H. 7.11 None shall transport any woollen before it be barbed rowed and shorn in pain to forfeit the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor except Vesses Rayes sailing clothes and others sold at 40 s. or under LXXVII Stat. 3 H. 8.7 The Statute of 7 E. 4.3 and 3 H. 7.11 are confirmed onely Vesses Rayes sailing clothes and others not exceeding four marks the cloth may be transported * LXXVIII Stat. 5 H. 2. None shall make white Streats to sell but when they are raw ready to be toked and being a yard and half a quarter broad and 15 yards long and except the maker set his special mark upon them neither shall any use another's mark in pain to forfeit the clothes otherwise made or marked to be divided betwixt the King and the seizor * LXXIX Stat. 5 H. 8.3 White clothes at five marks and under may be conveyed beyond the Sea unbarbed unshorn and unrowed LXXX None shall convey beyond Sea any such clothes worth above five marks the piece unbarbed unshorn unrowed in pain to forfeit the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * LXXXI Stat. 6 H. 8.8 The Statute of 5 H. 8.2 is made perpetual and none shall make white or russet Streats which being raw shall not be of length and breadth and marked as by the said Statute of 5 H. 8.2 is ordained and shall not weigh 14 pounds the piece at least in pain to forfeit the same to be divided betwixt the King and the seizor * LXXXII Stat. 6 H. 8.9 The wooll delivered by the Clothier for Breaking Kembing Carding or Spinning shall be by just weight of Avoirdupoiz not exceeding above one quarter for the waste in 12 pound of seimed wooll and the Breaker Kember Carder and Spinner shall re-deliver to the Clothier the same wool or wollen yarn by the same weight the waste thereof excepted without concealing any part thereof or putting any thing therein deceitfully in pain to forfeit to the Lord of the Leet where the work is done for every such default 12 d. upon proof thereof before the Head-officer there calling to him fit persons to prove the same LXXXIII The Weaver shall put all the yarn delivered unto him into the web or restore it without putting any thing deceitfully thereinto in pain of 3 s. 4 d. LXXXIV None shall buy any coloured wool or yarn of any Carder Spinner or Weaver but in open Market in pain to forfeit the same LXXXV The Walker and Fuller shall duely work every Web without flocks or other deceit and shall not row or work it on either side with Cards in pain of 6 s. 8 d. LXXXVI None shall put to sale any cloth which being wet shall shrink above one yard in length and one quarter in breadth for the more part thereof or Narrows or Streats after that rate in pain of 6 s. 8 d. and to abate the buyer for such defect LXXXVII None after he hath bought cloth shall draw or strain it in length or breadth with tentor wrinch or otherwise in pain of 5 l. LXXXVIII Provided that such buyer having for proof-sake fully wet cloth may draw and strein them for evening them onely so that he exceed not one yard of the length it had when it was fully wet LXXXIX None shall put upon clothes any flocks or other deceit in pain of 20 s. XC The buyer and seller of clothes shall measure them by yard and inch of the Rule and not otherwise in pain of 5 l. XCI The forfeitures aforesaid shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XCII This Act shall not extend to Kendals Carpnel Whites To stocks made in Devon Clothes made in Cornwall Cottons or Frize made in Wales Lancashire or Cheshire XCIII Stat. 14 15 H. 8.11 The Statute of 6 H. 8.9 Touching the shrinking of clothes shall not extend to Vesses or set clothes when they exceed not the value of 40 s. the cloth * XCIV Stat. 25 H. 8.18 None shall make cloth in Worce-Rer-shire but onely such as dwell in Worcester Evesham Droitwich ●ederminster and Broinisgrave in pain to forfeit for every cloth 〈◊〉 where made 40 s. XCV This Act shall not extend to clothes made for any person 's own use their children or servants * XCVI Stat. 27 H. 8.12 Every Clothier shall cause his mark to be woven in his Clothes and Kerseys and
the one and the other shall incur the pains ordained by the former Statutes VI. Stat. 14 R. 2.8 None shall be molested for not gauging of Renish wines nor incur any forfeiture for the same otherwise then hath been used of old time * VII Stat. 18 H. 6.17 All Tuns Pipes Tertians and Hogs-heads of Wine and Oyl to be sold within the Realm shall be lawfully gauged by the King 's Gauger or his deputy before they be sold in pain to forfeit to the King the Wine Oyl and Honey otherwise sold or the value thereof VIII If any sell any such vessel wanting the due measure he shall abate so much of the price as it wants of measure in pain to forfeit to the King the value of such Wine Oyl or Honey otherwise sold IX The Informer who will discover such forfeitures to the Lord Treasurer or Barons of the Exchequer shall receive half thereof for his labor * X. Stat. 23 H. 6.16 The Gauge-peny shall not be paid to the Gauger or any other in his name before he or his Deputies have gauged the Wines and then he may take it and no more XI He or his deputy shall upon request be ready to do their office and this Act is to be observed throughout the Realm upon the pain comprized in the Statute of 27 E. 3.8 * XII Stat. 31 E. 8. No Brewer shall sell or put to sale in London the suburbs or within 2 miles compass of the Suburbs any Beer or Ale in Buts Pipes Punchions Hogs-heads Tiercies or such other uessel brought from beyond Sea and never lawfully gauged within this Realm before the same be lawfully gauged and the true content thereof set down thereupon by the Gallon appointed for Beer and Ale according to the Standard by the Master and Wardens of the Coopers of the City of London or their Deputies neither shall any Brewer sell or put to sale any Beer or Ale in such vessel elsewhere in England or Wales before the same be lawfully gauged and the true content thereof set thereupon by such as by the Statute of the 23 H. 8.4 which see in Coopers are to have the Gauging of Barrels Kilderkins and Firkins elsewhere in England and Wales in pain to forfeit every such vessel and also the Beer and Ale therein to him that will seize the same and besides 10 s. for every such vessel all which forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor XIII The fees of the Gauger shall be for every But or Pipe a penny for every Punchion Hogs-head of Tierce an half-penny and for every other vessel after the like rate XIV This Act shall extend to Denizons as well as to strangers and the Gauger may retain the vessel until he be paid his fee. XV. The Master and Wardens of the Coopers in London or their Deputies or Deputy within 48 hours after request to them made shall come to any person in London or the Precinct aforesaid and shall gauge and mark his vessel in pain of forfeiting to him that makes such request 20 s. to be recovered by action of debt c. XVI This Act shall not extend to punish the Brewer that shall fill vessels which are imported and after they are so filled are immediately to be exported to be sent elsewhere out of this Realm Gigmills I. Stat. 5 6 E. 6.22 None shall use any Gigmill for the working of any wollen Cloth in pain to forfeit for every Cloth so used 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor ☞ Gold silver and Gold-smiths * I. Artic. sup Cart. Cap. 20. 28 E. 1. None shall make or cause to be made any Vessel Jewel or other thing of Gold or Silver except it be of good and true alloy viz. gold of a certain touch and silver of the sterling alloy or better and none shall work worse silver then money II. No vessel of silver shall depart out of the worker's hand until it be assayed by the Wardens of the craft and marked with the Leopards head neither any work worse gold then of the touch of Paris and the said Wardens shall go from Shop to Shop to assay gold whether it have the right touch and if any other be found it shall be forfeit to the King III. None shall make rings crosses or locks nor set any stone in gold unless it be natural And Gravers of stones and seals shall give to each their weight of Silver and Gold as near as they can IV. The Jewels of base Gold which they have they shall utter as soon as they can and if they buy any such work hereafter they may buy it to work upon but must not sell it V. The Gold-smiths of all other places in England shal be governed by this law and one shall come from each Town to London to be assertained of their touch VI. If any Gold-smith offend against this Law he shall suffer imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will VII This Act shall not impeach the King's prerogative VIII Stat. 27 E. 3.14 All Merchants Denizons and strangers may import plate of Silver and billets of Gold and all other Gold and Silver to the Kings Bullion or his Exchanges taking their Gold or Silver equal to the value And any man take forreign coin without impeachment yet he may refuse it if he please IX No coin shall be currant in the King's Dominions but his own neither shall any export Gold sterling or other money save onely that which is new except Merchants strangers who importing money will imploy the same within this Realm in which case they may export without impeachment so much as they import or so much thereof as shall not be so imployed Howbeit lawful search thereof ought to be made in the Port where they arive and the money so imported must be put in writing by the searchers to the end they may not export more then they import but here no Officer by colour of such search shall unduly vex the Merchant stranger X. All false money shall be forfeited to the King * XI Stat. 7. E. 37. Every Gold-smith shall make his work of Silver lawfully of the Alloy of good sterling and shall have a proper mark by himself made known to such as shall be assigned by the King to survey his work or alloy XII The Gold-smith shall not set his mark thereunto until the surveyors have made their essay as shall be ordained by the King and his Council And when the essay is made the surveyors shall set to the King's mark and after the Gold-smith his mark XIII No Gold-smith shall take for vessel white and full for the weight of a pound viz. of the price of two marks of Paris weight but 18 pence as they do at Paris XIV If the Gold-smith be found in default he shall forfeit his false metal to the King * XV. Stat. 5 H. 4.13 None shall gild any Rings or other things made of Copper or Lattin save
Attaint 23 H. 8.3 Page 33 34 35 Attorney who may make one Merton c. 10. 20 H. 3. West 2. c. 10. 13 E. 1. 7 H. 4.13 Page 35 36 Who may be an Attorney and his duty 4 H. 4.18 3 Jac. 7. and fees 32 H. 8.30 Page 36 37 Avowry what where and by whom to be made 21 H. 8.19 Page 37 Attainder and cause of it c. Certificate thereof by whom to be made 34 H. 8.14 Page 68 69 Appear who may be cited to appear out of his Diocess and who may not 23 H. 8.9 Page 73 74 Assizes where in assizes names are inserted by collusion to exclude from conusance the Assises shall abate 9 H. 4.5 8 H. 6.26 Page 86 Ayel and Besayel what West 2.26 13 E. 3. Page 98 Allegianee The Oath of allegiance by whom and to whom to be administred 3 Jac. 4. 7 Jac. 6. pag. 121 ad 126 129 130 131 Action against a Justice of Peace c. where it must be brought and what costs shall be recovered in the same 7 Jac. 5. 21 Jac. 12. Page 205 Assurance fraudulent assurances of Lands and Goods where void 50 E. 3.6 13 El. 5. Page 258 259 Annoyance who is guilty of annoyance how he shall be punished and by whom 12 R. 2.13 Page 294 Abbots how Trespasses done to them shall be answered for Marl. 28. 52 H. 3. Page 372 Amie Prochein amie what he may do in behalf of an heir West 1.47 West 2.15 Page 445 Aid reasonable aid to make the Kings eldest son a Knight c. whence raised and of what value West 1. 35 E. 1. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.11 Page 459 Arms Sergeant at Arms how many there shall be and their duty 13 R. 2.6 Page 496 Ashes white ashes may not be exported and if they be the penalty thereof 2. 3 E. 6.26 Page 638 Abate where and in what case a Writ shall abate West 2.24 13 E. 1. Pars inde West 2.49 6 R. 2. Stat. 1 2. Page 664 B. BAnks who shall be distrained to make them Mag. Chart. 9 H. 3.15 and who defend them ibid. 14. pag. 37 Banks of the Sea who are to be charged towards their repair and how who to order and survey the same 27 El. 24. Page 37 38 Bankrupt who how to be ordered and by whom 34 H. 8.4 13 El. 7. 1 Jac. 15. 21 Jac. 19. 14 Car. 2. Page 38 39 41 42 Berwick the Liberties and priviledges thereof 22 E. 4.8 1 Jac. 28. Page 42 Bastard who is a Bastard Merton c. 9. 20 H. 3. ib. Who shall certifie Bastardy and when 9 H. 9.11 Page 43 Mother of a Bastard child how punishable and by whom 18 E. 3. ibid. Beaupleader no Fines for fair pleading Merton cap. 11. 52 H. 3. West 1. c. 8. 3 E. 1. 1 E. 3.8 ibid. Benevolence granted to the King 13 Car. 2. cap. 4. pag. 44 Bishop Temporalties of a Bishop not to be seised by the King 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 2. 14 E. 3. Stat. 3. Pro Clero c. 3. 25 E. 3. Stat. 3. Pro Clero c. 6. Page 44 Bishops Suffragans where placed by whom made their power 26 H. 8.14 Page 44 45 Bishops by whom to be made the form of their consecration c. 1 E. 6.2 3 E. 6.1 1 2 P. M. 8. 8 El. 1. 5 6 E. 6.1 Page 45 46 Books who may buy and sell them and in what manner and who may qualifie their prices 25 H. 8.15 ibid. Bowstaves how and by whom to be brought into this Realm 12 E. 4.2 1 R. 3.11 13 El. 14. Page 47 Bowyer his Trade and the prices of Bows 8 El. ibid. Brass who may change it where and when who work it 19 H. 7.6 who buy and sell it 25 H. 8.9 Page 47 48 None may export it and if they do the penalties for the same 33 H. 8.7 2 3 Ed. 6.37 Page 48 49 Bridges Burford Bridge when made 8 H. 6.28 Page 51 Who are to inquire of the annoyances of Bridges c. and their power therein 22 H. 8.5 ibid. Severall Statutes for the building and repairing divers Bridges 18 El. 17.20 23 Eliz. 11. 27 El. 25. 39 El. 23 24. 43 El. 16. 3 Jac. 23 24. 1 H. 8.9 14 Car. 2. cap. 6. Page 51 52 Brokers their duty what makes a good sale to them 1 Jac. 11. Page 52 Burning burning Carts or wood the punishment 37 H. 8.6 Page 53 Barking of trees the punishment 37 H. 8.6 ibid. Butcher his duty and for neglect his punishment 31 E. 1.7 4 H. 7.3 15 Car. 2. cap. 8. ibid. Butter and Cheese by whose order it may be exported 3 H. 6.4 18 H. 6.3 Page 54 Who may buy it to sell again 3 4 Ed. 6.21 21 Jac. 22. ibid. Butter the packing thereof contents of the Kilderkin and marks thereof and punishment for false packing c. 14 Car. 2. cap. 26. Page 54 55 Boots shooes c. not to be transported 5 H. 6.15 Page 88 Barrels c. their content and measure 23 H. 8.4 Page 100 101 Brewer to sell his Beer and Ale as shall be thought fit by Magistrates 23 H. 8.4 ibid. Books Popish may not be sold or brought into England 3 Jac. 5. Page 128 Bayliwicks may not be farmed at over-great sums Art super Cartas 14. 28 E. 1. Page 289 Bribe none shall take money for the report of a cause referred to them by the Judges 1 Jac. 10. Page 307 Bail and Mainprize Who shall be let to bail and who not and who shall take the bail Marlb 52 H. 3.27 West 1.15 3 H. 7.3 1.2 P. M. 13. 2.3 P. M. 10. Page 338 339 340 C. CHildren when and whose inheritable 25 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. 42 E. 3.10 Page 1 Chancellor where the Lord Chancellor may award damages 17 R. 2.6 Page 5 Common Bench how to be removed 2 E. 3.11 Page 7 Court Common-Pleas Court not to be removed without adjournment 2 E. 3.11 ibid. Common of pasture who shall have it and who approve it Merton c. 4. 20 H. 3. West 2. c. 46. 13 E. 1. 3 E. 6.3 43 El. 11. Page 23 24 Cutting of Dams heads of Ponds Conduits Pipes Tongues and Ears the punishment thereof 37 H. 8.6 Page 53 Cables where by whom and of what to be made 21 H. 8.12 35 El. 8. Page 55 Cables Halsers and Ropes where how and of what to be made 21 H. 8.12 35 El. 8. ibid. Cattel who may buy them and where 3 4 E. 6.19 Page 56 Cambridg when paved 35 H. 8.15 Knights of Parliament there how payed 34 35 H. 8.24 ibid. Captain may not detain his Souldiers pay 18 H. 6.18 7 H. 7.1 Page 56 57 ad 68 Captives to be relieved and how 16 17 Car. 1.24 Page 68 Castle Constable of a Castle his duty Magna Charta 19 20. West 1.7 3 E. 1. ibid. Cessavit what by whom maintainable and against whom Gloucest c. 4. 6 E. 1. West 2. c. 21. 13 E. 1. Page 69 Challenge where good
Proclamation published by the King concerning the payment of Customes for strangers to indure for certain years XXXIX Lords of the Parliament may keep six strangers born at one time XL. No stranger except Denizons shall take a Lease of any house or shop in pain to forfeit 5 l. and none shall let them such Leases upon the like pain both of them to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor Amendments I. Stat. 14 E. 3.6 Stat. 1. A process which is defective by Misprision of a Clerk in one syllable or letter too much or too little shall be amended without giving advantage to the party challenging the same II. Stat. 9 H. 5.4 The Justices before whom such default shall be found in any Record or Process may amend the same as well after Judgment as before so long as such Record or Process shall continue before them III. Stat. 4 H. 6.3 The Statute of 9 H. 5.4 is made perpetual provided it shall not extend to Records or Process in Wales or whereby any person is outlawed IV. Stat. 8 H. 6.12 No Judgment or Record shall be reversed or annulled for Error assigned by reason of the rasing or interlining of any Record Process Warrant Writ Pannel or Return or of any Addition Subtraction or Diminution of Words Letters Titles or parcel of Letters found in the same V. The Judges may reform all defects in any Record Process Ward Plea Warrant Writ Pannel or Return except Appeals Indictments of Treason or Felony and the Outlawries of the same and the substance of the proper names surnames and additions left out in original Writs Exigents and in other Writs of Proclamation contrary to the Statute of 1 H. 5.5 which see in Addition so that by such misprision of the Clerk no Judgment shall be reversed or annulled VI. Variance alledged between a Record and the Certificate thereof shall be amended by the Judges VII Imbezilling of a Record is felony VIII If a record process writ warrant pannel return or any parcel thereof be exemplified under the Great Seal and inrolled for any error assigned in the said Record c. in any letter word clause or matter varying or contrary to the exemplification and inrolment there shall be no judgment reversed or annulled IX Stat. 8 H. 6.15 The Justices may amend the misprisision and defaults of Clerks of the Court or of Sheriffs their Clerks and of all other Officers whatsoever found before them in any record or process or the return of the same by reason of writing one letter or one syllable too much or too little except in records and processes within Wales and of felonies and treasons and the dependants of the same Amerciaments I. Magna Charta cap. 14. 9 H. 3. A free-man shall not be amercied for a small fault but according to the manner thereof and for a great offence according to the quantity thereof saving to him his Contentment or Countenance and a Merchant saving his merchandize and any Villain except the King's shall be amercied saving his wainage and such amerciaments shall be assessed by lawful men of the Vicinage Peers also shall be amercied by Peers according to their offence Also Church-men shall be amercied according to their Lay-tenement and the quantity of their offence and not according to their Spiritual Benefice II. Marlb cap. 18. 52 H. 3. No Escheator Commissioner or Justice assigned to take Assizes or to hear or determine matters shall have power to amerce for default of common Summons but the chief Justices or the Justices in Eyre in their Circuit III. West 1. cap. 6. No City Borough Town or man shall be amercied without reasonable cause and according to the trespass viz. every Free-man saving his Free-hold a Merchant saving his merchandize a Villain saving his Gainure and that by his or their Peers Anniversary Fast I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 30. Every 30th day of January unless it falls upon the Lord's day throughout his Majestie 's dominions shall be kept and observed as an anniversary day of Fasting and Humiliation for the horrid Murther of King Charles the First committed by a party of desperately wretched and wicked men to the shame and reproach of the people of England and Protestant Religion and to implore God's mercy that the said sacred and innocent bloud nor those other sins which provoked God to deliver up the said King into the hands of wicked and unreasonable men may not hereafter be visited upon the people of England or their Posterity Annuary Thanksgiving I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 14. A perpetual annuary Thanksgiving to be celebrated on the 29th day of May for the wonderful power and goodness of God in restauration of the King by the unanimous and cordial affection of the Lords and Commons in Parliament and people in general upon which day all persons are to resort to some Church Chappel or publick place of Thanksgiving this Act to be then read and notice to be given the next Lord's day before Apparance I. Stat. 10 H. 6.4 No Filizer Exigenter or other Officer whatsoever in any suit shall make entry that the Plaintiff obtulit se in propria persona sua unless the Plaintiff before such entry made doth indeed appear in proper person before some of the Justices of the place where the Plea depends and either by himself or some other credible person of his Council make oath that he is the same person in whose name that suit is prosecuted This Act to continue to the next Parliament II. Stat. 18 H. 6.9 The Stat. of 10 H. 6.4 is made perpetual III. No officer contained in the Statute of 10 H. 6.4 shall doe to the contrary thereof in pain to forfeit 40 s. to the King for every time that he shall be attainted thereof by due examination of any of the Justices before whom the Entry or Record is IV. Every Attorny who hath not his Warrant entred upon Record in all suits wherein process of Capias and Exigent are awardable the same Term in which the Exigent is awarded or before and is thereof attainted by like examination for every time he so offendeth shall incur the pain aforesaid Appeals I. Magna Charta cap. 34. 9 H. 3. No man shall be taken or imprisoned upon the appeal of a woman for the death of any other then her husband II. West 1. c. 14. 3 E. 1. The accessary in an appeal shall not be outlawed before the Principal be attainted Howbeit none shall intermit to commence their appeal at the next County as well against the accessary as against the principal but the Exigent against those shall remain until those be attainted by Outlawry or otherwise III. Stat. Gloc. c. 14. 9 E. 1. If the Appealor declare the deed the year the day the hour the time of the King and the town where the fact was done and with what weapon the appeal shall stand and shall not be abated for default of fresh suit so that he sue within
Artificers that will sue for the same * VII Stat. 13 Eliz. 14. The Statute of 12 E. 4. confirmed VIII All Merchant-strangers bringing wares from the East-parts as well as from the 27 Hanse-towns shall be bound by the said Statute of 12 E. 4.2 under the pains therein contained to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Brass Laten Copper Bel-metall Pewter c. * I. Stat. 19 H. 7.6 None shall sell or change Brass save onely in open Fairs and Markets or in their own houses except they be desired by the buyer of such wares in pain of 10 l. II. None shall cast or work brass or pewter but according to the goodness of metal wrought in London in pain to forfeit the one moiety thereof to the King and the other to the finder III. Hollow ware of pewter called Lay-metall shall be wrought after the assise of Lay-metall in London and shall be marked in pain to forfeit the said wares or being sold the price thereof which shall be divided as aforesaid IV. None shall use in the selling of brass or pewter any false beams or weights in pain to forfeit 20 s. to be divided as above and in case he be not able to pay it he shall be by the Head-officer committed to the stocks till the next Market-day and then stand upon the Pillory V. Searchers of brass and pewter in every City and Borough shall be appointed by the Head-officers of the same and in every County by Justices of Peace at their Mich. Sess and in default of searchers in Cities and Boroughs any other person skilful in that Mystery by over-sight of the Head-officers may take upon him the search of defective brass which shall be equally divided as aforesaid VI. Stat. 4 H. 8.7 The Stat. of 19 H. 7.6 is confirmed And besides it is enacted that in Cities and Boroughs search of defective tinn and pewter shall be made by the Wardens of the Craft of Pewterers and in Towns where no Wardens are searchers shall be appointed by the Head-officers there which said defective ware shall be forfeited and divided as in the former Statute VII Stat. 25 H. 8.9 None shall buy or take by way of exchange any wares made of tinn or pewter out of the Realm in pain to forfeit them and also the value thereof in money VIII Officers may search and seize wares brought into this Realm contrary to this Act. IX No stranger born shall work any pewter or tinn in England in pain to forfeit the same X. No Pewterer shall teach his Trade in a forein Nation in pain to lose the priviledge of an Englishman XI Licenses and Placards to wandring Braziers and Pewterers shall be void XII The penalty of 10 l. mentioned in 19 H. 7.6 and those likewise of this present Act shall be equally divided betwixt the King and the finder XIII Stat. 33 H. 8.4 The Statute of 25 H. 8.9 is made perpetual XIV None shall withstand the search of brass tinn pewter c. in pain of 5 l. to be divided as in the former Statute XV. Stat. 33 H. 8.7 None shall convey out of this Realm Brass Copper Laten Bell-metal Pan-metal Gun-metal or Shrooff-metal clean or mixed Tin and Lead onely excepted in pain to forfeit the double value to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVI The landing thereof in forein parts shall be tried and determined in the County where it was shipped XVII None shall transport such metall from one part of the Realm to another before he hath acquainted the Customer where the Ship is with the true weight thereof and also give him bond to the King's use of the double value thereof with condition to land it in some part of the Realm in pain to forfeit the same in manner and form aforesaid and shall also within eight moneths after bring from the Customer of the place where he lands it a certificate of the landing thereof which Customer shall give him or his Factor such certificate without delay XVIII The Customer that makes a false certificate in such case shall lose his place and the value of the goods so concealed XIX If the goods be diminished by tempest enemies or pirates upon due proof thereof made to the Customer by the party his executor or c. his bond shall be re-delivered or otherwise discharged XX. Stat. 2 and 3 E. 6.37 The penalty of 10 l. for every thousand weight is added to the forfeiture of the double value of metall transported contrary to the Stat. of 33 H. 8.7 XXI Also 10 l. for every thousand weight shall be added to the double value of the goods and the total thereof put into the Bond to be made to the Customer according to the Stat. of 33 H. 8.7 which Bond if it want a date the Customer shall forfeit his place and the value of the goods shipped XXII If any Officer of the Ship suffer any such metall to be shipped and do not disclose it within three days he shall forfeit the double value thereof or if any Customer or searcher having notice thereof do not seise it to the King's use he shall lose his office and the value of the metall XXIII None shall lade such metall but where there is a Customer in pain to forfeit 10 l. and the metall XXIV The forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and prosecutor XXV The Statute of 33 H. 8.7 in all points not altered by this is confirmed Breakers of Leagues and Truce I. Stat. 2 H. 5.6 In every port beside the Cinque-ports there shall be a Conservator of the Truce worth in land 40 l. per annum at least who by the King's Letters Patents and the Admiral 's Commission shall have power to enquire of by inquest and inflict punishment for offences done upon the Sea against Truce and false conducts in like manner as the Admirals have heretofore used to doe Howbeit the death of a man is reserved to the Admiral II. The Conservator hath power to award processes against the offenders viz. Capias and Exigent wherein the additions of the parties indicted shall truly be inserted and also by himself or his Lievtenant to hear and determine differences betwixt party and party concerning Truce and false conducts III. The Conservator shall have two men learned in the Law joyned in Commission with him as his associates and both he and they shall be sworn to take no fee gift c. save of the King onely and if any be offered them that they forthwith discover it to the King or his Councellor in pain of imprisonment and fine IV. The Conservator shall be resident upon the place where he is appointed Conservator and shall have for his fee 40 l. per annum at least and a Seal of the King 's proper for his Office V. Every Master of a Ship and Owner too if he be present shall before he departs the Port be sworn before the Conservator not to attempt any
thing against the Truce and the Conservator shall record the name of such Master and Owner and also of the Ship together with the number of the Mariners and if they take any thing from the Enemy the Conservator shall be acquainted therewith before discharge or sale if for some reasonable cause the Ship entred not some other Port then they must procure from the Conservator there a testimonial under Seal of the goods taken and their value to be shewed to the Conservator of the Port from whence they first came And all this they must doe in pain to forfeit the Ship and suffer imprisonment untill they make fine and ransom to the King VI. Provided that no possessor of a Ship shall suffer imprisonment or make fine unless he was present in the Ship when the offence was committed VII The Admiral shall have all forfeitures out of the Cinque-ports as before hath been used VIII Conservators to be made within the Cinque-ports by the King's Letters Patents and the Warden's Commission shall also have like power within that Franchise and the Warden shall have the forfeitures there as in times past Howbeit the death of a man is reserved to the Warden IX Stat. 4 H. 5.7 If any with whom Truce is broken at Sea complain thereof to the Keeper of the Privie Seal he shall have Letters of Request under the Privie Seal and if thereupon the offender makes not restitution he shall have Letters of Mart granted him under the Great Seal X. Stat. 14 E. 4.4 The former Statutes are confirmed ☞ Bridges I. Stat. 1 H. 8. ca. 9. An Act for Stanes Bridge Comitat. Middlesex II. Stat. 8 H. 6.28 An Act for the making Burford and Culhamford Bridges III. Stat. 22 H. 8.5 Four Justices 1 Qu. shall in Sessions inquire hear and determine the annoiances of Bridges and of the High-waies adjoyning within 300 foot next unto the said Bridges and shall also charge such as should repair them by sending forth processes and setting pains as they shall think fit IV. When it cannot be known what Precinct shall repair a Bridge or Way they shall be repaired by the County Riding or Corporation within which they are situate and if they happen to be situate in two of such Precincts the inhabitants there shall repair their several parts respectively V. The said four Justices have power to call before them the Constables or two able men of every Parish and by their assent to make a tax and to appoint Collectors to levy the same by distress and sale and also to appoint Surveyours of such decayed Bridges and Wayes unto whom the Collectors shall pay the money levied which said Collectors and Surveyors shall render an account unto the said Justices upon pain of imprisonment without bail VI. The Justices may in this case send process out of their jurisdiction which the Officers to whom it is directed shall obey and serve in pain to be fined by the said Justices VII This Act shall not extend to the five Ports nor to the members of the same save onely that their Officers shall have such power to reform annoyances of Bridges and Wayes there as the Justices of Peace have elsewhere by force of this Act. VIII The Justices shall allow to the Collectors and Surveyours their reasonable charges IX Stat. 1● Eliz. 17. A good Law for the maintenance of Rochester bridge in Kent See the Statute X. Stat. 18 Eliz. 20. An Act for the repair of bridges and high-ways within one mile of Oxford See it at large XI Stat. 23 Eliz. 11. An Act for the re-edifying and maintenance of the bridges over Toffe near Cardiff in the County of Glamorgan in South Wales XII Stat. 27 Eliz. 25. Another Act for the repair of Rochester bridge XIII Stat. 39 Eliz. 23. An Act for the making and repairing of Newport and Carlion bridges over the River Usk. XIV Stat. 39 El. 24. An Act for the building of a Bridge at Wilton upon Wye in the County of Hereford near Ross and what Pontage shall be there taken XV. Stat. 43 Eliz. 16. An Act for the erecting and repairing of Edon and Presberk bridges in Cumberland XVI Stat. 3 Jac. 23. An Act for new making and repairing of Chepstow bridge XVII Stat. 3 Jac. 24. An Act for the building of Upton bridge over Severn in Worcester-shire within three years Exp. XVIII Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 6. A clause for repairing and maintaining a bridge called Foot-bridge in stead of another called Rey-bridge in Wiltshire XIX Proviso touching Stratford bridge in Hallingdon in the County of Sussex XX. The Surveyors of the high-ways are to see that all Bridges have sufficient walls posts or railes four foot high ☞ Brokers * I. Stat. 1 Jac. 21. The sale of goods wrongfully gotten to any Broker in London Westminster Southwark or within two miles of London shall not alter the property thereof II. If a Broker having received such goods shall not upon the request of the true owner truly discover them how and when he came by them and to whom they are conveyed he shall forfeit the double value thereof to the said owner III. This Act shall not prejudice the ancient Trade of Brokers in London being selected and sworn for that purpose it being onely intended against Fripers and pawn-takers who for the most part keep open shop ☞ Burning of Carts and Wood cutting of Dams Heads of Ponds Conduits Pipes Tongues and Ears and Barking of Trees * I. Stat. 3. 7 H. 8.6 If any maliciously and willingly cut the head of a Pond burn a Cart laden a heap of wood prepared for coal cut out the tongue of any tame beast being alive or the ear or ears of any person or bark any fruit-trees for every such offence he shall lose treble dammages to the party grieved and pay 10 l. to the King ☞ Butchers * I. Stat. Of Bakers and Brewers cap. 7. 31 E. 1. A Butcher that sells Swines-flesh mezeled or dead of the murrain for the first offence he shall be amercied for the second have the Pillory for the third be imprisoned and make fine for the fourth abjure the Town II. Stat. 4 H. 7.3 No Butcher shall kill any flesh in his scalding-Scalding-house or within the walls of London in pain to forfeit for every Ox so killed 12 d. and for every other beast 8 d. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor III. The same Law shall extend to all other walled Towns and to Cambridge Barwick and Carlile onely excepted * IV. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 8. No person using the trade of a Butcher shall at any time after Michaelmas next sell offer or expose to sale by himself or any servant or agent any fat Oxen Steers Runts Kine Heifers Calves Sheep or Lambs alive upon pain of forfeiture of double the value thereof one moiety to the King and his heirs the other moiety to him who shall sue for the same in any of his Majestie 's Courts of Record wherein
no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed See more under the Title of Calves and Cattel And see Tanner n. 25. Also see Title Victuallers Butler of the King I. Stat. 25 E. 3. cap. 21. The Steward of the house and Treasurer of the Wardrobe shall give notice how much wine shall be taken by the Butler or his Lievtenant in every Port which number shall not be exceeded II. A Certificate shall be made by the Mayor and Bailiffs there under their seals by Indenture betwixt them and such takers of wine to the said Steward and Treasurer how much wine is so taken III. If the Butler or his Lievtenant take more wine or any reward or delay any by colour of his office as by arrest he shall forfeit double dammages to the party grieved lose his office be imprisoned and be ransomed at the King's will * IV. Stat. 43 E. 3.3 The King's Butler or his Lievtenant shall take no more wine then he shall be commanded in pain to be imprisoned and ransomed at the King's will and after ten days the merchant may sell the residue notwithstanding their arrest ☞ Butter and Cheese I. Stat. 3 H. 6.4 The Lord Chancellor may grant licence under the Great Seal to any to convey Butter and Cheese to any other place besides the Staple which then was of Calais II. Stat. 18 H. 6.3 Butter and Cheese may be conveyed to any place out of the Realm being in the King's amity without licence * III. Stat. 3 and 4 E. 6.21 None except Inholders and Victuallers in their houses shall buy any Butter or Cheese to sell again save onely by retail in open Shop Fair or Market and so not above a Wey of Cheese or a Barrel of Butter at one time without fraud in pain to forfeit the double value to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * IV. Stat. 21 Jac. 22. The Statute of 3 and 4 E. 6.21 and so much of the Statute of 5 and 6 E. 6.14 as concerns the buying and retailing Butter and Cheese which see in Fore-stallers shall not extend to the retailers of Cheese in London Westminster or Southwark having served seven years in that Trade not uttering above four wey of Cheese or four barrels of Butter at one time without fraud V. Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to restrain the retailing of Butter and Cheese during which restraint those that rerail shall be liable to the penalties of 3 and 4 E 6.21 and 5 and 6 E. 6.14 * VI. Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 26. Every kilderkin of Butter shall contain 132 pound the Cask 20 l. the Firkin 56 of good butter the Pot 14 pound besides the Casks and Pots and Farmers shall use no fraudulent dealings in packing weighing with unwarrantable weights mixing old bad and decayed butter with new or whey butter or unreasonably salting the same and a cask of butter shall be of the same sort upon pain of forfeiture of the value of the butter false packed and six times the value of what shall be wanting in weight VII Cheesemongers and others selling butter shall deliver the full quantity of Kilderkins Firkins Casks and Pots and the due quality thereof and none shall repack butter for sale upon forfeiture of the double value for such repacking VIII Farmers and others shall pack their butter in sufficient and well-seasoned Casks which shall be marked with the first letters of the Christian-names and Surnames of the sellers and the weight of the butter upon penalty of forfeiture of 10 s. for every 100 weight of butter not so marked IX Potters shall mark their pots with their names and the weight of the Pot and set the first letter of their Christian name and Surname at length upon pain for every default 12 d. and farmers shall not sell butter packed in other pots upon pain of 2 s. for every default X. Offences against this Act shall be heard and determined in the Sessions of the Peace for the County City or liberty where committed by action of Debt Indictment Information or Presentment and one half of the penalty to the poor of the Parish where the offence is committed to be paid to the Church-wardens or Overseers the other half to the Prosecutor XI All Suits upon this Act shall be commenced within 4 months after the sale of such butter Cables Halsors and Ropes I. Stat. 21 H. 8.12 AN Act for true making of Cables Halsors and Ropes in Burport and within five miles thereof See the Statute at large * II. Stat. 35 Eliz. 8. None shall make or cause to be made any Cables of old stuff which shall contain seven inches in compass in pain to forfeit four times the value of every Cable so made neither shall any tar or cause to be tarred any Halsors or other Cordage made of old stuff being of lesser Assise nor put the same to sale in pain to forfeit the treble value of every such Cable Halsor or other Cordage of lesser Assize then seven inches made and tarred as aforesaid III. The said forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor ☞ Calves and other Cattel I. Stat. 3 and 4 E. 6.19 No Cattel shall be bought but in open Fair or Market and those not sold again in the same Fair or Market in pain to forfeit the double value II. No Butcher shall buy any Cattel and sell the same again alive in pain to forfeit them * III. Stat. 2 and 3 P. and M. 3. He that keepeth above 120 sheep or 20 beasts upon every pasture-ground apt for Milch-kine and not commonable shall yearly for every 60 sheep or 10 beasts keep one Milch-cow and for every 120 sheep or 20 beasts rear up one Calf in pain to forfeit for every Cow or Calf not so kept or reared 20 s. viz. the one half to the King and Queen and the other to the prosecutor if he commence his suit within one year after the offence committed IV. Justices of Peace in Sess have power to hear and determine the breach of this Statute V. This Act shall not binde such as keep sheep or feed beasts onely for their own provision VI. Stat. 7 Jac. 8. The Statute of 2 3 P. and M. 3. shall also extend to grounds which since the said Act have been or shall be made several See more Title Butchers Cambridge and Cambridge-shire I. Stat. 34 35 H. 8.24 An Act for the assurance of certain lands to John Hinde then Serjeant at Law and his heirs paying yearly 10 l. toward the charges and wages of the Knights of the Parliament for Cambridge-shire for ever II. Stat. 35 H. 8.15 An Act for paving the streets in Cambridge See these Statutes at large ☞ Captains and Souldiers I. Stat. 5 R. 2.10 The Covenants of such as shall serve the King in his Wars or Embassies shall be recorded in the Exchequer as also the repeal of their retinue to the end a just account may be
until the next Quarter-Sessions at which the more part of the Justices may allow him a pension which the Treasurers shall pay him quarterly until it shall be revoked or altered by the said Justices And this allowance to him that hath not born Offices shall not exceed 10 l. to an Officer under a Lievtenant 15 l. to a Lievtenant 20 l. XXX When Souldiers or Mariners arrive far from the place where they are to receive relief the Treasurers there shall give them relief and testimonial whereby they may pass from Treasurer to Treasurer until they shall come to the place required and this shall be done upon the bare Certificate of the Commander and Captain although they have not as yet obtained any allowance thereof from the said Muster-master or Receiver general of the Muster-rolls XXXI The Treasurers shall register their Receits and Disbursments and enter the names of the parties relieved and also the Certificate by warrant whereof the disbursments are made the Muster-master also or Receiver aforesaid shall register the names of the parties and the Certificates by him allowed and the Treasurer returning or not allowing the Muster-master's Certificates shall thereupon subscribe or endorse the cause of his disallowance XXXII Justices of Peace in Sess have power to fine a Treasurer that wilfully refuseth to give relief which any two of them appointed by the rest may levy by distress and sale of goods XXXIII A Souldier or Mariner that begs or counterfeits a Certificate shall suffer punishment as a common Rogue and shall lose his pension if he have any XXXIV The surplusage of this contribution shall be imployed by the more part of the Justices in Sessions upon charitable uses according to the statutes made for relief of the poor and punishment of Rogues XXXV In Corporations the Justices there shall put this Act in execution and not the Justices of the County and shall be liable to fines as well as other Justices if they misuse their power therein and shall appoint a Collector of this tax which shall have the power and be subject to the penalties limited by this Act to High-Constables of the Counties XXXVI The forfeitures accruing by this Act shall be imployed as the surplusage abovesaid or otherwise kept in augmentation of the stock as the more part of the Justices in Sessions shall direct XXXVII When out of the County where the party was prest a fit pension cannot be satisfied it shall be supplied by the Counties where he was born or where he last dwelt by the space of 3 years XXXVIII This Act shall not prohibit the City of London to make a tax if need require differing from that above limited so that no Parish pay above 3 s. weekly nor above or under 12 d. weekly one Parish with another XXXIX Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 6. The command and disposing of the Militia and 14 Car. 2. ca. 3. all the forces by Sea and land and Forts and places of Strength declared to be in the King and neither or both Houses of Parliament can or ought to pretend any power to levy war offensive or defensive against the King his Heirs or lawful Successors Provided this Act be not taken to extend to give or declare any power for transporting or compelling any of the subjects to march out of this Kingdom otherwise then by the Laws thereof ought to be done XL. Stat. 14. Car. 2. ca. 3. The same again declared and that the King his Heirs and Successors may issue forth Commissions of Lievtenancy for the several Counties and places of England and Wales and town of Berwick upon Tweed impowering them to call together persons and them to arm and form into Regiments and lead and conduct and employ them as his Majesty shall direct as well within the several Counties and places where they be commissionated as into other Counties for suppressing all Insurrections Rebellions and Invasions XLI The Lievtenants impowered to commissionate Officers and to present the names of such persons as they shall think fit to be Deputy-Lievtenants and upon the King's approbation to give them Deputations accordingly which his Majesty his Heirs or Successors may notwithstanding displace XLII In absence of the Lievtenants the Deputy-Lievtenants o● any two of them may train exercise and lead persons so armed to the intents hereafter expressed XLIII The Lievtenants or Deputy-Lievtenants the major part of them being 3 at least may charge persons with horse or foot-arms where their estates lie not exceeding the limitations in the Act viz. 1. None to be charged with horse unless he have a revenue of 500 l. per annum or 6000 l. in goods or money 2. None to be charged with foot-arms not having 50 l. per annum or 600 l. in goods nor shall he be charged with horse and foot in the same County 3. None that find or contribute towards a horse shall find any foot-arms and two or three may be joyned in finding an horse-arms 4. No person not having 100 l. per annum shall be contributary to a horse-arms 5. The Lievtenants and Deputy-Lievtenants or any three of them impowered to hear and redress complaints and examine witnesses upon oath 6. Two shillings per diem shall be allowed an horse and 12 d. per diem a foot-souldier 7. The Lievtenants or any three Deputy-Lievtenants may set rates for furnishing ammunition or other necessaries not exceeding in any one year a fourth part of 70000 l. 8. In cases of Invasion or Insurrection every souldier is to be provided of one moneth 's pay but no person to be charged further until the said moneth 's pay be reimbursed him 9. Lievtenants Deputy-Lievtenants and Chief-officers may charge horses carts and carriages for ammunition allowing 6 d. a mile to every cart with 5 horses and 1 d. the mile for a horse 10. Mutineers may be punished by mulcts not exceeding 5 s. or imprisonment not exceeding 20 days 11. The Lievtenants or 3 Deputy-Lievtenants may impose and levy penalties not exceeding 20 l. upon every person charged and refusing to furnish arms and imprison any person that shall imbezil arms until satisfaction and fine any horse-armes not appearing upon summons 20 s. and any foot-arms 10 s. and upon persons charged and not sending in their horses upon summons 5 l. to be levied by distress and sale of the offender's goods 12. And for discovering the abilities of persons chargeable and misdemeanours in hindrances of the service the Lievtenants or any 3 Deputies may examine any person upon oath other then the parties assessed and accused XLIV The Lievtenants may appoint Treasurers and clerks who are to account for money received every six moneths and to certifie the same to the King 's Privy councel and duplicates thereof to the Quarter-Sessions XLV Deputy-Lievtenants shall obey and execute the directions of the Lievtenants XLVI The Lievtenants or any two Deputy-Lievtenants may imploy any persons with the assistance of a Commission-Officer and Constable or other Parish-officer to
search for and seize arms in the custody of any person whom they shall think dangerous to the peace of the Kingdom but no search to be made in any house in the night other then in Cities and Towns corporate by warrant specially directing the same and no dwelling-house of any Peer to be searched but by warrant under the King's sign manual or in presence of the Lievtenant or Deputy-Lievtenant of the same County and the arms seised to be restored again if it shall be thought sit XLVII High-Constables and all other officers to be aiding and assisting to the Lievtenants and Deputy-Lievtenants and to be saved harmless and indemnified for so doing XLVIII Persons charged to find arms in Counties where they reside not shall have notice sent to their tenants or servants there who shall speedily thereof inform their masters or landlords and bring an account thereof to the Deputy-Lievtenants And upon neglect or refusal of the Land-lord the Tenants shall provide arms and doe as the Land-lord ought to have done and if the Tenants refuse or make default the penalties of this Act to be levied upon them And such Tenants may defalk for such moneys as they expend for providing arms out of their Rents unless the default and penalty were occasioned by their own neglect XLIX Peers acting as Lievtenants or Deputy-Lievtenants shall before they act take the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy before six of the Privy Councel and the Oath following I A. B. do declare and believe that it is not lawful upon any pretence whatsoever to take arms against the King and that I do abhor that traitorous Position That arms may be taken by his Authority against his Person or against those that are commissioned by him in pursuance of such military Commissions So help me God L. Persons under the degree of Peers before they act as Lievtenants or Deputy-Lievnants shall take the oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy and the aforsaid oath before the Lievtenant or some Justice of the Peace of the respective Counties and places where they act And the Lievtenant or any two Deputy-Leivtenants in their absence are enabled to administer the said Oaths to the said Officers and Souldiers The Trained-bands discharged LI. Times of training and exercising shall be as followeth 1. The General muster and exercise of Regiments not above once a year 2. Training and exercising single Companies not above 4 times a year unless upon special direction by the King or Privy Councel and the same not to continue above two daies 3. At general Muster and Exercise of Regiments none shall be constrained to stay above 4 days from their habitations LII At every Muster and exercise every Musketeer shall bring half a pound of Powder every Horseman a quarter of a pound at the charge of the Persons finding the said Souldiers LIII The Armes and Furniture of an horse offensive and desensive shall be viz. Defensive arms A Back Breastplate and Pot the Breastplate and Pot Pistol-proof Offensive arms A sword and Case of Pistols the barrells not under 14 inches in length Furniture of a horse A great Saddle-Pad with burrs and straps to affix the holsters unto a bit and bridle with a pectorall and Crupper LIV. Foot-armes A Musket the barrel not under 3 foot in length and the bore for 12 bullets in the pound a coller of bandeliers and sword LV. Pike-Arms A Pike of Ash not under 16 foot long with a Back breast head-piece and sword LVI The Militia of the Isle of Purbeck to remain seperate from the County of Dorset and the Lievtenants and Deputy-Lievtenants there to exercise the same powers as in the said County LVII Proviso impowering the King in case of dangers during the space of 3 years from the 25 of June 1662. to raise money for defraying the charge and securing the Nation the said summ not exceeding 70000 l. in one whole year LVIII Proviso That none be compelled to serve in person finding one sufficient man qualified according to the Act And persons listed shall not be changed or desert the service without leave upon pain of 20 l. to be levied by distress and for want of distress by imprisonment of the party offending LIX Proviso Not to put any new charge upon the Tinners in Cornwall But the Lord Warden of the Stannaries and his Deputies by the King's Commission may exercise the same powers for arraying assessing and arming as others observing the customes and privileges of the Stannaries LX. Proviso The Militia of London may continue to list the Trained-bands and Auxiliaries by the King's Commission and that his Majesties Lievtenants for the said City by his warrant may assess and levy for defraying charges any summ yearly not exceeding the proportion which the City payeth to the tax of 70000 pound per mensem and to be accountable as in this Act mentioned LXI Proviso That no Officer or Souldier of the Militia or Trained-bands of Cities Boroughs or Corporations or Ports be compellable to appear out of the Liberties thereof at any Muster or exercise onely and they are to be chargeable with the usual number of Souldiers unless the Lievtenants find cause to lessen the same LXII Proviso Not to avoid any Covenant between Land-lord and tenant concerning finding horses or arms or bearing the charges taxes or rates for the same LXIII Proviso That this Act shall not alter the manner of raising horse or foot in the Isle of Wight but the same to continue as now used and practised there LXIV Proviso That none be compelled to march out of this Kingdom or be transported beyond the Seas otherwise then by the law of this Kingdom ought to be done LXV Proviso That no Peer be charged with horse or foot souldiers or arms but by Commission to so many Peers not fewer then 12 as the King shall appoint under the great Seal except the monethly taxes to be levied as before in this Act which Peers or any 5 of them shall have power to execute this Act in all things except imprisonment of the person of any Peer and the Assessment laid and penalties imposed shall be certified to the Lievtenants of the respective Counties and the penalties levied by distress and sale of the goods of such Peer or his tenant who may deduct the same out of his next rent LXVI Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 16. All Officers and Souldiers of the Army disbanded that were in service under General Monk 25 of April 1660. and instrumental in his Majestie 's restauration may exercise trades such as have deserted the said service or refuse the Oath of Allegiance excepted Vid. the Act and Proviso's at large LXVII Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 8. An Act for distribution of 60000 l. amongst the truly loyal and indigent Commission-Officers of his Majesty and the late King and for assessing of Offices and distributing the moneys thereby raised for their supply Vid. the said Act and the Act of Explanation thereof 15 Car. 2. cap. 3.
be freed from Castle-gard doing the service by himself or another or being with the King in his Host III. West 1.7 3 E. 1. No Constable or Castellane shall exact any thing of any but such as reside in their Town or Castle unless it be an ancient price due to the King Castle or Lord of the Castle Certificate of the cause of Attainder c. I. Stat. 34 H. 8.14 The Clerks of the Crown Assise and Peace shall certifie unto the King's Bench the tenor of every Indictment Outlawry or Conviction and Clerks Attaint had before them respectively for any felony or other offence and that within 40 days next after such attainder conviction or outlawry if it be Term-time otherwise within 20 dayes after the beginning of the Term next following the 40 dayes and shall also deliver a transcript of the indictment to the Ordinary to whom the person attainted is committed and all this in pain of 40 s. to the King and prosecutor But note that the transcript to the Ordinary need not now since the Statute of 18 Eliz. 7. which see after in Clergy * II. The Clerk of the Crown shall receive such certificates in pain of 40 s. for every one refused III. When the indictment containeth more names then are convict a transcript containing onely the names of such as are convict shall serve IV. The Clerk of the Crown being sent to by the Justices of Gaol-delivery or Peace for the name of any person so convict and certified shall without delay send a certificate thereof in pain of 40 s. V. No certificates out of Wales Chester Lancaster Duresm Cessavit I. Gloucester cap. 4. 6 E. 1. If a Free-farmer cease to pay his rent two years together the Lessor shall have a Cessavit against him and recover the land unless before Judgment he pay the arrearages and give security to pay duly for the future II. West 2 cap. 21. 13 E. 1. A Cessavit by the Chief Lord against his Free-hold tenant that ceaseth per biennium III. A Cessavit is maintainable by the heir of the Demandant against the heir or assigne of the Tenant Challenge I. Stat. De Inquis 33 E. 1. If one challengeth a Juror for the King he shall forthwith assign the cause which shall be presently tried by the discretion of the Justices II. If he alledge not a good cause or it go against him the Inquest shall be forthwith taken III. Stat. 7 H. 7.5 Riens diens le Garde shall not be admitted for challenge in London IV. Stat. 33 H. 8.23 Peremptory challenge shall not be admitted in cases of High Treason or misprision of Treason V. Stat. 1 E. 6.12 All Statutes made during the Reign of H. 8. touching challenges and forem pleas are confirmed Champerty * I. West 1.25 3 E. 1. No Officer of the King shall maintain plea of lands or other things to have part thereof or other profit by Covenant between them made in pain to be punished at the King's will II. West 2.49 13 E. 1. The Chancellor Treasurer Justices or any of the King's Councel Clerks of Chancery Exchequer or of any Justice or other Officer or any of the King's house Clerk or Lay shall not receive any Church or Advouson Land or Tenement in fee by gift by purchace to farm by Champerty or otherwise so long as the same thing is in plea nor shall take any reward thereof in pain to be punished at the King's will both buier and seller III. Stat. 20 or 21 E. 1. made at Barwick The attainted of Champerty shall suffer three years imprisonment and be fineable at the King's will where you have also the form of a Writ for remedy thereof to be issued out by Gilbert de Thornton IV. Artic. super Chart. 11. 28 E. 1. None shall take upon him a business in suit with an intent to have part of the thing sued for neither shall any upon any such Covenant give up his right to another in pain that the taker shall forfeit to the King so much of his lands and goods as do amount to the value of the part so purchased for such maintenance to be recovered by any that will sue for the King in the Court where the plea hangeth V. This shall not prohibit any to take counsel at Law for the fee or of his parents or friends VI. Stat. 33 E. 1. Anno Domini 1304. Champertors are such as move pleas and suits or cause them to be moved either by themselves or others and prosecute them at their own charge to have part of the thing in variance or part of the gains VII Stat. 33 E. 1. Anno Domini 1305. None of our Court of Pleaders Attorneys Stewards Bailiffs or any other shall take any plea or suit to Champerty or for maintenance in pain that they together with the consenters thereunto shall suffer three years imprisonment and be fined at the King's will See also there the form of a Writ for the same purpose and also against Conspirators Chancery Masters in Chancery I. Artic. super Chart. 5. 28 E. 1. The Chancellour and the Justices of his Bench shall follow the King to the end he may have always near him such as be learned in the Laws to order matters that shall come to the Court. II. Stat. 36 E. 3.9 Whosoever findeth himself grieved with any Statute shall have his remedy in the Chancery III. Stat. Car. 2. not printed The office of the Masters in Chancery being of very ancient institution and necessary attendance for dispatch of business in the Court and being thought more proper and safe for the subject in general that Affidavits Answers Recognisances and acknowledgments of Deeds should be in some publick place then in private studies and houses as formerly and for the just incouragement of the said Masters for their attendance and support in due discharge of their places enacted that one publick office be kept and no more near the Rolls in which the said Masters some or one of them shall constantly attend for the administring of oaths caption of deeds and recognisances and dispatch of all matters incident to their office References upon accounts and insufficient answers onely excepted from 7 a clock in the morning until 12 at noon and from 2 in the afternoon until 6 at night and the said Masters may demand and take the Fees following viz. For every Affidavit or oath taken in the said office 12 d. For every bill of Costs to be taxed by them for the Plaintiff's not putting in his bill or not proceeding to reply or for the Defendant's not appearing in due time 2 s. 6 d. For the acknowledgment of every deed to be enrolled 2 s. For the caption of every recognisance 2 s. For every exemplification examined by two of the said Masters to each of the said Masters who shall examine the same for every skin of parchment so examined 2 s. For every Report or Certificate to be made in pursuance of any order
shall be void X. Stat. 1 H. 4.4 The Parliament holden in Ann. 11 R. 2. shall be holden and kept according to the purport thereof as a thing done to the great honour and common profit of the Realm XI Stat. 1 E. 4.1 An Act was made whereby was confirmed all Judicial Acts Exemplifications Concords Recoveries Process in Court c. made in the times of H. 4. H. 5. and H. 6. and all grants and letters Patents of divers things mentioned in the said Act made by any of the said three kings See the Statute at large XII The confirmation of divers particular Statutes See under their proper titles ☞ Conjuration Enchantment and Witchcraft * I. Stat. 1. Jac. 12. If any shall be convicted to have used any invocation or conjuration of any evil Spirit or to have consulted covenanted with entertained imployed fed or rewarded any such Spirit or taken up any dead person or the skin bone or other part thereof to have used in Witchcraft Sorcery charm or inchantment or to have used any of the said Arts to kill consume and lame any person they together with their accessaries before the facts shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie II. If any shall be convicted to have by Witchcraft Sorcery Charm or Inchantment undertaken to tell where any treasure or goods lost or stollen may be found or are become or to provoke any to unlawfull love or to destroy or hurt any cattel goods or person albeit the same be not effected they shall for the first offence suffer one year's imprisonment without bail once every quarter of that year-stand six hours upon the pillory in some open Fair or Market and there make open confession of the offence committed and for the second offence shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie III. But in these cases shall be no loss of dower or disherison of heir And a Peer being an offender shall be tried by his Peers ☞ Conspiracie I. Artic. sup Charta 10. 28 E. 1. Against Conspirators false Informers and imbraceors of inquests the King hath provided a Writ in the Chancery and the Justices of either Bench and Justices of Assize shall upon every plaint thereof award inquests thereupon without Writ II. Stat. 33 E. 1. Conspirators are such as bind themselves by oath or other alliance falsly and maliciously to indict and falsly to move and maintain pleas and such as cause children within age to appeal men of felony and retain men to maintain their malicious enterprizes And this extendeth as well to the takers as givers and also Stewards and Bailiffs who by their power maintain debates that concern not their Lords but other parties III. Stat. 7 H. 5. Whereas divers have been indicted for treasons and felonies supposed to be committed in places there being none such to be found every Justice having power to hear and determine such offences by the oath of twelve men whereof each shall have Free-hold within the County of the yearly value of 5 l. besides all reprises shall before Exigent inquire of Office whether there be indeed any such places or no And if there be no such place or places in the County where such appeals or indictments are made they and the process thereupon shall be void and the Indictors shall be punished by imprisonment fine and ransome at the discretion of the said Justices and if any Exigent be awarded before inquisition it shall be also void This Act to continue in force untill the next Parliament IV. Stat. 9 H. 5.1 The Stat. of 7 H. 5. shall continue in force untill the next Parliament after the King's return from beyond Sea V. Stat. 18 H. 6.12 The Statute of 9 H. 5.1 made perpetual because H. 5. dying beyond Sea some were of opinion it was expired Constable and Marshal I. Stat. 8 R. 2.5 The Constable and Marshall shall not have conusance of Pleas or suits which ought to be discussed at the Common Law II. Stat. 13 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 The Constable of England hath cognisance of things concerning Arms and Wars which cannot be discussed by the Common Law III. In this Court the Plaintiff shall plainly declare his matter in his Petition before the Defendant be sent for IV. When a Plea is commenced before the Constable and Marshall which may be tried at the Common Law the party grieved shall have a privy Seal to cause the Constable and Marshall to cease untill it may be decided by the King's Councel whether it may be tried there or at the Common Law Contra formam Collationis I. West 2.41 13 E. 1. If lands given to Abbies Priories Hospitals or other Religious Houses or to maintain a Chantery a light or Alms be alienated the King shall seize it and the purchaser shall lose both the land and his money II. If the house were founded by a Subject he shall recover the land by a Writ which see in the Statute at large III. If it were given to maintain a Chanterie a light or Alms and not aliened but the duty withdrawn two years together the donor or his heir shall recover it by Cessavit Conventicles 1. Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 4. The Stat. of 35 El. cap. 1. declared to be in force and further remedies against the dangerous practices of seditious Sectaries and other meetings in Conventicles under colour of exercise of Religion and the Act at large being upon continuance for 3 years after the end of this Parliament and to the end of the next session of Parliament after the said 3 years and no longer Conusance I. Stat. 9 H. 4.5 Where in Assizes and Pleas of land or rent within Franchises and ancient Demesne against certain persons the names of the Mayors Bailiffs or Communalties in Franchises and of the Lords or Bailiffs in ancient Demesne are therein also by collusion inserted supposing them also to be disseisors or tenants of the land and with purpose to exclude them from the conusance of the matter in Plea which by reason of their Franchises and Liberties ought to be discussed before them in such Assizes and Writs the Justices shall upon request first inquire by the same Assize whether they be indeed disseisors or tenants or whether their names be inserted by fraud as aforesaid II. If it shall be found by fraud the Assizes or Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be grievously amercied notwithstanding there be others named therein who are in truth disseisors or tenants III. Stat. 8. H. 6.26 In Assizes or personal actions if the Defendant make default by collusion with purpose that Mayors Bailiffs or other Communalties or Lords and Bailiffs should lose their jurisdictions the Justices shall upon request inquire thereof by Assizes or inquests where both the Plaintiffs and the owners of such Franchises and Liberties may have their challenges And if collusion be found the Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be amercied Copiholds I. Stat. 7 Jac. 21. Compositions made by Decrees in the Exchequer
and Duchie Chambers with the Kings Copihold tenants concerning their Copiholds within three years from the first day of this Parliament are confirmed saving the right of all others ☞ Cordwainers Curriers Tanners and Leather * I. Stat. 27 H. 8.14 None shall pack any Leather to be transported but by a Packer sworn in pain to forfeit the leather or the value thereof And every stranger shall pay for the custome of a Dicker of leather 4 s. 9 d. and a Denizon 4 s. 1 d. II. The Customers and Controllers shall name and appoint a Toller in every Port where none are and shall also give him his oath for the due execution of his Office in the presence of the Customer and Controller or their Deputie or Deputies III. The fee for tolling leather is for every Dicker of a stranger 6 d. whereof the Toller is to have 2 d. and the Communalty there the rest of a Denizon 4 d. to be divided betwixt the Toller and the Communalty and of a Free-man of the Port 2 d. IV. The Customers and Controllers shall also appoint and swear a Packer in every Port respectively who may put up in one pack as many Dickers under seven as the owner of the leather pleaseth and his fee is 4 d. a pack V. If the Packer pack any leather before it be tolled and entred by the Customer or his Deputy or pack more then shall be entred he shall forfeit for every such offence 5 l. and suffer imprisonment at the King's pleasure and if the Toller number any leather in the absence of the Customer Controller or his or their Deputy or Deputies he shall forfeit five marks VI. If any stranger or his Factor convey any leather from one Port to another with an intent to transport it also afterwards from the second Port he shall cause the same to be Tolled entred and packed at the second Port and shall have a certificate thereof from the Customer there in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof VII None having a tanne-Tanne-house shall transport any leather without the King's licence in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof VIII These forfeitures shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX This Act shall not prohibit a Captain of a Ship of the King 's in time of war nor the owner nor Master of a Ship bound for a voyage to take salt hides with them so they exceed not the number of 18 Also untanned hides of beasts killed in Wales or the Marches may be transported notwithstanding this Act except by one keeping a tanne-Tanne-house * X. Stat. 5 E. 6.15 None shall buy or ingross leather to the intent to sell the same again in pain to forfeit the same leather or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor or seisor XI This Statute shall not restrain Girdlers or other Artificers to sell their necks wombs or shreds nor the buying of so much leather as the party which buyes it hath license to transport XII None shall transport any Shoes Boots Buskins Start-ups or Slippers in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor or seisor XIII No Girdler or other cutter of leather shall curry it in his own house in pain to forfeit the same to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * XIV Stat. 1 M. Parl. 2.8 No Artificer using the Mysterie of leather-buying shall buy any leather and sell the same again to be transported in pain to forfeit the same to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XV. No Curriers in London shall use their own stuff in pain to forfeit the leather otherwise curried XVI No Currier shall curry any hides betwixt St. James-tide and the Ladie-day but onely such as have been sufficiently dipped twice in the pan in pain to forfeit the same to be divided as aforesaid XVII A Currier shall dress his leather within the space of five days in Summer and of ten days in Winter in pain to forfeit to the party grieved for every hide otherwise dressed 10 s. * XVIII Stat. 5 El. 22. None shall make any Pelts viz. pull or take away any wool from any Sheep or Lamb-skins or buy any kind of Stag Hind Buck Doe Goat Fawn or Kid or the pelts of any of them unless they make thereof tawed or leather lawfully tanned or parchment or otherwise convert the same into semits pannels or other their own necessary uses in pain to forfeit the value of such skins and 2 s. 6 d. for every skin otherwise used * XIX Stat. 18 El. 6. None shall ship any leather tallow or raw hides except Scotch hides according to the proviso of 5 El. 8. now repealed by 1 Ja. 22. in pain to forfeit the same and the treble value and the owner of the ship knowing the same to forfeit his ship and the furniture thereof and the Master thereof also knowing the same to forfeit all his goods and to suffer one year's imprisonment without bail The forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XX. If the Owner Master or Mariner within 3 moneths after his knowledge thereof or at his return into England shall upon oath discover it bona fide to one of the Barons of the Exchequer either of the Lords Presidents or an head-officer of the Port where he lands and afterwards shall be ready to justifie it he shall be thereupon excused XXI He that transports any Leather Tallow or raw hides otherwise then according to the aforesaid proviso shall pay by the name of Subsidie 10 s. for every hide 3 s. 1 d. for every dozen of Calfs-skins and 6 s. 8 d. for every 100 weight of Tallow XXII The Customers c. shall be accountable to the Queen for the said subsidie and shall pay the same unto her upon the pain contained in 3 H. 6.3 * XXIII Stat. 1 Jac. 22. None shall gash any Hide in pain of 20 d. nor water them except in June July and August nor put them to sale being putrefied in pain to forfeit for every Hide so watered or put to sale 3 s. 4 d. XXIV None shall kill any Calves under five weeks old in pain to forfeit for every Galf so killed 6 s. 8 d. * XXV No Butcher shall exercise the mysterie of a Tanner in pain of 6 s. 8 d. for every day he so continues both professions XXVI None shall be Tanners but such as have served seven years as Apprentices or hired servants in that Trade or the Widow or children of a Tanner having a Tanne-fat left them and having been brought up in that Profession by the space of four years in pain to forfeit all the leather they tanne or the full value thereof XXVII None that useth the cutting or working of Leather shall be a Tanner in pain to forfeit all the Leather he tannes or the value thereof XXVIII None shall buy any rough Hides
or Calf-skins in the hair but onely such as do or may lawfully tanne them except salt Hides for the necessary use of Ships in pain to forfeit them or the just value Neither shall any forestall Hides but buy them in open Fair or Market except of such as kill beasts for their own provision in pain to forfeit for every Hide otherwise bought 6 s. 8 d. XXIX None shall buy any tanned Leather unwrought but onely such as will and shall convert the same into made wares XXX This Act shall not restrain Artificers from buying tanned Leather every Monday at Leaden-hall to be converted into made wares being first duly searched sealed and registred as hereafter is limited nor Girdlers or Sadlers from selling their necks or shreds of tanned red Leather XXXI The Tanner that over-limes his Hides or useth in his tanning any thing save Ash-bark Oak-bark Tapwort Malt Meal Lime Culver-dung or Hen-dung or suffers them to be frozen or to be parched with fire or Sun or tannes such as are rotten by long lying or otherwise or continues not utter-sole Leather twelve moneths in the woozes and upper Leathers 9 moneths or doth negligently work his Hides in the woozes not renewing and strengthening them as often as need shall require or doth work them in any other sort then is by this Statute limited shall forfeit every Hide so tanned and put to sale or the full value thereof XXXII No Tanner shall by mixtures raise any Hide for sole-Leather which shall not be fit for that use in pain of forfeiting the same XXXIII None shall put to sale any tanned Leather red and unwrought but in open Fair or Market unless the same hath been searched and sealed in some Fair or Market before neither shall any offer to sell any such Leather before it be searched and sealed in pain to forfeit for every Hide otherwise put to sale 6 s 8 d. and for every dozen of Calf-skins or Sheep-skins 3 s. 4 d. besides the Hides and Skins themselves or the full value thereof XXXIV None shall put to sale any Leather insufficiently tanned or dried in pain to forfeit the whole or at least so much as shall be so misused XXXV No Tanner shall hasten the tanning of his Leather by giving it unkind heats with hot wooze or otherwise in pain of 10 l. and to stand upon the Pillorie three days in the next Market XXXVI None shall buy or ingross Bark to the intent to fell the same again in pain to forfeit it or the value thereof neither shall any fell Oak-trees apt for Barking where Bark is worth 2 s. the Cart-load Timber for the necessary repair of houses Ships and Mills excepted but onely betwixt the first of April and the last of June in pain to forfeit the trees otherwise felled or the double value of the same XXXVII Purveyors of trees for the King's use shall fell them onely in barking time except for the present repair of the King's Houses or Ships and shall take no more thereof from the owner then what may serve the King's present occasion in pain to forfeit to the party grieved for every tree and for the lop top or bark of every tree taken contrary to this Act 40 s. And it shall be lawfull for the owner to retain the lop top and bark of every such tree XXXVIII A Currier shall not curry a Hide or skin which is not sufficiently tanned and dried and that in his own house situate in some Corporate or Market-town and not elsewhere neither shall he gash or other way spoil or impair them but work them sufficiently in all points in pain to forfeit for every Skin or Hide so spoiled otherwise then by gashing in shaving them 6 s. 8 d. besides the value of the same Skin or Hide and for gashing them to forfeit to the party grieved twice so much as he impairs them thereby XXXIX No Artificer within London or three miles distance from it shall put any leather to be curried save onely to some person free of the Company of Curriers in London in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof XL. None within the foresaid Jurisdiction of London shall use or put into made wares any curried leather before the same be searched and sealed in pain to forfeit for every Hide or Skin 6 s. 8 d. and also the value of every such Hide or Skin XLI A Currier shall not use the Art of a Tanner Cordwainer Shoe-maker Butcher or of any other Artificer which useth the cutting of leather in pain to forfeit for every Hide or Skin he currieth during that time 6 s. 8 d. XLII No Currier sufficient stuff being tendred unto him shall refuse sufficiently to curry leather within eitht days in Summer and sixteen days in Winter after he shall or may take it in hand in pain to forfeit for every Hide or piece of leather not curried accordingly 10 s. XLIII The Wardens of the Company of Curriers or officers by them appointed shall within one day after request made unto them search and seal leather curried for which the Currier shall pay after the rate of 1 d. for every Dicker of hides and as much for every six dozen of Calf-skins And the Currier shall forfeit for every hide not searched and sealed as aforesaid 6 s. 8 d. XLIV Shoe-makers shall make their Boots c. of good and sufficient stuff sew them well and not put them to sale upon Sundays in pain to forfeit for every such default or offence 3 s. 4 d. and also the full value of all wares otherwise made or sold XLV The Masters and the Wardens of the Company of Shoemakers Curriers Girdlers and Sadlers within the Jurisdiction of London aforesaid or the more part of them shall once every quarter or oftener if need require make search and view of all wares made of tanned leather in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every year's default to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and shall also have power to seize all insufficient wares found upon search XLVI The said Masters and Wardens shall onely search the wares of such as are of their own professions and Coach-makers shall be under the survey and search of the Company of Sadlers XLVII The Mayor and Aldermen of London shall within the said jurisdiction and upon the like pain of 40 s. to be imployed as aforesaid chuse and swear 8 expert men out of some of the four Companies abovesaid to be searchers and sealers of all tanned leather there whereof one shall be assigned to keep the seal XLVIII Head-officers in Corporate and Market-towns and Lords of Liberties shall yearly in all other parts of the Kingdome upon the like pain of 40 s. to be imployed as aforesaid appoint and swear two three or more honest and skilful men to be searchers and sealers of leather who shall have power to seal sufficient wares and likewise to seize and retain such as be insufficient untill they shall
be tried by triers to be hereafter appointed by this Act. XLIX There shall be appointed six triers of insufficient leather and leather-wares which shall be seized within the said jurisdiction of London and when any such leather or wares are seized within any other jurisdiction the chief Officer or Lord of the Liberty or his Deputy shall cause triall thereof to be made by the oath of six honest men upon some Market-day and within fifteen dayes after such seisure made L. The Lord Mayor of London and the head Officer and Lord or Deputy aforesaid shall appoint triers in their several jurisdictions in pain of 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and these triers shall do their duties in that Office without delay in pain to forfeit for every default 5 l. LI. Four of the triers in London shall be yearly changed and other four placed in their rooms and none shall continue in that Office there above two years and if any happen to be trier two years together he shall not be chosen again within three years after in pain to forfeit for every moneth he continues otherwise in that Office 10 l. LII No searcher or sealer of leather shall refuse within convenient time to do his office or allow any wares which are sufficient in pain of 40 s. and shall not take bribes or exact more then due fees in pain of 20 l. nor being lawfully elected shall refuse the office in pain of 10 l. LIII All red tanned leather which shall be brought within the aforesaid jurisdiction of London shall be carried to Leaden-hall before it be housed and there searched sealed and registred by the Officers aforesaid for which if it were sealed before out of the said jurisdiction they shall take half fees onely LIV. None shall sell any tanned leather within the aforesaid jurisdiction of London before the Officers there have searched and sealed it in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof LV. None shall withstand the searchers and sealers in the due execution of their Office nor the seizing of insufficient wares in pain of 5 l. LVI The abovesaid searchers and sealers shall register all tanned leather sold in Fairs or Markets together with the prices thereof and the names and dwelling-places of the buyer and seller being thereunto required by the said buyer and seller taking as well of the buyer as the seller 2 d. for every ten hides backs or buts of leather and 2 d. for every six dozen of Calf-skins or Sheep-skins and no more LVII None shall sell any tanned leather red and unwrought before it be registred in pain to forfeit the value thereof LVIII None shall buy any tanned leather before it be searched and sealed nor carry it out of the Fair or Market before it be registred in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof LIX The Currier within the jurisdiction of London aforesaid which currieth not his leather sufficiently and every other Artificer there using tanned and curried leather which putteth into his wares leather insufficiently tanned or curried shall forfeit for every such default the said wares and the just value thereof LX. No such Artificer shall fell any wares but in open Shop Fair or Market where due search may be made in pain to forfeit the wares otherwise sold and besides ten shillings for every such offence LXI Here the summes of money aforesaid forfeited shall be divided into three parts whereof the King is to have one the prosecutor another and the City Corporation or Lord of the Liberty the third LXII The value of the wares forfeited within the jurisdiction of London after praisement shall also be divided into three parts whereof one shall be given to the seisor another to the Chamber of London and the third to the poor And in all other places one third part to charitable uses another to the Head-Officer or Lord of the Liberty and the third to the seisor or seisors for his or their pains LXIII None shall buy any forfeited wares to sell them again in pain to forfeit for every parcell thereof 3 s. 4 d. LXIV This Act shall not prejudice the authority of the Universities so that their Officers observe the provision of this Act under the penalties therein contained LXV The Hides or Skins of Oxe Steer Bull Cow Calf Deer Goats and Sheep being tanned or tawed and salt Hides are reputed Leather within the letter of this Statute ☞ LXVI Justices of Assize or Gaol-delivery and of Peace Stewards of Leets the Mayor of London and Head-Officers within their several Precincts have power to hear and determine these offences LXVII The King's Steward of a Leet or Liberty shall have the the same authority and be subject to the same penalties that a Lord of a Leet hath and is subject to LXVIII It shall be lawfull for all Artificers save onely Shoemakers between September and the twentieth of April to use dry curried and frised leather being well tanned according to this Act. LXIX This Act shall not extend to Wales LXX If any Customer or other such Officer having notice of the transporting of any leather do not use his best endeavor to seize it or being transported do not disclose it within fourty days he shall forfeit for the first default 100 l. and for the second lose his place And every such Officer for making a false certificate of the arrivall of any leather shall also forfeit 100 l. LXXI This Act shall not extend to Scotch Hides brought to Barwick LXXII Licenses to dispense with the offences prohibited by this Act shall be void LXXIII Stat. 4 Jac. 6. There shall be no penalty for housing buying or selling Sheep-skins unsealed LXXIV None shall sell tanned leather by weight in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwen the King and the prosecutor See Title Leather ☞ Corn and Grain ●● Stat. 5 Eliz. 12. None but a married man and housholder of the age of 30 years at least shall take upon him to be a Badger Lader Kidder Carrier Buyer or Transporter of Corn or Grain Butter and Cheese neither he without licence in open Sess of the County where he hath dwelt by the space of three years before under the hands and seal of at least three Justices 1. Qu. in pain of 5 l. which licence shall remain in force for one year onely from the date thereof and all licenses otherwise granted shall be void ☞ II. The Justices of Peace in Sessions shall at their discretions take recognisances of Badgers c. that they shall not forestall or ingross or put in practice any Act contrary to 5 and 6 E. 6.14 III. The Clerk of the Peace shall write and enter the license and recognisance and his fees shall be viz. for writing the license 12 d. for writing the recognisance 8 d. and for entring them both into a Register-book 4 d. which Book he shall bring to every Sessions IV. This
accomplished the age of 16 years doth still continue a Recusant his lands shall not be freed until he do conform and take the Oath of Supremacy as aforesaid XCIII A third part of every Recusant's lands shall remain clear unto him from seizure or extent and the other two parts shall remain in the King's hands both before and after the Recusant's death until the King shall be fully satisfied all the arrearages for the 20 l. a moneth according to 23 El. 1. * XCIV None shall send any child or other person under their government beyond the Seas to be instructed in the Popish Religion in pain of 100 l. and they which are so sent shall be incapable as to themselves onely of any grant or inheritance due unto them or to others for their use * XCV If a woman or child under the age of 21 years be suffered to pass the Seas without the license of the King or of six of the Privy Council under their hands except Sailors Ship-boys or Merchants Factors or Apprentices the Officers of the ●orts shall forfeit their Offices and all their goods the owner of the Ship his Ship and Tackle and every Master or Mariner of or in the Ship all their goods and also suffer a year's imprisonment without bail * XCVI None out of the Universities shall keep School except a Free-School or in some person's house that is no Recusant or by license of the Bishop or Ordinary in pain to forfeit 40 s. a day XCVII The forfeitures of this Act shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * XCVIII Stat. 3 Jac. 4. A Recusant that conforms shall within one year after and so once every year at least receive the blessed Sacrament in pain to forfeit for the first year 20 l. for the second 40 l. and for every default after 60 l. And if after he hath received it he make default therein by the space of a whole year he shall forfeit 60 l. XCIX These forfeitures may be recovered before Justices of Peace in Sessions or in any other Court of Record and are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor C. The Church-wardens and Constables of every Parish or one of them or if there be none such then the High Constable of the Hundred there shall present once every year at the general Sessions of Peace the monethly absence from Church of every Popish Recusant and their children being above the age of nine years and their servants together with the age of their children as near as they can know them in pain to forfeit respectively for every such default 20 s. Which presentment the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk shall record without fee in pain of 40 s. CI. If upon such presentment being the first the Recusant be convicted the Officer that presents him shall have 40 s. to be levied by warrant upon the Recusant's goods and estate as the more part of the Justices of Peace shall think fit CII Justices of Assize Gaol-delivery and Peace have power to hear and determine of all Recusants and offences as well for not receiving the Sacrament according to this Act as also for not coming to Church according to former Laws and likewise to make Proclamation that they shall tender themselves to the Sheriff or Bailiff of the Liberty where they are before the next Assize Gaol-delivery or Sessions respectively which if they do not that default being recorded shall be taken for as sufficient a conviction of them as a trial by verdict CIII Every offender not repairing to Church as aforesaid after their first conviction shall pay into the Checquer in such of the Terms of Easter and Michaelmas as shall happen next after such conviction the summ then due for the forfeiture of 20 l. a moneth and yearly after that in the same Terms according to the rate of 20 l. a moneth except where the King shall be pleased to take two third parts of their lands and leases in lieu thereof or that they conform themselves and come to Church CIV Every conviction shall before the end of the Term next following be certified into the Exchequer in such convenient certainty that the Court may thereupon award process for the seizure of all the offender's goods and two parts of his lands and leases in case the 20 l. a moneth be not paid as aforesaid CV The King may refuse 20 l. a moneth and take two third parts of his lands and leases but here he shall not include the Recusant's mansion-Mansion-house nor demise his two parts to a Recusant or to any other for a Recusant's use And the King's Lessee for his two parts shall give such security against committing of waste as by the Court of Exchequer shall be thought sufficient CVI. It shall be lawful for the Bishop of the Diocess or two Justices of the Peace 1. Qu. out of Sess to tender the Oath hereafter following to any person eighteen years old or above except noble men and noble women which stand convicted or indicted of Recusancy hath not received the Sacrament twice in the year next before or passing through the Country and examined upon oath confesseth or at least denieth not that he or she is a Recusant or that he or she hath not received the Sacrament twice in the year next before which Bishop or Justices shall certifie the name and dwelling of the person so taking the same oath at the next Ses where the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk shall record them CVII If the parties refuse to answer upon oath or to take the oath aforesaid tendred unto them the Bishop or Justice aforesaid shall binde them over to the next Ass or Sess where if they again refuse it they shall incur a Praemunire except women covert who in that case shall onely suffer imprisonment till they take it The Tenor of the Oath is as followeth CVIII 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 Majesty's 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 of any of his Majesty's Kingdoms or Dominions or to authorize any forein Prince to invade or annoy him or his Countries or to discharge any of his Subjects of their allegiance or obedience to his Majesty or to give licence or leave to any of them to bear arms raise tumults or to offer any violence or hurt to his Majesty's Royal person state or government or to any of his Majesty's Subjects within his Majesty's Dominions Also I do swear from my heart that notwithstanding any Declaration or Sentence of Excommunication or Deprivation made or granted or to be made or granted by the Pope or his
successours or by any authority derived or pretended to be derived from him or his See against the said King his heirs or successors or any absolution of the said Subjects from their obedience I will bear faith and true allegiance to his Majesty and him and them will defend to the uttermost of my power against all conspiracies and attempts whatsoever which shall be made against his or their persons their Crown and dignity by reason or colour of any such Sentence or Declaration or otherwise and will do my best endeavour to disclose and make known unto his Majesty his heirs and successours all treasons and traitorous conspiracies which I shall know or hear of to be against him or any of them And I do further swear that I do from my heart abhor detest and abjure as impious and heretical this damnable Doctrine and Position That Princes which be excommunicated or deprived by the Pope may be deposed or murthered by their Subjects or any other whatsoever And I do believe and in my conscience am resolved That neither the Pope nor any person whatsoever hath power to absolve me of this Oath or any part thereof which I acknowledg by good and full authority to be lawfully ministred unto me and do renounce all pardons and dispensations to the contrary And all these things I do plainly and sincerely acknowledge and swear according to the express words by me spoken and according to the plain and common sense and understanding of the same words without any equivocation or mental evasion or secret reservation whatsoever And I do make this recognition and acknowledgment heartily willingly and truly upon the true faith of a Christian So God me help CIX Unto this Oath the party taking it shall subscribe his name or mark CX No Indictment against a Recusant shall be reversed for lack of form other then by direct traverse to the point of not coming to Church or not receiving the Sacrament as aforesaid CXI The party conforming himself shall from thenceforth be admitted to discharge or reverse an Indictment CXII None shall go out of this Realm to serve any forein Prince or State without first taking the Oath aforesaid in pain to be adjudged a felon And if he have born office amongst Souldiers before his departure out of the Realm he shall enter into Bond unto the King's use with the Condition following upon like pain of being adjudged a felon The Condition is this CXIII That if the within bounden c. shall not any time then after be reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome nor shall enter into nor consent unto any practice plot or conspiracy whatsoever against the King's Majesty his heirs and successors or any his or their estate or estates Realms or Dominions but shall within convenient time after knowledge thereof had reveal and disclose to the King's Majesty his heirs and successors or some of the Lords of his or their honorable privy Council all such practices plots and conspiracies That then the said Obligation to be void CXIV None but the Customer and Controller of a Port or their deputies shall have power to take such bond or to minister the Oath in such case for which bond they shall onely take 6 d. and nothing for the Oath and shall once every year certifie into the Exchequer every such bond in pain of 5 l. and every such oath in pain of 20 s. CXV To absolve or withdraw any of the King's Subjects from their natural obedience to his Majesty to reconcile them to the Pope or See of Rome or to move them to promise obedience to any pretended authority of the See of Rome or to any other Prince or State or to be absolved withdrawn reconciled or to make promise as aforesaid shall be adjudged High Treason CXVI This last clause shall not extend to any reconciled as aforesaid for and touching the point of so being reconciled onely that shall return into this Realm and within six days after before the Bishop of the Diocess or two Justices of Peace jointly or severally of the County where he shall arrive submit himself to the King and his Laws and take the Oath of Supremacy and also the Oath abovesaid which said Oaths the said Bishop and Justices respectively shall by this Act have power to minister to such persons and shall certifie them in at the next General Sessions in pain of 40 l. CXVII Here the trial of Treason shall be before Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery of that County for the time being and may also be before the Justices of the King's Bench but Peers in this case shall be tried by their Peers CXVIII If any person repaireth not every Sunday to some Church or Chappel proof thereof being made to a Justice of Peace by the partie 's own confession or the evidence of one witness the same Justice hath power to call the party before him and if the party give not the Justice a good reason of his absence the Justice may give warrant to the Church-wardens of the Parish under his hand and seal to levy 12 d. for every such default by distress and sale of goods and in default of distress the Justice may commit the offender to prison until he pay the forfeiture aforesaid which shall be imployed for the use of the poor but this offence must be prosecuted within one moneth after it is committed and none punished by this Law shall also be punished by the forfeiture of 12 d. upon the Stat. of 1 Eliz. 2. Which see in Sacrament CXIX None shall keep or retain any person in their house servant or other which shall forbear to come to Church by the space of a moneth together in pain to forfeit 10 l. for every moneth they so keep them Howbeit children may relieve their father or mother and Guardians their Wards or Pupils CXX The Sheriff upon a lawful Writ may justifie to break an house for the taking of a Recusant excommunicate CXXI The Justices of the King's Bench and Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery may hear and determine all the offences committed against this Act and so may Justices of Peace all save Treason CXXII The offences made felony by this Act shall not cause loss of Dower corruption of bloud or disherison of heirs CXXIII Here if an Action shall be brought against an Officer for the execution of this Act he may plead the general issue and yet give special matter in evidence CXXIV This Act shall not abbridge the jurisdiction of Ecclesiastical censures CXXV None shall be punished for his wife's offence neither shall any married woman be chargeable with any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act. CXXVI Six of the Privy Council whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer or Principal Secretary shall be one have power to minister the Oaths abovesaid to noble men being 18 years old and to noble women also of the like age and unmarried who shall take the same Oaths accordingly in
Merchants Subjects natural 4 l. 10. By Aliens and strangers 6 l. Into other Ports by Subjects 3 l. By Aliens 4 l. 10 s. 2. Muskadels Malmseys Cates Tents Alicants Bastards Sacks Canariees Malligoes Maderoes and all other sweet wines by Subjects natives brought into the Port of London the Tun 2 l. 5 s. By Stangers and Aliens 3 l. Into other Ports by native Subjects 1 l. 10 s. Ry Aliens and strangers 2 l. 5 s. XXVIII Poundage viz. 12 d. in the pound of all Merchandise goods according to the Book of Rates except Woollen clothes made in England called old Draperies Wines paying Tunnage Fish English taken and brought in English bottoms and all fresh fish and Bestial and all goods mentioned in the Book of Rates to be Custom free 12 d. per l. Of all Woollen broad clothes exported after the rate of each 64. in weight and so proportionably by subjects 3 s. 4 d. By Strangers Aliens 6 s. 8 d. For not paying of which the goods and merchandise shall be forfeit one moiety of the rate hereof to the King the other moiety to the Informer that shall seise or sue for the same XXIX Such as have their goods taken by Pyrates or perished at Sea being born Denizens may upon proof there before the Lord Treasurer or Baron of the Exchequer ship so many more goods of the same value without custom And herrings fish may be transported in English bottoms custom free XXX No rates can be set upon merchandise of Subjects or Alien but by common consent in Parliament The Rates intended by this Act agreed by the Common's house of Parliament and signed by the Speaker XXXI For goods above 5 l. value the Custom officers shall take such Fees and no other as were taken in the 4th year of King James untill they shall be otherwise setled by Parliament XXXII Iron armes Bandiliers Bridle-Bitts Halbert-heads and Shaps Holsters Muskets Carbines Fowling-pieces Pistols Pike-heads Sword or Rapier blades Saddles Snaffels Stirops Calve-skins dressed or undressed Geldings Oxen Sheep-skins dressed without the wool and all sorts of manufactures made of leather may be transported paying the Rates by this act appointed and no other XXXIII Goods when they are at the prices following may be transported viz. Gunpowder when the barrel exceeds not 5 l. Wheat when at the time of the lading the quarter exceeds not 2 l. Rie Beans and Peace 1 l. 4 s. Barly and Malt 1 l. Oats 16 s. Bacon the pound 6 d. Butter the barrell 4 l. 10 s. Cheese the hundred 1 l 10 s. Candles the dozen pound Paying the Rates appointed and no more 5 s. XXXIV Provided the King by Proclamation may at any time prohibit the transporting Gunpowder Armes and Ammunition XXXV Above the Rates aforesaid there shall be paid to the King of every Tun of Wine of the growth of France Germany Portugal or Mader a brought into London or elsewhere 3 l. within four moneths after importing and all other Wines 4 l. within nine moneths after importing and the importers shallgive security for the same and if the said wines be exported within 12 moneths the said additional duty shall be repayed and security discharged as to so much exported all Impost of Excise discharged And Prisage to pay no Custom See Title Ships LXVIII Who shall pay double Aliens Customes XXXVI Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 19. For preventing frauds and concealments of Customs If any person shall land and convey away any goods for which Tunnage and Poundage ought to be paid without entry or agreement for the Custom upon oath hereof made before the Lord Treasurer Baron of the Exchequer or Magistrate of the Port where the offence is committed or place next adjoyning thereunto they may grant warrant to search for the said goods and in case of resistance in the day time to break open any house and seize and secure the said goods so as the same be within one moneth after the supposed offence committed XXXVII In case of false information the party injured may recover his full dammages and costs and this Act to continue unto the end of the first Session of the next Parliament and no longer XXXVIII Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. An Act for the preventing and punishing fraudes and violences used to avoid the King's Customes and for regulating abuses therein See the Statute at large ☞ Customs and Usages I. Stat. 31 H 8.3 The Mannors c. of Thomas Lord Crommel and others within the County of Kent Leing Gavelkind land shall hereafter descend as lands at the Common Law ☞ Custos Rotulorum I. Stat. 37 H. 8.1 None shall be Custos Rotulorum but such as shall have a Bill signed by the King's hand for the same which shall be warrant for the Lord Chancellor to put and continue him in the Commission to be Custos Rotulorum until the King shall appoint another II. The Custos Rotulorum may execute that Office by a Deputy learned in the Laws and able to supply that place III. The Custos Rotulorum shall have power to appoint the Clerk of the peace who may also execute it by a sufficient Deputy approved by the Custos Rotulorum IV. This Act shall not inhibit the Arch-bishop of York the Bishop of Durham the Bishop of Ely and all others having lawfull power by the grant of the King or his Progenitors to make Custos Rotulorum within their several jurisdictions to use the same liberty which they had before V. Stat. 3. 4 E. 6.1 The Lord Chancellor or Keeper shall appoint the Custos Rotulorum in every County of England Wales and other the King's Dominions who may execute his Office by himself or by his Deputy Howbeit the power of others is saved who have power to name the Custos Rotulorum Days in Bank I. Stat. DE Anno Bissextili 21 H. 3. The day increasing in the Leap-year and the day next going before shall be accounted for one day and this was done to avoid the doubt of the year and day that were wont to be assigned to sick persons being impleaded to the end they might know when the Leap-year happened how to reckon their year and day II. Stat. 51 H. 3. If a Writ come in Utas Sancti Mich. Quinzime Mich. Tres Mich. Crastino Anim. Crastino Mart. Utas Martinì Quinzime Mart. Utas Hillarii Quindena Hillarii Crast Purif Utas Purific Quindena Paschae Tres Paschae Mense Paschae Quinque Paschae or Crast Ascens Utas Trin. Quindena Trin. or Crast S. Joh. B. Utas S. John Bapt. Quindena S. J. B. Day shall be given thereupon unto the Utas Sancti Hill Quinzime Hill Crastino Purif Quinzime Paschae Tres Paschae Mense Paschae Quinque Paschae Utas Trin. sometimes in Crast S. J. B. Crast Utas S. J. B. Quindena S. Jo. Bapt. Utas Mich. Quindena Mich. Tres Mich. Mense Michaelis Crast Anim. Crast Mart. Utas Mart. Quindena Mart. And so every Term shall answer to other
shall set a seal of lead thereunto shewing the true length thereof as they will hold being wet and in case of defect the Clothier shall forfeit the double value thereof to the buyer XCVII If the Clothier put any Clothes to sale before they be sealed by the Aulnager or order them not as aforesaid they shall be forfeited and divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XCVIII Broad cloth shall hold seven quarters in breadth betwix the lists being proved by the water and Kerseys one yard in pain of 3 s. 4 d. for that and 20 d. for this to be divided betwixt the King and Prosecutor XCIX This Statute shall not extend to sell clothes not exceeding seven Nobles the cloth nor to Tavestock Western Dozens Frizes Kendal's Cottons nor course clothes made for linings C. The Aulnager shall not seal clothes until they be sealed by the aforesaid seal of content in pain to lose his Office neither shall the buyer afterward alter them by shretching unless he after reduce them to the right content again in pain to forfeit the double value thereof to be divided as aforesaid * CI. Stat. 27 H. 8.13 Every white woollen cloth sold for 4 l. and under and every coloured cloth sold for 3. l. and under may be conveyed beyond Sea unbarbed unshorn and unrowed but none shall convey such clothes beyond Sea above these prices in pain to forfeit the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * CII Stat. 33 H. 8.3 Welsh clothes called Whites Russets and Kennets brought into Fairs or Markets to be sold shall be foulded in plights or cuttles and not hard rolled together in pain to forfeit the same to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * CIII Stat. 33 H. 8.19 None shall ship any white Woollen cloth above the value of 4 l. not coloured above 3. l. unrowed unbarbed or unshorn with an intent to convey it beyond Sea in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * CIV Stat. 3 4 E. 6.2 Every Clothier shall set his seal of lead to his cloth declaring the just length thereof to be tried by the water CV None shall stretch any cloth above a yard and an half in length and a quarter in bredth in pain of 40 s. CVI. None upon the said pain shall put to sale any cloth which being wet shall shrink above a yard and a quarter in length or a quarter in breadth neither shall Streats or Kerseys be stretched above a yard in length and half a quarter in bredth in pain of 20 s. CVII None shall put to sale any cloth Narrow Streat or Kersey the pieces whereof being wet shall shrink more then after the same rates in pain of 20 s. CVIII None shall dy any cloth before it be perfectly boiled grieved or maddered upon the Woad and well shot with good cork or orchal in pain of 20 s. CIX None shall dy any wooll to to be converted into cloth hats or caps before it be perfectly woaded boyled and maddered in pain to forfeit for every such cloth or so much wool as makes a cloth 40 s. neither shall any dy with brasil to make a false colour in cloth wool hats or caps in pain of 20 s. CX None shall put upon cloth any flocks chalk flour starch or other deceivable thing in pain of 40 s. CXI None shall use any iron cards or pickards in rowing of cloth in pain to forfeit the same and 20 s. besides CXII None shall sell any cloth by other measure then yard and inch according to the Statute of 6 H. 8.9 in pain to forfeit for every yard otherwise measured 6 s. 8 d. CXIII None shall put to sale within this Realm any cloth pressed in pain to forfeit the same or the value there of CXIV Justices of Peace and Head-officers shall in their several Precincts appoint and swear Overseers for the due observing of this Statute concerning the well ordering of cloth who shall have power to make search accordingly CXV The forfeitures for defaults in cloth mentioned in that Statute shall be recovered in any Court of Record and shall be divided betwixt the King and the Overseer that discovers them but in case the Overseers will not sue for them within half a year then may any other within another half year take the suit and shall have the overseers moiety CXVI No Overseer duely chosen shall refuse to execute that Office in pain of 40 s. and shall remain in the custody of the Sheriff until he pay it or give security for it and this shall be divided betwixt the King and the Justices of Peace or Head-officers that chose him CXVII The Overseers or two of them at least shall once every Quarter make due search for the true executing of this Statute in pain of 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor CXVIII None shall interrupt the Overseers in the due execution of their office in pain of 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the Overseers so interrupted CXIX None shall take advantage of the forfeitures given by this Act unless the suit for them be commenced within one year after they accrue CXX Every Clothier shall cause the letter E crowned to be wrought in every cloth in pain of 20 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor * CXXI Stat. 5 6 E. 6.6 Every broad cloth made in Kent Sussex or Reading or of like making with them being thorow wet shall contain in length betwixt 28 and 30 yards usuall measure and in breadth seven quarters throughout within the lists and being well scoured thicked milled and dried shall weigh 90 pounds at least CXXII Every white cloth made in Worcester Coventry or elsewhere of like making being wet shall contain in length betwixt 29 and 30 yards with inches of the Standard and seven quarters throughout in breadth betwixt the lists and being ordered as aforesaid shall weigh 84 pounds at least and every coloured cloth there shall contain like length and breadth and shall weigh 80 pounds at least CXXIII White short Worcesters shall contain in length being wet betwixt 23 and 25 yards with inches as aforesaid and in breadth as aforesaid and shall weigh 60 pounds at least CXXIV Coloured long clothes made in Suffolk Norfolk Essex and elsewhere of like sort shall contain in length being wet betwixt 20 and 30 yards and inches and in breadth 7 quarters and shall weigh 80 pounds at least and coloured short clothes there and elsewhere shall contain in length betwixt 23 and 25 yards and the breadth aforesaid and shall weigh 64 pounds at least Also coloured or white Handy-warps there and elsewhere shall be of like breadth and every yard thereof shall weigh three pounds CXXV All Whites and reds in Wilts Glocester-shire and Somerset and elsewhere of like making being wet shall contain in length betwixt 26 and 28
yards and seven quarters in breadth and weigh being white 64 pound but coloured 60 pounds at least also Plunkets Azures Blues and other coloured clothes made there and elsewhere shall contain in length betwixt 25 and 28 yards be of the same breadth and shall weigh 88 pounds CXXVI Ordinary Kerseys shall contain in length betwixt 17 and 18 yards and shall weigh 20 pounds and sorting Kerseys shall have equal length but shall weigh 13 pounds CXXVII The length of Devonshire Kerseys called Douseins shall be betwixt 12 and 13 yards and their weight 14 pounds CXXVIII The length of Broad clothes called Tauntons Bridgwaters and the like shall be betwixt 12 and 13 yards and their breadth 7 quarters And every narrow cloth made there or elsewhere of like sort shall contain in length betwixt 24 and 25 yards and in breadth one yard and shall weigh 34 yards CXXIX Check Kerseys and Streats shall contain in length betwixt 17 and 18 yards and in breadth one yard and shall weigh 24 pounds CXXX Frizes in Wales and elsewhere of like making ready for sale and wet shall contain 36 yards at most in length and three quarters in breadth and shall weigh 48 pounds and every half piece after the same rate CXXXI Northern Clothes shall be betwixt 23 and 25 yards long and 7 quarters broad and shall weigh 6 pounds CXXXII Douseins shall be betwixt twelve and thirteen yards long and seven quarters broad and shall weigh thirty three pounds CXXXIII Pennystones and Forest Whites shall be betwixt 12 and 13 yards long and six quarters and an half broad and shall weigh 28 pounds CXXXIV Manchester Lancashire and Cheshire Cottons shall be 22 yards long and three quarters broad and shall weigh 30 pounds CXXXV Manchester Ruggs or Frizes shall be 36 yards long three quarters broad shall not be stretched above a nail and shall weigh 48 pounds CXXXVI If any put to sale any of the broad clothes abovesaid not of the due lengh breadth or weight abovesaid they shall forfeit for every cloth defective or exceeding in length or breadth 40 s. and for every pound it wants not exceeding four 2 s. the pound and if it want more then four they shall forfeit 40 s. CXXXVII Provided if broad cloth exceed the due length by reason of the fineness or stuffy making thereof the maker shall not incur any penalty thereby CXXXVIII If any put to sale any of the other clothes above specified not of due length breadth and weight as aforesaid they shall forfeit 20 s. CXXXIX None shall put any flocks or yarn made of lamb's wool into any of the abovesaid clothes in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof CXL None shall put any cloth or Kersey to sale before they have paid the Aulnager his due fee in pain of 20 s. CXLI No cloth shall be transported before the seals of the Aulnager and owner be put thereunto in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof ☞ CXLII No retailer of cloth shall put it to seal before he have tried it by water measure and weight and shall present the defect thereof to an Head-officer or two next Justices of Peace in pain to forfeit the double value thereof And the cloth found defective shall be divided into three parts whereof the King shall have one the prosecutor another and the Head-officer or two Justices the third CXLIII The Clothier shall repay to the buyer of faulty cloth his money again or otherwise satisfie him for the same in pain to forfeit to the party grieved the double value thereof CXLIV None shall stretch cloth above a yard in length and an half quarter in breadth in pain of 5 l. CXLV None shall use with his tentor any wrinch rope ring or other engine to strain or stretch cloth in pain of 20 l. CXLVI Two or more searchers of cloth shall be appointed in every place where cloth is made who being sworn shall have power to enter into all houses where cloth is made or wrought to make search whether the clothes are well dressed and pressed with the cold press and the moiety of all forfeitures therupon accruing shall the King have and the other shall be given to the use of the Commonalty or Town where the offence or default is committed or made CXLVII The party with whom such defective cloth is found shall recover dammages against the party that was the cause thereof by Action of debt c. CXLVIII The Head-officer of every Town shall prepare a seal of lead having the Arms and name of the Town printed thereupon which seal the searchers shall fix to every cloth well made and shall have for every seal so fixed 2 d. CXLIX If the searchers finde any faulty coloured cloth they shall at each end six another seal of lead having the letter F. printed thereupon and shall also in the list just against the fault set another mark of an inch compass to the end the buyer may readily discover where the fault is CL. If the searchers set the Town seal to cloth not sufficiently dressed the Corporations shall forfeit the value thereof CLI If the searchers set the Town-seal to faulty cloth or do not set the seal F. above expressed thereunto the Corporation shall forfeit 5 l. CLII. No retailer of cloth shall put it to sale unless the said Town-seal be fixed thereunto and shall keep it fixed at one end thereof untill it be all sold in pain to forfeit the value of such cloth CLIII The Corporation that appoints not such searchers shall forfeit 10 pounds And the searcher that refuseth to execute the Office shall forfeit 5 pounds to be divided betwixt the King and the Corporation and shall be in ward until he pay or give security for it CLIV. None shall press any cloth with the hot press nor in any other deceivable manner but onely with the cold press in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof CLV If any but persons authorized by this Act couterfeit set to or take away from any clothes any of the seals appointed by this Act he shall forfeit for the first offence being thereof convict by 12 men two witnesses or his own confession 10 l. and for the second shall stand upon the Pillory and forfeit all his goods and chattells to the King CLVI Euery Article in any Statute heretofore made concerning the making dying pressing searching or sealing any of the clothes above in this Act mentioned and being repugnant or contrariant to any Article of this Statue shall be void CLVII The forfeitures abovesaid not otherwise appointed shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor CLVIII Povided it shall not be lawful to boil wooll to be converted into cloth with gauls rinds bark or saw-dust in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be recovered and had as aforesaid CLIX. This Act shall not extendt to Devonshire-clothes called Tavestocks CLX Stat. 5 6 E. 6.8 No person
shall weave or make or put to weaving or making of broad woollen cloth unless he hath been seven years Apprentice to that Art CLXI Stat. 1 M. Parl. 2.7 Any person may make broad cloth and put them to weaving walking fulling dying and shearing without any impediment so that the cloth be duly made according to the Statute of 5 6 E. 6.6 notwithstanding the Statute of 5 6 E. 6.8 or any other Statute of Cloth-making made to the contrary * CLXII Stat. 2 3 P. M. 11. No Clothier in any Corporation or Market town shall keep in his house above one loom or let any loom or house and loom together to make profit thereby in pain to forfeit for every week he so keepeth or letteth them 20 s. CLXIII No Weaver in the said places shall keep above two looms in his house to make profit thereof in pain to forfeit for every week he keeps more 20 s. CLXIV A Weaver being no Cloth-maker shall not keep any Tucking-mill nor use the art of a Tucker Fuller or dyer in pain of 20 s. for every week CLXV No Tucker or Fuller shall have in his house any loom to make profit thereof in pain of 20 s. for every week CLXVI None shall make any broad white woollen clothes but in a Corporation Market town or other place where they have been made ten years before the making of this Act in pain of 5 l. for every cloth otherwhere made CLXVII No Weaver in a Corporation or Market-Town shall have above two Apprentices at one time in pain of 10 l. CLXVIII None shall be a Weaver but he who hath been seven years an Apprentice in that Art in pain of 20 l. CLXIX This Act shall not extend to the Counties of York Cumberland Northumberland nor Westmerland * CLXX Stat. 2 3 P. M. 12. No clothes called Bridgwater Taunton and Chard clothes and made in the County of Somerset shall be sold there before they be viewed searched and sealed in Bridgwater Taunton or Chard according to the Statute of 5 6 E. 6.6 in pain to forfeit the cloth so sold or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor CLXXI. Stat. 4 5 P. M. 5. White Worcesters and all others of like making being well scoured thicked milled and fully dried shall weigh 75 pounds CLXXII White clothes made in the Counties of Wilts Glocester and Somerset and all others of like making ordered as aforesaid shall weigh 61 pounds CLXXIII Broad clothes made in Kent Sussex and Reading and all others of like making ordered as abforesaid shall weigh 86 pounds CLXXIV Course short clothes made in Suffolk Norfolk Kent and Essex and others of like sort shall contain at the water 6 quarters and an half in breadth CLXXV Handy-warpes ordered as aforesaid shall contain the breadth ordained by the Statute of 5 6 E. 6.6 and shall weigh two pounds and an half CLXXVI None shall add handy-warplists to their clothes except in Worcester and when the warp thereof be spun upon the rock or distaff in pain to forfeit the cloth or the value thereof CLXXVII None in the west-riding of Yorkshire shall make any broad clothes Pewks Tawnies Violets or Greens except the wool thereof being first converted into yarn be first dyed blue of the value of two pence the pound in pain to forfeit such cloth or the value thereof CLXXVIII Ordinary Kerseys shall contain in length in the water betwixt 16 and 17 yards yard and inch and being ordered as aforesaid shall weigh 19 pounds the piece And sorting Kerseys so ordered shall weigh 22 pounds CLXXIX Devonshire Kerseys ordered as aforesaid shall weigh after the rate of one pound the yard CLXXX Welsh Cottons in the water shall contain 3 quarters of a yard in breadth and shall weigh one pound and an half the goad and being well cottoned shall weigh one pound at least CLXXXI No retailer of Cottons shall dress it himself or by any other save onely by a proper dresser thereof in pain to forfeit for every piece otherwise dressed 6 s. 8 d. CLXXXII Manchester Lancashire and Cheshire Cottens and Manchester Rugs and Frizes may be divided into two half pieces and shall contain in length and breadth as by the said Statute of 5 6 E. 6. is ordained for the whole piece CLXXXIII If any cloth or Kersie exceed the length prescribed by this or the said Statute of E. 6. then every yard so exceeding shall weigh according to the rate of the due length thereof in pain to forfet for every yard not weighing after that rate 5 s. and if any such cloth or kersie lack any of the due length the maker shall forfeit for every pound wanting more then 4 pounds 5 s. and for every pound under 4 pounds 2 s. CLXXXIV If any cloth or kersie prove defective or ill wrought the maker thereof shall fix to each end thereof a seal of lead engraven with this word Faulty in pain to forfeit such cloth and kersie or the value thereof CXXXV If any by himself or any other counterfeit set to or take away any seal appointed by this or the said Statute of E 6. he shall incurr such penalties as by the said Statute of E. 6. are limited CLXXXVI The Burrough or Corporation-seal shall be set to clothes c. being well made there which cloth so sealed shall not to be afterwards searched by the searcher of any other Corporation or Burrough CLXXXVII Clothes and Kerseys made out of Corporations shall be sealed in the Town corporate CLXXXVIII If any searcher or sealer set the Corporation-seal to any cloth c. defective in length weight or breadth appointed by this or that other Statute of E. 6. the Corporation shall forfeit the value thereof CLXXXIX The searchers and sealers may in the day-time enter into any house to search and try cloth c. and may seise clothes made of other colours then by the said Statute of E. 6. is appointed Friers-gray Crane-colour Purple and old Medley colours used to be made 20 years last past onely excepted CXC None shall deny or withstand the searcher or sealer in pain of 10 pounds CXCI. No searcher or sealer shall in any Fair or Market search any cloth c. which hath a Corporation-seal affixed thereunto CXCII Every clause in the said Statute of E. 6. not repugnant to this Act is confirmed CXCIII None shall incur any penalty or forfeiture of any offence limited by that Act which is mitigated or otherwise appointed by this CXCIV Every Clothier shall cause the letter M. crowned to be wrought in each cloth in pain to forfeit 20 s. for every cloth not so marked CXCV. None shall weave or make or put to weaving or making any cloth or kersie unless he hath been an Apprentice to or exercised that Art 7 years before in pain to forfeit it or the value thereof CXCVI. The penalties and forfeitures of this and the said Act of
whereof the Sheriff is answerable shall be writ in the annual roll and there shall be acquitted XXII Tailes already paid and not allowed but charged in the summons of the Exchequer shall after proclamation be delivered to the Sheriffs to be allowed upon their accounts and two faithful Knights in every County shall be present at the delivery of such Tails which shall be delivered by Indenture betwixt the Knights and the Sheriffs which Knights shall send their part to the Exchequer at the Sheriffs account And if the Tails be not so delivered as aforesaid the party failing shall be chargeable with the debt XXIII Inquisitors shall be appointed in every County what debts and what part thereof are paid and what not which Inquisitors shall certifie the persons convict to have received them and thereupon Examination thereof shall be made in the Exchequer and the Rolls rectified accordingly XXIV The Chamberlains of the Exchequer shall not make to Sheriffs or Bayliffs Tails or dividends unless they first receive of them writings concerning the particular summs of the actions of debts and the names of them that paid them unto which particulars he may put the names of such dividends which being so received under their seals they shall not be afterwards numbred into other particulars XXV When Nichils are returned by the Sheriff they shall be estreated into Rolls and delivered unto circumspect men to be inquired of as the Treasurer and Barons shall direct XXVI No suit shall be prosecuted in the Exchequer house unless it concern the King and his Officers there XXVII Stat. 37 E. 3.4 The Clerksof the Remembrance shall sit against the Clerk of the Pipe to take notice of and imbreviate all discharges in the Pipe to the end that process may thereupon cease also upon such discharge the summons of Pipe shall be withdrawn XXVIII Stat. 1 R. 2.5 All former Statutes made concerning the Officers of the Exchequer shall be firmly kept XXIX If any Officer there make out process for a debt already paid he shall lose his office be imprisoned and mak gree with the party at the discretion of the Treasurer and Barons XXX Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.9 Every person impeached in the Exchequer may plead there in his own discharge XXXI Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.11 Accounts in the Exchequer shall be heard made and ingrossed more speedily then they were wont XXXII Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.12 Two Clerks shall be assigned and sworn to make parcels of Accompts in the Exchequer and shall be recompenced for their pains as the Barons shall think fit XXXIII Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.13 No accounts of Nihil shall be admitted but upon oath and examination of the Officer who upon such oath shall be discharged thereof saving the Kings right XXXIV Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.14 The Clerk of the Pipe and the two Remembrancers shall be sworn to make due entry every term of all Writs for the discharge of any person And the Remembrancers shall also be sworn to make a Schedule every term of such as shall be so discharged and to deliver it to the Clerks of the Pipe to the end they may be also discharged in the great Roll and the Clerk of the Pipe shall also be sworn to require such Schedules and to deliver like Schedules to the Remembrancers of such as shall be discharged in his Office XXXV Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.15 If a Judgment of Livery given in any other Court shall be sent into the Exchequer the Remembrancer in whose office such accounts shall be demanded shall not issue new process thereupon but shall cause it to cease by an Indorsement upon the Writ XXXVI Stat. 5 R. 2. Stat. 1.15 The Clerk's fee for making of a Commission or Record of Nisi prius in the Exchequer shall be onely 2 s. XXXVII Stat. 13 R. 2. Stat. 1.14 Recognizances or bonds of the double made in the Exchequer for the King's debts shall be void Provided that the King be secured his duty the usual way XXXVIII Stat. 1 Jac. 26. Issues lost which by Queen Elizabeth's orders made in the fifteenth year of her Reign ought to be remitted shall from henceforth be discharged in the Exchequer XXXIX If the Treasurer's Remembrancer or any officer under him observe not the said orders they shall forfeit 20 l. to be sued for within two years and to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved XL. No process to do homage and fealty or fealty onely or writs of scire facias capias or distress for fines estreated out of the Common Pleas shall issue out of the Remembrancers office upon supposal onely upon the pains provided by former laws and orders of the Exchequer but it must be upon just ground and if it appear there that a tenure hath been traversed the process shall be dischared by such traverse without pleading XLI Upon the estreat of the original of the Chancery of the first granted of any lands holden in chief by Knight Service or Soccage in chief or of any licence or pardon of alienation Ouster le maine general or special livery or the inrolment of any of them process shall be made only for the services due thereupon and the parties shall be admitted without pleading paying the fine as hereafter is expressed XLII Here where the first tenant is returned Mort or Nihil habet then shall issue out a distring tenent for the tenant or tenants to do his or their service against whom after he or they are known process shall issue out every term with issues to be lost until they come in shew their entry make fine c. XLIII If a grantee of an inheritance or free-hold in lands holden in chief or by Knights service have a licence of Alienation and bring it to the Treasurers Remembrancer it shall be received and inrolled without plea so likewise shall a livery general or special or ouster le main XLIV Where any Writ of Reversion shall be made upon any Record for lands wherein the Prince is in Reversion the party upon shewing a Record testifying so much shall be discharged without plea. XLV Where two Mannors in one County have the same name if that of them be charged which ought not the issues out shall be saved and the party discharged without plea. XLVI Issues lost by any which are returned tenants of lands which they have not shall be discharged XLVII Issues lost upon a Ward under age shall be discharged so also shall those returned upon the Committee of a ward XLVIII Issues lost upon lands in the Queens hands by extent shall be discharged so also shall those returned upon tenants for life year or at will or upon tenants of lands in chief by extent XLIX Issues lost by untrue returns or misreturns by Sheriffs shall be discharged L. Issues lost upon any former grants of lands in chief and now not holden shall be discharged LI. Issues lost by being returned upon a Jury when the
the Jurors come where the party is seen in the Court Essoin Ultra mare lieth not where the party hath had before an Essoin de mal venir It lieth not where the party hath Essoined himself another day where the Sheriff was commanded to make the party to appear Essoin de servitio Regis lieth not where the party is a woman it lieth not in a Writ of Dower or because the plaintiff hath not found pledges it lieth not where such a man's Attorney was Essoined where the party hath an Attorney in his suit where the Essoiner confesseth that he is not in the Kings service where the sommons is not returned or the party not attached upon non est inventus returned where the party was before Essoined de servitio Regis had not put in his warrant where the party hath been resummoned in Assize of Mortdancester or Darrein presentment It lieth not because such a one is not named in the writ nor where the Sheriff hath a Precept to distrain the party to come by his lands and goods nor where the Bishop was commanded to cause the party to appear nor for that the day is past XIV An Essoin de servitio Regis is allowed after the Grand cape Petit cape and distresses taken upon the lands and goods XV. Stat. De visu terrae An essoin de servitio Regis lieth not in a writ of Novel disseisin Dower Darrein presentment or Appeal Vide Rast Essoin 13. Estrepement I. Glocester 13. 6 E. 1. No wast shall be made hanging a suit for the land ☞ Estreats I. West 1.44 5 E. 1. If tenant or defendant make default after the first attachment returned the great distress shall be awarded whereupon if the Sheriff make no sufficient return he shall be amerced but if the return be that he hath done execution delivered the issues to the sureties day shall be given him to return them before the Justices when if the party appear he shall have them but if not the King shall have them and the Justices shall cause them to be sent into the King's Wardrobe and then deliver them into the Exchequer and the Justices in Eyre to the Sheriff of the County where they plead and likewise of forreign Counties who shall be charged therewith by the Rolls of the Justices II. Stat. De forma mittendi extractus ad scaccarium 15 E. 2. Vide Rast Estreates 2. First all fines to have writs and all other fines wherein the sum is expressed of one County for the whole year which are to be sent into the Exchequer entred in the streat of themselves in one place in order as they are entred in the Chancery Rolls together with the date of the day when such fine was made III. Next to them shall be entred Charters Letters Patents and Commissions in which any rent is due to the King or any accompt is to be made Then homages fealties writs of Diem clausit extremum reliefs and services IV. Then the names of all such as shall be assigned that year to hear inquire of or do any thing whereby fine amerciament or other profit may arise to the King to the end they may be sent to for the Estreats thereof And in the end of the Estreat redisseisins and surcharging of pastures V. Statutum scaccarii is confirmed and it is further ordained that the Justices of both the Benches the Warden of the forrest the Steward of the King's house and the Clerk of the Market shall in like manner yearly deliver their Estreats in the Exchequer The Steward of the King's house shall also send his Estreats yearly at the close of Easter term and the next day after Michaelmas VI. The Warden also of the Alnage shall yearly deliver his Estrears to the Treasurer containing all defaults of cloth contrary to the Assize and the Price at which he delivered them and also where when and by what warrant VII Divers other provisions for the King's Butler and Customers concerning wines imported VIII Stat. 42 E. 3.9 The party chargeable by the Estreats of green wax upon payment thereof shall see the schedules themselves under seal and the charge being paid it shall be totred by the Sheriff for default whereof if the party be afterwards damnified the Sheriff shall pay him treble damages to be recovered before Justices of Peace or other Justices and shall besides make fine to the King Also where the copies of the Estreat concern franchises they shall be delivered to Bailiffs of the Franchises under the Sheriffs seal which Bailiffs shall render an account thereof in the Exchequer by the same Copies IX Stat. 7 H. 4.3 The Justices and Judges before whom Issues or amerciaments are forfeit shall charge the Clerks of the Estreats where they are so forfeit by oath to express in their Rols the cause of such forfeit the term when the nature of the writ whereupon and betwixt what parties they were lost and that as well in the King's suit as in the parties X. The Statute of 42 E. 3.9 confirmed Evidence I. Stat. Ja. An Action being brought against a Justice of Peace Major or Bailiff of a Corporation Head-borough Pottreeve Constable Tithing-man or Collector of subsidies or fifteens for any thing done by reason of their several offices both they and all their assistants may plead the general issue and yet give the special matter in evidence II. Here if the verdict pass for the defendant or the plaintiff be non-suit or discontinue his suit the defendant shall be allowed double costs to be recovered as costs in other cases given to the defendant use to be recovered III. Stat. 21 Ja. 12. The Statute of 7 Ja. 5. is confirmed and Churchwardens Sworn-men and Overseers of the poor together with their Assistants are to be comprehended within the purview of the same Statute IV. An Action brought against any of the said Officers there Deputies or Assistants shall be laid in the County where the fact was committed and not elsewhere Exception I. West 2.31 13 E. 1. When the Justices will not allow a Bill of exception upon Prayer if the party impleaded render the same unto them in writing and requires their seals thereunto they or one of them shall do it II. If the Exception sealed be not put into the Roll upon complaint thereof to the King the Justice shall be sent for and if he cannot deny the seal the Court shall proceed to judgment according to the exception Excise I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. There shall be paid to the King his heires and successors the several rates and impositions following viz. Every barrel of Beer or Ale above 6 s. the barrel brewed by common Brewers or persons commonly selling the same 15 d Every barrel of Beer or Ale under 6 s. by such common Brewers or Sellers 3 d. Every hogshead of Sider and Perry sold by retail and payable by the retailer 15 d. Every gallon of Metheglin or Mead sold
De Tallagio non concedendo Tempore E. 1. cap. 4. All persons shall have their laws liberties and free customs as largely as they have used to have them when they had them best And if any Statutes or Customs have been made or brought in by us or our Predecessors or if any article contained in this Charter be found contrary thereunto they shall be void VIII Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2.4 All Cities Burroughs and franchised Towns shall injoy all their franchises customs and usages as they ought and were wont to do IX Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 1. Holy Church shall have her liberties in quietness The great Charter and that of the Forest shall be holden in all points and the City of London and all other Cities and Burroughs shall injoy all their Franchises and Customs which they have reasonably had and used in times past X. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 3.1 All priviledges and franchises heretofore granted to the Clergy are confirmed and shall be holden in all points XI Stat. 6 R. 2. Stat. 1.1 The Church of England shall have all her liberties whole and unhurt and the same shall fully injoy and use XII Stat. 7 R. 2.1 Holy Church shall injoy all their liberties and franchises as she had them in the time of the King's Progenitors The like is granted in 2 R. 2.1 3 R. 2.1 5 R. 2.2.1 12 R. 2.1 1 H. 4.1 XIII Stat. 2 H. 4.1 The Church shall have her rights and liberties All Lords spiritual and temporal Cities Burroughs and Towns enfranchised shall injoy their liberties and franchises which they have lawfully used or have had by the grant of the King's predecessors Kings of England Vide 9 H. 4.1 13 H. 4.1 3 H. 5.1 and 2 H. 6.1 which are in effect the same save that they except such Franchises as are repealed or repealable by the Common-Law XIV Stat. 27 H. 8.24 None but the King shall have power to pardon treason or felony or such as are accessary to or outlawed for the same notwithstanding any Grant Usage Prescription Act or other thing to the contrary XV. None shall make Justices in Eyre of Assize Peace or Gaol-delivery but only the King and that by his Letters patents under the great Seal and notwithstanding any grant c. XVI All Writs Indictments and Processes in every County Palatine or other liberty shall be made in the King's name Teste the owner of such County Palatine or liberty and here in every such writ and indictment of any offence against the Peace it shall be supposed to be done against the King's Peace and not against the peace of any other person notwithstanding any Grant c. XVII Provided that Justices of Assize Gaol-delivery and Peace in the County Palatine of Lancaster shall be so made under the King 's usual seal of Lancaster notwithstanding any Act. XVIII Provided also that Corporations which have power to have Justices of Peace and Gaol-delivery may have them still notwithstanding this Act. XIX Stewards Bailiffs and other Ministers of Liberties shall attend the Justices of Assize Gaol-delivery and Peace and make due execution of Processes to them directed within their liberties and the Bailiffs there or their Deputies shall also attend and assist the Sheriff at the Gaol-delivery for execution of prisoners XX. Provided that the last clause shall not be prejudicial to any Stewards or Bailiffs of Corporations which are not compellable to attend or appear out of their Corporations XXI The King shall have the fines issues amerciaments and forfeitures which shall be set upon or lost by Stewards Bailiffs or other Ministers of Liberties notwithstanding any grant c. And amerciament for insufficient returns made by such Stewards or Bailiffs shall be set upon their heads and not upon the Sheriffs XXII Purveyors may take provision within liberties notwithstanding any grant c. Provided such purveyors observe the Statutes made for them in that behalf XXIII The King's officers may keep their Courts within the Verge and his Clerk of the Market onely shall execute his Office there notwithstanding any Liberty but London XXIV All Statutes made against Sheriffs Under-Sheriffs Bailiffs or other Ministers for any misdemeanour concerning their Offices shall extend to Stewards Bailiffs and other Ministers of Liberties XXV Stewards and Bailiffs of Liberties and their Deputies and Clerks may execute their office above a year notwithstanding this last clause XXVI All such Justices to be made as is aforesaid rehearsed in this Act shall have power to hold their Sessions of Peace and to deliver the Gaols within their liberties and to execute all other things within the same in as ample manner as other Justices of Peace and Gaol-delivery do in any Shire notwithstanding any Act Grant c. XXVII The new Justices now to be made by the King within Liberties shall sit where such Justices have commonly used to sit before and none within the said Liberties shall be compellable to appear before any other Justices of the same Liberties XXVIII Sir Thomas Englefield now Justice of Chester annd Flint shall not be prejudiced by this Act. XXIX This Act shall not be prejudicial to Corporations but they shall injoy such liberties fines issues amerciaments and forfeitures as they did before the making thereof XXX The Bishop of Ely and his Steward for the time being shall be Justice of Peace within the same Isle notwithstanding this Act so also shall the Bishop of Durrham and his Chanceller in that County Palatine and the Bishop of York and his Chancellor of Hexam within that Precinct XXXI Stat. 32 H. 8.20 The same franchises that the late owners of Religious houses had within three moneths before their dissolutions shall be revived and be actually in the King and in the survey of the Court of Augmentations and the Stewards Bailiffs and Ministers thereof shall account there as other Officers accountants of the King in that Court have done XXXII The Franchises of the late Religious houses which have come to the King's hands by attainder shall be in the order of the Court of general Surveyors and the Stewards Bailiffs and other Ministers thereof shall account there as other officers accountants of the King in that Court have done XXXIII The said Stewards and other Officers shall be attendant and obedient in all other the King's Courts as the officers of the said late owners were and no Sheriff or other forein officers shall intromit into their Liberties in any other manner then they lawfully might have done before the said Franchises came into the King's possession XXXIV Every person may use all such liberties as he hath by the King's grant or otherwise notwithstanding this Act also the offices fees annuities and profits of all persons out of any of the lands of the said Religious houses are saved XXXV Fines may be levied in the Court of Augmentations of lands within that Survey to the King's use without fee and the Justices of the Common Pleas
2.12 None shall be compelled to answer for his Free-hold or for any other thing touching the same or for any other thing real or personal before the Council of any Lord or Lady and if any be hereafter molested in that kind and thereof complain to the Chancellor ●e shall have remedy III. Stat. 16 R. 2.2 The Statute of 15 R. 2.12 shall be duly put in execution and if any Lord Lady or other do to the contrary they shall forfeit 20 l. to the King ☞ Fuel * I. Stat. 7 E. 6.7 The Assize of Fuel shall hereafter be as followeth Every sack of coal shall contain 4 bushels of good and clean coal a Talshid shall contain in length four foot besides the carf Every Talshid name of one shall within a foot of the midst be 16 of two 23 of three 28 of four 33 and of five 38 inches about Also every Billet shall contain in length three foot 4 inches and being named a single shall contain seven inches and an half about a cast 10 and two casts 14 likewise a fagot bound shall be three foot long and have the bond 24 inches about besides the knot II. Billets of two casts may be made without danger of forfeiture they being made according to the aforesaid Assize and marked within 6 inches of the midst but a Billet of one cast shall be marked within four inches of the end thereof III. For every Talshid Billet Fagot or sack of coals otherwise made and put to sale the maker and seller thereof shall forfeit 3 s. 4 d. IV. None shall buy any such Fuel but Wharfingers or Barge-men or such as will burn the same or will retail it to such as will burn it in pain to forfeit the treble value of fuel otherwise bought neither shall any alter any mark or Assize of fuel upon the like forfeiture all which forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor but are not recoverable unless prosecuted within a year after the offence committed V. Here if the Offender be not able to satisfie the forfeiture he shall upon conviction by witnesses or otherwise be set upon the Pillory in the next Market-Town on the Market-day at 11 a clock by command of a Justice of Peace or any other of the King's officers having a Billet or Fagot bound to some part of his body VI. Stat. 43 El. 14. So much of the Statute of 7 E. 6.7 as concerns the forfeiture of 3 s. 4 d. is repealed but the Assize of Fuel ordained by that Act is still continued and injoyned to be observed in London Westminster and all other Corporations where Tall-wood Billet and fagots are used to be sold VII If any bring any Tall-wood Billet or Fagot to any City Burrough or Corporation to be sold there or being brought shall put the same to sale not being made according to the Assize limimited by the Statute 7 E. 6.7 or hereafter by this Act upon information thereof the Mayor or other Head-officer of such City Burrough or Corporation shall swear six lawful men there to inquire thereof And if the said Fuel shall by them be found faulty it shall be by such Mayor or other Head-officer delivered to the Overseers for the poor there to be distributed to the poor there as the said overseers shall think fit VIII Every Tall-shid marked one being round-bodied shall contain 16 inches and an half in compass being half round 19 and quarter cleft 18 inches and an half being marked two and round 23 inches half round 27 and quarter cleft 26 marked three and round 28. half round 33 quarter cleft 32 marked four and round 33 half round 39 quarter cleft 38 and marked five and round 38 half round 44 and quarter cleft 43 all which are to be measured about within six inches of the midst thereof and are to contain the length limitted by the Statute of 7 E. 6.7 IX In all other forms of cleaving of Tall-wood which will not admit the former manner of cleaving nor any of these the letter of the said Statute of 7 E. 6. is to be observed X. Every Billet named a single shall contain in compass being round 7 inches and a half and no singles shall be made out of cleft wood XI Every Billet marked one called a cast being round shall contain in compass 11 inches half round 13 quarter cleft 12 and an half and marked two called two casts being round shall contain in compass 16 inches half round 19 and quarter cleft 18 and an half and in all other forms of Billet which will not admit the former manner of cleaving and touching the length of Billet the letter of the said Statute of 7 E. 6. is to be observed XII A Fagot shall contain in compass besides the knot 24 inches and every fagot-stick shall be three-foot long except one which may be but a foot long to stop and harden the binding of the fagot the better ☞ Fustions * I. Stat. 11 H. 7.27 None shall dress Fustions with any other Instruments then the broad Sheers in pain of 20 s. for every such default to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor II. The Master and Wardens of Sheermen in London shall have power to search the workmanship of such as use the broad-sheer as well for Fustion as Cloth and this Act shall be executed as well against denizons as strangers * III. Stat. 32 El. 13. The Mayor of London or his Deputy and the Master and Wardens of the Mystery of Cloth-workers there or such discreet persons as the said Master and Wardens shall appoint may make such search as the said Master and Wardens of Sheer-men might do together by the Statute of 11 H. 7.27 And none shall resist such search in pain of 20 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Gaming See Plaies and Games Gauging * I. Stat. 27 E. 3.8 Stat. 1. ALL Wines white and red brought into the King's Dominions shall be lawfully gauged by the King 's Gaugers or their Deputies and none shall resist them in pain to forfeit the Wines to be imprisoned and to be ransomed at the King's will II. If the Gauger be not ready to do his office upon request or use fraud therein he shall pay to the party grieved treble dammages lose his office and be imprisoned and ransomed at the Kings will III. If the vessel want due measure the value of that want shall be deducted out of the price thereof * IV. Stat. 31 E. 3.5 If any sell a tun or pipe of wine not gauged he shall forfeit the same wine or the value thereof to the King * V. Stat. 4 R. 2.1 The former Statutes made for gauging shall be duly put in execution and all other vessels of Wine Vinegar Oyl Honey and other liquors gaugeable brought into the King's Dominions shall be lawfully gauged by the Gaugers thereunto assigned or their Deputies and if any resist them or if they be found faulty both
they or two of them 1 Qu. shall think fit XVI Here the presentment of a Justice of Peace in Sessions upon his own knowledge shall be a good conviction whereupon the Justices in Sessions or any two of them 1 Qu. may assess a fine as well as upon a verdict of 12 men Howbeit the Delinquent shall here be admitted to his traverse as in other cases XVII The fines assessed in Sessions shall be estreated by the Clerk of the Peace levied accounted and imployed as by the Stat. of 2 3 P. M. 8. is provided XVIII Stat. 18 El. 10. A Subsidy-man according to 5 l. in goods or 40 s. in lands not chargeable towards the High-ways by the Stat. of 2 3 P. M. 8. shall find two able men to labour in the ways as by the said Statute is appointed XIX Every person having a Plough-land in several Parishes shall be chargeable with a team or draught in that Parish onely where he dwels Howbeit having intire Plow-lands in several Parishes he shall for every one of them find a team in the several Parishes where they lie although he be not inhabitant there XX. Every person not scouring his Ditches or not keeping low his hedges trees and bushes according to the Statute of 5 El. 13. shall forfeit for every such default 10 s. and he that scours not his ditches in the ground next adjoyning to the ground which is next the High-way to the end the water may have the better passage over the said groud next the High-way shall forfeit 12 d. for every rod so left unscoured XXI None shall cast the scouring of his ditch into the High-way and suffer it to lie there six moneths in pain to forfeit 12 d. for every load and it shall be lawfull for the Surveyors to make sluces where any such banks have been heretofore cast up XXII The penalties forfeited upon this Statute shall be levied by the Surveyors for the time being by distress and sale of goods and shall be imployed towards the amendment of the High-ways but if the Surveyors neglect to do it within one year after the offence committed the Constable and Churchwardens shall do it according to the provisions of the before-recited Statutes XXIII Justices of Assiz Oyer and Terminer Justices of Peace in Sessions Stewards in Leets have power to hear and determine the said offences XXIV Certain provisions for the repair of King's Ferry in the Isle of Shippery and of the ways leading thereunto XXV Stat. 39 El. 19. An Act for the repair of the High-ways in the welds of Sussex c. used for Iron-works wherein Justices of Peace have power to meddle See the Statute at large * XXVI Stat. 13 14 Car. 2. cap. 2. Stat. 2. Commissioners to be appointed by the King under the Great Seal for surveying ordering enlarging amending making or cleansing any Vaults Sinks or Sewers Pavements and amoving any nufances or encroachments by Sheds Stalls Posts or Walls within London and Westmister XXVII Provided such nusances which be above 30 years standing shall not be removed without satisfaction to the occupiers to be given by the Commissioners and upon difference of how much the Barons of the Exchequer to determine the same XXVIII Timber and irregular buildings to be prevented and upon conviction by view of the Commissioners or any 5 of them to be removed within one moneth after notice upon pain of 40 s. they shall after continue XXIX Certain High-ways and new built streets about London to be repaired and paved by the Commissioners at the charge of Owners of houses thereto adjoyning XXX Every load of Hay standing to be sold upon any the places new paved shall pay 6 d. and every load of Straw 2 d. towards paving and maintaining the same the same and all fines rents and penalties upon this Act to be levied by distress and defaults of distress imprisonment of the offendors XXXI The Commissioners for the Streets and ways may appoint a Clark and Collector Rakers or Carriers away of the Ashes and Filth and Scavengers and call them to an accompt and may hear and determine all differences concerning paving and cleansing the Streets XXXII Scavengers and Rakers may appoint fitting publick and vacant places to lay the Ashes and Filth of the streets in and and may pass through any Wharfs Dock or Yards with the same giving satisfaction to the owners of such yards upon any difference or unreasonable demand for such passage to be ascertained by the said Commissioners wherein upon any wrong the party injured may apeale for relief by petition to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer XXXIII The Commissioners to be accomptable for all rents fines and profits in the Exchequer and there to deliver in an accompt every Trinity Term. XXXIV All Streets Lanes Allies and places within London and Westminster Borough of Southwark and places adjacent to be cleansed of all Ashes Dirt and Filth twice every week XXXV None shall cast or lay before their doors or walls any Sea-cole ashes Dirt or Filth upon pain of 5 s. nor before the houses or walls of their neighbours nor before any Church Church-yard the King's houses nor cast the same into any publick sink or vault within London or Westminster or Southwark upon pain of 20 s. for every offence and all Churchwardens Keepers of White-hall Porters of Noble-men's houses and Keepers of Courts of Justice shall be liable to the like penalty for their neglect therein XXXVI None shall keep or cleanse Barrells nor mend Coaches or hew Timber in the streets upon pain of 20 s. for every offence XXXVII Rakers and Scavengers shall bring carts every day to receive and carry away Ashes and Filth upon pain of 40 s. for every neglect therein XXXVIII Every Justice of either Bench Baron of the Exchequer and Justice of the Peace of London and Westminster have power upon their own view or proof by one witness upon oath to convict persons offending against this Act and to dispose the penalties towards mending and cleansing the streets if upon proof half to the party informing if upon conviction by view then the whole towards repairing and cleansing the streets or ways to be levied by warrant from any such Justice under his hand and seal directed to the Constable or other Officer of the same parish by distress and sale of his goods and for default if no Peer imprisonment untill payment XXXIX Scavengers and Rakers within London to be elected and rates Assessed for their wages according to the ancient custome and new messuages to be rated as others and so also within the City of Westminster in all other Parishes and places as formerly to be chosen upon every Tuesday or Wednesday in Easter-week and two Tradesmen shall be Scavengers in every Parish to continue for a year who shall perform the office upon pain of 20 l. but upon refusal others shall be chosen the said penalties to be levied and imployed for mending the streets and
ways of the same Parish by distress and sale of the offendor's goods and imprisonment in default by warrant as aforesaid XL. Within 20 days after election of such Officers a tax or pound rate shall be made by the Inhabitants of every Parish which being confirmed by 2 Justices of the Peace shall be quarterly paid upon demand by the Officers appointed and upon refusal levied by distress and sale of the goods by warrant from 2 Justices of the Peace and for lack of distress by imprisonment of the Offendor not being a Peer until payment XLI Provided all Actions against Persons for executing this Act shall be laid in their proper County and the defendant may plead the general issue and recover treble costs if wrongfully vexed XLII Several houses in and about London obstructing the common passages to be removed and Commissioners by the King to be appointed under the Great Seal to receive contributions for enlarging the streets and ways and to treat with the owners for satisfaction for pulling down the same which Commissioners are to take an oath impartiality to execute this Act the Lord Mayor of London to be a joynt Commissioner with them and the Dean of Westminster Steward and Deputy Steward to be also joynt Commissioners within the said liberties This Act to continue till the end of the first Sessions of the next Parliament XLIII Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 6. For enlarging and repairing common High-ways Surveyors shall be chosen upon Munday or Tuesday in Easter-week yearly in every parish upon pain of 5 l. for default thereof XLIV The said Surveyors shall within 20 days after Election view all the High-ways and Bridges within their Parish and consider of needful reparations and thereupon with 2 or more substantial Householders make an assessment for repair thereof not exceeding 6 d. in the pound for one year 20 l. stock to be rated as 20 l. per annum which being allowed by some Justice of the Peace shall be paid within 20 days after demand by the Surveyors upon pain of forfeiture of double so much unless upon complaint to the said Justice he shall think fit to alter the same XLV The Surveyors shall cause all nusances in High-ways or Ditches and water-courses not scoured to be amended and the offenders punished by law and deduct their charges for prosecution thereof and may yearly between the 1 of May and the last of August hire labourers carts and carriages for that purpose XLVI They may appoint persons to work in the High-ways according to former laws and Carts and Carriages for more days then by former laws directed paying according to the rates of the Country and one Justice of Peace may upon questions of value determine the same and upon neglect or refusal of any person charged he shall forfeit 10 s. for a Team a day and 18 d. for a labourer Provided none be charged for lands and stock which he useth upon the same XLVII The Surveyors within their Parishes by order from the quarter Sessions and upon view and by consent of 2 Justices authorised by the said Sessions under their hands and seals in writing may enlarge any High-way not of to the breadth 8 yards out of the sale of the owner in such manner as by the Act appointed XLVIII In case of want of gravel sand c. in one Parish it may be digged in the waste of another filling up the pit again if required XLIX In case of want of gravel sand or other materials in any Common or Waste of any Parish the same may be digged in the soile of any owner the same not being a House Orchard Garden Court-yard Park with deer or Meddow rendring damages to the owner for digging and filling again the pit L. No travelling Waggon Wain or Carriage for hire other then carriage for Husbandry managing lands carrying Hay Straw Corn unthreshed Coal Chalk Timber for Shipping materials for building stones Amunition and Artillerie for the King's service shall go in any High-way with above 7 Horses whereof 6 by paiers and not above 8 Oxen or six and two Horses by paires nor carry above 2000 weight between 1 October and 1 May nor above 3000 between 1 May and 1 October nor above 8 quarters of Barley Mault or Oates nor with any wheeles less then 4 inches broad in the tyre upon pain of 40 s. one third part whereof shall be to the Surveyors one other third part to the poor of the Parish and the other third part to the discoverer to be levied by distress and sale of the offenders goods if payment be not made within 3 days and the offences aforesaid declared common nusances LI. Suits against any Officers for any thing done upon this Act shall be tried in their proper Counties the defendant may plead the general issue and if wrongfully sued recover double costs LII All moneys assessed and charitable gifts for mending the High-ways Pavements c. and all fines and forfeitures not otherwise disposed by this Act and all amerciaments upon Parishes for repairing High-ways shall be imployed by the respective Surveyors within their respective Parishes by warrant under their hands and seals and levied by distress and sale of the offendors goods as aforesaid LIII All Surveyors shall within one moneth after their year expired give in an accompt under their hands in writing to the parish of all their receits and disbursements and of all arreares fines forfeitures penalties and charitable gifts and pay what remains in their hands to the succeeding Surveyors and upon default and complaint to any 2 Justices of the Peace near the said Parish the said Justices shall commit the party offending to prison till a true accompt be made LIV. Justices of Oyer and Terminer and of the Peace may enquire of hear and determine matters of Charitable gifts for mending High-ways and also all offences in Surveyors and other concerning High-ways and make orders therein Provided persons grieved by such orders may appeal to the Chancery as upon decree upon the Statute of charitable uses LV. No certiorari shall be allowed to remove any information indictment or other proceedings in the quarter Sessions touching any matter in this Act unless the Parties prosecuted give security to the prosecutors to pay them their costs and damages LVI Proviso touching the lessees of the Iron works in Surroy Sussex and Kent LVII Proviso not to lay any new charge where the Justices at the quarter Sessions or two Justices near the Parish shall be satisfied that the High-ways may be sufficently repaired without help of this Act. LVIII Tenants and Occupiers are to pay Assesments for High-ways LIX The power of Assessing to continue onely for 3 years LX. All other powers continued till the end of the first Session of the next Parliament and no longer LXI Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 1. Stat. 3. An Act appointing speciall Commissioners with power to oversee and repair the High-ways within the Counties of Hertford Cambridge and
are not compellable to keep their Sessions above twice in the year notwithstanding the Statute of 12 R. 2.10 yet may they keep them oftener if need be at their discretions XVIII Stat. 18 H. 6.14 None except men learned in the Law or inhabiting Corporations shall be Justices of Peace unless their Lands be worth 20 l. per annum XIX If any be put into the Commission not having Lands to that value and do not within one moneth after notice thereof acquaint the Lord Chancellor therewith or do fit or make any warrant by force of such Commission he shall forfeit to the King 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XX. Stat. 3 H. 7.1 Justices of Peace shall at the next general Sessions certifie recognizances taken for keeping the Peace where if the party being called do not appear those Recognizances shall be certified into the Chancery King's Bench or Exchequer XXI Stat. 4 H. 7.12 The King commandeth all Justices of Peace diligently to exercise their office to the end that his people by that means living in peace and injoying their own husbandry may flourish He also chargeth all both poor and rich that shall suffer any grievance from others wherein a Justice of Peace may intermeddle that they forthwith make complaint thereof to the next Justice of Peace and having no remedy there to the Justices of Assize if it be not long before their coming into that Country but if it be then to the Chancellor for the time being and then the King will send for the Justice so neglecting his duty and in case he shall finde him guilty thereof will cause him to be put out of the Commission and otherwise punished according to his demerits and this Statute shall be proclaimed at every Quarter-Sessions in pain that every Justice there present when it is not so proclaimed shall forfeit to the King 20 s. XXII Stat. 2. 3 P. M. 18. A new Commission of the Peace or Gaol-delivery for the whole County shall not be a supersedeas to a former like Commission granted to a City or Town-Corporate being no County Keeper of the Great Seal of England I. Stat. 5 El. 18. THe Authority Preheminence and advantages of the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and of the Lord Chancellor are declared to be the same to all intents constructions and purposes King I. Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 1. What shall be High Treason against the King during his Majestie 's life Vid. Title Treason num XXXIX II. If any person or persons during the King's life shall maliciously and advisedly publish or affirm the King to be an Heretick or a Papist or that he endeavours to introduce Popery or shall maliciously and advisedly by Writing Printing Preaching or other speaking express publish utter or declare any words sentences or other thing or things to incite or stir up the people to hatred or dislike of the person of his Majesty or the established goverment then every such person being legally convicted shall be disabled to have injoy or exercise any place office or promotion ecclesiastical civil or military or any other imployment in Church or State other then his Peerage and shall likewise be lyable to such further punishment as by the Common laws and Statutes of the Realm may be inflicted in such cases III. If any person shall maliciously and advisedly by writing printing preaching or speaking publish declare or affirm that the Parliament begun at VVestminster the 30th of Novemb. 1640. is not dissolved or not determined or that it ought to be in being or that there lies any obligation upon him or any other person from any Oath Covenant or Engagement to endeavour a change of Government or that both or either houses of Parliament have a Legislative Power without the King or any words to the same effect Such persons so offending shall incur the Penalty of a Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of 16 R. 2. IV. The Solemn League and Covenant declared an unlawful Oath and to have been illegally imposed upon the Subjects And all Ordinances of either or both Houses of Parliament for imposing Oathes Covenants or engagements levying Taxes raising forces or armes without the King's assent or by Commission were and are and shall be void Provided the said Ordinances and Orders may be made use of according to the Act of Indemnity 12 Car. 2.11 V. Provided no person be prosecuted for any offence in this Act other then High Treason unless it be by order of the King his heirs or Successors under their sign Manual or of the Privy Council directed to the Attorney general or some of the King's Council for the time being nor unless such prosecution be within six moneths and the Indictment within three moneths after such prosecution VI. Proviso for privilege of debate in Parliament touching repealing or altering of Laws or redressing publique grievances VII Provided no person be indicted arraigned condemned convicted or attainted for any Treasons or Offences aforesaid but by Testimony of two lawful witnesses upon oath brought in person face to face who shall openly avow upon oath what they have to say against the person accused concerning the Treason or offences contained in the said Indictment unless the party shall willingly without violence confess the same VIII Provided no Peer be tryed for any Offence against this Act but by Peers and every Peer convicted of any Offence against this Act be disabled during life to sit in Parliament unless his Majesty shall please to pardon him and upon pardon granted to any Peer or Commoner convicted of any Offence against this Act the party pardoned shall be restored to all intents and purposes as if never convicted IX Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 10. For setling an additional Revenue upon the King for better support of his Crown and dignity Every dwelling house and other edifice and all lodgings and Chambers in the Inns of Court Inns of Chancery Colledges and other societies that are or shall be within England VVales and Town of Barwick other then hereafter excepted shall be charged with the annual payment for every Fire-hearth and Stove 2 s. per annum and payable at Michaelmas and our Lady-day by equal parcels half yearly for ever X. Owners and occupiers of such houses and chambers shall give a true account thereof in writing of all the Hearths and Stoves in them to the Constables and Tithing-men within their several Parishes and Constables and other such Officers shall require an account of them of all Hearths and Stoves in their Houses and in default may enter and view the same and for every false return the party offendng shall forfeit 40 s. XI The said Constables and other such Officers shall deliver the accounts of their Returns at the next quarter-Sessions after the last of May 1662. And the Justices of the Peace shall cause the said accompts of Hearths to be enrolled and a duplicate thereof returned into the Exchequer XII The said Hearth
money shall be collected half-yearly within 6 days after the same shall grow due and acquittances shall be given by the Officers collecting it which shall be good discharges for the same and distress and sale of the goods of the party in case of non-payment rendring the overplus after the duty paid and necessary charges for levying it XIII Constables and other such officers shall pay in the money collected within 20 days to the High-Constables of the several hundreds and limits and shall have 2 d. in the pound for collecting the same and shall deliver in writing to the High-Constables the names of such persons as have paid and such as have not paid the same XIV The High Constables shall pay the moneys by them received within 10 days unto the High-Sheriffs deducting one penny in the pound for their pains and deliver the several returns which they received from the Constables aforesaid and the Sheriffs shall return the moneys received and the names of the defaulters into the Exchequer deducting 4 d. in the pound 3 d. whereof to the Sheriff for his pains and 1 d. to the Clark of the Peace which the said Clerk may recover by Action of debt XV. Proviso making the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex Surrey for that Burrough of Southwark and all other Sheriffs of Cities and Towns being Counties Collectors within their limits and the Constables and other Officers to deliver duplicates to the said Sheriffs and they enabled to levy the said moneys and give acquittances without fees and within 40 days to pay the same into the Exchequer with the names of defaulters where no distress is found deducting as to other Sheriffs and Clarks of Peace and the Officers of the Exchequer shall discharge persons paying without fees and issue and process against such as fail of payment where no distress can be found XVI This Revenue shall be duely answered into the Exchequer and shall not be lyable to or charged with any gift or grant and any Non obstante to the contrary shall be void and the grantee an accomptant to the King and the Court of Exchequer injoyned to issue out process accordingly XVII If any Action be brought against any persons for execution of any thing within this Act they may plead the general issue and upon Non-suit discontinuance or verdict against the Plaintiff the Defendant shall recover treble Costs XVIII Increase and decrease of Hearths and Stoves shall in like manner be accounted and returned by duplicates in writing into the Exchequer and there discharged upon decrease without farther pleading XIX No prosecution for any arrearages of this duty unless suit be commenced within 2 years after they become due XX. Proviso that no person who by reason of poverty is exempted from usual taxes be charged with any duties in this Act. XXI Proviso for exempting from payment all houses under 20 s. value per annum upon certificate by the Minister and Overseers of the poor to the 2 next Justices of the Peace XXII Proviso That none shall accept or procure any gift pension or grant from the King of this Revenue upon penalty to forfeit double the value thereof one moiety to be to the use of the poor to be recovered by the Church-wardens of the Parish the other Moiety to him that will sue for the same XXIII Proviso not to charge Blowing houses Stamps Furnaces Kilns private ovens nor Hospitals or Almeshouses not having 100 l. per annum of endowment XXIV The occupier of the Hearth for the time being shall be charged his Executors and Administrators and not the Landlord XXV No person indebted to the King for any the said duties shall be priviledged as a debtor to sue in the Exchequer or assign to the King any such debt XXVI Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 23. Certain Impositions upon Beer Ale and other liquors for the increase of the King's revenue during his Life See the Statute at large XXVII The same setled upon the King his heirs and successors for ever Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. XXVIII Stat. 15 Car. 2. ca. 14. Every inhabitant occupier of any house lodging c. shall upon notice after next Mich. Sessions give a true accompt in writing under his hand to the Constable of all the Hearths and Stoves in such house c. who shall with 2 other inhabitants of the Parish in the day time enter into such house and upon his own view compare and see if the same be truly made and indorse the said Account to what he finds upon his view and return the same to the High Constable together with a book or roll fairly written with 2 Colums one containing the names of the persons and number of hearths and stoves chargeable by the said Act the other the names of the persons and number of Hearths and Stoves not chargeable which being received and compared shall within 6 days be transmitted to the 2 next Justices of the Peace who are impowred to examine the said High-Constables and other Officers concerning the truth and faithfulness of their actings in the premisses which being done the said Justices are within 10 days to transmit the same to the Clark of the Peace who within 20 days is to engross the same to be kept in the County and within 2 moneths to engross and return duplicates signed by himself and 2 Justices of the Peace into the Exchequer XXIX Penalty for omitting to return every Hearth upon the occupier 40 s. XXX Constables and Officers neglecting their duty shall forfeit 5 l. XXXI High Constables neglecting to perform their duties 10 l. XXXII Constables and Officers changing or leaving their offices for that year are notwithstanding enabled and required to perform the duties in relation to the premisses and for every day they shall neglect to gather the moneys due shall forfeit 20 s. and such as shall gather and distrain for the same may call to their assistance any 2 sufficient Inhabitants XXXIII Sheriffs may appoint Deputies under the Seal of their Offices or their own hand and seals for collecting the said duties XXXIV Provided the Lord Treasurer and Chancellor of the Exchequer may give further allowance to the Clarks of the Peace for their pains in engrossing and returning duplicates into the Exchequer XXXV Stat. 16 Car. 2. ca. 3. Reciting the said defects in the former Acts. Enacted that the King his heirs and successors may make officers for receiving and collecting the duties upon Fire-hearths and Stoves by the former Acts and for viewing and numbring the same and for inspecting and examining the several Rolls Certificates and Returns made and to be made into the Exchequer in pursuance of the said Acts or any other thing belonging to the same which Officers accompanied with the Constable or Tything-man Treasurer or under-Treasurer or other publick or proper Officers of the Place who are required to attend upon this occasion in all Parishes and places where there are no Constables Tithing-men or other publick Officer
Officer there or unto the Lord Treasurer Chancellor under-Treasurer or one of the Barons of the Exchequer or unto the Attorney-general he shall forfeit 100 l. LXXIV Customers Controllers and Searchers have power to make Deputies in Ports Creeks and Roads and both they and their Deputies shall duly and faithfully execnte their offices in pain of a 100 l. and to lose their places LXXV Such custom shall be paid for sweet Wines as hath formerly been paid for Malmseys LXXVI This Act shall not infringe the liberties granted to the Isle of Anglesey and the Counties of Flint and Carnarvan so as they pay the due Customs and Subsidies and lade and discharge within the times and hours above mentioned LXXVII Stat. 43 El. 12. The Lord Chancellor or Keeper shall award a standing Commission to be renewed yearly or as often as to him shall seem meet for the hearing and determining of all such causes arising and policies of assurances as shall be entred in the office of Assurance in London LXXVIII This Commission shall be directed to the Judge of the Admiralty the Recorder of London two Doctors of the Civil Law 2 common Lawyers and 8 grave and discreet Merchants or to any 5 of them which Commissioners or the greater part of them shall have power to hear and examine order and decree all such causes in a brief and summary course as to their discretion shall seem meet without formality of pleadings or proceedings LXXIX The Commissioners have also power to summon the parties examine witnesses upon oath and commit to prison such as contemn or disobey their orders or decrees they shall meet and sit once a week at least in the office of Assurances or some other convenient publick place for the execution of the said Commission And no fees at all shall be there exacted by any person whatsoever LXXX If any be grieved by their sentence or decree he may exhibit his bill in Chancery for the re-examination thereof so as he first satisfie the sentence so awarded or deposit with the Commissioners the summ awarded and then albeit he be imprisoned he may be inlarged and here the Lord Chancellor or Keeper hath power to reverse or affirm every such sentence or decree and in case it be affirmed to award the party assured double cost LXXXI No Commissioner shall meddle in the execution of this Commission in any cause wherein himself is party Assurer or Assured not until he hath taken his corporal oath before the Mayor and Court of Aldermen to proceed uprightly and indifferently between party and party onely the Judg of the Admiralty and Recorder are excused from such oath LXXXII Stat. 3 Jac. 6. All the Kings subjects shall have free trade into and from Spain Portugal and France notwithstanding the late grant of an Incorporation to prohibit the same or any other Act or thing whatsoever to the contrary LXXXIII Provided that this Act shall not give liberty for any person to go beyond Sea who by Law is restrained from going without licence LXXXIV Stat. 3 Jac. 9. No merchant or other shall dress or cause to be dressed in his house or by any workman being no Skinner appointed by him for that purpose any black Cony-skins of this Realm nor transport any such or pack them to be transported before they be tawed and duly wrought by such as are Artizan Skinners or Tawers under them in pain to forfeit them or the value thereof LXXXV No Merchant shall buy or contract for any Cony-skins or Lambs-skins under the number of 1000 black Cony-skins 3000 grey Cony-skins and 2000 Lambs-skins at one and the same time to be so bought and delivered intirely together and not by parcels except they be bought of the Artizan-skinners neither shall the Merchant sell them again in less parcels then as aforesaid unless to the said Artizan-skinners in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof LXXXVI None shall retain any Servant Journey-man or Apprentice to work in the trade of a Skinner unless he himself hath served 7 years as an Apprentice in the same trade in pain to forfeit the double value of his ware so wrought LXXXVII The forfeitures aforesaid are to be divided betwixt the King and the seisor or prosecutor LXXXVIII Stat. 4 Jac. 9. The general Statute of 3 Jac. 6. neither doth nor shall dissolve or impeach the Charter of Incorporation granted by Queen El. to certain Merchants of Exeter and their successors LXXXIX Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 23. Upon some defects in the Statute 43 Eliz. ca. 12. recited It is enacted That the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great-Seal shall yearly issue out one standing Commission authorising Commissioners or any 3 of them whereof a Doctor of the Civil-Law or a Barrister at Common-law of 5 years standing to be always one to make a Court of Pollicies of Assurance and act as any 5 before might have done XC The said Commissioners or any 3 of them impowred to summon parties and witnesses and upon Contempts or delay in the witnesses upon first summons and tender of reasonable charges and in the parties upon second summons to imprison offendors or give costs every Commissioner having taken the oath before the Lord Mayor of London to proceed uprightly in execution of the said Commission XCI Commissions may issue out of the Court of Admiralty for examining witnesses beyond Sea or in remote place by direction of the said Commissioners or any 3 of them And decrees may be made against the body and goods and against the Executors c. and execution accordingly and assess costs of suit as to them shall seem just XCII Any of the Commissioners may administer an oath to any witness legally summoned so as the adverse party have timely notice to the end witnesses be truly examined XCIII Provided Execution in no case be against body and goods for the same debt XCIV Provided An Appeal may be to the Chancery as in the said former Act. Marshalsey I. Artic. super Cart. 3. 28. E. 1. The Stewards and Marshals of the Kings house shall not hold plea of freehold debt covenant or contract but only trespass done in the house or Verge or of contracts and covenants when both parties are of the house and the plea of trespass shall be determined before the Kings departure from the Verge where the trespass was committed and therefore the plea thereof shall be speedy de die in diem and if the plea cannot be determined in time the Plaintiff shall in such case have recourse to the Common Law II. The Steward shall from henceforth take no conusance of debt or other things but of the people of the same house nor shall hold plea by obligation made at the distress of the said Stewards or Marshals And if any thing be done contrary to this Act it shall be holden void III. In case of death within the Verge where the Coroner is to make view the Coroner of the County together with the Kings
Coroner shall do his office and inrol it And what cannot be determined by the Steward before the Kings departure shall be remitted to the Common Law so that Exigents Outlawries and Presentments shall be made thereupon in Eyre by the Coroner of the County as in case of other Felonies done out of the Verge ● Howbeit they shall not omit by reason hereof to make attachments freshly upon the Felonies done IV. Stat. 5. E. 3.2 Pars inde and 10 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 Inquests before the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house shall be taken by men of the Countrey thereabouts and not by men of the Kings house except it be contracts covenants or trespasses when both parties are of the same house and in the house V. Stat. 9. R. 2.5 Priests and others of the Holy Church taken in the Marshalsey shall pay such fees as Lay-people pay and no more VI. Stat. 13. R. 2. Stat. 1.3 The jurisdiction of the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house shall extend no further then 12 miles from the Kings lodging VII Stat. 4. H. 2.23 The fees of the Marshal of the Kings house shall be as in times past and no more viz. for him that cometh in by Capias 4 d. and if he be bailed 3 d. more of the defendant in trespass that findeth bail to answer the suit 2 d. for every commitment by judgment 4 d. o● every one delivered of Felony and of a Felon bailed by the Court 4 d. And if the Marshal or his Officers take more they shall lose their Offices and pay treble damages to the party grieved and that the party grieved have his suit before the Steward of the same Court VIII Here a server of bills shall take no more then 1 d. for every mile distant from the Court to the place where he doth his office but when he serves a v●nire facias or a distringas he shall have the double If such an Officer takes more he shall be imprisoned make a Fine to the King at the discretion of the Steward and be from thenceforth fore-judged the Court. IX Stat. 15. H. 6.1 In a suit commenced before the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house the defendant shall not be estopped to plead that the Plaintiff or he are not of the Kings house but his averment thereof shall be received notwithstanding any record of the same Court to be produced to the contrary Marshes Fens c. I. Stat. 4. Jac. 8. An Act for winning from Inundation the drowned grounds and Marshes of Lesnes and Fants in Kent by the 10. of October 1609. See the Statute II. Stat. 4. Jac. 13. Another for draining the Fens and low grounds in the Isle of Ely containing about 6000. Acres compassed about with banks called the Ring of Waldersey and Coldham See also the Statute III. Stat. 7. Jac. 20. A mean to recover a great quantity of ground lately surrounded in Norfolk and Suffolk by the Sea and to prevent the like for the future See the Statute IV. Stat. 15. Car. 2. cap. 17. An Act for setling the draining the great level of the Fens called Bedford Level See the Act at large V. Stat. 16. 17. Car. 2. cap. 11. An Act for draining of the Fen called Deeping Fen and other Fens therein mentioned See the Act at large Masons I. Stat. 3. H. 6.1 It shall be felony to plot confederacies amongst Masons and such as assemble upon such confederacies shall suffer Imprisonment and make fine and ransome at the Kings will ☞ Matrimony and Marriage I. Stat. 32. H. 8.38 Pars inde All Marriages shall be adjudged lawful that are not prohibited by Gods Law II. Stat. 23. E. 6.21 All Laws Canons Constitutions and Ordinances which prohibit marriage to spiritual persons who by Gods Law may marry and all pain and forfeitures therein contained shall be void III. Provided that this Act shall not give liberty to marry without asking in the Church and other Ceremonies appointed by the Book of Common Prayer IV. Degrees and divorces heretofore made are saved V. Stat. 5. E. 6.12 The Marriage of Priests and other spiritual persons shall be lawful and their Children legitimate and inheritable likewise they to be tenants by the Curtesy and their Wives nowable VI. Stat. 1. Jac. 11. A Bigamus shall suffer death as a felon unless he or she have had no notice that the husband or wife was living within seven years before or the marriage be severed by divorce VII This felony shall cause no corruption of blood or loss of dower or inheritance VIII Stat. 12. Car. 2. ca. 33. All Marriages had and solemnized in any of the Kings Dominions since the 1. of May 1642. before any Justice of Peace of England or other his Dominions and so pronounced and declared or had and solemnized according to Act or Ordinance of Parliament or any Convention having that style shall be adjudged good and valid in Law as if the same had been solemnized according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England Mesne I. Stat. Westm 2.9 13. E. 1. The tenant distrained by the Chief Lord may have a writ of Mesne in the County where he is distreined against the Mesne who having land in that County and not appearing till the Grand distress day shall be given in the Grand distress so as two Counties may be holden before the return wherein the Sheriff shall proclaim that he come to answer the tenant at the day at which day if he come not he loseth his service and then the tenant shall answer to the Chief Lord such services as he ought to have done to the Mesne II. The Chief Lord shall not distrein the tenant so long as he offers him the services due and if the Lord exact more then the Mesne ought to do the tenant may have such remedy as the Mesne might have had III. Upon a return that the Mesne hath nothing to be summoned by an attachment shall go out and then upon a Nihil returned the G●a●d distress with Proclamation as before IV. The Mesne having no l●nd in that County but in another upon such a return by the Sheriff the party shall have a Writ judicial to summon the Mesne in that County where it is testified that he hath lands and both there and in the other County shall proceed to the Grand distress Proclamation and Judgment as before V. The Mesne comming into the Court and acknowledging or being adjudged to acquit the Tenant and not doing it the Tenant shall thereupon have a judicial writ of acquittal whereupon if the Mesne come in and the Tenant can aver that a Mesne hath not acquitted him he shall be satisfied his damages be quit of the Mesne and hold of the chief Lord And here also if the Mesne come not at the first distress then another distress shall go out Proclamation shall be made and Judgment had as before VI. This Statute extendeth only where there is but one Mesne
between the Lord that distraineth and the tenant the Mesne also being of full age and the Tenant Tenant in fee-simple Militia See Captains and Souldiers Numb XXXIX Ministers I. Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 17. An Act for confirming some and restoring other Ministers to their Benefices Monasteries Abbeys Priories Colledges Free-Chappels Hospitals Chanteries their Governours and Possessions and also all other Religious persons I. Marlb 28. 52. H. 3. If wrongs or trespasses be done to Abbots or other Prelates of the Church and they dye before Judgment given thereof whether or no the suit be commenced in their life-time yet their successors shall have actions to demand the goods of their Church out of the hands of such trespassers II. The successors shall also have a writ to recover seisin of their lands intruded into in time of vacation and therein damages shall be awarded them as in Assizes of Novel disseisin is used III. West 1.1 3. E. 1. The Peace of the Church and Realm shall be duly kept and Religious houses shall not entertain any at the charge of the house save only the Founders c. neither shall any charge them in pain of imprisonment to make fine and to be otherwise punished at the Kings will IV. No purveyance shall be made of a Prelate without his consent V. The Sheriff shall not ride with above 5 or 6 horse nor indamage Religious persons by lodging too often at their houses or Mannors VI. Artic. Cleri 11. 9. E. 2. Religious houses shal not be charged by compulsion with Corodies Pensions resort or taking of their Horses or Carts upon the pains ordained by the Statute of West 2. VII Stat. 1. E. 3. Stat. 2.10 There shall be no more grants of Pensions Prebends Churches or Corodies at the Kings request by Bishops Abbots Priors Abbesses or Prioresses VIII Stat. 27. H. 8.28 All Monasteries Priories and other Religious Houses of Monks Canons and Nuns which have not above the clear yearly value of 200 l. per annum are given to the King and his heirs to have and hold the same in as large and ample manner as they injoyed them And all grants thereof made or to be made by the King to others are confirmed The right of others having any profit out of the same being saved IX Fraudulent Conveyances made by Governours of such houses within one year next before the making of this Act shall be void Howbeit all Leases upon the accustomed rents and grants of accustomed Offices Fees or Corodies are saved X. All Ornaments Jewels Goods and Debts which they had the first of March 1535 or at any time since are also given to the King XI The King shall have the actual and real possession of the said houses without inquisition of office so that he may lawfully grant them at his will and pleasure XII Cels which are only obediencers to the Abbies and Priories dissolved by this Act shall still remain undissolved notwithstanding this Act The right also of Founders Patrons and Donors is saved XIII Stat. 27 H. 8.27 Pars inde Upon the grant of Abbey Lands in fee a tenure in Capite shall be reserved to the King and also a yearly payment of the tenth part of the yearly value mentioned in the Letters Patents XIV Stat. 31 H. 8.13 The King and his heirs shall have all the Monasteries Abbies Priories Nunneries Colledges Hospitals houses of Friers and other religious houses and places together with their estates which since the 4. of Feb. 27 H. 8. have been dissolved suppressed renounced relinquished forfeited given up or by any other means are come into the Kings hands in as large and ample manner as the Governors thereof held them in right of the said houses XV. All Religious houses dissolved and to be dissolved together with the revenues to them belonging shall be in the actual possession of the King XVI These Abbey lands except such of them as shall come to the King by attainder of Treason shall be within the survey of the Court of Augmentations XVII Here the right of all others is saved save only for Rents-service Rents-seck and all other services and suits which are excepted out of the said saving XVIII Provided that all Leases of any such Religious or Ecclesiastical house or of any hereditaments thereunto belonging granted within one year next before the dissolution thereof which hath not heretofore been usually demised or whereof there was a former Lease in being or whereupon such ancient yearly rent is not reserved as hath been usually paid for the same twenty years next before the beginning of this Parliament and also wood-sales made within one year as aforesaid shall be void XIX Also all Feofments Fines and Recoveries of such Lands whereof the King was Founder made acknowledged or suffered by the Governours or Governesses thereof without the Kings Licence within one year next before such dissolution shall be void XX. The like provision is made for making void Leases and Wood-sales of Lands belonging to such Religious or Ecclesiastical houses as are hereafter to be dissolved Also all Feofments fines and Recoveries of such lands where the King is Founder made acknowledged or suffered by the Governours or Governesses thereof shall likewise be void XXI Leases for years not exceeding 21 made a year before this Parliament or the dissolution of such house and whereupon the accustomed rent is reserved and where a former term therein is not expired at the making of such Lease shall be good notwithstanding this Actiso also is a Lease for life or lives granted a year before dissolution to the old tenant or the former lease for life o● 〈◊〉 being not expired and the accustomed rent being reserved XXII Grants also for life by Copy of Court-Roll according to the custom where the old rent is reserved shall be good XXIII Leases examined inrolled decre●d or affirmed in the Court of Augmentations albeit they be made within the year shall be good XXIV Where any hath paid money for wood and by this Act is abridged from having his bargain he shall be relieved therein by the Chancellor and other Officers of the said Court or any three of them whereof the Chancellor is to be one and if any other hath taken the Wood he shall make satisfaction for the same to the party grieved XXV Grants to other persons by such Religious persons with the Kings consent and licence under the great Seal shall be good Howbeit here the right of others is saved XXVI A confirmation of the Kings exchanges and purchases since the fourth of February 27 H. 8. Howbeit here also the right of all persons but the exchangees and bargainees is saved rents-service rents-seck and other services excepted XXVII The Kings Letters Patents of Lands or other hereditaments granted since the fourth of February 27 H. 8. and within three years after the making of this Act shall be sufficient notwithstanding mis-recital non-recital mis-nosmer cause consideration or thing material to the
contrary Here also the right of all others save of the King and the Governours and Governesses is saved XXVIII Such Lands Parsonages appropriate c. belonging to the said Religious houses as before their coming into the Kings hands or dissolution were discharged of Tithes shall so continue XXIX All rents services and other duties are saved to the King notwithstanding this Act. XXX Such Monasteries c. As were heretofore exempt from the jurisdiction of the Ordinary shall from henceforth be within the jurisdiction and visitation of the Ordinaries in whose Diocess they shall be scituate XXXI The grant of the Abbey of Sipton in Suffolk is confirmed to the Duke of Norfolk and the Colledge or Chantery of Cobham in Kent to the Lord Cobham notwithstanding this Act The right of others being saved XXXII Stat. 37 H. 8.4 All Colledges Free-Chappels Chanteries Hospitals Fraternities Brother-hoods Guilds and other promotions made to have continuance for ever and chargeable with first-fruits and tenths and also all the mansion-Mansion-houses mannors lands tenements hereditaments rights members and appurtenances unto them belonging which between the fourth of February 27 H. 8. and the 25 of December the 37 H. 8. were dissolved relinquished or otherwise extinct other then such of them as now are or were in the Kings possession and have been granted by the Kings Licence or recovered by a former right or title shall be adjudged in the actual possession of the King and of his heirs and successors in as large manner ●s the Governours Incumbents Patrons Donors or Founders of them or any of them have since the said fourth of February 27 H. 8. injoyed the same or do now injoy them XXXIII All Covenants Bonds and Grants of any Rent or Annuity made to any Chantery Priest or other having any of the said promotions in consideration of any bargain grant or other assurance of the said promotions or any part thereof shall be void XXXIV Every person being in life which for any sum of money hath sold any of the said promotions shall repay upon request unto the Bargainee his Executors or Assigns the money so received And for non-payment thereof the said Bargainee shall maintain an Action of debt against them that so sold the same unto the said Bargainee or his testator in which Action no essoine c. shall be allowed XXXV All gifts grants surrenders and other assurances made to the King of any of the said promotions between the said fourth of February and the 25 of December shall be good against the bargainors their successors and assigns and also against their Founders Donors and Patrons heirs and successors XXXVI All Letters Patents made by the King of any of the said promotions or any part thereof and all assurances thereof made with the Kings assent by any having such promotions shall be good against the grantors their heirs and successors and against their Founders Donors and Patrons their heirs and successors XXXVII The King during his life may direct Commissions by warrant to be signed by his own hand to such persons as he shall think fit giving them power to enter into so many of the said promotions chargeable with first-fruits and tenths as shall be expressed in such several Commissions and to seize and take the same into the Kings possession to have and hold the same to him his heirs and successors XXXVIII The Commissioners or any two of them may enquire into any part in the name of the whole and by such thei● ter and seisure albeit the Lands be in several mens occupations or lie in several Counties the King shall be adjudged in the actual possession thereof without any inquisition office or other entry XXXIX The Commissioners or any two of them after such seisure made shall certifie and return every such Commission making mention in writing of their doing therein according to the words and authority thereby given them XL. All such Chanteries and other promotions aforesaid seised and to be seised as aforesain shall be within the order and survey of the Court of Augmentations and all suits tending to the detriment of the Mannors lands and other hereditaments belonging to them shall be also heard and determined in that Court Howbeit suits between party and party concerning the said Mannors Lands c. shall be heard and determined by the Common Law and Statutes of this Realm and not in the said Court XLI All Assurances made of any Inheritance or Free-hold without the Kings assent by any Chantery Priest or other Governour having any of the said promotions being not made to the King shall be void as well against the King as against the successor of such Chantery Priest or other Governour XLII The right of others is saved other then the Governors and their Founders Patrons or Donors their heirs and successors and other then such persons their heirs successors and assigns as claim any free-hold or inheritance by conveyance from any such Governor without the Kings assent thereunto XLIII If any such Governour within one year before the 23. of Novemb. in the 27 H. 8. hath made or shall hereafter make any lease for life or years of any such promotion or any part thereof which was not for the most part of twenty years before such lease let to farm but in their own occupation Or within the said time hath made or shall hereafter make any such lease in reversion the old lease not being then expired Or within the said time hath made or shall hereafter make any such lease without reserving the accustomed yearly rent paid for the same twenty years next before the said 23. of November Or have made any Wood sale the Woods being yet standing that then every such lease and grant shall be void XLIV This Act shall not extend to any Lands or other Hereditaments whereof such Governors now are or hereafter shall be seised or possessed to their own use nor united nor annexed to their promotions nor to Lands or Pensions granted or to be granted by the King unto such Governors for life only under the Great Seal or the Seal of the Augmentations XLV The Governors from whom the King by force of this Act taketh any Lands c. shall be proportionably abated for the same in their Tenths and First-fruits XLVI Every person having any Annuity or rent issuing out of any such promotion shall still enjoy them notwithstanding this Act Also he that hath bought and paid for any wood shall have his money again or the same wood XLVII All payments for the First-fruits hapning after such seisure as aforesaid are discharged XLVIII All Rents Services Issues and Profits payable out of such promotions into the Exchequer shall be still continued notwithstanding this Act. XLIX Stat. 1 E. 6.14 All Colledges Free Chappels and Chanteries in esse within five years before the first day of this Parliament which were not in the actual and real possession of the late King nor of E. 6. nor excepted in
shall be paid by the King LXVI This Act shall not extend to any Colledge or Hall in the Universities the Free-Chappel at Windsor the Colledges of Winchester and Eaton N wton Chappel in the Isle of Ely nor to any of the lands belonging to them nor to any Chappel of Ease nor to any Chappel whereunto only a Church-yard a little house or Close doth belong Nor to any Cathedral where there is a Bishops See nor to their lands other then such Chanteries Obits Lights and Lamps used within such Cathedrals within five years before this Paliament and unto which this Act doth extend LXVII The King may during his life alter the Names of such Chanteries and their Foundations LXVIII The right of all persons except only the Governors Incumbents c. of such Chanteries c. their Founders and the heirs and successors of every of them also the grantees or any of the premises to the uses aforesaid or to the use of any such Chantery c. or without the Kings licence is saved likewise all services rents annuities profits and offices of right due to Founders Donors c. and leases made before the beginning of this Parliament whereupon the accustomed rent is reserved are saved LXIX The Bargainor of any of the premises or his Executors shall repay unto the Bargainee his Executors or Administrators the money received upon sale thereof within three months after request thereof made and upon non-payment thereof such bargainee shall recover it by action of debt wherein no essoin c. shall be allowed LXX The premises given to the King by this Act together with their revenues shall be within the survey of the Court of Augmentations or such other Court as the King shall appoint LXXI All leases made by the said Governors Incumbent c. since the 23 of November 37. H. 8. whereupon the old rents are reserved shall be void but all others shall continue in force LXXII This Act shall not extend to any Lands whereof such Governours Incumbents c. are seised or possessed to their own uses and not annexed to such Chanteries Free-chappels c. nor to any Mannors Lands Pensions c. not parcel of the premises granted by H. 8. or granted or to be granted by E. 6. to any of the said Governors Incumbents c. LXXIII Every person which had any rent or yearly profit out of the lands of any Chantery c. shall still enjoy them notwithstanding this Act. LXXIV All payments of First Fruits to be made by any such Governor Incumbent c. after the beginning of this Parliament shall be remitted LXXV Payments answered yearly into the Exchequer out of the premises shall be still continued LXXVI All Assurances made of the premises by H. 8. or E. 6. or by either of their licence or to either of them by any such Governour Incumbent c. shall be good The right of others being saved LXXVII This Act shall not extend to make good any Grant made by any Parson or Vicar nor to prejudice the Lord Cobham or any Corporation or the Chantery of Attlebo●ough in Norfolk LXXVIII All such Chanteries Free-Chappels c. given to the King by this Act as are within the Dutchy of Lancaster together with their lands c. shall be within the survey of the Dutchy-Court and all Commissions to be issued out concerning them shall be under the great Seal but shall be certified into the said Dutchy LXXIX The King may impower Commissioners to alter the nature and condition of Obits to better uses and none shall take advantage of any remainder use or condition for not finding of a Priest Obit Anniversary Light or Lamp LXXX This Act shall not extend to give Copyhold-lands to the King but the said Incumbents shall have them during their lives towards their maintenance LXXXI This Act shall not extend to lands recovered from a Chantery Priest by a good title without fraud LXXXII All Letters Pattents made by H. 8. and E. 6. of Chantery-lands and other the premises are confirm'd LXXXIII Stat. 1.2 P. M. 8. Pars inde None shall molest any person for any Abbey-Lands in pain to incur a Praemunire Vide 1 El. 1. ☞ Money * I. The Statute of great money incerti temporis None upon grievous forfeiture shall expend utter or receive any money or any other Coyn then English Irish or Scotch nor import more money into this Realm then may serve him for his expences nor land unless forced by tempest at any other then the known Ports and there shall shew his money to such person as the King shall assign without concealment in pain to forfeit his body and moneys II. None shall hide his money within Clothes Fardels Bales or otherwise in pain that the finder thereof shall have 4 d. for every pound so found and the King the rest and the body of him in whose hands any false or clipt money shall be found shall be arrested untill he find surety if he be a suspitious man Also he that finds any other coyn than English Irish or Scotch shall break the same and restore the pieces to the party that ows it and none shall oppose him in pain of great forfeiture but false money shall be pierced without restoring it III. Because poor people cannot well discover light moneyes they shall receive and pay them by weight of 5. of even weight by the Tumbrel to be delivered unto them by the Warden of the Exchange and marked by the Kings mark and it shall be lawful fon any man to pierce money not weiging the Tumbrel Howbeit 4 d. shall be allowed in every pound weight being then 20 s. and so it be only worn 6 d. * IV. The Statute of small money 20 E. 1. No Merchant or other shall import into this Realm any mony clipt or counterfeited or traffick therewith in pain for the first time to forfeit the mony for the second the mony and all his goods for the third his body and goods V. Others which have clipt money shall pierce it and carry it to the Kings Exchange to be new coyned * VI. Stat. 9. E. 3.1 None without the Kings Licence shall export any gold or silver in money or plate in pain to forfeit the same * VII Cap. 2. None shall import into any of the Kings Dominions any false or counterfeit money in pain to forfeit the same Howbeit any person stranger and other may bring to the Kings Exchange good money or bullion and receive convenient exchange for the same * VIII Cap. 3. Small money viz. half-pence or farthings shall not be molten into vessel or any thing else by any Goldsmith in pain to forfeit the money so molten and to suffer imprisonment until he hath paid the one half thereof IX Cap. 4. Black money shall not be current in this Realm X. Cap. 5. The Prosecutor against the offenders of this Statute shall be allowed a fourth part of the forfeiture XI Cap. 6. There shall
be no defrauding of this Statute XII Cap. 9. Search shall be made for money exported and false money imported XIII Cap. 10. The Searchers shall have the fourth part of the forfeiture XIV Cap. 11. Hostlers viz. Innc-keepers and Victuallers shall be sworn to search their guests XV. Stat. 18 E. 3. Stat. 2.6 Money shall be made and exchanges ordained where the King shall please XVI Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.13 Money shall not be impaired in weight or alloy XVII Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.20 Plate of Gold and Silver shall be received into the Kings Mint by weight and not by number and so also shall the Money be returned XVIII Stat. 38 E. 3. Stat. 1.2 None shall export Gold or Silver in money or Plate but Victuallers of fish who fish for Herring or other fish and such as import fish in small vessels who meddle not with other Merchandize but not otherwise then as the Chancellor shall think fit XIX Stat. 5 R. 2.2 None shall export Gold or Silver But quaere whether this Statute be not repealed by 4 Jac. 1. XX. Stat. 17 R. 2.1 The Statute of 9 E. 3. cap. 3. shall be duly executed and none shall melt Groats or half Groats into Vessel upon the pain contained in that Statute * XXI Foreign Coin shall not be current in England but shall be brought to the bullion there to be molten into the coin of England in pain of forfeiture thereof and imprisonment neither shall there be any exchange of English money for Scotch money upon the like pain XXII Stat. 2 H. 4.5 If the Kings Searchers find any money or plate in the custody of any ready to pass beyond sea or in any ship which is to go beyond Sea it shall be forfeited to the King save the parties reasonable expences which he shall also lose unless he presently confess the truth XXIII Provided that Merchant-strangers that sell their Merchandize in England and do imploy half their money received for the same upon other merchandize of England may by the Kings licence export the other half thereof without prejudice XXIV Stat. 4 H. 4.10 A third part of all silver money which shall be brought to the Bullion shall be coined into half pence and farthings of each alike and the Coiner shall make oath so to do XXV No Goldsmith shall melt half-pence or farthings in pain to forfeit four times so much as he so melts XXVI Stat. 11 H. 4.5 Gally half-pence shall not be current in England and all Statutes formerly made concerning Money are confirmed XXVII Stat. 13 H. 4. 6 The Statute of 11 H. 4.5 and all other Statutes formerly made concerning money shall be duly put in execution XXVIII Stat. 3 H. 5. Stat. 1. It shall be Felony to utter Scotch money in payments But this Statute is now obsolete and out of use XXIX Stat. 3. H. 5.6 It shall be Treason to clip wash or file money Howbeit this Statute is repealed by 1 E. 6.12 and 1. M. Sess 1. but the same again made Treason by 5 El. 11. which see in Treason ☞ XXX Stat. 3. H. 5.7 Justices of Assize and of Peace have power to hear and determine all offences concerning false money XXXI Stat. 9 H. 5.11 No English Gold shall be received in payment but by the Kings weight XXXII Stat. 1 H. 6.1 The Kings Council may assign money to be Coined and Exchanges to be holden in as many places as they please XXXIII Stat. 2 H. 6.6 No Gold or Silver shall be exported in pain to forfeit the value thereof save only for the ransome of prisoners the reasonable costs of Souldiers passing beyond sea and money to be expended for certain Scotch commodities so as they be done by the Kings licence XXXIV Merchants-Aliens shall find sureties in the Chancery every Company for them of their Company that none of them shall export any Gold or Silver in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof whereof the discoverer unto the Treasurer or Kings Council shall have a fourth part XXXV Stat. 2 H. 6.9 The money called Blanks are wholly prohibited XXXVI Stat. 2 H. 6.12 The Mint-master shall keep his Alloy in the making of white money according to his Indenture and shall receive silver brought to the Mint at the true value it is worth according to the same Alloy in pain to pay to the party his double damages XXXVII The Kings Assayer who ought to be a person indifferent betwixt the Mint-master and the Merchant and the controler of the Mint shall be present when any bullion is brought to the Mint to the end the Assayer may set the true value thereof in case any variance happen betwixt the Master and Merchant XXXVIII The Controllers office is every two dayes f●ithfully to try all silver brought in or carried out of the Mint and that without fee save what he receives of the King in pain of double damages And he ought to be a credible man and expert in the Mystery of Goldsmiths and of the Mint XXXIX The Mint-master and Exchanger shall convert into coin all Gold and Silver brought to the Mint or to the Exchange according to the form of the said Indenture upon the pain therein contained XL. Stat. 19 H. 7.5 All coins of Gold and Silver current in this Realm shall so continue for the value they were so coined for albeit some of them be cracked so as they be not clipt or otherwise diminished reasonable wearing excepted ☞ XLI If any refuse any lawful coin in payment he shall be compelled by the Officer of the place to receive it and also imprisoned or otherwise punished as such Officer shall think fit And if any Sheriff or other Officer refuse it he shall be compelled to take it by a Justice of Peace and is otherwise punishable at the discretion of such Justice XLII It shall be lawful for the owner of money clipped or otherwise impaired to exchange it at the Mint or to convert it into Plate or Bullion or otherwise to dispose thereof for his best profit XLIII To avoid clipping of silver coins hereafter the King appointeth new ones to be made with a circle about the outermost part thereof and for Gold coins that they should have the intire Scripture stamped without lacking any part thereof to the end that by the ring or Scripture it may be discerned when they were clipt or any way diminished and the Warden and Controller of the Mint are to see them thus ordered before they passe from the Mint in pain to forfeit their Offices and to be fined at the Kings will XLIV None shall transport any money I late or Bullion above 6 s. 8 d. into Ireland nor convey any of them into any Ship or other vessel in pain to forfeit them and to be imprisoned and ransomed at the Kings will XLV It shall be lawful for any to seize any Irish coin above 3 s. 4 d. brought into this Realm and to deliver it in at the
Mint for which the Master shall presently pay him half the value thereof to his own use XLVI Stat. 14 15 H. 8.12 The Coiners of every hundred pounds worth of gold brought to the Mint to be coined shall make 20 l. thereof in half Angels then called pieces of 4 d. and of every hundred pounds worth of silver 50 l. in groats 20 l. in two pences 20 l. in pence 10 Marks in half-pence and 5 Marks in farthings in pain that the Mint-master shall forfeit 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XLVII The half-pence and farthings shall have several stamps to the end they may be the better distinguished by the common people XLVIII When the value of the Plate or Bullion is under 100 l. the owner thereof shall receive a tenth part in half-pence and farthings XLIX This Act shall not be prejudicial to the Coiners and Mint-masters in York Duresm or Canterbury L. Stat. 14 El. 3. If any shall falsly forge or Counterfeit any coin of gold or silver nor current in this Realm he and his procurers aidors and abettors after conviction shall be imprisoned and forfeit their lands and goods as in case of misprision of treason Monopolies I. Stat. 21 Jac. 3. All Monopolies and all Commissions of or for the sole buying selling making working or using of any thing within the Kings Dominions or of any other Monopolies or of Power liberty or faculty to dispence with any others or to give licence or toleration to do use or exercise any thing against the tenor of any Law or Statute or to give or make any Warrant for such dispensation licence or toleration or to agree or compound for any penalty or forfeiture limited by any Statute or for any grant or promise of any benefit or profit of any such penalty forfeiture or sum of money before Judgment thereupon had and all Proclamations Inhibitions Restraints Warrants of assistances and other matters and things whatsoever any way tending to the erecting strengthening or countenancing thereof are contrary to the Laws of the Realm and shall be void and of none effect II. All the matters and things aforesaid shall be examined heard tried and determined by the Common Laws of the Realm and not otherwise And all persons are prohibited to use exercise or put them in ure III. The party grieved by pretext of any of the matters or things aforesaid shall recover in one of the Courts at Westminster treble damages and double costs in which suit no essoin or other delay shall be allowed nor any more then one Imparlance And if any person after notice given that such action depending is grounded upon this Statute shall cause to be stayed or delayed before Judgment by any Order Warrant Power or Authority save only of the Court where it is so depending or shall after Judgment had cause or procure the execution thereof to be staid or delayed by colour or means of any such Order Warrant Power or Authority save only by writ of Error or Attaint he or they so offending shall incur a Praemunire IV. Letters Patents of new Manufactures heretofore granted for 21 years or under to the Inventors thereof where they are not contrary to Law or any way prejudicial to the Common-Wealth are saved so also are such as have been heretofore granted for more then 21 years good for 21 years from the date of their Patent notwithstanding this Statute V. Neither shall this Act extend to grants of new Manufactures hereafter to be made to the Inventors thereof for 14 years or under being not contrary to Law or prejudicial to the Common-wealth nor to grants heretofore confirmed by Act of Parliament so long as such acts continue in force Nor to any warrant of Privy Seal granted or to be granted to the Justices of the Kings Bench or Common-Pleas the Barons of the Exchequer Justices of Assize of Oyer and Termine Goal-●elivery or Peace or other Justices to compound for the forfeitures of any penal Statute depending in suit before them after plea pleaded by the party defendant VI. This Act shall not be prejudicial to London or any other Corporation for any grant made them concerning their Customs Nor to any Corporation Company or Fellowship of any Art Trade or Mystery nor to any Company or Society of Merchants VII Neither shall it extend to any grant of Priviledg for Printing digging or making or compounding of Salt-Peter or Gunpowder or casting or making of Ordnance or shot for Ordnance nor to any grant of any office now in being other then such as are decreed by the Kings Proclamation Nor to the liberties of New-Castle concerning Sea-coals Nor to licensing of Taverns so the King receive the benefit Nor to the Patent granted to Sir Robert Mansfield for making of Glass nor to that granted to James Maxwel Esquire for transportation of Calves skins Nor to that of Abrah●m Baker for making of Smalt nor to that of Edward Lord Dudl●y for melting of Iron Ewer and making the same into Cast-works Mortdancester I. Marlbridge 16.52 H. 3. If the Lord will not render unto the heir his Land when he comes to Age without plea the heir shall recover his Land by Assize of Mortdancester together with all his damages II. If the heir at his Ancestors death be at full age and then seised of the Inheritance the Lord shall not out him nor meddle with any thing there but shall only take simple seisin thereof that he may be known to be Lord And if the Lord shall then put him out whereby he is driven to his writ of Mortdancester or Cosinage he shall recover his damages as in a writ of Novel disseisin III. The King shall have primer seisin of lands holden in chief as in times past neither shall the heir or any other intrude into the Inheritance before he have received out of the Kings hands as formerly hath been used IV. This Statute is to be understood of lands accustomed to be in the Kings hands by reason of Knight-service Serjeancy or right of Patronage V. The Statute of Glocester 6. 6 E. 1. If one die having many H i●s of whom one is Son or Daughter Brother or Sister Nephew or Neece and the other be a farther degree off the heir shall recover by a writ of Mortdancester ☞ Mortmain I. Magna Charta 36. 9 H. 3. If any shall give lands to a religious House the grant shall be void and the land forfeit to the Lord of the fee. II. The Statute of Glocester alias de Religiosis 7 E. 1. If lands be any way alienated in Mortmain to a Religious person or other the King or other Lord immediate may enter within a year after such alienation and if such Lord neglect it the next Lord to him may enter within half a year after and if all the mean Lords being of full age within the four Seas and out of prison neglect to do it after the year the King may enter III. West
granted to end the quarrel and that as well in the Exchequer as elsewhere XIII Stat. 14 H. 6.1 Justices of Nisi prius have power to give their Judgments in cases of Felony and Treason as well upon acquital as attainder and thereupon also to award execution XIV Stat. 18 El. 12. The chief Justice of England upon issue joyned in the Kings Bench or Chancery and the chief Justice of the Common Pleas and chief Baron of the Exchequer upon issues joyned in their several Courts or in their absence two other Justices or Barons are made Justices of Nisi prius for the County of Middlesex and may sit in Westminster-Hall or in the Exchequer within the term or four days after for the trial of issues joyned in the said Courts respectively and triable in Middlesex aforesaid to prevent interruption of proceeding in the said several Courts during the term and for the better ease of the Free-holden of Middlesex Upon which trials Tales shall be granted and all other proceedings shall pass as upon Writs of Nisi prius triable elsewhere in the Country Non-plevin I. Stat. 9 E. 3.2 None shall lose their Land by reason of Non plevin Non-suit I. Stat. 2 H. 4.7 Where before Justices of Assise the parties are adjourned for some difficulty in law upon the matter found in this case the Plaintiff shall not be non-suited albeit the verdict passe against him Non-tenure I. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.16 By the exception of Non-tenure of parcel no Writ shall abate but only for the quantity of the Non-tenure which is alledged Northumberland I. Stat. 23 H. 6.7 The Sheriff of Northumberland shall gather no more Head-pence there in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Norwich * I. Stat. 33 H. 8.16 None shall buy within Norwich or the County of Norfolk any Worsted yarn spun in the said City or County but such as shall work it or cause it to be wrought in Norwich or elsewhere within the said County in pain to forfeit for every pound thereof otherwise imployed 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor II. None shall convey beyond Sea any Worsted-yarn spun in England in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every pound to be divided as aforesaid III. Stat. 1 E. 6.6 The Statute of 33 H. 8.16 is made perpetual IV. Hat-makers dwelling in Norwich may buy Worsted-yarn called Middl usse yarn as they have used to do notwithstanding the Statute of 33 H. 8.16 so as they imploy it in Hat-making within the said City V. Stat. 56 E. 6.24 None shall make Mats Coverlets or Dornecks by himself or others or use any of those mysteries in Norwich or Norfolk unless he be admitted so to do by the Major Recorder Steward and two Justices of Peace of that City or by four of them or have been apprentice to the said Mystery by the space of seven years VI. None shall make any Hats Dornecks or Coverlets in Norfolk but only in some Corporate or Market-Town there in pain to forfeit for every six Felts 10 s. for every Coverlet 3 s. 4 d. and for every six yards of Dornecks 6 s. 8 d. VII This Act shall not extend to the Inhabitants of Pulham in Norfolk VIII The Major Recorder Steward or Justice of Peace that takes a reward for admitting any to work shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX Stat. 1 2. P. M. 14. An Act for the making of Russets Sattens Sattens reverses and Fustians of Naples at Norwich and not elsewhere by which Act there is a Corporation made for that purpose and divers Articles concerning the same See the Act at large X. Stat. 39 El. 22. An establishment of the Bishoprick of Norwich and the possession thereof against a pretended concealed title made thereunto See the Statute at large ☞ Nusance I. West 2.24 13 E. 1. A Writ of Nusance shall be grantable as well against the Alienee as against the party that levied it and when it is against the party himself the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod D. injuste c. Levavit domum murum mercatum alia quae sunt ad nocumentum c. But when against the Alien the Writ shall be Questus est nobis A. quod B. C. Levav●runt c. II. Stat. 6 R. 2.3 All Writs of Nusance called Vicomtiels shall be made at the election of the Plaintiff according to the old form or in the nature of Assizes determinable before the Justices of the one Bench or other or the Justices of assize to be taken in the County of the place assigned Oath I. SEe Magna Charta printed by Richard Tottle Anno Domini 1556. fol. 164. and 166. the Oaths of the King the Bishops the Kings Counsellors Escheators Sheriffs Majors and Bailiffs See the Oath Ex Officio Courts and Jurisdictions Ecclesiastical Numb IV. And see Title Quakers Numb I. Obligations I. Stat. 38 E. 3.4 Whereas divers people be bound in another Court out of the Realm by Instruments or otherwise it is accorded that all penal bonds in the third person be void and holden for none Odio Atia I. West 1.11 3 E. 1. Forasmuch as many being indicted of Murder and guilty thereof by favourable inquests taken by the Sheriff and by the Kings Writ of Odio Atia are replevied until the comming of the Justices in Eyre It is provided that from henceforth such Inquests shall be taken by lawful men chosen out by the oath of twelve men of whom two at the least shall be Knights who by no affinity with the Prisoners or otherwise are to be suspected ☞ Officers and Office I. Stat. 12 R. 2. The Chancellor Treasurer Keeper of the Privy Seal Steward of the Kings house the Kings Chamberlain the Clerk of the Rolls Justices of the Benches Barons of the Exchequer and all others called to name and ordain Justices of Peace Sheriffs Escheators Customers Controllers or any other Officer or Minister of the King shall be firmly sworn that they shall not name or ordain any Officers or Ministers for any gift or brocage favour or affection And none which pursueth by him or by other privily or openly to be in any such office shall be put in the same or any other but that they make all such Officers and Ministers of the best and most lawful and sufficient men in their judgments and knowledg II. Stat. 14 R. 2.10 No Customer Controller Searcher Weigher or Finder shall have any such Office for term of life but only during the Kings pleasure notwithstanding any Patent or grant to the contrary III. Stat. 17 R. 2.5 No Searcher Gauger Aulnager Finder or Weigher of Wools or other Merchandize Collector of Customs and Subsidies or Controller shall have their several Offices for ●●erm of life or years But such Offices shall remain in the Kings 〈◊〉 and under the governance of the Treasurer with the assent of the
Council if need be and all Charters and Patents otherwise made shall be void IV. Stat. 1 H. 4.13 The Statute of 17 R. 2.5 shall be duly put in execution and all Customers and Controllers shall be resident upon their Offices in their proper persons without making any deputies in their places V. Stat. 4 H. 4.20 The Statute of 1 H. 4.13 shall be duly put in execution and the said Officers shall be sworn so to do in pain of imprisonment and to forfeit 100 l. VI. Stat. 13 H. 4.5 The Statute of 1 H. 4.13 shall be duly put in execution And all Customers Controllers Gaugers of Wines and searchers shall be resident upon their office especially at the time of charge and discharge of Ships and Vessels so that no such Officer after the time aforesaid be absent from his said Office by three weeks at the most in pain to lose his Office unless he be commanded upon record to be in the Kings Courts or otherwise in the Kings service of Record VII Stat. 2 H. 6.10 All Officers made by the Kings Letters Patents within his Courts which have authority ab antiquo to appoint Clerks and Ministers within the same Courts shall be sworn to appoint such there for whom they will answer at their peril and such as be sufficient and will be faithful and diligent in their places VIII Stat. 31 H. 6.5 All Letters Patents of the said Offices or Aulnage made against the effect of the Statutes of the 17 R. 2.5 or 4 H. 4.24 which see in Drapery shall be void And no Letters Patents of any of them shall be hereafter made but by warrant of bill sealed by the Treasurer and sent by him into the Chancery as hath been heretofore used and if any be otherwise made they shall be void IX This Act shall not extend to be prejudicial to the Queen the Prince the Duke of Buckingham the heirs of Henry late Earl of Warwick the Cities of London or Winchester to any Controller for any Office out of the Kings Ports to John Panicock or Giles Seyntlo Esquires or to any of the King or Queens houshold servants for any of their Offices or the fees thereof due and accustomed * X. Stat. 5 E. 6.16 None shall bargain or sell any Office or Deputation or any part thereof or receive or take any money fee reward or other profit directly or indirectly or any promise agreement bond or assurance to receive any such profit for the same which office shall concern the administration or execution of Iustice or the receipt controlment or payment of any of the Kings Money or Revenue or any Accompt Aulnage Auditorship or surveying of any of the Kings Lands or any of his Customs or any administration or attendance in any custom-Custom-house or the keeping of any of the Kings Towns Castles or Fortresses being places of strength or defence or any Clerkship in any Court of Record in pain that the Bargainee thereof shall lose his place and the Bargainor be adjudged disabled to execute the same and every such bargain and agreement shall be void XI Provided that this Act shall not extend to any office or inheritance or for the keeping of a Park House Mannor Garden Chase or Forest nor to the two Chief Iustices or Iustices of Assize but that they may grant offices as they did before the making of this Act Also all Acts done by an officer removeable by force of this Statute shall be good in Law until he be removed XII Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 8. Officers and Offices assessed for raising Money to be distributed amongst loyal and indigent Officers of the late Kings Army XIII Provided this Act not to be drawn into president to tax any sort of persons distinct from the body of the people Oyer and Terminer I. West 2.29 13. E. 1. A Writ of Trespass ad audiendum terminandum shall not be granted but before the Iustices of either Bench or Iustices in Eyre unless it be for some heynous Trespass which requires speedy remedy II. A Writ to hear and determine Appeals before Justices assigned shall not be granted but upon a special case a certain cause and the Kings command And lest the party should be kept too long in prison they may have the Writ De Odio Alia provided by Magna Charta cap. 26. and other Statutes III. Statutum quod vocatur Ragman de Iusticiaris assignatis 33 E. 1. By this Act it was ordained that Justices should go through England to hear and determine trespasses and other complaints of things done within 25 years before and divers matters be in that Statute concerning those things See the Statute in Vet. Mag. Cart. fol. 28. and Sir Edw. Cook in the fourth part of his Instit cap. 34. IV. Stat. 2 E. 3.2 Pars înde Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer shall not be granted but before the Justices of the one Bench or the other or the Justices Errants and that for great hurt and horrible Trespasses and of the Kings special Grace according to the Statute of Westm 2.29 Oyle I. Stat. 3 H. 8.14 The Major of London together with the Master and Wardens of the Mystery of Tallow-Chandlers there shall have power to search all Oyls brought to London to be sold and to oversee that the same be not mixed or altered from their right kinds and what they shall find deceitfully mixed shall cast away and punish the Offendor by imprisonment or otherwise at their discretions according to the Laws and Customs of the said City II. Head-Officers in other Corporations shall have the like power within their Jurisdictions ☞ Ordinaries I. West 2.19 13 E. 1. Where an intestate dies in debt and the goods come to the Ordinary to be disposed in this case the Ordinary shall satisfie the debts so far as the goods extend in such sort as the Executors of such persons should have done in case he had made a Testament II. Stat. 18 E. 3.6 3. Temporal Justices shall not make inquiries of process awarded by the Spiritual Judges saving onely the Article in Eyre such as ought to be III. Stat. 25 E. 3 Stat. 3.9 The Justices shall not impeach Ordinaries or their Ministers upon Indictments of general Extortions or Oppressions unless they put in certain in what thing of what and in what manner the Ordinaries or their Ministers have committed extortion or oppression ☞ Painters * I. Stat. 1 Jac. 20. NO Plaisterer shall use to exercise the Art of a Painter in London or the Suburbs thereof or lay any manner of Colour or Painting whatsoever in the Art of Painting heretofore used unless he be a Servant or Apprentice to a Painter or have served seven years as an Apprentice in that Art in pain for every time so offending to forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor II. Provided that Plaisterers may use Whiting Blacking Red-Lead Red-Okar and Russet mingled with Size only and not with Oyl notwithstanding this
they be that choose them Also Citizens and Burgesses shall be resiant in and free of the Cities and Boroughs for which they are chosen XI Stat. 6 H. 6.1 Knights of the Shires and Sheriffs against whom any Inquest of Office for undue Elections are found before the Justices of Assize shall have their answer and traverse thereunto and shall not be damnified thereby until they be duly convict thereof according to Law XII Stat. 8 R. 6.1 The Clergy called to the Convocation by the Kings Writ together with their Servants and Familiars shall fully use and enjoy such liberty or defence in coming tarrying and returning as the great men and Communalty of the Realm called to Parliament do or ought to enjoy XIII Stat. 8. H. 6.7 The election of Knights of the Shire shall be made by the more voices of people dwelling in the Counties having each of them Land or Tenements of the yearly value of 40 s. besides Reprises also the Knights so chosen shall be resiant within the same Counties XIV The Sheriff hath power to examine upon Oath the choosers how much they may expend by the year XV. If the Sheriff be found by Inquest and also attainted before Justices of Assize to have done contrary to this Act he shall forfeit 100 l. to the King and suffer a years imprisonment without Bail and in that case the Knights so returned shall lose their wages XVI He that cannot expend 40 s. per annum shall have no voice in the election of Knights for the Parliament and hereafter in every Writ issued out for that purpose mention shall be made of this Ordinance XVII Stat. 10 H. 6.2 A chooser of the Knights of Parliament must be resident and have free-hold worth 40 s. per annum besides Reprises within the same County XVIII Stat. 23 H. 6.11 The Sheriff in the next County Court after he shall have received the Writ for assessing the wages of the Knights of Parliament shall make Proclamation that the Coroners chief Constables Bailiffs and all others that will appear at the next County Court to assess the same wages at which last County the Sheriff and the other Officers shall be present in proper person in pain that every one that makes default shall forfeit 40 s. and then the Sheriff shall in full County assess every Hundred by it self and every Town in each Hundred by it self so as the sum assessed upon all the Hundreds exceeds not the entire charge of the County nor that assessed upon all the Towns in each Hundred exceeds not the sum charged upon the Hundred in which they be XIX The Sheriff or other Officer which levies more then is so assessed shall forfeit 20 l. to the King and 10 l. to the Prosecutor for the recovery of which 10 l. the said prosecutor shall have a Scire facia● and if the Defendant make default or appear and is afterward convict he shall recover the said 10 l. to his own use over and above the said 20 l. and besides treble damages for his costs of suit XX. The Sheriff shall levy the said Assesments as speedily as may be after they are so assessed and shall deliver them to the Knights XXI Justices of both Benches Justices of Assize Goal-delivery and Peace have power to hear and determine these abuses as well at the suit of the King as of the party XXII This Assessment shall not be levied but only in places where it hath been formerly levied and hereafter in every Writ for the levying of such wages this Act shall be inserted XXIII Stat. 23 H. 6.15 The Statutes of 1 H. 5.1 and 8 H. 6.7 shall be kept in all points XXIV The Sheriff after the receipt of the Writ shall deliver a precept under his Seal to every Mayor and Bailiff or Bailiffs or Bailiff where no Mayor is of the Cities and Burroughs within his County reciting the Writ and commanding them if it be a City to choose by Citizens of the same City Citizens and if a Burrough Burgesses to come to the Parliament And such head-Officers shall lawfully return such precept to the same Sheriff by Indenture betwixt them of such Elections and of the names of the Citizens and Burgesses so chosen and thereupon the Sheriff shall make a good return of every such Writ and also of every such return made by the said Head-Officers XXV If the Sheriff aforesaid do contrary to this Act or any other formerly made for the election of Knights Citizens and Burgesses the Sheriff shall incur the pain contained in the said Stat. of 8. H. 6.7 and besides shall forfeit to the person so chosen and not duly returned 100 l. more to be recovered by action of debt by the said person so chosen against the said Sheriff his Executors and Administrators or in his default by any other prosecutor in which Action no Essoin c. shall be allowed And if such Head-Officers shall make a false return they shall forfeit 40 l. to the King and 40 l. more to the person so chosen and not returned to be recovered by such person or other prosecutor in manner aforesaid XXVI The Sheriff that maketh not due election of Knights betwixt the hours of 8 and 11 in the forenoon and a good true return in manner aforesaid shall incur the pain of 100 l. to the King and as much to any that will sue for the same XXVII The party grieved shall commence his Action within three moneths after the beginning of the Parliament and in his default the prosecutor may then take it XXVIII If any Knight Citizens or Burgess returned by the Sheriff be put out and another put in his place the person so put in if he take the place upon him shall forfeit 100 l. to the King and as much to the person so put out who shall have an Action of debt for the same if he commence his Suit within three months after the beginning of the Parliament XXIX The Knights of the Shires shall be notable knights of the same County for which they are choser or else notable Esquires or Gentlemen born in the same Counties and such as are able to be knights but none shall be such a knight which standeth in the degree of a Yeoman or under XXX Stat. 6 H. 8.16 No Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron of any of the Cinque-ports shall depart from the Parliament without the licence of the Speaker and Commons in Parliament assembled to be entred upon Record in the Clerk of the Parliaments Book in pain to lose their wages XXXI Stat. 33 H. 8.21 The Kings Royal assent by his Letters Pattents under the Great Seal and signed by his hand and notified in his absence to the Lords and Commons assembled in the Upper House is and ever was of as good strength and force as if the King were personally present and had publickly assented thereunto XXXII Stat. 35 H. 8.11 Whereas Knights and Burgesses of Parliament in England and Wales have used to
have allowed them viz. the Knights 4 s. and the Burgesses 2 s. a day or more during the Parliament and their reasonable time of comming to and returning from the Parliament together with their costs of Writs and other ordinary fees and charges by this Statute it is ordained that the Sheriffs of all the 12 Shires in Wales and the County of Monmouth shall have power to levy the said fees of the Inhabitants of those Shires and Counties and shall pay them to the Knights within two Moneths after the said Knights shall have delivered unto them their Writs de solutione feodi Militis Parliamenti in pain to forfeit 20 l. to be recovered by bill plaint c. and to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and for every month that such default is made after the said two moneths 20 l. more to be levied as aforesaid The Head-officers also of the Cities and Burroughs in the said twelve Shires and County shall levy and pay their Burgesses wages and fees within the like time after the writs De solutione feodi Burgens Parliam delivered unto them upon the like pains to be levied of the goods and chattels of such Head-officers XXXIII The Inhabitants of the Cities and Boroughs in the said Shires and County which having no Burgesses of their own use to contribute towards the wages of the Burgesses of the Shire-Towns shall have warning by Proclamation or otherwise from the Head-officers of the said Towns to come and give their voices at the electing of the Burgesses of such Shire-Towns XXXIV Two Justices of Peace in each of the said Shires and County have power to tax every City and Burrough in the several Counties where they inhabit respectively towards the wages of the Burgesses within the Shire-Towns which taxes shall be again rated upon the Inhabitants of each such City and Burrough by four or six discreet and substantial Burgesses there and then levied and paid by the Head-officers unto the Burgesses of Parliament for the said Shire-Towns in manner and form aforesaid and upon the like pains XXXV Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 1. The Parliament begun the 3. of Nov. 16 Car. 1. declared to be dissolved And the Lords and Commons now sitting declared to be the two houses of Parliament XXXVI The Parliament begun at Westm 3. of Nov. 1640. declared to be Dissolved and that there is nor can be any legislative power in either or both Houses of Parliament without the King XXXVII Tumultuous and disorderly preparing Petitions Remonstrances to the King and Houses of Parliament having been a great occasion of the late Wars and calamities It is Enacted That no person hereafter shall sollicite or procure any Petition complaint Remonstrance Declaration or other address to the King or both or either Houses of Parliament for altering of matters established by Law in Church or State unless the matter thereof have been first consented unto and ordered by three or more Justices of the County or by the major part of the Grand Jury of the County or Division of the County where the same matter shall arise at the publick Assizes or general Quarter-Sessions Or if in London by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Commons in Councel Assembled XXXVIII Provided this Act be not intended to hinder any persons not exceeding 10 in number to present any publick or private grievance or complaint to any Members after election and during continuance of the Parliament or to the King for remedy therein nor to any address to the King by all or any the Members of Parliament during their sitting XXXIX Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 1. The Act in 16 Car. 1. Entituled An Act for preventing of Inconveniencies hapning by long intermissions of Parliament Being in derogation of his Majesties just Rights and Prerogative inherent to the Crown for calling and assembling Parliaments Repealed And declared That Parliaments shall not be intermitted or discontinued above three years at the most and to be assembled and called oftner if need require Parson Vicar and Parsonage I. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.17 Parsons Vicars Wardens of Chappels and Provost-Wardens and Priests of perpetual Chanteries shall have their Writs of Juris utrum of lands and tenements rents and possessions annexed and given perpetually in Almes to Vicarages Chappels or Chanteries and recover by other Writs in their case as far forth as Parsons of Churches and Prebends Partitions and Parceners I. Statutum Hiverniae 14 H. 3. If land descend to several Coparceners they shall all hold of the chief Lord of the Fee and not one of another This is the usage in England and shall also be observed in Ireland II. Prerog Reg. 5.17 E. 2. If one inheritance that is holden of the●ing in chief descend to many Parceners all the heirs shall do homage to the King and that Inheritance shall be divided amongst those Heirs so that every of them after shall hold their part of the King III. Stat. 31. H. 8.1 Joynt-tenants and tenants in common of any inheritance in their own right or in the right of their wives in any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments may be compelled to make Partition by Writ De partitione sacienda as Coparceners are compellable to do and this Writ shall be pursued at the common Law IV. Provided that after such Partition made they shall have aid one of another and of their heirs to deraign warranty and to recover for the rate as Coparceners use to have V. Stat. 32. H. 8.32 Joynt-tenants and Tenants in common that have inheritance or free-hold in any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments shall also be compellable to make partition by the said Writ to be pursued upon their case Howbeit such partition shall not be prejudicial to any but the parties to such partition their Executors and Assigns Passage and Arrivage I. Stat. 8. H. 6.27 Any of the inhabitants of Tewksbury in Com. Gloucestr may have an action of debt according to the Stat. of Winchester to recover against the communalty of the Forest of Dean and Hundred of Bledislow and Westbury though no Communalty recompence for robberies and wrongs done them upon Severn Also the goods of any private person may be taken upon an Execution awarded against the Communalty Any person may arrest and imprison the offenders and he whose goods are taken in execution may have an action of trespass or debt against the offender II. Stat. 9 H. 6.5 All persons shall have free passage in Severn with Flotes and Drags and all other Merchandize goods and chattels and if any be disturbed he shall have his remedy by action at the common Law III. Stat. 19. H. 7.18 Another stricter Statute for the free passage of Severn See the Statute at large IV. Stat. 23 H. 8.12 None shall interrupt the passage upon the banks of Severn or take or ask any tax or toll for the same in pain of 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved V. Stat. 26 H. 8.5 Justices
their fees for keeping of Castles Houses Parks Chases Forrests or block-Block-houses shall be void when the cause of exercising such Offices is determined XI Provided also that this Act shall not extend to revive any Letters Patents or any Office granted by the King which have been made void by Authority of Parliament Judgement Decree or otherwise XII This Act shall not be prejudicial to any Letters Patents Indentures or Writings made after the said 4th of February and before the 28th of April in the 28th year of the Kings Reign or to any other Statute made for the corroboration of such Letters Parents Indentures or Writings XIII Stat. 1. E. 6.8 Such another Statute made for the confirmation of all Grants made and to be made by E. 6. from the 28th of January in the first year of his Reign and so during his life with such provisoes and limitations as in the former Act of 34 35. of H. 8. are contained See the Statute XIV Stat. 7. E. 6.3 A confirmation of the Kings Letters Patents notwithstanding his non-age or any Statute heretofore made for the reservation of Tenures Rents or Tenths XV. Stat. 4.5 P. M. 1. Another like Act made for the confirmation of all Grants made and to be made to or by the Queen or the King and Queen from the first of July in the first year of her Reign and so during her life with such provisoes and limitations as in the said former Acts of H. 8. and E. 6. are contained XVI Stat. 18. E. 2. Another like confirmation of all Grants made to for or by the Queen or to be so made within 7. years next after the end of this Session with like provisoes and limitations as in the former Statutes XVII Stat. 35 El. 3. All Abby-lands which came to the hands of H. 8. shall be adjudged to have been in his actual and lawful possession notwithstanding any defect want or insufficiency of or in any Surrender Grant or Conveyance thereof or of any part thereof made to the said King or any other matter or cause whatsoever whereby he might have been entitled thereunto XVIII All Letters Patents made by him since the fourth of February in the 25. year of her Reign for the foundation of any Dean and Chapter or Colledge shall be adjudged good XIX The right of all others except of Abbots Priors c. is saved XX. Stat. 43. El. 1. All grants made to the Queen since the 8th of February in the 27th year of his Reign except by Ecclesiastical persons or bodies politique not having power or ability to make such grants are confirmed XXI The right of all others is saved except of the parties and privies of such grants XXII All grants made by the Queen to others since the said time as also all others that should be made by force of a Commission then on foot before the end of this Session or within one year after shall be good XXIII The Letters Patents of all such grants shall be expounded most beneficial to the Patentees any mis-naming mis-recital non-recital c. notwithstanding XXIV This Act shall not extend to Letters Patents of Offices nor of concealments except such concealments onely as are sold by Commissioners XXV Neither shall this Act extend to make good any Letters Patents heretofore adjudged void by any Court of Record at Westminster or by Act of Parliament neither yet those of Monopolies or for toleration of any offence prohibited by any penal Law nor of Lands where there is an estate tail in the Queen unless such estate be duly received XXVI Here also the right of others is saved XXVII Stat. 21 Jac. 25. The King nor any other claiming from by or under him shall hereafter take advantage against the Kings Patentees or Tenants for default of payment of Rent or other duty to be performed so as the rent be paid or such duty performed before such advantage taken or any Commission awarded to enquire or other process shall be issued for such forfeiture XXVIII Stat. 21 Jac. 29. All Leases made and to be made by Prince Charles of the Dutchie Lands of Cornwall shall be good XXIX Howbeit they shall not be good unless they be in possession and granted only for 31 years or 3 lives or estates determinable upon 31 years or 3 lives and thereupon also the accustomable Rent for the greatest part of 20 years before shall be reserved and where no such Rent hath been payable a reasonable Rent shall be reserved not under the twentieth part of the clear yearly value neither shall such Leases be dispunishable of waste XXX All Covenants and other agreements contained in such Leases shall be good XXXI The right of others except of the King and Prince and their Successors is saved XXXII 1 Car. 2. Such another Act for Leases to be made of the said Dutchie Lands within three years with such Clauses and Provisoes as in the Act of 21 Jac. 29. ☞ Paving I. Stat. 24 H. 8.11 The Street-way between Charing-Cross and Stroad-Cross shall be sufficiently paved at the charge of the owners of the Lands adjoyning to the same and shall also be afterwards repaired by them in pain to forfeit to the King 12 d. for every yard square not so paved and repaired and 25 H. 8. for Holborn and Southwark * II. Stat. 32 H. 8.17 All persons having lands betwixt Algate and White-Chappel Church or in Chancery-Lane Grays-Inn-Lane● Shooe-lane Fetter-lane or the way betwixt Holborn-bars and High-Holborn as far as any houses are there built shall before the 24 of June 1542. sufficiently pave so much of the Streets and Lanes aforesaid as are next adjoyning to their said lands and continue them in good repair in pain to forfeit for every yard square not so paved or repaired 6 d. III. The Mayor Aldermen and Justices in London and the Justices of Peace in Middl sex have power within their respective Jurisdictions to enquire hear and determine in Sessions the defaults And in case the said Justices shall be found remiss therein they shall respectively forfeit 5 l. IV. The Clerk of the Peace in Middlisex shall duly estreat into the Exchequer the Fines and forfeitures happening upon this Act in pain of 5 l. to be divided betwixt the king and the prosecutor V. Any three Justices in London whereof the Mayor is to be one have power to set Fines upon such as do not pave or repair any Street or Lane in London or the liberties thereof to be levied by distress plaint or action by the Chamberlain to the use of the Mayor and Communalty of the said City VI. The inhabitant paving his part in the said Streets or Lanes may defaulk so much of his rent from his lessor as the charge thereof shall amount unto unless it be otherwise agreed betwixt them VII Stat. 35 H. 8.12 Another like Statute for the paving and repairing of Whit●-Cross-Street Cheswel-stre●t Golding-Lane Grub-street Goswel-street Long-Lane Saint Johns-street the streets there leading
the Parish oftentimes the Churchwardens and Overseers for the poor of the said parish where the child is born may seise and take so much of the goods and chattels and of the rents and profits of the lands of such reputed fathers or mothers as shall be ordered by two Justices of the Peace for and towards discharge of the Parish for providing for such bastard and by order of the Sessions may sell the said goods or so much thereof as the Court shall think fit and so much of the rents and profits of the lands for the said purposes XLIX The Defendant sued for any thing done upon this Act may plead the general Issue and upon Verdict for him Nonsuit or Discontinuance shall recover treble damages L. The poor of the Counties of Lancashire Cheshire Derby-shire York-shire Durham Cumberland and Westmerland and other Counties of England and Wales shall be maintained and set on work within their respective Parishes according to the intent of this Act and in case of default the several penalties herein to be incurred And the Justices of the Peace in the said Counties may execute all powers there under the like penalties as in the Statute of 43 El. cap. 2. to be levyed as therein mentioned LI. Proviso Impowring the Justices of the Peace in their Quarter-Sessions to transport convicted Rogues Vagabonds and sturdy Beggars to English plantations beyond the Seas LII Proviso for saving the Franchises and Liberties of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster and this Act as to all matters except what relates to the Corporations to continue till the end of the first Session of the Parliament after the 29th of May 1665. and no longer Post-Office I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 34. A Post-Office for the carriage of Letters and providing post-horses erected in London the Master whereof to be appointed by the Kings Letters Pattents under the Great Seal and the rates for carrying Letters ascertained as well Inland as beyond Sea II. Postmasters not providing sufficient horses for such as have occasion forfeit 5 l. for every offence one moyety to the King the other moyety to the party that will sue for the same in any the Kings Courts of Record III. No horses to be seised or used for any service within the said Act without consent of the owners IV. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 14. Stat. 3. The profits of the said Post-Office and power of granting Wine-Licenses setled on the Duke of York and the heirs Males of his body ☞ Prerogativa Regis I. West 1.48 3. E. 1. Forasmuch as the King hath ordained these things viz. this Statute of Westm 1. for the honour of God and the Church and for the Common-wealth and for remedy of such as are grieved he would not that at any other time it should turn in prejudice of him or of his Crown but that such right as appertain to him should be saved in all points President of the Council I. Stat. 21 H. 8.20 Pars inde The President of the Kings Council if he be present may associate the Lord Chancellor Treasurer and Privy Seal at naming of Sheriffs setting of prizes of Wines and at all other Acts limited by any Statute to be done by the said Chancellor and Treasurer or Keeper of the Privy Seal Primer Seisin I. Prerog Reg. 3. 17. E. 2. The King shall have Primer seisin after the death of his Tenant in chief of all the lands whereof he dyed seised in Demesne as of Fee of what age soever the Heir be taking the issues of the same lands until inquisition be made and he have taken homage of such heir Printing See Books c. Per tot ☞ Prison Prisoners Goal Goalers I. Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 1.7 The Justices of either Bench Assize and Goal-delivery shall hear and determine all plaints made against Sheriffs and Goalers who shall compel or procure prisoners to become approvers viz. to accuse others II. Stat. 5 E. 3.8 Endictees and Appellees in the Kings Bench shall be safely kept in Prison by the Marshals there and not suffered to go at large according to the charge given them by the Justices And if any complain thereof the Justices shall do him right during the Terms III. At the end of every Term the Marshalls shall acquaint the Justices in what Town they will keep such Prisoners and shall there allow them houses at their own charge IV. The Marshals who suffer any such prisoner to go at large shall suffer half a years Imprisonment and be ransomed at the Kings will which the Justices shall have power to enquire of when they see time V. The proceedings against Marshals shall be within the Verge and if the Marshalls suffer any to escape they shall be proceeded against according to Law howbeit the King intended not by this Statute to lose the escape where he ought to have it VI. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.10 Goals which were wont to be in she Sheriffs custody shall be again rejoyned to their Bailiwicks and they shall put in such keepers for whom they will answer VII The Goaler which by dures compells a prisoner to become an approver shall have judgment of life and member VIII Stat. 13 R. 1.15 The Kings Castles and Goals which were wont to be joyned to the bodies of the Counties and be now severed shall be rejoyned to the same IX Stat. 5 H. 4.10 Justices of Peace shall imprison none but in the common Goal saving to Lords and others who have Goals their Franchise in this case X. Stat. 19 H. 7.10 The Sheriff of every County shall have the keeping of the common Goal there except such as hold any by inheritance or succession also all Letters Patents of the keeping of Goals for life or years are annulled and void howbeit the Kings Bench nor Marshalsey shall be in the custody of any Sheriff and the Patents of Edmard Courtney Earl of Devon and John Morgan for keeping of prisons are excepted XI Stat. 6 H. 8.6 The Justices of the Kings Bench have power by their discretions to remand as well the bodies of Felons as their Indictments into the Counties where such Felonies were committed And also to command the Justices of Goal-delivery of Peace and all other Justices and Commissioners there to proceed and determine such Felonies in like manner as if their bodies and Indictments had not been removed XII Stat. 23 H. 8.2 The Justices of Peace in Essex Suffolk Dorset Sussex Surrey Nottinghans Glocester Bedford Buckingham Huntington Wilts Kent Warwick Staff Oxon Bark Ieic Rutl. Linc. Heref. North. Salop. Norf. Cornwal and Derby or the greater part of them in their respective Counties have power within one year to appoint the Towns and places within their respective limits where common Goals may be edified and to tax the several Counties for building and furnishing the same Howbeit this tax was not to extend to corporate Towns having Justices and Common Goals of their own XIII Felons shall be committed to the
H. 4.3 and 4. Religious persons purchasing Bulls from the Pope to be exempted from obedience or tithes shall incur a praemunire X. Stat. 7. H. 4.8 No provision shall be made by the Pope nor license or pardon by the King touching any Benefice then full of an Incumbent XI Stat. 3. H. 5.4 All Provisions made by the Pope and licences or pardons by the King touching any Benefices full of an Incumbent shall be void and the provisors thereof shall incur a pramunire ☞ Purprestures I. Stat. De Bigamis 4. E. 1. Purprestures or usurpatrons upon the King shall be reseised and if any complain of such reseisures h● shall be heard and have right done him ☞ Purveyors * I. Magna Carta 21. 9. H. 3. No Sherrif or Bailiff of the King or any other shall take any Horses or Carts of any man to make carriage except they pay for carriage with two Horses after the rate of 10 d. a day and with three 14 d. a day II. No Demesne Cart of any Spiritual person Lord or Knight shall be taken for carriage by the Kings Bailiffs Neither shall any wood be taken for the Kings use without the owners license III. Stat. De Tallagio nonconcedendo Tempore H. 3. vel E. 1. None of the Kings Ministers shall take any Corn Hides or any other goods without the owners consent IV. West 1.31 3. E. 1. Purveyors who take any thing for the Kings use upon credit shall immediately after they shall have received money of the King satisfie the Creditor in pain to have the same together with damages levied of their lands and goods and also to make fine for the trespass And if they have neither lands not goods they shall suffer imprisonment at the Kings will V. None shall take more Horses or Carts for the Kings use then need requires Nor take a reward to excuse any in pain to be punished by the Marshals if he be of the Court and if not being thereof attainted to pay treble damages and to remain in the Kings prison 40 dayes VI. Artic. super Cart. 2. 28. E. 1. None but the Kings Purveyors shall take any prices and they only for the use of his House paying or agreeing with the party for the same if the prices taken be meat drink or such other mean things VII Purveyors shall before they take any goods shew their Warrant to the owner which Warrant shall be under the great or petty Seal declaring also their authority and the goods whereof they are to make purveyance neither shall they take any more then need requires VIII Purveyors shall not take any thing for such as are in wages nor for any other but shall make full answer in the Kings House and in the Wardrobe for all things taken by them without making their larges elsewhere or liveries of such things as they have taken for the King IX A Purveyor upon complaint made to the Steward or Treasurer of the Kings House being attainted to have offended in the premisses shall forthwith agree with the party grieved be put out of the Kings Service for ever and remain in prison at the Kings pleasure X. If a Purveyor be attainted to have taken any thing without Warrant he shall be conveyed to the next Goal and suffer as a Felon if the value of the goods do so require XI Concerning prices made in Fairs good Towns and Ports for the Kings great Wardrobe the Purveyors shall have their common Warrant under the Great Seal XII This Act shall not diminish the Kings right to ancient prices due and accustomed as of Wines and other goods See this Statute confirmed by 18. E. 2.2 4. E. 3.4 and 25. E. 3.1 XIII Stat. 4. E. 3 3. No purveyance shall be made but only for the Houses of the King Queen or their Children XIV Purveyance made for those Houses shall be taken by ordinary striked measure and prized at the true value by the Constable and other good men of the place according to their Oath and without threats or dures for which express payment shall be made before the Kings departure out of that Verge See this Statute confirmed 10 E. 3.1 XV. Stat. 5. E. 3.2 Purveyances for the Houses of the King Queen and their Children shall be made without menace by the Constables and four disereet men of the place where they are to be taken who shall also be thereto sworn And Talley of the goods so taken shall be strook betwixt the Purveyors and the owners thereof in the presence of those Constable and apprizers under the Seals of the said Purveyors according to which the owners shall be afterwards paid And if a Purveyor shall be attainted to have taken any thing otherwise then is limited by this Statute he shall be imprisoned and suffer as a Felon if the value of the goods require it And in every Warrant of Purveyance the form and penalty of this Statute shall be inserted See 10 E. 3.1 and 25 E. 3.1 to the like effect XVI Stat. 14. E. 3. Stat. 3.1 Spiritual persons goods shall not be taken by Purveyors nor their Houses charged with Horses Dogs Hawks or the like without their consent and good liking XVII Stat. 13 E. 3.19 Stat. 1. The Kings Purveyors shall take nothing without the owners consent and shall pay for what they take before the Kings departure out of that Verge And if they attempt to do any thing against this Statute by colour of their Commission no man is bound to obey them XVIII For the purveyance of Towns and Castles in Scotland and England Merchants shall be appointed by the Treasurers without Commission but none shall be compelled to sell any thing against their will XIX The Sheriff shall make purveyance for a certain number of the Kings Horses and Dogs out of the issue of his Bailiwick XX. The Countrey shall not be charged with any more persons then are necessary to keep those Horses v z. for every Horse a servant without bringing Women Pages or Dogs with them XXI Stat. 18. E. 3.4 In Commissions of purveyance the fees of the Church shall be excepted XXII Stat. 25. E. 3. Stat. 5.6 No Purveyor shall take any Timber growing about a mans house in pain of one years imprisonment and the losse of his Office XXIII Stat. 25. E. 3. Stat. 5.15 No Purveyor shall take more sheep for the Kings House before Sheer-day then shall be needfull in pain to suffer as a Felon and this penalty shall be inserted in every Commission of Purveyance XXIV Stat. 28. E. 3.12 When the value of the purveyance exceeds not 20 s. present payment shall be made for it within one quarter of a year after upon a certain day and at a place convenient for the party that is to receive it XXV Stat. 34. E. 3.2 No purveyance shall be hereafter made save only for the King Queen and Prince XXVI Stat. 34. E. 3.3 As concerning parveyances for the Queen or Prince present payment shall be made
for Poultry or other small things but for other great purveyances within a month or six weeks XXVII Stat. 36. E. 3.2 From henceforth purveyances shall be made for the King and Queens Houses and none other XXVIII The odious name of a Purveyor shall be changed and termed Buyer XXIX If the buyer and seller cannot agree the goods shall be appraized by the Lords or Bailiffs Constables and four men by Indenture between the buyer and them containing the quantity of the takings the price and of what persons bought which takings shall be made without dures or compulsion in places of plenty and in a convenient time XXX Purveyors shall be men of sufficiency and shall make no Deputies their Commission shall be renewed every half year under the Great Seal which none is bound to obey unless they pay ready money as well for things bought as also for carriages XXXI Purveyance of Grain or Malt shall be made by striked measure according to the Standard and no more carriages shall be used for it then shall be needful XXXII If any Purveyor or Buyer offend against the Statute he shall suffer punishment of life and member See the Statute confirmed 23 H. 6.1 XXXIII Stat. 36. E. 3.3 No buyer shall spare any from carriages nor charge any for hatred or ill will in pain to yield to the party grieved treble damages suffer two years imprisonment to be ransomed at the Kings will and to abjure the Court and if the party grieved will not sue in this case any other that will shall have the third peny of what shall be recovered XXXIV Stat. 36. E. 3.4 Commission shall be awarded to enquire of the behaviour and act of such buyers and if it shall be found by the Countrey that they have taken more then they have delivered in or have not paid for what they have taken they shall have pain of life and member XXXV Stat. 36. E. 3.3 None shall keep more houses of the Kings then shall be committed to him XXXVI None of the King or Queens Houses shall make any Purveyor but shall buy provision as others do of such as are willing to sell XXXVII Stat. 38. E. 3.6 It is Felony for any Subjects servant to take any thing by way of purveyance without the owners notice XXXVIII Stat. 1. R. 2.5 Prelates shall have their actions of trespass against Purveyors offending and shall also recover treble damages XXXIX Stat. 7. R. 2.8 No Subjects Cator shall take any victual or carriage without the owners consent and present payment in pain to incur the penalties comprised in the Statutes of Purveyors XL. Stat. 2. H. 4.14 When the value of a thing taken exceeds not 40 s. the Purveyor shall make present payment for it in pain to lose his Office and also to pay as much to the party grieved XLI Stat. 1. H. 6.2 The Statutes of Purveyors shall be proclaimed quarterly by every Sheriff throughout his Bailiwick in pain to forfeit 5 l for every time he makes default XLII Stat. 20 H. 6.8 A Purveyor that takes goods whose value exceeds not 10 s. and payes not present money for them may lawfully be resisted And here the Constable Headborough or other Officer shall upon request assist the owner in pain to yield unto the said owner the value of the goods taken and double damages XLIII None of the Kings Officers shall Arrest or trouble any of the Kings Subjects for any such resistance in pain of 20 l. to be drvided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XLIV Justices of Peace have power to hear and determine the offences committed against this Act and upon conviction of the Defendant to award damages to the Plaintiff XLV In every purveyors Commission this Act shall be inserted and shall also be sent to the Sheriffs of every County to be proclaimed amongst other Statutes of purveyors according to the Statute of 1 H. 6.2 XLVI Stat. 23 H. 6.1.2 Every purveyor before he receive his Commission shall be sworn to the Chancery to take nothing of subjects contrary to the Statute of 36 E. 3.2.3 XLVII The party grieved by taking which upon request was not assisted by the Apprizer Town or Towns adjoyning may bring his Action of Debt against the Town or the purveyor which he likes best and shall recover the treble value of his goods so taken away together with his costs and treble damages And none of the Kings Officers shall trouble any of the Kings subjects for the execution of this Act in pain to forfeit 20 l. to the party grieved besides his costs and damages for which he may have a Writ of debt in which Action no wager of Law Essoin Aid of the King or protection shall be allowed And the debt damages and executions recovered against a purveyor in the case if he hath not whereof to pay them shall be satisfied by the Serjeant of the Catery unto whom a Scire sacias shall be directed for that purpose XLVIII These Statutes shall be sent to the Justices of peace in every County to the end they may be yearly proclaimed XLIX Stat. 23 H. 6.14 All Mayors Bailiffs Constables and other Officers shall upon request made arrest and imprison without bail all purveyors except only the Kings or Queens which take any goods or carriages from any of the Kings subjects in pain to forfeit 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved in case he will sue for it but if not then betwixt the King and the prosecutor And the party offending being duly convicted thereof shall yield to the party grieved the treble value of the goods so ●raken and double costs and besides shall fine to the King for the trespass committed L. Here no wager of Law or the Kings protection shall be allowed to the defendant LI. This Act shall not restrain the punishment ordained against the Kings purveyors LII Stat. 28 H. 6.2 No person keeping an Hostery Brew-house or Victualling shall be a purveyor and all Letters Patents of purveyance granted to such shall be void LIII No purveyor shall take any horse or Cart but by the consent of the owner or delivery of the Mayor Sheriff Bailiffs or Constable in pain to be subject to an Action of Trespass wherein the party grieved shall recover treble damages LIV. Stat. 2 3. P. M. 6. No Commission of purveyance shall continue in force above six months LV. In every such Commission shall be inserted the proportion and number of things to be taken as also the County or Counties where such purveyance is to be made LVI To every Commission shall be annexed blanks in parchment according to the number of the Counties into which it extends and in every such blank shall be fair written the proportion and number of the commodities there to be taken which shall also be subscribed by the High-Constables Constables or other Officers which shall be privy to the delivery of the said goods LVII The purveyor shall make writings
or Dockets of all things by him taken and subscribing his name thereunto shall deliver them to the Constables Head-boroughs or other Officers of the places where he takes the same things in pain for every such default to suffer one years imprisonment and forseit 100 marks to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor which said Dockets shall be by the said Officers delivered over to the Justices of peace at their next general Sessions and by them certified to the Lord Steward Treasurer or Comptroller of the King and Queens houses if such purveyance were for the house but if for the Navy then to the Treasurer or Comptroller of the Navy and all this to the end a true answer of the purveyors Commission may fully appear LVIII This Statute shall not give liberty to purveyors or their Deputies to execute their Office otherwise then is provided and expressed in other Statutes heretofore made upon the pains and penalties in the same former Statutes contained LIX Statutes made and provided for purveyors or Takers shall also extend to their Undertakers Deputies and servants LX. All Commissions of purveyance shall be written in English LXI Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Purveyanacs for the Kings houshold and all carriages for purveyances and all sums of money or other things taken rated or paid in regard hereof or of any the children of any King or Queen of England and all constraint for providing Carriages for their goods without the owners free consent obtained without menace or enforcement be taken away and in recompence thereof and of the Courts of Wards taken away Rates of Excise given to the King LXII Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 8. The clause in the Act taking away purveyances being inconvenient in regard of the King or Queens Royal progresses It is Enacted That the Clerk or chief Officer of the Kings Carriages three dayes before the Kings Arrival by Warrant from the Green-Cloth shall give notice to two Justices of the peace adjoyning to provide Carts and Carriage for the Kings use expressing the time and place of attendance every carriage to consist of four horses or four Oxen and two horses for every which Carriage the owner to receive 6 d. for every mile going laden LXIII If any shall upon occasion refuse or neglect to provide Carriages accordingly for the King or Queen his or her houshold and be convicted by the Oath of the Constable other Officer or two Witnesses before any Justice of the Peace of the Countrey such person shall forfeit 40 s. to the Kings use to be levied by distress and sale of his goods Provided none be compelled to travel above one dayes Journey and upon ready payment at the place of lading LXIV If any Justice of the Peace or other Officer shall take any gift or reward to spare any or shall impress any other Carriage then directed from the Green-Cloth he shall forfeit 10 l. to be recovered in any the Kings Courts of Record And any person taking supon him to impress any horses or Carriages other then impowred he shall suffer the punishment in the recited Act. LXV The Kings servants shall not pay above 12 d. a night for a bed and 6 d. for a servants bed and where they pay for their diet and horsemeat beds shall be provided gratis LXVI Two Justices of the Peace near the Road after notice from the Green-Cloth or Avenor under their hands and seals shall set and proclaim the rates and prizes to be paid during the Kings stay for Hay and Oats and other accomodations for horses and rone shall take more upon pain of 40 s. to be levyed by warrant of the said Justices upon the Offendors goods LXVII This Act to continue untill the end of the first Session of the next Parliament and no longer LXVIII Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 20. The said clause of the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. of setling a revenue upon the King in lieu and recompence for taking away the Court of Wards and Purveyance being recited It is notwithstanding Enacted LXIX That Carriages shall be provided for the use of the Kings Navy and Ordnance upon notice in writing by appointment of the Lord Admiral or two or more of the principal Officers or Commissioners of the Navy or Master or Lievtenant of the Ordinance directed to two Justices of the Peace near the place where the same are to be provided LXX The said two Justices of the Peace shall issue their Warrants to such adjacent Parishes Hundreds or Divisions as they shall think fit not above 12 miles distant from the place of lading The Owners to receive for every load of Timber 12 d. per mile and for every other provision 8 d. the mile per Tun from the place of lading LXXI The Lord Admiral or Officers above mentioned may likewise impress Ships Hoyes and Boats for the Carriages imployed for the Navy and Ordnance at the rates per Tun usually paid by Merchants and upon difference to be setled by the Brotherhood of trinity-Trinity-house of Debtford-strand LXXII If any the Kings subjects shall refuse or neglect to perform the service in carriage upon conviction as aforesaid for land-Carriages and for Water-carriages by the Oath of such persons as shall be appointed by the Lord Admiral or principal Officers aforesaid or two credible Witnesses shall for every such default of Land-Carriage forfeit 20 s. And for water-carriage treble the fraight of the ship or vessel to be levyed by the Justices of the Peace or other chief Officer of Corporations or from the principal Officers of the Navy aforesaid by distress and sale of the Offendors goods LXXIII Provided no person or carriage be forced to travel further or continue longer then by order of the said Justices of the Peace and ready payment at the place of lading LXXIV No Officer impowred shall take any gift or reward to spare any person nor none shall be charged injuriously of evil will no more then necessity of service shall require or then shall be commanded by the superiours upon forfeiture of 10 l. to the party grieved to be recovered by Action of debt and if any shall take upon him to press any horses or Carriage being not lawfully impowred to incur the penalty in the Act for taking away purveyances mentioned LXXV Proviso no ship or vessel fraighted by Charter-party if there be other vessels in the Port nor any vessel quarter-laden outward bound shall be lyable to be impressed LXXV Proviso to allow the Inhabitants of New-Forrest in the County of Southampton 4 d. per mile extraordinary going empty This Act to continue till the end of the first Session of the next Parliament and no longer Quakers * I. Stat. 13 14 Car. 2. cap. 1. IF any persons who maintain That the taking of an Oath in any case whatsoever though before a lawful Magistrate is unlawful and contrary to the Word of God shall wilfully refuse to take an Oath by the Laws of the land being duly
tendred or shall perswade any other to forbear the taking the same so tendred or shall go about by Printing writing or otherwise to maintain That the taking of an Oath in any case whatsoever is unlawful And persons called Quakers may not assemble themselves together above 5 in number of the age of 16 years or more under pretence of Religious Worship upon penalty for the first Offence upon conviction by verdict or confession a fine not exceeding 5 l. The second offence 10. l. upon every offendor To be levyed by Warrant of the parties before whom the conviction shall be and for want of distress and non-payment within one week after conviction for the first offence Imprisonment or house of Correction three Months the second offence six Months which penalties shall be imployed for the maintaining the house of Correction II. The third offence and conviction the party offending shall abjure the Realm or otherwise the King may give order to transport the offendor to any of his Majesties Plantations beyond the Seas III. Justices of Oyer and Terminer Assise Goal-delivery and Justices of the Peace in open Sessions may hear and determine the said offences within their respective limits IV. Any Justice of the Peace Mayor or chief Officer of a Corporation may commit to the Goal or bind over persons with suffient sure ties in order to their conviction V. Such persons as after conviction shall take such Oaths for which they stand committed and give security to forbear meeting in any such unlawful assembly shall be discharged of all the said penalties VI. A Lord of Parliament for every third offence within this Act shall be tryed by Peers Queen I. Stat. 1. M. Parl. 2.1 ALL Regal power of this Realm and all dignities and preheminences thereunto belonging shall be as well in a Queen as in a King Quod Permittat I. West 2.24 13 E. 1. In like manner as a Parson of a Church may recover common of pasture by a writ of Novel disseisin so his successor shall have a Quod permittat against the Disseisor or his heir though there was never such a Writ granted out of the Chancery before ☞ Rape * I. West 1.13 3 E. 1. NOne shall ravish or take away by force any Maid within age neither by or without her consent nor any Wife or Maid of full age nor any other woman against her will II. Here any person may sue within 40 dayes but if not then the King shall have the suit and such as be found culpable shall suffer two years imprisonment and make fine at the Kings will and if they have not whereof they shall be punished by longer imprisonment as the trespass requireth III. West 2.34 13 E. 1. If a man ravish a Woman married Maid or other where she did not consent neither before nor after he shall have judgment of life and member IV. Where a man ravished a woman married Lady Damosel or other albeit she confent after yet he being attainted thereof shall have like judgment as before and here the King shall have the suit V. Of women-carried away with the goods of their husbands the King shall have the suit for the goods so taken away VI. If a woman willingly leave her husband and go away and continue with her Advowterer she shall be barred for ever of action to demand her Dower unless her husband willingly and without coertion of the Church reconcile her and suffer her to dwell with him VII None shall carry away a Nun from her house ableit she consent in pain to suffer three years Imprisonment and to make satisfaction to the house and fine to the King VIII Stat. 6 R. 2.3 Both the Ravisher and Ravished where she consents after the fact are disabled to have or challenge any Inheritance Dower or joynt estate after the death of their Husband or Ancestor IX In an appeal of Rape the Husband Father or next of the bloud shall have the suit and the Defendant shall not be received to wage battel Reasonable Aid I. West 1. 35. E. 1. and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.11 Reasonable Aid to make the Kings eldest Son a Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter shall be for a Knights fee holden of the King without mean 20 s. and every 20 l. land in soccage shall pay as much and so more or less according to that rate And it shall be levied at 15 years age of the Son and 7 years of the Daughter Here if the Father levy it and dye and before the marriage of the Daughter the Fathers executors shall be charged therewith and if they have not assets the heir shall be therewith charged Receivers I. Stat. 34 H. 8.2 All Collectors of Fifteens and Subsidies or other tax or loan and all particular and general Receivers of the Kings revenues shall within three months after the same are due and by them received truly pay them unto the Kings use in pain to lose their Offices and also to forfeit 4 s. for every pound so received and not paid in as aforesaid to be recovered by Bill Plaint or Action of Debt at the Kings suit Howbeit lawful tender thereof within the said time shall excuse the said penalties albeit they be not then received by the proper Officer by reason of other occafions II. Provided that the heir of any such Collector or Receiver shall not be charged by reason of this Act but only in lands which descend in fee-simple or fee-tail or which have been conveyed unto him by collusion from such Collector or Receiver neither shall their executors or administrators be otherwise charged for the same then as they are chargeable by the Common Law in action of debt commenced against them as Executors or Administrators III. The heir being charged shall have remedy against the Executors or Administrators of his Father or Ancestor and shall have execution of such goods and chattels as remain in their hands at the time of the Action brought IV. This Act shall not extend to the Collectors of the Custome or of Tunnage and Poundage nor to restrain the payment of pensions fees annuities rents or other allowances to be paid by the said Receivers according to the several allowances thereof V. Stat. 7 E. 6.1 Every Treasurer general and particular Receiver Bailiff and Minister Accomptant to the King shall before his entry upon the Office be bound with surety or sureties for his true account and payment in pain to lose his Office VI. Every such Receiver his Deputy or Deputies shall yearly make Precepts to the several Collectors Ministers and Bailiffs accountant within the circuit of his Office charging them thereby personally to appear before him or by their Deputy or Deputies for whom they will answer within the County where such Offices do lye at a certain day and place in the said Precept to be limited to pay in such moneys as shall be due within their Collections to the King at or before Easter which Precept shall be delivered
he is so received until final judgment given to the demandant III. Here if the demandant recover the defendant shall be grievously amerced and if he have not whereof he shall suffer imprisonment at the Kings pleasure but if he can prove his right he shall go quit IV. Stat. 13 R. 2.17 If any tenant for life in Dower by the Law of England or in tail after possibility of issue extinct be impleaded and he in the reversion come into the Court and pray to be received to defend his right at the day that the tenant pleadeth to the Action or before he shall be then received to defend his right and after such receipt the business shall be hasted as much as may be by the Law without any delay whatsoever of either side And therefore here dayes of grace shall be given by the discretion of the Judges between the demandant and the party so received and not the common day in plea of land unless the demandant will thereunto consent lest the demandants may be too much delayed because they must plead to two adversaries V. Howbeit they in the reversion who so pray to be received shall find sureties for the issues of the tenements demanded for the time that the demandants be delayed after the plea determined between the demandants and tenants if the Judgment pass for the demandant against them in the reversion as well as where the receit is counter-pleaded as where it is granted Residence * I. Artic. Cler. 8. 9 E. 2. Such Clerks as attend in the Kings service if they offend shall be corrected by the Ordinaries as others be Howbeit so long as they be imployed about the Exchequer they shall not be bound to keep residence in their Churches To this was added by the Kings Council The King and his Ancestors time out of mind have used that Clerks who are imployed in his service during the time they are so in his service shall not be compelled to keep residence in their Benefices and such things as be thought necessary for the King and Common-wealth ought not to be prejudicial to the Church * II. Stat. 21 H. 8.13 No spiritual person shall take to farm to himself or to any other for his use any lands or other hereditament for life years or at will in pain to forfeit ten pounds for every month he so continues the same to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor III. This Act shall not extend to any spiritual person for taking to farm any temporalities during the time of vacation of any Archbishopricks Bishopricks Abbeyes Priories or Collegiate Cathedral or Coventual-Churches nor to any such person who shall terder or make any traverse upon any Office concerning his Freehold IV. No spiritual person shall by himself or any other for his use buy to sell again for profit any cattel victual or Merchandize whatsoever in pain to forfeit treble the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and every such bargain shall be void V. Howbeit a spiritual person may buy horses Mares Cattel or other goods for his necessary use and imployment and in case they happen not fit for his turn may sell them again so as this be done without fraud or covin VI. Also Abbots Priors Abbesses Prioresses Provosts Presidents and Masters of Colledges and Hospitals and all other spiritual Governours and Governesses of any Houses of Religion lands of the yearly value of 800 Marks or under may use and occupy so much thereof for the maintenance of their houses as they or any of their Predecessors have done within 100 year last past notwithstanding this Act. VII Likewise Spiritual persons not having sufficient Glebe or Demesne lands in right of their Churches or houses may notwithstanding this Act for the only expences of their houses and for their carriages and journeyes take in farm other lands and buy and sell corn and cattel for the only manurance and pasturage of such Farms so as if it be done for such purposes only without fraud or covin VIII If any person having a Benefice with cure of Souls being of the yearly value of 8 l. or above accept another with cure of Souls and be Instituted and Inducted in possession of the same immediately upon such possession thereof the first Benefice shall be adjudged void and then it shall be lawful for the Patron thereof to present another as if the Incumbent had dyed or resigned any license union or other dispensation to the contrary notwithstanding IX Every license union or other dispensation obtained contrary to this Act shall be void And none shall obtain from Rome or elswhere any license union toleration or dispensation to receive any Benefice with Cure in pain of 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor X. Provided that every Spiritual person of the Kings Council may purchase license or dispensation to keep three Benefices with Cure and the Chaplains of the Kings Queens the Kings Children Brethren Sisters Unkles or Aunts may so keep each of them two XI Also an Archbishop and Duke may have each of them six Chaplains a Marquess and Earl five a Viscount and other Bishop four the Chancellor every Baron and Knight of the Garter three Every Dutchess Marchioness Countess and Baroness being Widows two the Treasurer and Comptroller of the Kings House the Kings Secretary and Dean of his Chappel the Kings Almoner and Master of the Rolls each of them two And the Chief Justice of the Kings Bench and Warden of the Cinque-ports each of them one And each of the aforesaid Chaplains may purchase license or dispensation to keep two Benefices XII Likewise the brethren and sons of Temporal Lords born in wedlock may purchase such license or dispensation to keep as many Benefices with Cure as the Chaplains of a Duke or Archbishop and the brethren or sons born in wedlock of every Knight may keep two XIII Provided that the aforesaid Chaplain shall exhibit where need shall be Letters under the Sign or Seal of the King or other their Lord and Master testifying whose Chaplains they be or else not to enjoy such plurality of Benefices XIV A so Doctors and Batchelors of Divinity Doctors of Law and Batchelors of Law-Canon admitted to their degrees by any of the Universities of this Realm and not by Grace only may purchase such license to keep two Benefices with Cure XV. And because Archbishops must use at consecration of Bishops eight Chaplains and Bishops at giving of Orders and Consecration of Churches six every of them may have two Chaplains over and above the number limited XVI Every Spiritual person that is advanced by colour of this Act to keep more Benefices with Cure then is abovelimited shall incur the penalty above provided by this Act. XVII Every Spiritual person promoted to any Arch-Deaconry Deanary or Dignity in a Monastery or Cathedral Church or other Church Conventual or Collegiate or being Beneficed with any Parsonage or Vicarage shall
Ceremonies or Rites of the Church by mis-using the Orders appointed in the Book of Common-Prayer the Queen by like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitan may ordain such further Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for Gods glory the edifying of the Church and reverence of Christs holy Ministeries and Sacraments XXX All other Laws made for other service shall be void XXXI Stat. 5 El. 28. An Act for translating of the Bible and Book of Common-Prayer into the Welsh Tongue Also there shall be an English Bible and Book of Common Prayer in every Church of Wales XXXII Stat. 3 Jac. 1. All Ministers in every Cathedral and Parish Church or other usual place for Common Prayer within the Kings Dominions shall alwayes upon the fifth day of November say morning Prayer and give thanks to God for the happy deliverance of the King Queen Prince and both Houses of Parliament upon that day XXXIII Every person within the Kings Dominions shall alwayes upon that day diligently resort to his Parish Church or Chappel or to some usual Church or Chappel where the said Common Prayer Preaching and other service of God shall be used and there orderly abide during the said solemnity XXXIV Every Minister shall give warning publickly in the Church at morning Prayer the Sunday before every such fifth of November for the due observation of the said day and after morning Prayer or Preaching upon the said fifth day of November shall read publickly and distinctly this present Act. See more Title Religion Severn I. Stat. 34. 35 H. 8.9 A penalty for casting any Ballast or Robul in King-rode in any part of the Haven in Bristol II. None shall load any Corn in any Vessel by the water of Severn to be transported beyond Sea before he be bound to the Customer of Bristol to bring it first to Bristol to be there viewed by the Mayor there for the time being in pain to forfeit both the grain and Vessel III. The penalty where one bringeth more Corn to Bristol to be measured and thence to be transported then is contained in his Cocket or License which is to be delivered unto him by the said Mayor when he takes bond of him as aforesaid IV. The penalty for denying to measure the Corn at Bristol is five pounds for every time to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor See the Statute at large ☞ Sewers I. Stat. 6 H. 6.5 During ten years several Commissions of Sewers shall be made to divers persons by the Chancellor of England to be sent into all parts of the Realm where need shall be according to the form in the said Statute expressed for which see the Statute at large being here omitted because a latter Commission was afterwards ordained by the Statute of 23 H. 8.5 which see after in the proper place II. Stat. 8 H. 6.3 Commissioners of Sewers shall have power to do ordain and execute all such Statutes Ordinances and other things as shall be made according to the effect and purport of the Commission of Sewers ordained by the Statute of 6 H. 6.5 III. Stat. 18 H. 6.10 Commission of Sewers shall be awarded where need shall require during ten years IV. Stat. 23 H. 6.9 The Chancellor of England may grant Commissions of Sewers during fifteen years V. Stat. 12 E. 4.6 The Chancellor of England may grant Commissions of Sewers for 15 years where need shall require VI. Stat. 4 H. 7.1 Commissions of Sewers shall be granted during 25 years VII Stat. 6 H. 8.10 Commissions of Sewers shall be granted during ten years according to the Statute of 6 H. 6.5 and 4 H. 7.1 VIII Stat. 23 H. 8.5 Commissions of Sewers shall be directed into all parts of the Realm from time to time where and when need shall require according to the manner form and tenor hereafter following to such substantial and indifferent persons as shall be named by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer of England and the two Chief Justices or any three of them whereof the Lord Chancellor is to be one IX Henry the eighth c. Know ye that forasmuch as the walls ditches banks gutters Sewers Gates Calcies Bridges streams and other defences by the Coasts of the Sea and Marsh-ground being and lying within the limits of A. B. and C. in the County or Counties of 〈…〉 or in the borders or confines of the same by rage of the Sea flowing and re-flowing and by means of the trenches of fresh water descending and having course by divers wayes to the Sea be so dirupt lacerate and broken And also the common passages of Ships Ballengers and Boats in the rivers streams and other floods within the limits of A. B. and C. in the County or Counties of 〈…〉 or in the borders or confines of the same by mean of setting up erecting and making streams mills bridges ponds fishgarths mill-dams locks habbing-wears hecks flood-gates or other lets impediments or annoyances be letted or interrupted so that great and inestimable damago for default of reparation of the said Walls Ditches Banks Fences Sewers Gates Gutters Calcies Bridges and streams and also by mean of setting up and erecting making and enlarging of the said fish-garths mill-dams locks hebbing-wears hecks flood-gates and other annoyances in times past hath happened and yet is to be feared that far greater hurt loss and damage is like to ensue unless that speedy remedy be provided in that behalf X. We therefore for that by reason of our Dignity and Prerogative Royal we be bound to provide for the safety and preservation of our Realm of England willing that speedy remedy be had in the premisses have assigned you and six of you of the which we will that A. B. and C. shall be three to be our Justices to survey the said Walls Streams Ditches Banks Gutters Sewers Gates Calcies Bridges Trenches Mills Mill-dams Flood-gates Ponds Locks Hebbing-wears and other impediments lets and annoyances aforesaid and the same cause to be made corrected repaired amended put down or reformed as cause shall require after your wisdomes and discretions And therein as well to ordain and do after the tenor form and effect of all and singular the Statutes and Ordinances made before the first day of March in the three and twentieth year of Our Reign touching the premisses or any of them as also to enquire by the oaths of the honest and lawful men of the said Shire or Shires place or places where such defaults or annoyances be as well within Liberties as without by whom the truth may the rather be known through whose default the said hurts and damages have happened and who hath or holdeth any lands or tenements or common of Pasture or profit of fishing or hath or may have any hurt loss or disadvantage by any manner of means in the said places as well near to the said dangers lets and impediments as inhabiting or dwelling thereabouts by the said walls ditches banks gutters gates sewers trenches and
also ordained XXXII Officers of Corporations where the Staple is or near adjoyning thereunto shall upon command assist the Officers of the Staple in the execution of their Offices in pain of grievous forfeiture Also a Lord of most sufficiency in the Countrey where the Staple is shall be assigned to be ayding to them as occasion shall require as well to reform offenders as to redress mistakes by them omitted but the appeal for injustice in the staple shall be to the Lord Chancellor or Privy Council XXXIII Statutum Stapul cap. 22. In every Staple there shall be Correctors appointed able and sufficient men as well Aliens as Denizens to record bargains betwixt buyers and sellers and they shall give good surety before the Mayor and Constables lawfully to execute their Office and being found in default shall answer damages to the party grieved Howbeit they shall not meddle with merchandize during their Office But here none shall be forced to use a Corrector unless he please nor give him any thing unless he do something at his request XXXIV Statutum Stapul cap. 23. A certain number of Porters Packers Winders Workers and other Labourers of Wools and other merchandize shall be ordained for the Staple who together with the Correctors and all other Officers of the Staple except the Constables shall be sworn before the Mayor duly to execute their Offices Also all Merchants both Aliens and Denizens coming thither to merchandize shall be sworn before the Mayor and Constables to be justified by them and to maintain the Laws and usages of the Staple But the Mayor and Constables shall be sworn in Chancery duly to execute their several Offices XXXV Statutum Stapul cap. 24. Merchants strangers shall choose two Merchants strangers who shall be assigned the one for the South the other for the North to sit when they please with the Mayor and Constables of the Staples to hear plaints touching merchants aliens but the Mayor and Constables shall not forbear to proceed if they come not Howbeit if they come and any debate happen to arise between them concerning such plaint it shall be determined before the Chancellor or the Kings Council XXXVI Also six other persons shall be chosen viz. two of Almaigne two of Lombardy and two of England who shall be sworn duly to execute their Offices in moderating differences amongst merchants concerning things of the staple which any four of them may by their Oaths do before the Mayor and the Officers and what they do therein shall be definitive XXXVII Statutum Stapul cap. 25. He that makes confederacy or conspiracy which may turn to the impeachment disturbance defeating or decay of the said Staples or of any thing to them belonging shall incur the penalties ordained in the said third Article XXXVIII Statutum Stapul cap. 28. The Liberties of the Staples are confirmed notwithstanding any Franchises granted to Corporate Cities or Towns howbeit other mens liberties being in the Staple viz. to keep Fairs Markets and the like are saved XXXIX Stat. 28 E. 3.13 The Warranty of packing of Woolls shall be wholly taken away unless it be by Covenant under Seal XL. An Enquest for the trial of an Action in the Staple or before other Justices where an Alien is one of the parties shall be per medictatem linguae if so many Aliens may be found but if not by so many as are found and the rest to be made up of Denizens being no parties or Privies XLI None shall forestall Merchandize coming towards this Realm in pain to incur the penalties of the said third Article of the Statute-Staple c. XLII No foreigners Ship shall be compelled to arrive in England nor to tarry in any place there against the good will of the Master Mariners or Merchant unto whom the Ship or the goods in her do belong in pain to incur a grievous forfeiture to the King XLIII Stat. 36 E. 3.7 Mayors and Constables of the Staples shall have only Conusance of Debts Covenants Contracts and all other Pleas touching merchandize and the surety thereof betwixt Merchants known but process of Felonies and all other pleas as well within the staple as without shall be at the Common Law as it was before the Statute-Staple Howbeit Merchant-Aliens have liberty for to sue for debts trespass c. before the Mayor or at the Common Law at their election XLIV The King and other Lords within their Seigniories shall enjoy their Franchises as they did before the Statute-Staple only the Mayor of the Staple shall take Recognizance as by the said Statute is ordained XLV Stat. 38 E. 3. Stat. 1.7 The Staple shall be in England And the Statute of the staple together with the Declarations additions and modifications thereof is confirmed XLVI Stat. 12 R. 2.16 The Staple shall be removed from Middleborough to Calais XLVII Stat. 14 R. 2.1 The Staple shall be removed from Calais to those Towus in England named in the Statute of the staple 27 E. 3.1 XLVIII Every Merchant alien shall bestow the value of half his merchandize upon Commodities of this Realm XLIX Stat. 14 R. 2.3 Officers of the Staple shall be first sworn to the King and then to the Staple L. Stat. 14 R. 2.4 No Denizen shall transport any Wools Woolfels Leather or Lead beyond Sea in pain to forfeit the same LI. Stat. 15 R. 2.9 The Statute of the staple is confirmed LII The Mayor of the staple shall take no Recognisance of debt contrary to the same Statute in pain to pay half the sum Recognised to the King LIII Stat. 10 H. 6.1 Recognisances taken before the Mayor of the Staple of Calais shall be effectual in England Steel * I. Stat. 2,3 E. 6.17 None shall forge or sell any gads of Iron like in fashion to gads of Steel in pain to forfeit 4 d. a gad to be diuided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Stilyard I. Stat. 19 H. 7.23 All Acts Statutes and Ordinances made in derogation of the Merchants of the Stilyard called Merchants of the House in Almain and having the House in London called Guilhalda Teutonicorum or of their Liberties granted them by the Kings of England shall stand as against them void and repealed Howbeit this Act shall not be prejudicial to the City of London Surveyors I. Extenta Manerii 4 E. 1. Containing certain Articles to be inquired by Surveyors concerning Building Demesnes Foreign Pasture Parks Demesne woods Foreign woods Herbage and Pannage Mills Fishing Freeholders Customary Tenants Cottages and Curtilages Perquisits of Courts Patronages Liberties Customes Services c. See the Statutes at large Suit of Court I. Marlbr 9. 52 H. 3. None enfeoffed by Deed shall be distrained to do suit to his Lords Court unless he be bound to do it by the form of his Deed or he or his Ancestors have used to do it before the Kings first voyage into Brittain being about 39 years and an half since II. None enfeoffed from the time of the Conquest shall do it
charge called a Benevolence or any such like exaction or imposition whatsoever and such impositions heretofore charged upon the Subject shall not be hereafter drawn into president or example VII Stat. 19 H. 7.8 No Mayor Sheriff Bayliff or other Officer shall distrain take or levy any custom called Scavage or Schevage of any Denizen for any Merchandize before truly customed nor for the payment thereof let or disturb any Merchant or other being Denizens to sell or utter the same Merchandize in pain of 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved or the prosecutor which of them will sue first for it VIII Howbeit the Mayor and Communalty of London may take so much money of Denizens for scavage as shall be found to be their right by the King and his Council IX Stat. 16 17 Car. 14. An Act for declaring unlawful and void the late proceedings touching Ship-money and for the vacating of all Records and Process concerning the same X. Stat. 16 and 17. Ca. 2. Ca. 1. A Royal Ayd of 4675000 l. granted to the King to be raised in three years And see title Excise per tot And for Hearth-money see title King numb 8. See Title Benevolence Templers I. Stat. De terris Templariorum 17 E. 2. Neither the King nor other Lords shall have by escheat the lands that were the Templers which Order was the dissolved but those lands shall remain to the Prior and Brethren of the Order of the Hospital of Saint Johns of Jerusalem which Order was then erected Tenure I. Magna Carta 10. None shall distrain for more service then is due II. Magna Carta 31. If a Baronie escheat to the King the Tenants that hold of the same not having other lands that hold of the King in chief shall pay like relief and do like services to the King after such escheat as they paid or did to their former Lords and not otherwise III. Magna Carta 32. No Freeman shall give or sell so much of his land that of the residue the Lord of the Fee may not have the services due to him IV. Quia Emptores terrarum 18 E. 1. In all Feoffments to one and his heirs the Feoffee shall hold his land of the chief Lord of the Fee by the same services that the Feoffor held before V. Here if the Feoffment be made of parcel he shall hold of the chief Lord pro particula according to the quantity of the land and the Feoffor shall be set free for that part VI. Howbeit by such sales or purchases of lands or any parcels thereof such lands shall not come into Mortmain contrary to the Statute thereof lately made Neither shall this Act be understood of any other then lands in Fee-simple VII Stat. 1. E. 3. Stat. 2.12 From henceforth lands holden of the King in chief and aliened without license shall not be forfeited but a reasonable fine shall be taken of such lands so aliened in Chancery by due Process VIII Stat. 1. E. 3. Stat. 2.15 Lands holden of the King as of some Honour shall not be taken into the Kings hands as if they were holden of the King in chief as of his Crown IX Stat 34 E. 3.15 All Alienations which the tenants of H. 3. and of other Kings before his time did make are confirmed X. Stat. 7 E. 4 5. Lands holden of a common person by Fealty Rent or other service coming to the Kings hands by attainder of Treason and being afterwards granted by the King to another shall be holden as if such attainder had not been XI Stat. 35 H. 8.14 The King at his pleasure upon the grant of any Abby-lands under the value of 40 s. per annum houses and gardens whereunto no lands appertain onely excepted may reserve either a Tenure by Knight-service in Capite or a Tenure in soccage or free-burgage and not in Capite with the yearly Rent of the tenth part of the annual value of the said lands as they shall be exprest in the said Grant to be yearly worth And of such houses also and gardens whereunto no lands appertain as aforesaid being none of the Kings Houses The like Tenures at his pleasure and a tenth part of the yearly value whether they be under or over the yearly value of 40 s. per annum XII Stat. 7 H. 8.20 All lands and other hereditaments not above the yearly value of 40 s. and all houses orchards yards and gardens whereunto no lands appertain being none of the Kings houses granted by the King since the 27th year of his Reign to any person or persons to hold of him by fealty only or by fealty only and not in Capite or in soccage or free-burgage or by fealty only in free and common soccage and not in Capite or by words to that effect Or to hold by fealty or by fealty onely and not in Capite as of one of the Kings Honours or Mannors or the like shall be adjudged and taken to be holden in soccage or burgage and not in Capite XIII The King within five years after the 1. of Novemb. in the 37th year of his Reign at his pleasure upon grants of lands or other hereditaments not rated at above 40 s. per annum houses gardens c. unto which no lands belong only excepted and of such houses gardens c. being not the Kings may reserve either a Tenure by Knight-service in Capite or else a Tenure by fealty or in soccage or burgage and not in Capite And all Tenures reserved since the 24. of April in the 25. year of the Kings Reign and to be reserved within the said five years by these words Et non in Capite shall be taken to be Tenures in soccage or burgage and not in Capite And the heir of the Grantee of any such lands houses c. may after the death of his Ancestor enter into any of the same lands houses c. without any livery or oustre le main or other fine or fines whatsoever to be paid to the King for the same XIV Stat. 1 E. 6.4 All such Honors Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments which are holden of the King by Knight-service in soccage or otherwise as of any Dukedom Earldom Baronie or other Seignlorie being come to the King by attainder conviction outlawry dissolution or surrender shall not be taken to be holden in Capite XV. This Act shall not prejudice the Kings profit or advantage in respect of lands holden of him as of his person in chief or of his ancient possessions XVI Neither shall this Act give advantage to any Tenant of lands who hath heretofore sued any special or general livery or Oustre l●mai● out of the hands of the King or his progenitors or shall confess by matter of record any Tenure in chief to the King ☞ Tiles I. Stat. 17 E. 4.4 Tile earth shall be cast up before the first of November shired and turned before the first of February and not made into
Officer or Clerk of the Chancery Justices of either Bench Barons of the Exchequer or other Officers or Clerks of the said places the Kings Attorney or Sollicitor Serjeants at Law any of the Kings Officers in Berwick or Carlisle or the Clerk of the Kings Council See also another Statute to the like effect for the fo●feiture of lands made 19 H. 7.1 VI. Stat. 16.17 Car.c. 2. An Act was made for the relief of the Kings Army and the Northern parts of this Kingdome otherwise called the Act of the Poll money or four Subsidies VII Cap. 3. Another Act was made for the reforming of some things mistaken in the Stat. of 16 Car.c. 2. And to make good the Acts of the Commissioners and other Officers by them authorized or appointed and to be then authorized or appointed VIII Cap. 4. Another Act was made for the levying of two intire Subsidies for the further relief of the Kings Army and the said Northern parts of the Kingdome IX Cap. 5. An Act was made for the levying of Mariners Sailers and others for the present guarding of the seas and necessary defence of the Realm X. Cap. 9. This Act was made for the speedy provision of money for disbanding the Armies and setling the peace of the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland XI Cap. 13. Another Act for the securing of such moneyes as are or shall be due to the Inhabitants of the County of York and the other adjoyning Counties wherein the Kings Army is or hath been billeted for the billet of the souldiers of the said Army as also to certain Officers of the same Army who do forbear part of their pay according to an Order in that behalf made in the Commons House of Parliament this present Session for such part of their pay as they shall so forbear VVaste I. Magna Charta 4.9 H. 3. No Waste shall be made by the Guardian in Wards lands and if the custody be committed to the Sheriff or any other that is accomptable to the King and they commit waste they shall make recompence and the wardship shall be committed to two discreet men of the fee who shall answer the issues of the land to the King or his Assignee II. The Committee of the Ward making such waste shall lose the custody and then likewise he shall be committed to two discreet men who shall be answerable to the King as aforesaid III. Magna Charta 5.9 H. 3. The Guardian of the Wards lands shall with the issues thereof uphold his Houses Parks Warrens Ponds Mills and other things pertaining to the said lands and shall deliver unto him at his full age lands stored with ploughs and other things at least as he received them IV. The like shall be observed in the custodies of all spiritual dignities which pertain to the King during their vacancy Howbeit such custodies ought not to be sold V. Marlbr 23.52 H. 3. Pars inde Farmers during their terms shall not make waste sale or exile of house woods men or any thing else which appertains to the tenements that they have in farm without special license had by writing of Covenant making mention that they may so do in pain that they being thereof convict shall yield full damage and be grievously punished by amerciament VI. The Statute of Glocester 5.6 E. 1. An Action of Waste is maintainable against tenant by the courtesy in dower for life or years and the party attainted thereof shall lose the thing wasted and recompence thrice so much as such waste is taxed at VII As for Waste done in the time of Wardship Magna Charta 4. 9 H. 3. before 1. shall be observed and moreover the Guardian shall recompence the heir for the waste done if the Wardship lost shall not amount to the value of the damages before the Heirs full age VIII West 2.14.13 E. 1. The processes in an action of waste shall be summons attachment and distress and if the defendant appear not upon the distress a writ of enquiry shall be directed to the Sheriff to inquire of the waste upon return whereof the Court shall proceed to Judgment according to the Statute of Glocester cap. 5. before IX West 2.22.13 E. 1. An action of waste shall be maintainable against one tenant in common against another of wood turfland fishing or the like and when the cause comes to Judgment the defendant shall choose either to take his part in a certain place to be set out by the Sheriff with a Jury or to grant to take nothing but as his pernors do and if he chuse to take his part in a place certain the place wasted shall be assigned for his part The writ in this case is Cum A. B. tenent Boscum pro indiviso B. fecit vastum c. X. The Statute of Waste 20 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable by the heir for waste done in his ancestors time as well as for that done in his own time XI Artic. sup Chart. 18.28 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable against Escheators and Sub-escheators for waste by them commitred in Wards lands XII Stat. 11 H. 6.5 An action of Waste is maintainable by the reversioner against tenant for life or years that first aliens his estate to a stranger and afterwards still receiving the profits thereof commits waste Howbeit this Statute shall not extend to such tonants as hold without impeachment of waste ☞ VVatches I. Stat. 5 H. 4.3 Watches shall be kept upon the Sea-costs as they were wont to be and in that case the Statute of Winchester shall be observed Which see in Robbery II. In every Commission of Peace hereafter to be made this article shall be inserted viz. That the Justices of Peace shall have power in their Sessions to inquire of Watches and to punish them who shall be found in default according to the tenor of the said Statute ☞ VVax * Stat. 11 H. 6.12 No Wax-chandler shall sell or put to sale any Candles or other wares made of Wax at a dearer rate then that he may have only 4 d. in every pound of wares above the common price of plain wax in pain to forfeit all such wares put to sale and the value of them sold and besides to make fine to the King II. Justices of Peace Mayors Bailiffs and Stewards of Franchises have power to examine and search concerning the breach of this Law and also to hear and determine the offences committed against it III. Stat. 23 El. 8. None in mingling or making of wax shall use or cause to be used any deceit by mixture and mingling the same with Rosin Tallow Turpentine or other deceitful thing to the intent to sell it or to put it to sale in pain to forfeit the same And if such deceitful wax happen to be sold before it be discovered the melter or procurer thereof shall forfeit for every pound thereof 2 s. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the party deceived if he will
otherwise then according to the prices so set and proclaimed as aforesaid in pain to forfeit 40 l. for every vessel otherwise sold to be divided in a Corporation betwixt the King and the Head Rulers there but out of a Corporation betwixt the King and the Prosecutor XIV Justices of Peace and Head Officers have power to hear and determine the defaults of all such as sell wine in grosse or by retail contrary to this Act. XV. Stat. 32 H. 8.23 The great Officers appointed by the Statute of 28 H. 8.14 to set prices upon wines shall so set them between the 20 day of November and the last day of December and at no time else and none that sell wines either in grosse or by retail shall sell them above those prices upon the penalties in the said Statute of 28 H. 8. contained XVI If any refuse to sell their wines accordingly In London the Mayor Recorder and two ancient Aldermen being no Vintners and in other places the Mayor Bailiffs Aldermen or other Officers whereof the chief Officer is to be one may enter the houses of such persons and sell their wines at the prices so assessed as aforesaid ☞ XVII Stat. 7. E. 6.5 None shall utter wine by retail in any other places then in Cities Burroughs Port Towns or Market Towns or in Gravesend Sittingborn Tuxford or Bagshot in pain to forfeit ten pounds for every day that they sell Wine otherwise XVIII None shall utter wine by retail in any City Burrough or Corporation but by licence of the most part of the Common Council Aldermen Burgesses or Communalty there under their common seal nor in any City Burrough Port-Town or Market-Town not corporate or in Gravesend Sittingborn or Bagshot without license of the Justices of Peace of the County in Sessions under their seal in pain to forfeit 5 l. for every day that they sell wine otherwise which said Officers Communalty and Justices have power to continue or change such licences at their discretions but shall not license above two in one place in pain to forfeit 5 l. a piece except in these hereafter following in which it shall be lawful to license more then two viz. in London 40 York 3 Norwich 4 Westminster 3 Bristol 6 Lincol● 3 Hull 4 Shrewsbury 3 Exeter 4 Salisbury 3 Glocester 4 Westchester 4 Hereford-East 3 Worcester 3 Southampton 3 Canterbury 4 Isswich 3 Winchester 3 Oxford 3 Cambridge 4 Colchester 3 Newcastle 4 XIX None shall sell or utter wine by retail to be spent in his or their mansion-Mansion-house or in any other place in their tenure by any colour craft or engine in pain of 10 l. XX. The abovesaid forfeiture shall be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor XXI Justices of Peace within every County and Corporation in Sessions Stewards in Leets and Sheriffs in their turns have power to enquire by the oaths of 12 men of all offences committed against this Act in which case the forfeitures which shall thereupon grow due shall be divided betwixt the King and the poor of the Town or place where the presentment shall be found XXII This Act shall not prejudice the liberties of either of the Universities nor charge any person offending unless the suit be prosecuted within a year XXIII Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 25. None shall sell or utter wines by retail upon pain to forfeit 5 l. the one moyety to the King the other to him that shall sue for the same XXIV The King may grant Commission to two or more persons who may license and authorise the selling of Wine by retail according to the rules and directions in this Act and not otherwise XXV Such persons Commissionated shall be called the Kings Agents for granting wine Licenses and may grant Licenses not exceeding 21 years if the party licensed so long live under a Rent yearly but no fine to be paid XXVI Licenses shall be granted onely ●● such persons as use the Trade of selling Wines by retail or to the Landlord of the house and may not be assigned nor shall indempnifie any against the penalties of this Act save the first taker XXVII They may appoint Officers for managing that service so as their Sallaries exceed not 6 d. in the pound of the yearly Revenue arisi●●● 〈◊〉 XXVIII The said Revenue shall be paid into the Exchequer and not to be charged with any gift or Pension and the Agents shall every Michaelmas Term return into the Exchequer what Licenses they have granted and the Rents reserved and paid and the arrears to the end Process may issue for the same XXIX Proviso not to extend to prejudice any priviledges of the two Universities nor to prejudice the priviledges of the Society of Vintners London nor any other Town Corporate nor the Burrough of St. Alboas in their priviledges granted by Letters Pattents of Queen Elizabeth for maintenance of the Free-School there XXX No Officer appointed by the King for this service shall receive any Fees or rewards for the same other then 5 s. for a License 4 d. for an Acquittance and 6 d. for a Bond upon pain of 10 l. one moyety to the King the other to the person that will sue for the same XXXI None shall abuse or mix any wines with any other Ingredients upon pain of forfeiture of 100 l. by every Merchant Wine-Cooper or other selling wines in grosse And 40 l. by every person selling wines by retail for such mixing corrupting or abusing of wines the one moyety to the King the other moyety to the person that shall sue for the same XXXII No Canary wines Muskadel or Alegant shall be sold within England Wales or Berwick by retail for above 18 d. the quart No Gascoigne or French wines for above 8 d. the quart No Rhenish wines for above 12 d. the quart and so proportionably for more or less quantity upon pain of 5 l. forfeiture for every Statute quart c. or other measure sold for more the one moyety to the King the other moyety to him that shall sue for the same XXXIII Provided the Lord Chancellor c. may set the prices of wines yearly or alter the same and in default of such setting of prizes the Rates set by this Act to continue under the penalties recoverable as aforesaid XXXIV See Post-Office Numb 4. Witnesse I. Stat. 12. E. 2.2 When a deed or other writing is denyed in Court wherein witnesses are named processes shall be awarded to cause them to appear and if they come not at the great distress returned or the return be that they have nothing or that they cannot be found yet the Enquest shall proceed but if the witnesses appear at the great distress and the Enquest for some cause remain untaken the witnesses shall have like day given as is assigned for the taking of the Enquest when if they appear not the issues first returned upon them shall be forfeit and the taking of the Enquest shall not be deferred because of their
distress to commit the party to the Goal at his own will there to remain one moneth without bail XXXI Provided no person be questioned for any offence within this Act unless within 6. weeks after the offence committed ☞ VVoolls I. Stat. 18 E. 3. Stat. 2.3 Every man as well stranger as other may buy Woolls as they can agree with the seller thereof II. Statutum Stapul Cap. 12. None shall transport Woolls Leather or Woolfels to Berwick or elsewhere into Scotland neither shall any sell Wooll Woolfels or Leather to any Scotchman or to any other to be transported into Scotland upon the pains contained in the third Article of this Statute which see in Merchants * III. Stat. 31 E. 3.2 No wools shall be bought by fraud to abate the price thereof upon grievous forfeiture also balances and weights for wools viz. of the sack half sack and quarter pound half pound and quarter shall be sent to all the Sheriffs of England according to which every person shall make theirs without fee or reward and none shall buy or sell by any other weight in pain to be fined at the Kings will IV. Stat. 31 E. 3.8 No buyer of wools shall make any other refuse of wools then hath been heretofore used viz. of cote gare and villain fleeces and every sack shall contain 16 stone and the stone 14 pound according to the Standard of the Exchequer also all wools fels and leather bought in the Countrey shall be brought to the staples and there shall remain 15 dayes at least and those that cannot be sold in that time shall be brought to the Ports ordained for the staple to be transported beyond Sea paying the due Customs and Subsidies viz. for a sack of wool 50 s. for 300 woolfels 50 s. and for a last of leather 100 s. V. No wools vendible shall be lodged shewed or sold within 3. miles of the Staple Howbeit every one but a Merchant may lodge shew and sell his wools being of his own growing in his own house or elsewhere at his pleasure VI. Stat. 31 E. 3.9 The Chancellor and Treasurer with the advice of others of the Kings Council shall have power to defer the transportation of wools when they see it needful VII Stat. 34 E. 3.19 No Custom or Subsidy shall be paid for Canvas to pack wool in VIII Stat. 36 E. 3.11 All Merchants may transport wools without restraint and no Subsidy or other charge shall be from henceforth set or granted upon wools by Merchants or others without assent in Parliament IX Stat. 38 E. 3. Stat. 1.1.6 A repeal of the Felony imposed by the Statute of the Staple Cap. 3.27 E. 3. which see in Merchants for transporting wools c. by Englishmen but the forfeiture of lands and goods shall stand X. Stat. 43 E. 3.1 Whereas the Staple of wools c. hath been holden at Calice since the first of March Anno 37 E. 3. That staple shall be wholly put out and the staple shall be holden in these places following viz. at Newcastle Kingston upon Hull Saint Buttolph ●lias Boston Yarmouth Quinborough Westminster Chichester Winchester Exeter and Bristll and the staples of Ireland and Wales shall be kept at the places where they were first ordained Obsolete XI Stat. 45 E. 3.4 No imposition or charge shall be put upon wools woolfels or leather other then the custom and subsidie granted to the King without assent of Parliament XII Stat. 13 R 2.9 pars inde None shall buy or sell wool at more weight then at 14 pounds to the stone in pain to forfeit the double to the party grieved and to make fine to the King XIII None Alien or Denizen shall make any other refuse of wool but Cot Gare or Villein XIV None shall buy wools by these words good packing or the like in pain that the Broker shall suffer half a years imprisonment and the buyer shall make fine to the King and recompence the party grieved his double damages neither shall any cause wools to be cocketed but in the owners name in pain to forfeit the same XV. Stat. 2 H. 5. Stat. 2.6 Merchandise of the Staple viz. wools fels leather lead or●tin shall not be transported beyond Sea without the Kings licence until they be first brought to the staple in pain to forfeit the same Obsolete XVI Stat. 8 H. 5.2 Every Merchant-stranger buying wools in England to convey them to the West-parts or elsewhere and not coming to the staple to sell them there shall bring to the Master of the Mint for every sack an ounce of Gold Bullion and for every 3. pieces of tin another such ounce of Bullion or the value in silver Bullion in pain to forfeit such wool and tin or the value thereof to the King Obsolete XVII Stat. 8 H. 6.22 No Alien shall cause any wools which he intends to convey out of the Realm to be forced clacked or bearded in pain to forfeit the same together with the double value thereof and besides to be imprisoned XVIII Every Wool-packer shall make good and due packing and neither he nor any other shall make any inwinding within the fleece at the rolling thereof nor put therein any looks pelt-wool tar sand earth glass or dirt in pain that the party grieved shall have his action of Trespass and deceit against such offender at the common Law XIX Stat. 14 H. 6 5. Wools and all other Merchandize in Creeks to be transported beyond Sea shall be forfeited whereof the King shall have the one moyety and the finder the other Obsolete * XX. Stat. 23 H. 8.17 None shall winde any fleece of wool not sufficiently rivered or washed nor winde therein any Clay Lead Stones Sand Tails deceitful locks cot calls comber lambs wool or any other thing whereby the fleece may be more weighty to the deceit of the buyer in pain that the seller of any such deceitful wool shall forfeit for every such fleece 6 d. to be divided betwixt the King and the finder XXI This Act shall not extend to such Counties where the Inhabitants have not customably used to river or wash their sheep before they be shorn nor to any persons who have used to sell their wool by tail or number of the fleeces and not by weight XXII Stat. 37 H. 8.15 All persons are restrained to buy wools in Norfolk and divers other Counties there mentioned except merchants to convey them to the Staple or others to convert them into Yarn Hats Girdles or Cloth But this Statute is now expired XXIII Stat. 1 E. 6.6 Every person dwelling in Norfolk or Norwich may buy wools of Norfolk growth as well as they might have done before the Statute of 37 H. 8.15 so as they sell or retail the same again in some open market or place in Norfolk or Norwich to some person or persons dwelling also there that will there spin the same XXIV Stat. 2 3 P. M. 13. Any inhabitant of Halifax may buy wools otherwise then by
several grounds lying in or near the same as are subject to surrounding between the Lords Commoners or owners thereof on the one part and the drainers on the other part shall be good in Law according to the manner and form of such contracts or bargains IX Where the Queen her heirs and successors hath an interest in such wastes or commons such contracts or bargains shall not binde them unless they be written in parchment indented and certified into the Chancery and the royal assent thereunto first obtained and signified under the privie or great Seal when the wastes or soils are of the possessions of the Crown but under the Seal of the Dutchy of Lancaster and inrolled in that Court when they are of that kinde X. This Act shall not impair or take away the interest of such Lords Commoners or Owners in any part of the residue of the wastes or commons not assigned to the said Drainers or any Franchise or Liberty but that the same may be lawfully used as if this Act or such contract or bargain had not been made XI This Act shall not be prejudicial to Ports or Havens neither shall it be put in execution within eight miles of Yarmouth or six miles of Linne ☞ Armour Arms. I. Stat. 7 E. 1. It belongeth to the King to prohibit force of Arms and all other force against the peace and to punish offenders therein according to the Law and herein every subject is bound to be aiding II. Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2.5 None shall be charged to arm himself otherwise then as was used in the time of the King's progenitors neither yet shall any be compelled to go out of his Shire but when necessity requireth and the sudden coming of strange enemies into the Realm and then it shall be done as in times past for the defence of the Realm III. Stat. 2 E. 3.3 None shall come with force and arms before the King's Justices or other his Ministers nor go or ride armed in affray of peace in pain to forfeit their armour and to suffer imprisonment at the King's pleasure IV. Justices of Peace and other Officers have power to put this Act in execution and the Justices of Assise shall inquire of their default in that behalf V. Stat. 7 R. 2.13 None shall ride in harness contrary to 2 E. 3.3 in pain to forfeit the same VI. Stat. 20 R. 2.1 The Statutes of 2 E. 3.3 7 R. 2.13 shall be duly observed upon the pains contained in the said Statute of 2 E. 3.3 and beside to make fine to the King VII Stat. 31 El. 4. To imbezil 20 s. worth of the Queen or her successors Ordnance Munition or Victual provided for war for lucre or with purpose to hinder the service is adjudged felony if prosecuted within the year VIII This offence shall not cause corruption of bloud nor loss of Dower onely the offender shall forfeit his lands during his life IX The Defendant may produce witnesses for his discharge See more in Title of Captains and Souldiers n. 39. Arrests I. West 1. cap. 34. 3 E. 1. None except the King's Ministers shall within a Liberty arrest any person passing through the same and holding nothing thereof for any Contracts Covenants or trespasses made or done out of such Liberty in pain to pay double dammages to the party grieved and a fine to the King II. Stat. 50 E. 3.5 None shall arrest Clerks or other persons of holy Church doing Divine Service in pain of grievous forfeiture so that Collusion be not found in any such persons or Clerks III. Stat. 1 R. 2.15 None shall arrest such person or Clerks doing Divine Service in pain of imprisonment and to be ransomed at the King's will IV. Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 2. Stat. 2. No person arrested upon any Writ out of the King's Bench or Common-Pleas upon which he is bailable by the Statute 23 H. 6. ca. 10. shall be forced to give Security or enter into bond with Sureties for his appearance at the day in such writ bill or process specified in any summ above 40 l. unless the cause of action be expressed particularly and where such cause of action is not expressed all Sheriffs and Officers shall let to bail persons arrested upon 40 l. Security for their appearance according to the Statute 23 H. 6. V. Upon appearance by Attorney in Term entred in Court where the process is returnable the bail-bond shall be satisfied and discharged and after such appearance no amerciament shall be estreated against any Sheriff or officer for want of appearance and if the Plaintiff in some personal action declare not before the end of the next term after appearance Non-suit may be entred against him and costs taxed and levied as in the Statute 28 H. 8. ca. 15. VI. Proviso this Act extend not to Cap ' utlagatum Attachments upon Rescous Attachments of Priviledge or any other Attachment for contempt whatsoever issuing out of either of the said Courts VII Original writs may be sued upon personal actions against persons in the Fleet and an Habeas corpus granted to bring them to the barr to answer any suit and declaration being put in and the Defendant not pleading judgment may be entred by Nihil dicit and the Prisoner charged in execution upon notice thereof to the Warden of the Fleet by rule of the Court. VIII In Actions of debt and other personal Actions and Ejectione firm ' in any of the said Courts after issue joyned to be tried by the Jury and after Judgment obtained there shall not need to be 15 days between the Teste and Return of any Venir ' fac ' Hab ' cor●●● a Jurator ' Distringas Fieri fac ' or Cap ' ad sat is faciendum and the want thereof shall be no error Provided this extend not to Writs of Cap ' ad satis faciendum where any exigent after judgment is to be awarded nor to any Cap'ad satis faciendum in order to make any bail liable ☞ Arrow-Heads * I. Stat. 7. H. 4.7 All Heads for Arrows and quarrels shall be well boiled or brazed and hardened at the point with steel in pain to forfeit them be imprisoned and make fine at the King's will II. Such Arrow-heads and quarrels shall be marked with the proper mark of the maker III. Justices of P. have power to punish such as make defective Arrow-heads and quarrels Assault * I. Stat. 5 H. 4.6 If any assault the servant of a Knight or Burgess of Parliament Proclamation shall be made that he render himself into the King's Bench within a quarter of a year which if he doe not he shall be attainted of the fact and pay double dammages to the party grieved to be taxed by the discretion of the Justices or by inquest if need be and besides shall make fine and ransom at the King's will II. Stat. 11 H. 6.11 The like provision is made against assaults made upon any member of either House of Parliament or of
any other council assembled by the King's command onely if it be not Term-time he shall then appear the first day of the Term following that quarter and upon appearance shall be proceeded against as before Assises I. Magna Charta cap. 12. 9 H. 3. Assises of novel disseisin and Mortdancester shall be taken in their proper Shires in this manner The King or in his absence out of the Realm the chief Justices shall once a year send the other Justices through every County to take together with the Knights of the Shires such Assises in those Counties and such things as cannot be there determined shall be ended elsewhere in their Circuits Also difficult matters shall be referred to the Justices of the Bench to be there determined II. West 1. Cap. 24. 3 E. 1. If any Escheator Sheriff or other Bailiff of the King do by colour of his office without special warrant pertaining to his office disseise any man of his free-hold or any thing belonging thereunto it shall be in the election of the disseisee whether the King by office shall cause it to be amended upon complaint or that he will sue by writ of Novel disseisin wherein if the disseisor be attainted the disseisee shall recover double dammages and the disseisor shall also be grievously amercied to the King III. West 1. cap. 36. 3 E. 1. If any be attainted of disseisin done in the now King's time with robbery of goods or otherwise the disseisee by Assise of Novel disseisin shall recover his seisin and dammages and the disseisor whether present or not shall make fine and if present shall be committed IV. West 1. cap. 48. 3 E. 1. Assises of Novel disseisin Mortdancester and Darreine presentment shall be taken in Advent Septuagesima and Lent as well as inquests and that at the special request of the King made to the Bishops V. West 2 cap. 25. 13 E. 1. For estovers of wood profit to be taken in woods corrodie delivery of corn and other victuals and necessaries to be received yearly in a certain place toll tunnage passage pontage pawnage and the like to be taken in places certain keeping of Parks Woods Forests Chases Warrens Yates and other Bailiwicks and offices in Fee an Assise of Novel disseisin shall be and in such cases the Writ shall be as in other cases de libero tenemento VI. It shall also be for Common of Turf-land fishing and such like common appendant to Free-hold or by special deed as it heretofore held place for common pasture provided the estate therein be at least for life VII If any holding for years or in ward aliene the fee remedy shall be had by this Writ and both the feoffors and feoffees shall be had for disseisors so that during the life of any of them the said Writ shall hold place and if they die the remedy shall be by Writ of Entry VIII The giving of this Writ in new cases shall not diminish the force thereof in those wherein it had force before and remedy also shall be had thereby in case where one feedeth in the several of another IX In this suit if the Defendant fail to make good the exception which he pleads he shall be adjudged a Disseisor without taking the Assise and shall give to the Plaintiff double dammages both inquired and to be inquired and besides shall suffer a year's imprisonment X. If such an exception be alledged by a Bailiff the taking of the Assise shall not be thereby delayed nor yet the Judgment upon the reftitution of the lands and dammages Howbeit if the Master of such Bailiff afterwards offer to prove to the Court by matter of record that there was just exception whereby the Plaintiff might have been barred he shall have a Venire facias to produce such record and then if the Justices see cause the Plaintiff shall be warned to appear at a certain day and the Defendant shall then have again his seisin and dammages and the Plaintiff shall be punished by imprisonment at the discretion of the Justices In like manner also shall the Justices proceed in case the Defendant's proof is by deeds or releases and if the Plaintiff purchased the Assise contrary to his own deed he shail be punished as aforesaid XI The Sheriff shall not take an Ox of the disseisee but of the disseisor onely and but one Ox though there be many disseisors named in the Writ and that Ox shall not exceed 5 s. in value Note that 5 s. then hath now the value of 15 s. XII West 2.46 13 E. 1. Where common of Pasture hath been usurped during Nonage Coverture tenancy in dower by the courtesie for life years or in tail it hath been holden that if such possessor of common be deforced he ought to have Action by Writ of Novel disseisin it must now be holden that such as have entred within the time that an Assise of Mortdancester hath lain if they had no common before shall not recover by Writ of Novel disseisin albeit they be deforced XIII Stat. de conjunct feoffatis 34 E. 1. In an Assise of Novel disseisin if joynt-tenancy be pleaded by force of a Deed upon the Plaintiff's averment against it the Justices shall keep the Deed until the trial and in the mean time shall by scir ' facias summon the absent joynt-tenant to be present with the Defendant at the said trial and they shall there maintain the Plea if they can But if it shall then be proved by an Assise that the Plea was maliciously alledged to delay the Plaintiff albeit the Assise doth pass for the Defendants yet he who pleadeth that exception shall suffer one whole year's imprisonment and shall not be enlarged without grievous fine And if it be found by Assise that the Plaintiff was disseised he shall recover seisin and double dammages and the trial shall go on notwithstanding such plea and albeit neither of the pretended joynt-tenants appear howbeit joynt-tenancy shall not be pleaded by Bailiffs XIV Also in Assises of Mortdancester and juris utrum the like course shall be taken as in those of Novel disseisin XV. In other Writs likewise whereby Tenants are demanded save that in them the dammages are referred to the discretion of the Justices XVI Stat. Eborum 34 E. 2.1 Tenants in Assise of Novel disseisin may make Attorneys and may also plead by Ba●hffs as in times past XVII Stat. 7 R. 2.10 An Assise of Novel disseisin for rents issuing out of lands in divers Counties shall be taken in Confinio Comitatus as is used for Common of pasture in one County appendant to tenements in another XVIII Stat. 1 H. 4.8 A special Assise is maintainable by the disseisee for such lands as are granted by the King's Patent without title first found by inquest for the King without suit to be made to the King in that behalf and if the Patentee pray in Aid of the King a Procedendo shall be also granted without suit XIX
XXI The Justices impowred to appoint a Treasurer to receive the said moneys and make payment thereof according to their orders and may agree and article with persons by them employ'd and take security of them for safe-guarding the said Counties XXII If any persons imployed in Border-Service upon this Act shall wilfully or corruptly neglect to apprehend or bring to tryall any persons called Moss-Troopers they shall be uncapable of being imployed in the said service and further fine and imprisonment as the Justices shall think fit XXIII The Justice may lessen the charge if they see cause this Act to continue 5. years The Stat. 4 Jac. cap. 1. 7 Jac. cap. 1. touching tryal of offenders flying out of England into Scotland et è contra revived and to be put in execution ☞ Rome * I. Stat. 25 H. 8.19 The Convocation shall be assembled by the Kings Writs and shall not enact any Constitutions or Ordinances without the Kings assent II. No Canons shall be executed which be repugnant to the Kings Prerogative or to the Customs Laws or Statutes of this Realm III. There shall be no appeals to Rome but from henceforth they shall be according to the Statute of 24 H. 8.12 Which see in Appeals to Rome IV. Appeals from the Courts of Archbishops of this Realm shall be to the King in his Chancery out of which shall thereupon issue out a Commission under the Great Seal to certain persons to be named by the King who shall thereby have power to hear and definitively to determine all such appeals and the causes concerning the same and from whose decree or sentence therein there shall be no farther appeal V. If any sue for an Appeal to Rome he shall incur a Praemunire but this is made Treason by 13 El. 2. which see in Crown VI. Appeals from places exempt which were before to the See of Rome shall be henceforth into the Chancery and shall be determined before the Commissioners as aforesaid VII Provided That all Canons Constitutions Ordinances and Synodals Provincial not repugnant to the Kings Prerogative nor to the Customs Laws or Statutes of this Kingdom shall be still used and executed notwithstanding this Act. * VIII Stat. 25 H. 8.20 No man shall be presented to the See of Rome for the Dignity of an Archbishop or Bishop neither shall Annates or First-fruits be paid to the same See IX Concerning the Election of Archbishops and Bishops the King may send to the Prior and Covent or Dean and Chapter of the place shall be void his Letters missive containing his conge d'eslire or license to elect the person named in the said Letters missive which person they are to choose for their Archbishop or Bishop and none other X. In case they fail to make election accordingly the King shall nominate such an Archbishop or Bishop by his Letters Patents and if it be a Bishop he shall present him to the Archbishop or in case that See be then void to any other Archbishop within his Dominion but if it be an Archbishop then to an Archbishop and two other Bishops or else to four other Bishops to be nominated by the King XI When any Archbishop or Bishop is elected or presented as aforesaid they are in due form to be invested and consecrated viz. a Bishop by the Archbishop of that Province or in case of vacation by any other within the Kings Dominions and an Archbishop by some other Archbishop ond two Bishops or else by four Bishops without suing for any Bulls Letters or other things from the See of Rome for the same And such Archbishop or Bishop betwixt his election and consecration shall be called the Lord Elect of such a Dignity XII Such election or presentment of an Archbishop or Bishop shall be lawful and make them capable to do and execute all things that concern the said Dignities XIII If the Prior and Covent or the Dean and Chapter within 20 days after the receipt of the Kings Conge d'eslire do not proceed to election and certifie the same to the King or if the Archbishop or Bishops unto whom the King presents any such person to be invested and consecrated as aforesaid do not perform the same accordingly within 20 days after such presentment or if any person or persons de admit obey or execute any Censures Excommunicotions Interdictions Inhibitions or any other Process or Act in derogation of this Act that then all and every person and persons offending shall incurre a Praemunire XIV Stat. 25 H. 8.21 No imposition shall be paid to the Bishop or See of Rome neither shall any person sue for any dispensation or license to the Bishop of Rome XV. The Archbishop of Canterbury may grant dispensations to the King and likewise licenses to all others of things formerly used to be licensed Howbeit of causes not used to be licensed no dispensations shall be granted without the approbation of the King and his Councill XVI Here Licenses of things whereof the tax did heretofore extend at Rome to 4 l. shall be also confirmed by the Kings Great Seal and likewise enrolled in Chancery by a Clerk thereto appointed but all others may be granted by the Archbishop without such confirmation unless the party desire to have it enrolled and then the Fee for the Seal shall be 5 s. and not above And all Acts done by such licenses shall be good in Law XVII All children procreated after Marriage to be had or done by such licenses or dispensation shall in all Courts be admitted Legtiimate and Inheritable XVIII There shall be a Clerk assigned by the Archbishop to register Dispensations and another by the King to enroll Confirmations XIX There shall be two Books made wherein the taxes of Dispensation shall be written whereof the one shall remain with the said Register of the Dispensations and the other with the said Clerk of the Confirmations XX. None shall pay for dispensation greater taxes then shall be set down in the said Books and if any Officer takes more he shall forfeit ten times so much to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Howbeit where they are Arbitrary the Archbishop and the Lord Chancellor and Keeper shall rate them and here also is set down how the money received shall be divided For which see the Statute at large XXI This Act shall not inhibit the Archbishop of York nor other Bishops to dispence as they were wont to do by the Common Law and custome of this Realm XXII During the vacation of the See of Canterbury the Guardian of the Spiritualities shall grant Dispensations Here is also a remedy provided where the Archbishop or Guardian refuse to grant Dispensations viz. by a Commission from the King to impower two other Prelates to perform the same For which see the Statutes at large XXIII All Religious Houses heretofore exempt from the Visitation of the Archbishop shall still remain so notwithstanding this Act and shall be under the Visitation of
the King by Commission under the Great Seal so as the Popes power shall be quite excluded from all such Visitations neither shall any Religious persons from henceforth depart this Realm for any Visitation Congregation or Assembly whatsoever but all such meetings shall be hereafter within the Kings Dominions XXIV Howbeit this Act nor any License or Dispensation to be granted thereby shall derogate the Statute of 21 H. 8.13 touching Pluralities of Benefices or Non-residence XXV Whosoever sues for any License Dispensatson c. to the See of Rome or obeys any Process from thence shall incur a Praemunire but this is made Treason by 13 E● 2. XXVI Grants and Confirmations of liberties obtained from the See of Rome to any Abbeys or other Religious Houses shall be of the fame effect as they were before this Act. XXVII Abbeys nor other places exempt shall pay any Pensions to the See of Rome nor accept any Dispensation or Confirmation from thence nor make any oath to the Bishop thereof and where no such Confirmation was requisite they shall still remain as before notwithstanding this Act. XXVIII Dispensations obtained at Rome before the 12th of March 1533. shall remain of the force that they had before this Act. XXIX The King with the advice of his Council may reform the manner of Indulgences Safe Conducts I. Stat. 15 H. 6.3 IN all Safe Conducts the name of them of the Ship and of the Master and the number of the Mariners together with the Portage of the Ship shall be expressed II. Stat. 18 H. 6.8 Goods may be loaded into the Ships of the Kings Enemies so as the Merchant hath an Authentique safe Conduct for them otherwise they may be made prize by any that can take them III. Stat. 20 H. 6.1 All Letters of safe Conduct which be not enrolled in the Chancery before the delivery of them shall be void IV. They who will take benefit of the Kings safe Conduct shall have it ready enrolled at the time of their apprehension Howbeit although the safe Conduct be not presently shewed yet it will suffice if it be afterwards proved to be then enrolled Saint Johns I. Stat. 32 H. 8.24 By this Act the Corporation of Saint Johns of Jerusalem in England and Ireland was dissolved and the Priors and Confreres thereof prohibited to wear the Mark c. II. The King was to have their Houses Churches Lands Goods Chattels Debts and all other things of theirs There be also divers Pensions appointed severally to the Priors Chaplains and Confreres of that Order to continue during their lives III. All of that Order are discharged from obedience for their Religion and also enabled to sue and to take and have liberty as other Religious persons were enabled by 31 H. 8.6 which see in Ability Likewise their lands are to be within the survey of the Court of Augmentations Scarborough I. Stat. 37 H. 8.14 An Act for the incorporating of two persons by the name of the Masters or Keepers of the Peer and Key at Scarborough who have power to distrain every man having lands or houses there for the fifth part of the yearly revenue thereof towards the repair of the said Peer and Key See the Statute at large Sea I. Stat. 18 E. 3. Stat. 1.3 The Sea shall be open to all Merchants to pass with their Merchandize where they please Seals I. Artic. sup Chart. Cap. 6. 28 E. 1. No Writ concerning the Common Law shall be awarded under any of the petty Seals II. Stat. 11 R. 2.10 The Kings Signet or Privy Seal shall not be sent in prejudice of the Realm or disturbance of the Law III. Stat. 4 H. 7.14 All Grants and Writings of Lands and other things pertaining to the Earldom of March shall be under the Great Seal and not under the special Seal Serjeants at Arms. I. Stat. 13 R. 2.6 There shall be but thirty Serjeants at Arms who shall meddle with nothing but what concerns their Offices neither shall they oppress the people in pain to lose their Office make fine to the King at his pleasure and full satisfaction to the party ☞ Service and Sacraments * I. Stat. 1 E. 6.1 None shall speak or do any thing in contempt of the most Holy Sacrament in pain of imprisonment and to make fine and ransom at the Kings Will. II. Three Justices of Peace 1. Qu. have power to take information by the Oaths of two lawful persons at least concerning the offence aforesaid and to bind over by Recognizance every accuser and witness in 5 l. a piece to appear at the next Sessions to give evidence against the offenders who are there to be enquired of before three Justices or more by the oaths of twelve men and also indicted if the matter alledged against them be found true III. Three Justices or more have likewise power to send out two writs Capias and Exigent and a Capias Utlegat against such offenders in all Counties and Liberties and upon their appearance to determine the contempts and offences aforesaid or to take bail for their appearance to be tried as aforesaid IV. The Justices also have power to direct a Writ in the Kings Name to the Bishop of the Diocess where the offence was committed by which he shall be required to be present himself or some for him sufficiently learned at the arraignment of the offender and to give advice concerning the offence committed V. The offence shall be prosecuted within three moneths and the offender shall be admitted to produce Witnesses for his defence VI. The Minister shall deliver the Sacrament to every person in both kinds and shall not without lawful cause deny it to any that will devoutly and humbly desire it VII Stat. 2. 3 E. 6.1 Every Minister shall use the Church-Service in such form as is mentioned in the Book of Common-Prayer established by this Act And shall not use any other or deprave the same in pain if he be Beneficed and convict thereof by the Verdict of twelve men his own confession or notorious evidence of the fact to forfeit to the King for the first offence that of his Benefices which the King will choose and to suffer six months imprisonment for the second to suffer one whole years imprisonment and to be deprived ipso facto of all his spiritual promotion whereupon every Patron may present and for the third to suffer imprisonment during life And if he be not Beneficed for the first offence he shall suffer six months imprisonment and for the second imprisonment during life VII If any shall be convicted to have by Enterludes Playes ●ongs rhymes or otherwise depraved the said books as to have compelled or procured the Minister to sing or say any other Church-service or in any other form then as aforesaid or by any such means 〈◊〉 have interrupted or let the Minister to sing or say the said Service th●● shall for the first offence forfeit 10 l. to the King or that not paid within