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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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unless his Ancestors have done it before the said voyage III. Such as be at a suit-fine shall be free from suit paying their Fine IV. The Parcenor having the eldest part shall do suit for his or her fellows and the rest shall be contributary V. Also one Joynt-tenant or Tenant in common shall do the suit and if there be no mean to acquit him the rest shall contribute VI. If a Lord distrain for suit not due the parties upon complaint shall have an attachment against the Lord to appear in the Kings Court at a short day when one only Essoin shall be allowed and the distress shall be delivered to the Plaintiff and there remain untill the Plea be determined VII If the Lord appear not at the day the Sheriff shall have command to distrain him by his goods and to have his body before the Justices at another day when if he appear not the Plaintiff shall go without day and the distress shall remain with him untill the Lord have recovered and in the mean time no more distresses shall be made saving to Lords their right to recover their suits when they will sue for them But here if the Lord be convict he shall allow the Plaintiff damages VIII Like Justice shall be done to Lords against Tenants that withdraw their Suits as to limiting of days and awarding of distresses and damages also if they recover but Lords shall not recover seisin of such Suits against their Tenants by default as they were wont to do And as concerning suits withdrawn before the time above-mentioned let the Common Law run as it was wont to do Swans I. Stat. 22 E. 4.6 None but the Kings Son shall have any mask or game of Swans of his own or to his use except he have Lands and Tenements of Freehold worth five Marks per annum besides reprises in pain to have them seised by any having lands of that value to be divided betwixt the King and the Seisor ☞ Swearing and Cursing * ☞ I. Stat. 21 Jac. 20. If any shall swear or curse within the hearing of a Justice of Peace or shall be convicted thereof by his own confession or the evidence of two witnesses upon oath before the same Justice he shall forfeit 12 d. to the use of the poor where the offence shall be committed to be levied by the Constable Church-wardens and Overseers of the Poor there upon warrant from such Justice by distress and sale of goods and in default of distress if the offender be above 12 years old he shall upon warrant as aforesaid be set in the stocks 3 hours but if under then shall he be whipped by the Constable or by the Parent or Master in the Constables presence II. Here if the Officer be sued for the due execution of his Office he may plead the general issue and yet give special matter in evidence III This offence shall be complained of and proved as aforesaid within 20 days after it is committed And this Act shall be read in the Church twice in the year upon Sunday after Evening-Prayer Tail I. West 2.1 13 E. 1. WHere Lands are given to a man and the heirs of his body or to husband and wife and the heirs of their two bodies upon condition That if such man or such husband and wife die without issue that then the land should revert to the Donor or where land is given in frank-marriage and such a condition is conceived to be annexed or implied In all such cases heretofore the Feoffees after issue had had power to Alien and to dis-inherit the issue contrary to the mind of the Donors Wherefore now it is ordained That the Will of the giver according to the form in the Deed of Gift manifestly expressed shall be from henceforth observed so that they to whom the land was given under such condition shall have no power to alien the land so given but it shall remain to their issue after their death or shall revert to the giver or his heirs if issue fail neither shall the second husband of any such woman from henceforth have any thing of the land so given upon condition after the death of his wife by the Law of England nor the issue of such second husband and wife shall succeed in the inheritance but immediately after the death of the husband and wife unto whom the land was given it shall return unto the issue of the giver or his heirs as aforesaid II. Hereupon a new Writ of Formedon in descender is granted in this form Praecipe A. quod juste c. reddat E. Manerinm de F. cum suis pertinentiis quod C. dedit tali viro tali mulieri haeredibus de ipsis viro muliere exeuntibus or thus Quod C. dedit tali viro i● liberum maritagium cum tali muliere quod post mortem praedictorum viri mulieris praedicto B. filio corum viri mulieris descendere debeat per formam donationis praedictae ut dicit c. vel Quod C. dedit tali haeredibus de corpore suo exeuntibus quod post mortem illius talis praedicto B. filio praedicti talis descendere d beat per formam c. III. This Act shall extend to gifts hereafter to be made and not to gifts heretofore made and a Fine hereafter to be levied upon such lands shall be void in Law Neither shall the heir or reversioner albeit they be of full age in England or out of prison need to make their claim But this Law concerning a Fine is in some sort altered by 32 H. 8.36 which see in Fines Taxes Tenths Fifteens Benevolences Ship-money I Stat. 25 E. 1. Certain Taxes then before taken shall not be taken in custome but by the common assent of the Realm except antient Aids and Taxes II. Stat. De Tallagio non concedendo cap. 1. Temp. E. 1. No tallage or aid by us or our heirs shall be levied without the will and assent of the Archbishops Bishops Earls Barons Knights Burgesses and other free Commons of our Realm III. Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 6. Whereas after Taxes rated levied and paid into the Exchequer Commissions of review issued out by colour whereof the Justices thereto assigned took Fines of the Taxers and others it is ordained That from henceforth the people shall be taxed after the old manner and not otherwise IV. Stat. 11 R. 2.9 No imposition or charge shall be put upon Wooll Leather or Woolfels other than the Custom and Subsidy granted to the King in this present Parliament and if any be the same shall be annulled saving always unto the King his ancient right V. Stat. 9 H. 4.7 Goods shall be chargeable towards the payment of Tenths or Fifteenths in the place where they were at the time the same were granted howbeit none shall be twice charged for his goods VI. Stat. 1 R. 3.2 The Subjects of this Realm shall not be hereafter charged by any
disposed as aforesaid IX In other places where there are no Wardens the Head-officers shall doe it and shall have the like power and advantage as those of London X. This shall not prohibit a Beer-brewer to keep in his house a servant for to mend his vessels XI If any shall diminish a vessel by taking out the head or a staff thereof the vessel shall be burnt and the offender shall forfeit 3 s. 4 d. to be disposed as aforesaid and shall be farther punished at the discretion of the Head-officers XII An Ale-brewer may also retain a Couper in his service to mend his vessels XIII Every Couper shall make his Ale-vessel according to the Assize exprest in the Treatise called Compositio mensurarum viz. every eight Gallons thereof to contain a Bushel according to the Assize limited by that Ordinance which was made 51 H. 3. in pain to forfeit for every vessel otherwise made 3 s. 4 d. to be disposed as aforesaid XIV Every Couper shall mark his vessel with his own mark in pain of 3 s. 4 d. to be levied and recovered as abovesaid XV. The Searchers shall not put out the Ale to measure the vessel whereby it may be made worse XVI This shall not prohibit to carry Ale to the Houses of his Majesty and Honourable persons in great vessels as Butts Pipes c. And Ale-brewers may convey Ale to any man's house in Barrels Kilderkins and Firkins being the due content * XVII Stat. 8 Eliz. 9. So much of the Statute of 23 H. 8.4 as concerns the prices of vessels is repealed XVIII Coupers shall sell their vessells at such rates as shall be yearly assessed in Corporations by the head-officers and in the Country by the Justices of Peace or the more part of them in the Sess after Easter XIX If after proclamations of the rates so assessed any Couper shall sell otherwise he shall incurr such penalties as by the said Statute of 23 H. 8.4 is ordained viz. for every Barrel Kilderkin and Firkin 3 s. 4 d. to be imposed and disposed as in the same Statute is exprest for selling such vessel above the due price Courts I. In the time of H. 8. there were amongst others three new Courts erected viz. those of the Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths and General Surveyors But these were afterwards annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliaments and Letters Patents of H. 8. and Qu. M. Nevertheless in some of these Acts there remains yet somewhat in force as hereafter followeth II. Stat. 33 H. 8.39 All Obligations and Specialties concerning the King shall be made to him and his heirs Kings in his own name by these words Domino Regi and to no other person and then for payment Solvendum Domino Regi haeredibus vel executoribus suis with other words used in common Obligations and such Obligations shall be of the nature of Statutes-staple and if the King die leaving such Obligations they shall remain to his heirs or executors at the King's pleasure III. If any take Obligation that concerns the King in another manner they shall suffer imprisonment as shall be ordered by the King's Council IV. All suits for the King's debts in any Court mentioned in this Act upon any Obligation or Specialty delivered before this Act or to be delivered before the second day of May next shall be prosecuted in the King's name to what person soever such Obligation or Specialty were made and they shall be of the nature of Statutes-staple as before V. The King in all suits for debts shall recover his costs and dammages VI. Suits for the King's debts shall be in the proper Courts where they shall be due whether it be the Exchequer Dutchy Augmentations Surveyors Wards and Liveries First-fruits and Tenths or any of them out of which such processes shall issue for the speedy recovery of them as the Court shall think fit VII The said Courts shall have power to hear and determine all actions defaults offences and other things which shall arise upon any matter committed to the governance of the same Courts wherein the King shall be onely party and also all Estates for term of years betwixt party and party concerning the premisses all treasons felonies and estates of freehold and inheritance other then joyntures for term of life onely excepted VIII If any person shall make title to any lands sold or exchanged to any in fee-simple or fee-fee-tail by the King's Letters Patents upon which a rent is reserved to the King his heirs and successors in the Court of Augmentations or shall demand any rents annuities officers fees or other profits out of lands in fee-simple or in fee-fee-tail comprised in any Letters Patents or if the King shall make like title or claim to any lands of inheritance or profits out of lands assigned to the said Court in any Letters Patents that the said Court or more part of them shall hear and determine such titles and claims and without other Warrant make recompence to the party grieved IX If any Decree of the Court of Augmentation for any of the premisses extend onely to the loss of the Patentee for the life of the Demandant or Plaintiff or for term of years then shall the Chancellor of that Court without any other Warrant make recompence in money or out of lands limited to the survey of the same Court X. The aforesaid Courts shall have power to set fines and amerciaments and upon trials and other proceedings there to examine by such proofs and in such manner as they shall think fit and the proceedings and decrees of the said Courts shall be effectual in Law XI The chief Officers of those Courts may without any other warrant discharge all bonds and recognisances there hanging the debts being satisfied and the conditions performed and may also make void all recognisances for appearance or other contempt XII If any person to whom the King hath granted with reservation of rent any lands of inheritance or for life within the survey of any of the said Courts do not pay yearly unto the Treasurer or Receiver General of the said several Courts at the day limited or within three moneths after all summs of money so reserved or make sufficient tender thereof unto the said Treasurer or Receiver he shall forfeit so much as the fourth part of the said yearly rent shall amount unto and if he pay not the rent and money forfeited as aforesaid within six moneths he shall forfeit so much as half the rent amounts unto and for every half year after shall forfeit so much as the whole year's rent doth amount unto XIII The Treasurer or Receiver General may distrain for the said rents and forfeitures and the Head-officers of the said Courts may issue out process for the recovery of the same at their discretions XIV A Treasurer or Receiver general or particular shall sign with his own hand a lawful acquittance ready made to be signed by him without any fee in
forfeited is saved XXXV The Act shall not extend to any Sheriff or Minister of a Corporation so that they return like issues as before are limited XXXVI Stat. 4 5 P.M. 7. A Tales de circumstantibus may upon request for the King or Queen by any authorized thereunto or assigned by the Court or upon request by the Prosecutor or his Attorney and by the command of the Justices of Assize of Nisi prius be granted in a suit commenced upon a penal Statute XXXVII The Stat. of 35 H. 8.6 shall be interpreted to give like advantages to the king Queen and prosecutor as it doth there to the Plaintiff as if such suits for the King had been there particularly mentioned XXXVIII Stat. 5 El. 25. Tales de circumstantibus shall be grantable in the 12 Counties of Wales and the Counties Palatine of Chester Lancaster and Durham being of the same effect with the Statute of 35 H. 8.6 See the Statute at large XXXIX Stat. 14 El. 9. In case the Plaintiff or Defendant forbear or refuse to pray a Tales it shall be granted by the Justices of Nisi prius in England or those of Oyer or Assize in Wales Chester Lancaster and Durham at the prayer of the Defendant or Tenant and that as well in suits upon penal Laws as upon other trials XL. Stat. 27 El. 6. The ability of Jurors returned upon trials ordained by the Statutes of 2 H. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 3. and 35 H. 8.6 to be 40 s. per annum is increased to 4 l. per annum upon the like pain of 20 s. to be forfeited by the Sheriff or other Officer for every Juror otherwise returned and in that respect the writs shall be Quorum quilibet habet quatuor libras c. XLI Here the issues to be returned shall be as followeth viz. upon the first writ 10 s. upon the second 20 s. upon the third 30 s. and the double of 30 s. afterwards until a full Jury be sworn or the process otherwise cease in pain that the Sheriff or other Officer shall forfeit 5 l. for every Juror returned with less issues set upon him XLII Upon issues lost by a failer of lawful summons the Sheriff or other Officer shall forfeit the double issues XLIII The Sheriff or other Officer that takes a bribe and agrees to take it directly or indirectly for the sparing of a Juror shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor XLIV Upon any trial two Hundreders shall be hereafter deemed sufficient notwithstanding any challenge hereafter to be made against the same XLV All lawful challenges shall be admitted notwithstanding this Act neither shall it extend to Juries in Corporations or Wales XLVI Stat. 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 3. All Jurors other then strangers upon trials Per medietatem linguae returnable for trial of issues in the King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer Justices of Assize or Nisi prius Oyer and Terminer Gaol-delivery or General or Quarter Sessions of the Peace after the 25 of April 1665 in any County of England shall have in their own name or in trust for them within the same County 20 l. per annum at least in their own or their wives right ultra Reprisas of Freehold lands or ancient Demesne or rents in Fee fee-Fee-Tail or for life And in every County of Wales every such Jurors shall have 8 l. per annum as aforesaid And if any be returned otherwise it shall be a good cause of challenge and the party discharged upon his own allegation and oath thereof XLVII No Jury man's issues for default shall be saved but by special order of the Judges for good cause proved before the Judge where the issue is to be tried XLVIII The writs of ven fac to be made out accordingly and the Sheriff or other persons to make out pannels shall not return any persons but such as aforesaid upon pain for every person returned not having such estate the summe of 5 l. to the King his heirs and successors XLIX And for discovering such persons and estates every Sheriff shall on the first day of every Sessions after Easter yearly deliver to the Justices of the Peace then fitting the names of all such persons as are to be returned for Jury men to be by the said Justices or greater part of them approved for Jury men for the year then next ensuing and the said Justices may adde such others as are omitted by the Sheriff to serve of Juries for the said year And the Sheriff to incurre no penalty for returning any persons added by the Justices in case his estate be of less value then aforesaid L. No Sheriff or other shall return any person unless duly summoned by the space of six days at least before their days of apparance And have left with or for such persons in writing the names of all the parties in the causes in which they are to serve as Jurors nor shall take any reward to excuse the apparance of any Juror upon pain to forfeit 10 l. for every offence Saving to Cities and Towns Corporate their ancient usage in returning Jurors of such estate as hath been accustomed LI. Writs of ven fac ' Hab. Corpora or distringas in the County Palatine of Lancaster shall be sued out like as is used in other Counties in England returnable at the then next Assizes and like issues returned upon Jurors and to be Estreated as above provided LII And the Sheriff of the said County of Lancaster for the time being shall cause 12 lawful men so qualifyed as before appointed by this Act out of every of the six hundreds there to be duly summoned ten days before every Assizes to appear the first day of every Assizes there to attend all the said Assizes as Jurors in such causes between party and party upon pain to forfeit 10 l. to the use of the poor of the Town where such party offending doth inhabit to be levied as other issues of Jurors be levied LIII This Act to continue 3 years and to the end of the next Sesison of Parliament and no longer ☞ Justice and right and Justices I. Stat. 2 E. 3.8 No command shall be made under the great or little seal to disturb or delay common right and the Justices shall proceed to do right notwithstanding such commands II. Stat. 18 E. 3. Stat. 3.1 The oath to be given to Justices when they take their places to this effect viz. to serve the King in their Offices warn him of any damage do Justice take no bribe give no councel where he is a party maintain no suit nor deny right though by command from the King to procure the King's profit and to be answerable to the King in body lands and goods if found in default III. Stat. 20 E. 3.1 The King's Justices shall do right to all without respect of persons notwithstanding the King's letters or commands to the contrary wherewith if any be they shall acquaint
Copies of Offices Lands Tenements and Hereditaments parcel of the Dutchy of Cornwall and a confirmation of such as be made not exceeding 31 years or 3 lives Leather and Hides I. Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 7. None shall transport beyond Seas any raw Leather or Hides tanned or untanned and for the regulating abuses in Leather and the Stat. 18 El. cap. 9. 8 El. cap. 14. 5 El. cap. 22. and 1 Jac. cap. 22. mentioned and the exportation of Hides declared a common nusance The Act not to extend to prohibit the transporting of Bootes and Shooes nor Hides and Leather to be necessarily used in any Ship See Title Cordwainers Curriers c. Lee-River I. Stat. 13 E. 18. For making the River of Lee Navigable from Ware to London See the Statute Leet I. Stat. 18 E. 2. The Articles of the charge in a Leet II. Stat. 1 Jac. 5. No Steward or Deputy Steward of any Leet or Court Baron shall make benefit to the value of 12 d. or more by colour of any Grant made of the profits or perquisites of any such Courts whereof he is Steward in pain to be disabled for ever after to be Steward of any Court and besides to forfeit 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Libel I. Stat. 2 H. 5.3 A Copy of a Libel grantable in the Ecclesiastical Court shall be presently delivered upon the defendants apparance Limitation I. Merton 25 H. 3.8 Seisin of ones Ancestor in writ of right shall be from the time of H. 2. In a Mortdancester writ of Neife and of Entry from the last return of King John out of Ireland and in an Assize of Novel disseisin from Henry the third's first Voyage into Gascoign II. West 1. 3 E. 1.38 Seisin of of ones Ancestor in a writ of right shall be from the time of R. 1. In an Assise of Novel disseisin and Nuper obiit from H. 3. his voyage into Gascoign and in a Mortdancester Cosenage Ayal and Neife from the Coronation of H. 3. III. Stat. 32 H. 8.2 Seisin in a writ of right shall be within 60 years before the Teste of the same writ IV. In a Mortdancester Cosinage Ayal writ of Entry sur disseisin or any other possessory Action upon the possession of his Ancestor or Predecessor it shall be within 50 years before the Teste of the original of any such writ V. In a writ upon the parties own seisin or possession it shall be within 30 years before the Teste of the original of the same writ VI. In an Avowry or Cognisance for rent suit or services of the seisin of his Ancestor predecessor or his own or of any other whose estate he pretends to have it shall be within 40 yeares before the making of such Avowry or Cognisance VII Formedons in reverter or remainder and scire facias upon fines shall be sued within 50 years after the title or cause of Action accrued and not after VIII The party demandant Plaintiff or Avowant that upon Traverse or denier by the other party cannot prove actual possession or seisin within the times above limited shall be for ever after barred in all such writs actions avowries cognisance prescription c. IX Provided that in any of the said actions avowries prescriptions c. the party grieved may have an attaint upon a false verdict given X. Stat. 1 M. 1. Parl. 2. Sess Cap. 5. The Statute of 32 H. 8.2 shall not extend to a writ of right of Advowson Quare impedit Assize of Darrein presentment Jure patronatus writ of right of ward writ of ravishment of ward nor to the seisor of the wards body or estate but the time of the seisin to be alledged in such cases shall be as it was at the Common law before the making of the said Statute XI Stat. 21 Jac. 2. The King his heirs or successors shall recover no concealed Mannors Lands Tenements Rents Tithes or Hereditaments other then Liberties and Franchises and the issues and profits which concern the same nor make any Right Claim or Demand of in or to the same by reason of any right or title accrued 60 years and more and now in esse unless the King or some of his Predecessors or some other under whom he claims have been answered by force of such right or title the Rents issues and profits thereof within 60 years next before the begining of this Parliament Or that the same have been duly in charge to the King or Queen Elizabeth or have stood in super of record within the said time XII This Act shall not extend to impeach the King 's right or title to any reversion or remainder nor to alter the tenures or services of Lands And here also the right of all others save of the King is saved XIII Neither shall this Act extend to annul the custome of two pence paid for every Chaldron of Sea-Coals at Newcastle upon Tine XIV Provided that no putting in charge standing in super or answering the rents or profits of any Lands or Hereditaments by force or colour of any Letters Pattents Grants of Concealments or defective Titles or of Lands Tenements or Hereditaments out of charge or by force or colour of any inquisions presentments upon any Commission or other authority to find out Concealments Defective Titles or Lands Tenements or Hereditaments out of charge shall be deemed or taken to be a putting in charge standing in super or answering the rents or profits to the King or his predecessors unless thereupon such Lands Tenements or Hereditaments have been upon any informatian or suit on the behalf of the King or his Predecessors upon any lawful verdict given or demurrer in Law adjudged and upon a hearing ordered or decreed to the King or his predecessors within the said time of 60 years XV. This Act shall not extend to lands for which composition is or shall be made before the end of this Parliament XVI Stat. 21 Jac. 16. All Writs of Formedon in Descender Remainder or Revertor for any title or cause now in esse shall be sued within 20 years next after this present Session of Parliament and for any title or cause hereafter accruing within 20 years after such title or cause so accruing Otherwise such title shall be for ever after barred and the party claiming utterly excluded from entry XVII None now having any right or title of entry into any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments now held from him or them shall thereinto enter but within 20 years next after the end of this Sessions of Parliament or within 20 years next after any other title accrued And none shall at any time hereafter make any entry into any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments but within 20 years next after his or their right or title which shall hereafter first descend or accrue to the same XVIII The Titles of any Infant Feme covert non compos mentis one imprisoned or beyond sea are saved so as they commence their suit
Mercatoribus 13 E. 1. The Merchant shall cause his Debtor to come before the Mayor of London or before some chief Warden of a City or other good Town where the King shall appoint and before the Mayor or chief Warden or other discreet men chosen and sworn thereto when the Mayor or chief Warden cannot attend and before one of the Clerks that the King shall thereto assign when both cannot attend and to acknowledg the Debt and Day of payment which recognisance shall be enrolled by one of the said Clerks hands being known and the Roll shall be double whereof one part shall remain with the Mayor or chief Warden and the other with the said Clerk IX Then one of the Clerks shall write an Obligation whereunto the Seal of the Debtor shall be put together with the Kings Seal provided for that purpose which Seal shall have two pieces whereof one part shall remain with the Mayor or chief Warden and the other with the aforesaid Clerk X. If the debt be not paid at the day upon the Merchants accompt the Mayor or chief Warden shall cause the Debtor to be imprisoned if he be Lay and in their power there to remain at his own costs untill he have agreed the debt And the Keeper of the Prison there shall receive him in pain to answer the debt himself or if he be not able he that committed the Prison to his keeping XI If the Debtor connot be found by the Mayor or chief Warden they shall send the Recognisance under the Kings Seal into the Chancery from whence shall issue a Writ to the Sheriff of the County where the Debtor is to take his body if he be Lay and safely to keep him in prison untill he agree the debt And within a quarter of a year after he is so taken his goods and lands shall be delivered unto him to the end he may pay the debt within which time the sale of his lands shall be good XII If he do not satisfie the debt within that quarter all his lands and goods shall be delivered to the Merchants by a reasonable extent to hold them untill the debt be wholly levied nevertheless his body shall still remain in Prison and the Merchant shall find him bread and water XIII The Merchant or his assigns shall have such Seisin in the said lands that he may maintain a Writ of Novel Disseisin if he be put out and a re-disseisin also as of a freehold to him and his assigns untill the debt be paid but when the debt is levied the body of the Debtor shall be delivered together with his lands XIV In the Writ awarded by the Chancellor the Sheriff shall be directed to certifie the Justices of one of the Benches at a certain day how he hath performed the service and then the Merchant shall sue before the said Justices if he be not satisfied XV. If the Sheriff make no return of the Writ or return a tardt or that he hath directed to the Bailiff of some Franchise the Justice shall proceed according to the Statute of Westminster 2. Chap. 39. which see in return of Sheriffs and Bailiffs XVI If the Sheriff return a Non est inventus or that he is a Clerk the Merchant shall have Writs to all the Sheriffs where he hath any land that they shall deliver him all the goods and lands of the Debtor by a reasonable extent to hold to him and his assigns in form aforesaid nevertheless he may also have a Writ to what Sheriff he will to take his body if he be Lay and to detain him in manner aforesaid and then the Keeper must answer the body or the debt but yet the Debtor may sell the lands so the Merchant be not damnified by the appraisement XVII Here the Merchant shall be always allowed their damages and all necessary and reasonable costs for their labours suits delays and expences XVIII If the Debtor have sureties the like course shall be taken against them as is above limited to be taken against the principal Debtor XIX All the lands in the hands of the Debtor at the time of the Recognisance acknowledged are chargeable in whose hands soever they come afterwards but after the debt satissied they shall return to the Grantees as also the rest to the debtor XX. If the debtor or his sureties die he Merchant shall not take the body of his heir but shall have his lands as aforesaid if he be of age or at his full age untill he hath levied his debr XXI There shall be also another Seal provided that shall serve for Fairs and shall be sent to every Fair under the Kings Seal by a Clerk sworn or by a keeper of the Fair. XXII Of the Communalty of London there shall betwo Merchants chosen and sworn and the Seal shall be opened before them whereof one piece shall be delivered to the said Merchants and the other shall remain with the Clerk XXIII Before these Merchants or one of them the Recognisances shall be taken and before they be enrolled the pain of the Statute shall be openly read before the Debtor that he may not afterwards excuse himself by ignorance of the said pain XXIV For the Clerks maintenance the King shall take a peny for every pound where the Seal is except in Fairs and there peny half peny XXV This Act shall be from henceforth observed throughout England and Ireland between any that will make Recognisances except Jews to whom it dothnot extend XXVI By this Statute the Writ of Debt shall not be abated neither shall the Chancellor Justice of either Bench or Justices Errants be hereby estopped to take recognisances of debts before them acknowledged and to issue execution thereupon as hath heretofore been used XXVII Breve fundatum super Statutum praedictum Rex Vic. salutem Quia coram tali Majore vel Custode talis villae vel coram Custode sigilli nostri de Mercatoribus in nundinis de tali loco tali clerico nostro A. Recognovit debere B. tantum quod solvisse debuit tall die tali anno quod idem B. Nondum solvit ut dicit Tibi praecipimus quod corpus praedicti A. si laicus sil capias in prisona nostra salio custedirifacias quousque de praedicto debito satisfecerit qualiter hoc praeceptum nostrum fueris exccutus scire facias Justiciariis nostris apud Westm per literas tuas sigillatas babeas ibi hoc breve Teste c. XXVIII Stat. 14 E. 3.11 The Clerk of the Statute shall be resident upon his Office and shall have lands sufficient in the same County whereof he may answer to all persons if he offend XXIX Stat. 8 R. 2.4 No Judge or Clerk shall make any false entry of Pleas rase any Roll or change any Verdict in pain to be punished by fine and ransome at the Kings will XXX Stat. 5 H. 4.12 When a Statute-Merchant hath been certified into the Chancery and
here provided for the Lessee for years VI. Stat. 34 35. H. 8.20 No feigned recovery hereafter to be had by assent of parties against any tenant or tenants in tail of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments whereof the reversion or remainder at that time of such recovery had shall be in the King shall bind or conclude the Heirs in tail whether any condition or Voucher be had in any such feigned recovery or not but that after the death of every such tenant in tail against whom such recovery shall be had the heirs in tail may enter hold and enjoy the lands tenements and hereditaments so recovered according to the form of the gift in tail the said recovery notwithstanding VII And here the heirs of every such Tenant in tail against whom any such recovery shall be had shall take no advantage for any recompence in value against the Voucher or his heirs VIII This Act shall not extend to prejudice the Lessee or Lessees of any such Tenant in tail made in writing indented of any Mannors Lands c. for 21 years or three lives or under whereupon the accustomed rent or rents is or shall be yearly reserved during the same Term or Terms but the same Lessee or Lessees shall injoy his or their Term or Terms according to the Statute of 32 H. 8.28 which see in Leases this Act notwithstanding IX Stat. 14 El. 8. All recoveries had or prosecuted by agreement of the parties or by covin against Tenants by the curtesie Tenants in tail after possibility of issue extinct for term of life or lives or of estates determinable upon life or lives or of any lands tenements or hereditaments whereof such particular tenant is so seised or against any other with Voucher over of any such particular tenant or of any having right or title to any such particular estate shall from henceforth as against the reversioners or them in remainder and against their heirs and successors be clearly void X. This Act shall not prejudice any person that shall by good title recover any lands c. without fraud by reason of any former right or title Also every such recovery had by the assent and agreement of the person in reversion or remainder appearing of record in any of the Queens Courts shall be good against the party so assenting Re-disseisin I. Merton 3. 20 H. 3. If any be disseised of their fee-hold and before the Justices in Eyre hath recovered seisin by Assise of Novel disseisin or by confession of the disseisors and hath had seisin delivered by the Sheriff if afterwards the same disseisors disseise the Plaintiff of the same free-hold and be thereof convict they shall be imprisonod until the King hath discharged them by redemption recognition of Assize Judgement or some other way II. This is the form of punishing of such convict persons The Plaintiff shall procure a Writ from the Kings Court directed to the Sheriff and containing the plaint of disseisin done upon disseisin By this Writ the Sheriff shall be commanded that he taking with him the Keepers of the Pleas of the Crown and other lawful Knights shall in proper person go to the Land or Pasture whereof the plaint was made where if they find him disseised again the Sheriff is to do as is above provided but if not the Plaintiff shall be amerced and the other shall go quit Howbeit the Sheriff shall not execute any such plaint without the Kings special Command III. There is the like Law for such as recover their seisin by Assise of Mortdancester or by Enquests if they be re-disseised by the first disseisors IV. Marlb 8. 52 H. 3. Persons imprisoned for re-disseisin shall not be delivered with the Kings special command and shall make fine to the King for their trespass And if the Sheriff deliver any contrary to this Ordinance he shall be grievously amerced and yet the persons so delivered shall be also grievously punished for their trespass V. West 2.26 13 E. 1. In Writs of re-disseisin double damages shall be awarded and the re-disseisors shall not be repleviable by the common Writ VI. Those that recover by default redition or otherwise without recognition of Assises or Juries shall have Writs of re-disseisin as well those which recover by Assise of Novel disseisin Mortdancester or other Juries provided for by the Statute of Merton 20. Relief I. Magna Cart. 2. When Lands holden of the King in chief by Knight-service descend to an heir of full age The reliefs are as followeth For an Earldom 100 l. For a Barony 100 Marks For one whole Knights fee 100 s. And he that hath less shall give less according to the old custom of the fees Religion * I. Stat. 14. Ca. 2. Ca. 4. The Stat. of 1 Eliz. Ca. 2. recited for uniformity of Common Prayer and considered by certain Commissioners appointed by the King for reviewing and altering the same and afterward being also reviewed by the Convocation The said Book of Common Prayer so altered c. is allowed and recommended to the Parliament by the King to be used under such sanctions and penalties as the Houses of Parliament shall think fit the same is enjoyned to be red in all Churches Chappels and places of publick Worship in England Wales and Town of Barwick upon Tweed in such order as is enjoyned by the said Book annexed to the said Act. II. Every Parson Vicar or other Minister in possession of any Ecclesiastical Benefice enjoyned to read the Common Prayer upon some Lords day morning and evening before the Feast of St. Bartholomow 1662. and after such reading the same make the Declaration verbatim as followeth I. A. B. do here declare my unfained assent and consent to and every thing contained and prescribed in and by the Book intituled The Book of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England according to the use of the Church of England together with the Psalter or Psalms of David pointed as they are to be sung or said in Churches and the form or manner of making ordaining and consecrating of Bishops Priests and Deacons Upon penalty there being no lawful impediment and within one month after such impediment removed of being deprived ipso facto as if the person neglecting or refusing so to do were dead III. All Parsons Vicars and Ministers to be after presented or put into any Ecclesiastical Benefice enjoyned to read the Common Prayer as aforesaid and to make the aforesaid Declaration within two months after they shall be in actual possession upon the same penalty as aforesaid IV. All Incumbents that reside upon their livings and keep Curates shall once every month themselves read the said Common Prayer upon pain of forfeiture of 5 l. to the use of the poor of the upon conviction by two credible Witnesses before two Justices of the Peace to be levyed by distress and sale of the offendors goods by Warrant from the said
the cause shall require but if such plea or voucher be tryable in England the Justice of Wales before whom they are pleaded or made may proceed to tryal thereof in such County of Wales where they are so pleaded or made such forreign plea or voucher notwithstanding CXX All Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in VVales and in the Lordships and places annexed by the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 to the Counties of Salop Hereford Glocester or any other Shires shall be English tenure and not partable amongst heirs males according to the Custome of Gavelkind CXXI No Mortgages of lands c. made in any of the said Counties or places shall be hereafter allowed or admitted otherwise than after the course of the Common-Law and Statutes of England CXXII It shall be lawful for all persons to alien their Lands c. in VVales the County of Monmouth and other places annexed as aforesaid from them and their heirs to any person or persons in Fee-simple fee-fee-tail for life or years according to the Laws of England notwithstanding any Welsh Law or Custome to the contrary CXXIII If any person having lands in VVales be bound in England by a Statute-Staple or Recognisance and pay not the debt accordingly in such cases upon certificate into the Chancery of England Processes shall be made to the Sheriffs of VVales out of the said Chancery for the due levying of the said debt as is used in England Howbeit for such Recognizances as are taken in the Kings Bench or Common Pleas of England Processes shall be pursued immediately from the Justices of the said Courts as in England also is used CXXIV All such Writs Bills Plaints Pleas Process Challenges and Trials shall be used throughout all the Shires aforesaid as are used in North VVales or as shall be devised by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one CXXV Where there shall be some Suits in Pleas personal which cannot be well tryed before the Justices in the great Sessions for shortness of time such issues may be tryed at the petty Sessions before the Deputy-Justices as is used in the three Counties of North VVales save only for such Suits as by the discretion of the said Justices shall be necessary to be tryed before themselves Howbeit there shall be no suit taken before any of the said Justices by Bill under the sum of 20 s. CXXVI No other Liberties Franchises or Customs shall be used or claimed in any Lordship which was anciently part of Wales whosoever be owner or owners thereof but only such as be given to the Lords thereof by force of the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and not altered by this Act notwithstanding the Stat. of 32 H. 8.20 which see in Franchises CXXVII If any murther or felony be committed in Wales the party or parties grieved shall make no agreement with the offender or with any other in his behalf unless he first acquaint the President Council or Justices therewith in pain of imprisonment and grievous fine at the discretion of the President Council and Justices or two of them whereof the President to be one the like punishment also they shall incur that labour or procure such agreement although it never take effect CXXVIII If any person or they whose estate he hath have peaceable possession of Lands in Wales by the space of 5 years without interruption or lawful claim such person shall continue the same untill they be recovered from him by law or decree of the President or Council there CXXIX If in personal actions pursued before the Justices nine of the Jury be sworn and the residue make default or be tryed out in that case the Sheriff may return other names de circumstantibus until the Jury be full as is used in North VVales and elsewhere in such cases CXXX No sale of goods or cattel stollen in Wales and sold in any Fair or Market there shall alter the propriety thereof such sale notwithstanding CXXXI No person shall buy any quick cattel in VVales out of the Fair or Market unless he can produce credible witness of the person place and time he so bought the same in pain of such punishment and fine as shall be set by the President and Council or any of the Justices in his Circuit and to answer it at his further peril CXXXII If any goods or cattel be stollen in VVales the tract shall be followed from Town to Town and Lordship to Lordship according to the Laws and Customs heretofore used in Wales upon such penalty as hath been heretofore accustomed CXXXIII Any man being a Frecholder may pass upon a Jury in all causes both criminal and civil attaint only excepted saving to every man his lawful challenge according to the Laws of England Howbeit none shall pass in attaint unless he have Freehold of 40 s. per annum CXXXIV Tenants and resiants in Wales shall pay their Tallage at the change of their Lords in such places aad after such form as hath been accustomed in Wales CXXXV The Kings Subjects in VVales shall find at the Parliaments in England Knights for the Counties and Citizens and Burgesses for the Cities and Towns to be chosen by the Kings Writ according to the Statute of 27 H. 8.26 and shall also be chargeable to all Subsidies and other charges granted by the Commons of the said Parliaments and pay all other rents farms customs and duties to the King as hath been accustomed fines for redemption of Sessions only excepted which the King is pleased to remit CXXXVI Haverford-west shall find one Burgess for that Town whose charges shall be born by the Mayor Burgesses and Inhabitants of the said Town and by none other CXXXVII The King shall have all Felons goods goods of persons outlawed Waifs Estrays and all other forfeitures and escheats and shall be answered thereof by the Sheriffs saving the right of all others having lawful title thereto CXXXVIII Errours and Judgments before any of the Justices in their great Sessions in Pleas reall and mixt shall be redressed by Writ of Errour out of the Chancery of England returnable before the Justices of the Common Pleas as other Writs of Errour be in England but Errors in Pleas personal shall be reformed by Bill before the President and Council and if the Judgment be affirmed good in any of the said Writs or Bills then there to make execution and all other process thereupon as is used in the Kings Bench of England and that the Plaintiff in every such Writ or Bill pay for the same like Fees as is used in England CXXXIX No execution of any Judgment given in any base Court shall be stayed by reason of any Writ of false Judgment but execution may be had at all times before the reversal of such Judgment and if such Judgment shall after be reversed the Plaintiff shall be restored to what he hath lost by such Judgment CXL All process for urgent and weighty causes shall be
thereupon XX. The savings in this Act and in that of 32 H. 8.1 of custody wardship relief and primer seisin to the King and of custody and wardship to other Lords shall be expounded thus That the King shall have for his full third part such mannors lands and tenements as shall descend as well in fee-fee-tail as in fee-simple to the heir of the person that made such Will or disposition as aforesaid and that the will or gift of the two parts shall be good in Law albeit the will or gift be made of all the fee-simple lands or the more part thereof Howbeit if the King have not a full third part left him he shall take out of the two parts so much as shall make it up to be severed by commission as aforesaid and such advantage also is given to other Lords for their third parts and the like shall both the King and they do in case their third parts or any parcel of them be evicted from them or determined XXI A Pardon of alienation must be sued by those to whom lands are devised for which they shall pay a third part of the value of the lands holden in chief and this Act shall be sufficient warrant for the Lord Chancellor to grant such pardons under the Great Seal without further suit to be made to the King for the same XXII Wills or Testaments of mannors lands c. made by femes covert Infants Idiots or persons of non sane memory shall not be good in Law XXIII If any person or persons shall by will or act executed make any estate for years life or lives with one remainder over in see or with divers remainders over for term of life years or in tail with a remainder over in fee-simple or any other estates conditions mesnalties tenures or conveyances by fraud and covin to the intent to defraud the King of his Prerogative primer seisin livery relief wardship marriages or rights or any other Lords of their wardships reliefs heriots or other profits and such estates or other conveyances be found by office to be so made by covin fraud or deceit In this case the King shall enjoy his Prerogatives and profits aforesaid according to this and the said former Act notwithstanding such estates or conveyances until such office be annulled by traverse or otherwise Also other Lords shall have their remedy in such cases for their wardships by writ of right of ward and shall distrain and make avowry or conusance by themselves or their Bailiffs for their reliefs heriots and other profits as if no such estate had been made Howbeit the right and title of the donees feoffees lessees and devisees thereof against the devisors and his heirs after the interest of the King and other Lords determined are saved XXIV Provided that every person from whom the King or other Lord shall take any mannors lands c. for their third part or to make it up may have relief in Chancery against every person who shall be intituled by any such will or gift to the other two parts to have such contribution for the same as the Lord Chancellor or Keeper shall think convenient VVines I. The Statute of Glocester 15.6 E. 1. The Mayor and Bailiffs now Sheriffs of London before the coming of the Barons which should be at their rising after Candlemas term as appears by the 14. Chapter of this Statute shall inquire of Wine sold against the Assize and shall present it before them at their coming and then they shall be amerced whereas they were wont to tarry until the coming of the Justices Obsolete * II. Stat. 4. E. 3.12 None shall sell Wines but at a reasonable price according to the price at the Ports from whence they come and the expence of their carriage to the places where they are sold Tryal shall be made of such Wines twice a year viz. at Easter and Michaelmas and Officers if need require by the Lords of Towns and their Bailiffs and likewise by Mayors and Bailiffs and all corrupt Wines shall be poured out and the vessel broken Also the Chancellor Treasurer Justices of the Benches and Justices of Assize shall have power to inquire of Mayors Bailiffs and Ministers of Towns that do not observe this Ordinance and to punish them as reason requires * III. Stat. 27. E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 5. No English Merchant shall forestal Gascoign Wines nor buy them of any Gascoign or other to pay in England for any greater price then they are commonly sold at in Gascoign because of Prest peril of the Sea and by any other colour in pain of life and member and to forfeit their Wines Goods and Chattels to the King and their lands to the chief Lords But here the felony and forfeiture of laws are repealed by 37 E. 3.16 Ob. IV. Cap. 6. Gascoign Merchants and other strangers may bring their Wines to what Port of England they please so as the Kings Butler may make purveyance for Wines of Aliens making payment for them within 40 days Ob. V. Cap. 7. No English Merchant shall buy Wines in Gascoign before the Vintage Nor then but at Burdeaux and Bayon upon the pain mentioned in the 5th Chapter Put that as to the s● lo●y and forseiture of Lands is repealed by 37 E. 3.16 as aforesaid Obsolete * VI. Stat. 37. E. 3.16 The felony and forfeiture of lands inflicted by 27 E. 3.5 7. are repealed and inquiry shall be yearly made within the Kings dominions in Gascoigne of Couchers of England who lie there to buy Wines Obsolete VII Stat. 38. E. 3.10 A confirmation of the Statutes made for wines Obsolete VIII Stat. 38. E. 3.11 All Merchants Denizens that be not Artificers may go into Gascoign to fetch wines and Aliens may bring wines into this Realm IX Stat. 43 E. 3.2 English Irish and Welsh-men being not Artificers may fetch wine in Gascoigne so as they find sureties to buy 100 Tun of their own goods and to bring the same into England Ireland or Wales X. Stat. 6. R. 2. Stat. 1.7 Sweet wines shall be sold in England at the price that Gascoign and Rhenish wines are sold for and not above in pain to forfeit the same XI Stat. 23 H. 6.18 No new impositions shall be laid upon them that buy wines in Gascoign and Guienne by any of the Kings Officers in those parts in pain of 20 l. and treble damages Obsolete * XII Stat 28. H. 8.14 The Lord Chancellor Treasurer President of the Council Privy Seal and the two chief Justices or five four or three of them have power at their discretions to set the prices of all kinds of wines viz. of the But Tun Pipe Hogshead Puncheon Tierce Barrel or Runlet when they shall be sold in grosse so as they cause the prices so set to be written and openly proclaimed in Chancery in the Term-time or else in the City Burrough or town where any such wines are sold in grosse XIII None shall sell wine
King without presentment or some matter of Record and what is done otherwise shall be void and holden for errour X. Stat. 17 R. 2.6 Upon an untrue suggestion made against any in the Chancery the Chancellor may award dammages XI Stat. 15 H. 6.4 None shall sue forth a Subpoena until he finde surety to satisfie the Defendant his dammages and costs in case he do not verifie his Bill Actions popular ☞ I. Stat. 4 H. 7. ca. 20. Recovery in an Action popular by Covin shall be no bar in an Action sued for the same thing bonâ fide II. Here the Defendant attainted of Collusion shall suffer two years imprisonment to be prosecuted within one year III. No release of a common person shall in this case discharge an Action popular IV. Yet no Collusion is in this case averrable where the point of the same Action or the Collusion it self hath been tried by Verdict ☞ V. Stat. 31 El. 5. Informers heretofore restrained by order of any Court shall not pursue Actions popular VI. In popular Actions the offence shall be laid to be done in the County where indeed it was done otherwise if the Defendant traverse and disprove that point the Plaintiff shall be barred VII This Act doth not restrain Officers which have lawfully used to exhibit informations nor Actions brought for champerty buying of Titles extortion offences against the Statute of 1 El. 11. concerning the right landing of Merchandise and custom of sweet wines concealing of customs c. corrupt usury forestalling regrating or ingrossing when the penalty shall amount to 20 l. or above For in all these cases the offence may be laid in any County * VIII Popular Actions where the King onely hath the forfeiture shall be commenced within two years where he hath onely a part and the Informer the rest within one year but this is to be understood where a shorter time is not limited by any Statute * IX All suits for using unlawful Games or any Art or Mystery without being brought up in it and for not having Bows and Arrows according to the Statute shall be prosecuted at the Assises or Sessions of the County or at the Leer within which the offence was committed and not elsewhere ☞ * X. Stat. 21 Jac. 4. Actions popular which may be presented before Justices of Assise Nisi prius G. D. Oyer and Terminer or of P. shall be prosecuted onely in the Counties where the offences were committed except for Recusancy Maintenance Champerty buying of Titles concealing of customs c. or transporting of gold silver munition wool woolfels or leather XI Upon default of proving that the offence was committed in the same County the Defendant shall be found not guilty XII The Informer shall make oath that the offence was committed in the same County where the Action is laid and within one year before the suit commenced * XIII The Defendant in a popular Action may plead the general issue and yet give special matter in evidence Addition I. Stat. 1 H. 5.5 In Original Writs where Exigent shall be awarded Additions of the Defendants condition and dwelling shall be inserted II. Outlawries otherwise prosecuted shall be void III. Surplusage of Additions shall not prejudice albeit the Writ do therein vary from the Records and Deeds IV. The Clerks of the Chancery shall not omit such Additions in pain to be fined at the discretion of the Chancellor Adjournment I. Stat. 2 E. 3.11 The Common Bench shall not be removed without warning by adjournment Admeasurement of Dower I. Stat. West 2. cap. 7. 13 E. 1. A Guardian shall have a Writ of Admeasurement of Dower yet the heir at full age shall not be barred by that suit in case it be prosecuted by Collusion II. When it comes to the great distress daies shall be given within which two Counties may be holden where Proclamation shall be made for the defendant to come in at the day contained in the Writ at which if the Defendant appear the plea shall proceed but if not upon the Proclamation returned by the Sheriff and the Defendant's default Admeasurement shall be made Admeasurement of Pasture I. West 2. cap. 8. 13 E. 1. Upon a second overcharge of Pasture if the Pasture were admeasured before the Justices the remedy shall be by Writ judicial returnable before the Justices under the seals of the Sheriff and Jurors and then the Justices shall award dammages to the Plaintiff and shall estreat into the Exchequer the value of the beasts wherewith the pasture was so overcharged to be answered to the King II. If the admeasurement were made in the County the Sheriff by a Chancery-writ shall enquire of the Surcharge and value of the beasts and shall answer the same to the King in the Exchequer III. To prevent fraud in the Sheriff all such Writs de secunda superoneratione shall be enrolled and also at the years end transcribed in the Exchequer and so likewise shall Writs of Redisseisin Administrators I. Stat. 31 E. 3.11 The Ordinaries shall depute the next and most lawful friends of the Intestate to administer his goods which deputies shall have the benefit and incurr the charge of an Executor and shall also be accountable to the Ordinaries as Executors II. Stat. 21 H. 8. ca. 5. Administration of Intestates goods shall be granted to the Widow or next of kin to the Intestate or both as the Ordinary shall think fit * See what Fees onely ought to be paid for Probate of Wills and obtaining Administrations and upon what penalties upon exaction pòst Title Probate of Testaments Admiralty I. Stat. 13 R. 2.5 The Admirals or their Deputies shall not meddle with any thing done within the Realm but onely upon the Sea II. Stat. 15 R. 2.3 The Admiral 's Court shall not have Cognisance of any thing done within the bodies of Counties as well by land as by water nor with wrecks of the Sea III. Of the death of a man and of a maihem done in great ships hovering in the main stream of great Rivers beneath the bridges near the Sea the Admiral shall have Cognisance and likewise to arrest ships in great Fleets for the great voiages of the King and Kingdom and shall also have jurisdiction in such Fleets during such voiages Saving to the King his forfeitures and to Lords Cities and Boroughs their liberties and Franchises IV. Stat. 2 H. 4.11 The Statute of 13 R. 2.5 is confirmed V. The party grieved by the non-observance of that Statute shall by Action upon his Case recover double dammages against the Prosecutor in the Admiralty and the Prosecutor shall also forfeit ten pounds to the King being thereof attainted VI. Stat. 8 El. 5. A sentence definitive in a civil and Marine cause by delegates appointed by Commission upon an appeal duly made in the Chancery shall be final Advouson I. West 2. cap. 5. 13 E. 1. Usurpation of Churches during Wardship particular estates Coverture or Vacancy shall not bar the
writ of attaint after the Teste these words shall be inserted Per statutum continuatum usque annum 23 H. 8. Dei gratiâ c. LII This act shall not be prejudicial to the Statute of 11 H. 7.21 but every man for any untrue verdict in London may bring an Attaint upon this or that at his pleasure LIII Stat. 37 H. 8.5 Citizens of London being worth 400 marks in personal estate may be impannelled and returned by the Sheriffs of London upon Attaints there albeit they have no real estates notwithstanding the Statute of 23 H. 8.3 LIV. The Justices shall hereafter sit upon Attaints in London at Guildhall or some other convenient place in that City and not elsewhere neither shall the Citizens there be compellable to appear upon any such Attaint in any other place notwithstanding the sa●d Statute of 23 H. 8. Attorney I. Merton Cap. 10. 20 H. 3. Every Free-man that oweth suit to the County Tithing Hundred or Wapentake or to a Court-Baron may make an Attorney to doe his suit for him II. West 2. Cap. 10. 13 E 1. Any person may make a general Attorney to sue in all Pleas during the circuit of Justices in Eire howbeit that shall not excuse the party from being put upon Juries and Assises before the same Justices III. Stat. 7 R. 2.14 They who shall depart the Realm with the King's licence may before their departure have a Patent from the Chancellor with the advice of the Justices inabling them to make general Attorneys to answer for them in Writs of Praemunire facias and all other Writs and Plaints in which Patent particular mention shall be made of Writs and Plaints of Praemunire facias and those Attorneys may make Attorneys under them IV. Stat. 4 H. 4.18 All Attorneys shall be examined by the Justices and by their discretion put into the Roll. V. Those that are by them approved shall swear truly to serve in their Offices and to make no suit in a forein County An insufficient Attorney shall be put out by the like discretion of the Justices and their Masters or Clients shall have notice thereof lest they be prejudiced thereby VI. As any die or cease the Justices shall appoint others being vertuous learned and sworn as aforesaid VII If an Attorney be found notoriously in fault he shall forswear the Court and be never admitted into any other Court VIII The Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer shall pursue the like course there at their discretion IX Stat. 4 H. 4.19 No Officer of a Lord of a Franchise which hath return of Writs shall be an Attorney in the same X. Stat. 7 H. 4.13 Impotent persons that are out-lawed may make their Attorney Howbeit in the Writ of Capias ad satisfac ' the Common Law shall still hold place XI Stat. 33 H. 6.7 There shall be but six common Attorneys in Norfolk six in Suffolk and two in Norwich if that shall seem reasonable to the Justices But it seems the Justices did not think it reasonable because this Act was never yet put in ure XII Stat. 32 H. 8. ca. 30. Every Attorney shall enter his Warrant of Attorney in every suit upon record in Conrt on pain of 10 l. and further punishment by imprisonment at the discretion of the Court. XIII Stat. 3 Jac. 7. An Attorney Sollicitor or servant to any shall not be allowed any fees laid out for counsel or otherwise unless he have tickets thereof signed by the hand of them that receive such fees and he shall also give unto his Client true Bills of all the charges of suit under his own hand before he can charge his Client with the payment thereof XIV If he delay his Client's suit for gain or demand by his Bill more then his due fees and disbursements the Client shall recover against him his costs and treble dammages and he himself shall be for ever after disabled from being an Attorney or Sollicitor any more XV. None shall be admitted Attorneys in Courts of Record but such as have been brought up in the same Courts or otherwise well practised in solliciting of Causes and also skilful and of honest disposition and none but such shall be hereafter suffered to sollicit Causes in any Court XVI An Attorney shall not admit any other to follow a suit in his name in pain that each of them shall forfeit twenty pounds to be divided betwixt the King and party grieved Avowry I. Stat. 21 H. 8.19 Upon a Replevin sued an Avowry may be made by the Lord or Conusance and justification by his Bailiff or servant upon the land holden of the said Lord without naming any person certain to be tenant thereof The like law is also upon every Writ sued of second deliverance II. In any Replegiare or second deliverance for rents customs service or dammage feasant if the Avowry Conusance or Justification be found for the Defendant or the Plaintiff be non-suit or otherwise barred the Defendant shall recover such dammages and costs as the Plaintiff should have had if he had recovered III. Both parties shall in such Writs have like pleas Aid Prayers and Joynders in Aid as at the Common Law notwithstanding this Act Pleas of disclaimer onely excepted Banks I. Magna Charta 9 H. 3.15 No Town or Free-man shall be distrained to make Bridges or Banks but such as of old time and of right have used to make them in the time of King Henry our Grandfather II. Magna Charta 9 H. 3.14 No Banks shall be defended from henceforth but such as were in defence in the time of King Henry our Grand-father by the same places and bounds as in his time III. Stat. 27 Eliz. 24. Justices of Peace in Norfolk shall take order for the repair of Sea-Banks and Sea-works within the same County IV. Every person shall be charged towards the repair of Sea-banks as they are chargeable towards High-waies V. The High-Constables shall be surveyours of that work VI. Those charged towards Sea-works shall be discharged towards the amendment of High-wayes Bankrupts I. Stat. 34 H. 8.4 The Lord Chancellor Treasurer c. shall take order with Bankrupts bodies lands and goods for the payment of their debts But this was altered by the ensuing Statutes II. Stat. 13 Eliz. 7. If any person Subject or Denizon exercising trade doth depart the Realm conceal him or her self take Sanctuary suffer him or her self to be arrested out-lawed or imprisoned without just canse to the intent to defraud Creditors being also Subjects born he shall be deemed a Bankrupt III. The Lord Chancellor or Keeper upon complaint in writing against any such Bankrupt may appoint honest and discreet persons to take such order with the body of such Bankrupt wheresoever found and also with the lands as well Copy as Free hereditaments annuities offices writings goods chattels and debts wheresoever known which the Bankrupt hath in his own right with his wife child or children or by way of trust to any secret use
to the true intent of this Act shall be void Decies tantum * I. Stat. 38 E. 3.12 If a Juror take any thing of either party to give his verdict and be attainted thereof by process contained in the Article of Jurors of the 34 E. 3.8 which see in Jurors he shall pay ten times so much as he hath taken to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor And all imbraceors that procure such Inquest shall incurre the like punishment II. If the Juror or Embraceor have not whereof to make gree he shall suffer a years imprisonment III. But no Justice or other Officer shall inquire of this offence ex officio Declaration I. Stat. 36 E. 3.15 By the ancient terms and forms of pleaders no man shall be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Declaration and in the writ Deeds and Writngs I. Stat. 1 M. Parl. 1 Sess 2. cap. 4. All Statutes Recognizances and writings made by or to any person since the sixth of July last and before August under the name of any other then the Queen shall be good II. This Act shall not extend to make good any letters patents commissons grants or other writings made by the Lady Jane Dudley since the said sixt of July last Demurrers I. Stat. 27 El. 5. After Demurrer joyned and entred the Judges shall proceed and give judgment according to the right of the cause and matter in law without regard to any defect in the proceeding except such onely as the party shall express together with his demurrer after which time no judgment shall be reversed by writ of Errour for any other defect then such as he shall there mention And if there happen to be any other the Judges may amend them II. This Act shall not extend to the proceeding in an Appeal of felony or murther upon an Indictment Presentment or penal Statute Dilapidations I. Stat. 13 El. 10. If any Ecclesiactical persons who are bound to repair the buildings whereof they are seized in right of their Place or Function suffer them to fall into decay for want of repair and make fraudulent gifts of their personal estate with purpose to hinder their successors from recovering dilapidations against their executors or Administrators in such case the successors shall have like remedy in the Ecclesiastical Court against the grantee of such personal estate as he might have had against the executor or administrator of the predecessor II. Stat. 14 El. 11. All moneys recovered for dilapidations shall within two years be imployed upon the buildings for which they were paid in pain to forfeit to the Queen c. double so much as shall not be so imployed ☞ Deceit * I. West 1.29 3 E. 1. If any person do act or consent to any thing in deceit of the Court or party and thereof be attainted he shall suffer a year and a days imprisonment at least and if he be a pleader he shall be also expelled the Court and if they shall deserve greater punishment it shall be at the King's pleasure II. Officers Criers of Fee and Marshals of Justices in Eyre shall not take money otherwise then they ought to do in pain to pay the treble thereof to the complainants III. Stat. 2 E. 3.17 A Writ of deceit shall be maintainable as well in case of garnishment touching a Plea of land as in case of summons in Plea of land Discontinuance of right or estate I. Stat. 11 H. 7.20 If a woman that hath an estate in Dower for life or in tail joyntly with her husband or onely to her self or to her use in any lands c. of the Inheritance or purchase of her husband or given to the husband and wife by the husbands ancestors or any seized to the use of the husband or his ancestors do sole or with an after taken husband discontinue or suffer a recovery by coven it shall be void and he to whom the land ought to belong after the death of the said woman may enter as if the woman were dead without discontinuance or recovery II. Provided that the woman may enter after the husbands death but if the woman were sole the recovery or discontinuance barreth her for ever III. This Act extends not to any recovery or discontinuance with the heir next inheritable to the woman or by his consent of record enrolled Discontinuance of process I. Stat. 11 H. 6.6 No suit before Justices of Peace shall be discontinued by a new Commission of Peace II. Stat. 1 E. 6.7 The death of the King shall not discontinue any suit betwixt party and party neither shall the variance between the original and judicial process in respect of the King's name be material as concerning any default to be alledged therefore III. Assizes of Novel disseisin Mortdancester Juris utrum or Attaints shall not be discontinued by reason of death new Commissions Associations or the not coming of the same Justices or any of them IV. Preferment of the demandant or plaintiff to be Duke Archbishop Marquess Earl Vicount Baron Bishop Knight Justice of the one Bench or the other or Serjeant at Law shall not make the suit abatable V. Preferment of a Justice of Assize Goal-delivery or Peace or of any other Commissioner to the dignities aforesaid or to be Sheriff shall not lessen his power But note that to be Sheriff is altered by 1 M. Parl. 1.8 which see in Sheriffs VI. New Justices of Goal-delivery may give judgment of a prisoner found guilty of treason or felony though he were reprieved by other Justices VII No process or suit before Justices of Assize Goal-delivery Oyer and Terminer or Peace or other of the King's Commissioners shall be discontinued by a new Commisson or by the alterations of any of their names ☞ Dispensations I. Stat. 28 H. 6.16 All Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations from the Bishop or See of Rome to any of the Kings subjects in any of the Kings Dominions shall be void and shall not be used in pain of a Praemunire II. Former lawfull marriages are confirmed III. A confirmation of all Arch-bishops and Bishops and their authority and of other Ecclesiastical persons and orders by authority of this Act and not by any forreign power IV. The effect and contents of all Bulls Breves and other faculties purchased of the See of Rome which are allowable shall be confirmed under the great Seal Distresses I. Stat. de districtione Scaccarii 51 H. 3. The owner of impounded cattel may give them food without disturbance II. A distress taken for the Kings debt shall not be sold within fifteen days and upon shewing of a tallie and giving surety for his appearance in the Exchequer upon the next accompt the distress shall cease the Sheriff shall also attach the party that received the debt to be there also at the same time III. Neither draught nor cattel nor sheep shall be distrained except for damage feasant so long as other goods may be
found to satisfie the debt distresses shall be reasonable The Sheriff shall answer all debts received and where the Sheriff chargeth himself the debtor shall be acquitted IV. Marlbr 1. 52 H. 3. All persons high and low shall receive justice in the King 's Court. V. None shall take any distress of his own authority without award of our Court in pain upon conviction thereof to be punished by fine according to the trespass and the party grieved shall be also recompensed his loss VI. Marlb 2. 52 H. 3. None shall distrain any to come to his Court that is not of his Fee or upon whom he hath no jurisdiction neither shall distresses be taken out of the fee or place where he hath no jurisdiction in pain that the offender shall be punished as before VII Mralb 3. 52 H. 3. If any will not suffer distresses to be delivered by the King's officers or summons attachments or executions of judgments given in the King's Court to be done he shall be punished as aforesaid VIII If a Lord distrain his tenant for a thing for which he hath cause to distrain and yet it is afterwards found not to be due in such case if the Lord suffer the distress to be delivered he shall not be fined but onely amercied nevertheless the tenant shall also recover his damages against him IX Marlb 4. 52 H. 3. None shall drive a distress out of the County wherein it was taken in pain to make fine as before And if a Lord presume so to do against his tenant he shall be grievously amercied X. None shall take an unreasonable distress in pain to be grievously amercied XI Marlb 15. 52 H. 3. It shall be lawfull to none except the King and his Officers having special authority to take distresses out of his see or in the King 's high way or in the common street XII West 1.16 3 E. 1. None shall drive a distress out of the County or distrain wrongfully or out of his fee in pain to be punished as by the Statute of Marlb is provided or more greivously if the Trespass so require XIII West 17. 3 E. 1. If Beasts be impounded in a Castle or Fortress and after convenient notice to the impounder c. not suffered to be replivied by the Sheriff or some other of the King's Bailiffs the King will command that Castle or Fortress to be demolished and after the first demand of the Sheriff or Bailiff the Plaintiff shall recover double damages against the Lord or impounder or if the impounder be not able then against the Lord onely XIV In this case if the Bailiff of the Franchise refuse to do it then shall the Sheriff do it himself upon the aforesaid pains XV. Also deliverance shall be made by attachment of the Plaintiff made without writ and upon the same pain XVI West 2.36 13 E. 1. None shall procure any to distrain anther to make him appear at the County-court or any other inferiour Court on purpose to vex him and put him to charge and trouble in pain to make fine to the King and to pay to the party greived treble damages XVII West 2.37 13 E. 1. No distress shall be taken but by Bayliffs known and sworn in pain to restore damages to the party greived and to be greivously punished by the King XVIII Artic. Cleri 9. 9 E. 2. Distresses shall not be taken in the high way nor in the ancient sees of the Church * XIX Stat. 1. 2 P. M. 12. No distressee of Cattel shall be driven out of the Hundred where it is taken except to a pound overt within the same Shire nor above three miles distant from the place where it was so taken neither shall a distress be impounded in several Replevins for the delivery thereof in pain to forfeit to the party grieved for every offence committed against this Act 5 l. and treble damages XX. None shall take above 4 d. for the poundage of one distress and where less is usually taken to take less in pain to forfeit to the party grieved 5 l. besides what is taken above XXI The Sheriff shall at his first County-day or within two months after he receives his Patent depute and proclaim in the Shire-Town four Deputives to make Replevins not dwelling above 12 miles distant one from another in pain to forfeit for every moneth he wants such Deputy or Deputies 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and profecutor Dover see Title Havens and Rivers num XIV I. Atticuli super Chartas 7 28 E. 1. The Constable of Dover Castle shall not hold plea of any forrain County within the Castle gates except it concern the keeping of the Castle neither shall he distrain the Inhabitants of the five Ports to plead elsewhere or otherwise then they as they ought according to the form of their Charter confirmed by the great Charter Dower I. Merton 1. 20 H. 3. A woman deforced of her Dower or Quarentine in a Writ of Dower shall recover damages viz. the value of her Dower from her husbands death to the day of the Recovery of her Dower and the deforceor shall be amercied II. West 2.48 3 E. 1. In a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet the Writ shall not abate by the exception of the Tenant that she hath received her Dower of another before the writ purchased unless he can shew that she received part of her Dower of himself and in the same Town before the Writ purchased III. West 2.4 13 E. 1. The Wife shall be endowable as well where land was recovered against her husband by default as by covin so that albeit the land was lost by the husbands default yet that shall be no good allegation for the tenant but he must then proceed and shew his right otherwise the wife shall recover IV. When Tenant in Dower in Frank-marriage by the courtesy for life or in tail lose their land by default and the tenant is compelled to shew his right they may vouch the Aeversioner if they have warranty and then the Plea shall pass betwixt the tenant and the warranter according to the tenor of the Writ by which the tenant recovered by default and so from many actions they shall resort to one judgment viz. that the demandants shall recover that demand and the tenants shall go quit V. Here if the Action of such a Tenant which is compellable to shew his right be moved by a writ of right albeit the great Assize or Battel cannot be joyned by words accustomed yet shall it in that case be joyned by words convenient VI. If the wife be wrongfully endowed by the Guardian during the minority of the heir he at full age shall be righted yet shall the wife retain her just Dower if she make her title good VII By this Statute in place of a writ of right a Quod ci deforceat is given to tenant in Dower in free marriage by the courtesie for life and in tail upon losing
shall receive and allow the same also all deeds and obligations made to the King's use which concern the said lands may be there inrolled without fee. XXXVI Provided that the King's Officers may keep Court within the Verge and his Clerk of the Market and none other execute his office there notwithstanding any grant c. Neither shall this act be prejudicial to the City of London XXXVII The lands of the late Monastery of Furnes and of the late Monasteries and Priories of Cartmele Coningshed Barstrough and Holland and the Liberties and Franchises belonging thereunto shall be in the Government of the Officers of the Dutchy of Lancaster and the Officers of those liberties shall be liable to accompt as other Officers of the Dutchy have used to be they shall also be attendant on the King's Courts and the Sheriff and other officers are prohibited to intromit into those Liberties XXXVIII This act shall not annul or diminish any of the liberties belonging to the said Dutchy or to the five Forts or the members thereof XXXIX The Petition of Right 3 Car. None shall be compelled to make or yield any gift loan benevolence tax or such like charge without consent by Act of Parliament nor upon refusal so to do shall be called to make answer take any oath not warranted by Law give attendance or be confined or otherwise molested concerning the same or for refusall thereof Neither shall any Free-man be imprisoned or detained without cause shewed XL. The subject shall not be burthened by the quarter of Souldiers or Marriners and all Commissions for proceeding by Martial Law shall be annulled neither shall any of like nature be issued out hereafter lest the subject by colour thereof be destroyed or put to death contrary to the Laws and Franchise of the Land XLI What hath been done to the prejudice of the Subject in any of the premisses shall not hereafter be drawn into consequence of example and the King declares his pleasure to be that in the things aforesaid all his Officers and Ministers shall serve him according to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm ☞ Fraudulent Conveyances I. Stat. 50 E. 3.6 Fraudulent assurances of lands or goods to deceive Creditors shall be void and the Creditors shall have execution thereof as if no such gift had been made * II. Stat. 13 El. 5. All fraudulent Conveyances of lands tenements hereditaments goods or chattels and all such bonds suits judgments and executions made to avoid the debt or duty of others shall as against the party onely whose debt or duty is so endeavoured to be avoided their heirs successors executors or assigns be utterly void any pretence feigned Consideration or c. notwithstanding III. Every of the parties to such a fraudulent conveyance bond suit judgment or execution who being privy thereunto shall wittingly justifie the same to be done bonâ fide and upon good consideration or shall alien and assign any lands lease or goods so to them conveyed as aforesaid shall forfeit one years value of the lands lease rent common or other profit out of the same and the whole value of the goods and also so much money as shall be contained in such covenous bond and being thereof convicted shall suffer half a years imprisonment without bail And here the said forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the party grieved IV. Common Recoveries against the tenants of the free-hold shall be good notwithstanding this Act. And so shall all estates made for the procuring of a Voucher in Formedon Neither shall this Act extend to grants made bonâ fide and upon good consideration to persons not privy to such Collusion V. Stat. 27 El. 4. Every conveyance grant charge incumbrance and limitation of use or uses of in or out of any lands or other hereditaments made to defraud any purchaser of the same in fee for tail for life or years shall as against such purchaser onely and every other person lawfully claiming from by or under him be utterly void the said purchaser having obtained the same for money or some other good consideration VI. Every of the parties to such fraudulent conveyances or being privy thereunto who shall justifie the same to be made bonâ fide and on good consideration to the disturbance or hinderance of the purchaser or of any other lawfully claiming from by or under him shall forfeit one years value of the lands or other hereditaments so purchased or charged to be divided betwixt the Queen and the party grieved and being thereof convicted shall suffer half a years imprisonment without bail VII Conveyances made upon good consideration and bonâ fide shall be good notwithstanding this Act. VIII If lands be first conveyed with clause provision or condition of revocation determination or alteration and afterwards sold or charged for money or other good consideration before the first conveyance was revoked altered or made void according to the power given thereby In this case such first conveyances shall be void against the vendee and all others lawfully claiming from by or under him Howbeit no lawful mortgage made bonâ fide without fraud shall be impeached by this Act. IX All Statutes Merchant and of the Staple shall within six moneths after their acknowledgment be entred in the office of the Clerk of Recognizances taken according to the Stat. of 23 H. 8.6 and the Clerk there upon shewing the same shall make entry thereof for which he shall have 8 d. and no more X. Every such Statute which is not within four moneths after the acknowledgment thereof delivered to be entred accordingly shall be void against the purchaser of the lands chargeable therewith and against his heirs successors executors and assigns XI The said Clerk shall within the said six moneths make entry of every Statute to him delivered as aforesaid and shall indorse thereupon the day and year of such his entry with his own name in pain to forfeit for every Statute so brought unto him and not entred as aforesaid 20 l. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor XII The Clerk shall take for the search of a Statute but 2 d. for every years search in pain to forfeit to the party grieved twenty times so much as he takes above to be recovered in any Court of Record by action of debt c. XIII Provided that this Act shall not extend to make good any purchase made void by reason of any former conveyance so as the party so making void the same his heirs or assignes were the first day of this Parliament in actual possession of the lands out of which any such Purchase Lease Charge or Profit was made Free-hold I. Marlb Cap. 22. 52 H. 3. None shall distrain his free-holders to answer for their Free-holds or for any thing touching the same without the King 's Writ nor cause his Free-holders to swear against their wills for none may do that without the King's commandment II. Stat. 15 R.
Huntingdon leading from London to York and into Lincolnshire and for gathering a certain Toll for the same viz. for Hertfordshire at Wades Mill for Cambridge at Caxton and for Huntingdonshire at Stilton and not elsewhere vid. the Act. LXI Stat. 16 17 Car. 2. An Act for continuance of a former Act for repairing the High-ways within the County of Hertford for 21 years from the time mentioned in the said Act. ☞ Holy-days and Fasting-days I. Stat. 2 3 E. 6.19 An Act prohibiting flesh to be eaten on fish-days But see a greater penalty inflicted 5 E. 5. Infra in Ships II. Stat. 5 6 E. 3.3 Holy-days and Fasting-days are appointed But 1 M. Parl. 1. Cap. 2. this Act is repealed And afterwards by 1 Jac. 25. 1 M. is repealed and therefore Quaere whether it be now in force unless it had been revived by special words III. Stat. 1 Car. 1. All concourse of people out of their own Parishes for any pastime whatsoever as also Bear-baitings Bull-baitings Enterludes Common-plays and all other unlawful pastimes are prohibited on the Lord's-day IV. The Offender against this law being thereof convicted by the view of one Justice of Peace in the Countrey or by a chief Officer in a Corporation or by his own confession or by the oath of one witness before one such Justice or Officer shall forfeit 3 s. 4 d. to the use of the poor where the offence is committed to be levied by distress and sale of goods upon warrant from the same Justice or Officer by the Constables or Churchwardens of the same Parish and in case no distress can be had the Offendor shall sit in the stocks 3 hours but this offence ought to be prosecuted within one moneth after it shall be committed And if the Officer be questioned he shall plead the general issue and yet give special matter in evidence * V. Stat. 3 Car. 1. No Carier with his Horse Waggoner with his Wagon Car-man with his Cart Wain-man with his Wain or Drover with his Cattel shall travel upon the Lord's-day in pain to forfeit 20 s. for every such offence VI. No Butcher shall kill or sell any victual upon the same day in pain of 6 s. 8 d. * VII Here the conviction of the Offender and the levying and imployment of the forfeitures are the same with those of the former Statute save onely that here two witnesses are necessary and the forfeitures may also be recovered by a prosecutor in the Sessions of the County or Corporation where the offence was committed and in that case the Justice or Head-Officer may allow the prosecutor part of the forfeitures but not above a third part VIII This Action shall be prosecuted within six moneths and here also the Officer may plead the general issue Homage and Fealty I. Stat. 17 E. 2. When a Free-man doth homage to his Lord of whom he holdeth in chief he shall hold his hands between the hands of his Lord and say thus I become your man from this time forth for life for member and for worldly honour and shall ow you my faith for the lands that I hold of you saving the faith that I ow unto our Lord the King and to mine other Lords II. When a Free-man doth fealty to his Lord he shall hold his right hand upon a Book and shall say thus Hear you my Lord R. that I P. will be to you both faithful and true and shall ow my fidelity unto you for the Land that I hold of you and lawfully shall do such customs and services as my duty is to you at all terms assigned so help me God and all his Saints III. When a Villain shall do fealty unto his Lord he shall hold his right hand over the Book and say thus Hear you my Lord A. that I B. from this day forth unto you shall be true and faithful and shall ow you fealty for the Land I hold of you in Villenage and shall be justified by you in body and goods so help me God and all his Saints Honours I. Stat. 31 H. 8.5 An Act for the making of the Mannor of Hampton-Court with divers Mannors and Lands thereunto annexed an Honour and the King shall have a free Chase and Warren there also the offenders there shall be punishable as in any other Forest or Chase all which are to be in the survey of the Court of Augmentations and Shipton is annexed unto the Dutchy of Cornwal in lieu of Bifleet and Weibridge taken away by this Act from the said Dutchy II. Stat. 33 H. 8.37 An Act for the making of the Mannor of Amphthil in Com. Bed an Honour and for annexing divers lands in Com. Bed and Buck. to the said Honour with other Articles concerning that Mannor which said lands are appointed to the survey of the Court of Augmentations III. Stat. 33 H. 8.38 The like for the Mannor of Grafton in Com. North. See the Statutes at large Hops * I. Stat. 1 Jac. 18. None shall bring or cause to be brought into this Realm from forein parts any hops deceitfully mixt with any soil whatsoever in pain to forfeit the hops so brought in neither shall any buy such hops so brought in or growing within the Realm and imploy them in brewing in pain to forfeit the value thereof which said forfeitures shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Horners * I. Stat. 4 E. 4.8 No stranger shall buy any English horns unwrought gathered or growing in London or within 24 miles thereof The Wardens of Horners in London may search all ware belonging to their Mystery in London and within 24 miles thereof And in Sturbridge and Ely Fairs See the Statute at large But note that this Statute is repealed by 1 Jac. 25. Howbeit it is recited in part revived by 7 Jac. 14. as followeth II. Stat. 7 Jac. 14. The Act of 4 E. 4.8 and every part thereof except power of search in the Fairs of Sturbridge and Ely and the limitation of such prices for horns as they were to be had for at the making of the said Act shall be revived and be of like force as if it had been repealed by 1 Jac. 25. III. None shall sell English horns unwrought to any stranger nor send any such horns beyond Sea in pain to forfeit the double value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor ☞ Horses Mares and Cattel * I. Stat. 20 R. 2.5 None shall take the horse or beast of any to serve the King without the owner's consent or sufficient warrant in pain to be imprisoned until he recompence the party grieved * II. Stat. 11 H. 7.13 None shall convey any horse out of the Realm without the King's licence in pain to forfeit the same nor any Mare above the value of 6 s. 8 d. in pain to forfeit her the owner thereof receiving 6 s. 8 d. for her at the time of the seisure otherwise that also is to be forfeited and here the Mare
the King and his Council therewith they shall take no fee but of the King nor give councel where he is a party and if they do amiss they shall be at the King's will in body lands and goods IV. Stat. 20 E. 3.2 The like is commanded to the Barrons of the Exchequer and to dispatch businesses depending before them without delay V. Stat. 20 E. 3.3 Justices assigned by Commission and of Assize and Gaol-delivery and their Associates shall make such oath as shall be enjoyned them by the King's Council or the Chancery before their Commissions be delivered unto them VI. Stat. 1 Jac. 10. None shall take any money or promise for the report of an order or cause referred unto them by any of the King's Judges or Court directly or indirectly in pain of 5 l. and to lose his office or place in the same Court VII The forfeiture is to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved if he will sue for it but if not then betwixt the King and any other prosecutor VIII This Act shall not prohibit the Clark from taking for his pains in writing the Report viz. 12 d. for the first sheet and 2 d. a piece for the rest Justices in Eyre I. Marlb 24 52 H. 3. Justices in Eyre shall not amerce Townships because all of twelve years of age came not before the Sheriffs and Coroners to make inquiry of robberies House-burnings and other offences against the Crown so that a full Inquest of those Towns appear Howbeit upon an Inquest for the death of a man all of 12 years of age ought to appear unless they have some reasonable cause of absence II. West 1. cap. 18. 3 E. 1. The common fine and amerciament of the whole County in Eyre of the Justices for false judgment or other trespass shall hereafter be Assessed by the said Justices upon the oaths of Knights and other honest men and not by Sheriffs and Barretters as in times past hath been used And the said Justices shall cause the parcels thereof to be Estreated into the Exchequer and not the whole summe onely III. West 2. cap. 10. 13 E. 1. Justices in Eyre in their Circuits shall appoint a certain time before which all writs shall be delivered in and then the Sheriff shall certifie the chief Justice in Eyre how many writs he hath and what they concern after which time they shall not be received or if received shall have no force except writs that abate during the Circuit which may be amended also except writs of Dower of men dying within the summons of the circuit Assizes of Darrein presentment and Quare impedit of Churches vacant within the said summons and of Novel disseisin ☞ Justices of Assize I. Stat. Justic Assisarum Incerti temporis There shall be eight circumspect and discreet Justices Assigned to take Assizes Juries and Certificates throughout the Realm viz. Two in the Counties of York Northumberland Westmerland Cumberland Lancashire Nottingham and Darby Two in the Counties of Lincoln Leicester Warwick Stafford Salop Northampton Rutland Glocester Hereford and Wigorn Two in the Counties of Cornwal Devon Somerset Dorset Wiltshire Southampton Oxon Berk Sussex and Surrey And two in the Counties of Kent Essex Suffolk Norfolk Cambridge Huntingdon Bedford and Buckingham II. Assizes Juries and Inquests of Middlesex shall be taken before the Justices of the Bench. III. The said eight Justices so Assigned shall daily attend for that purpose at such places as they shall think fit and most for the ease of the people and writs of Assizes Juries or Recognizances shall be granted to be taken before none but them save of the special grace of the King IV. Stat. 20 E. 3.6 Justices of Assize have power to inquire of the misdemeanours of Sheriffs Escheators Bailiffs and other Ministers Imbraceors and Jurors and to punish such as be found guilty And the Chancellor and Treasurer are to hear all complaints thereof and to apply speedy remedy thereunto V. Stat. 6 R. 2.5 Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery shall hold their Sessions in the chief Towns of every County where the Shire-Courts there use to be holden VI. Stat. 8 R. 2.2 No man of Law shall be Justice of Assize or Gaol-delivery in his own Country and the chief Justice of the Common Bench shall be Assigned amongst others to take Assizes and to deliver Gaols but as to the chief Justice of the King's Bench it shall be as for the most part of 100 years last past hath been wont to be done VII Stat. 11 R. 2.11 Because it was found inconvenient to the subject that Justices of Assize should be bound to hold their Sessions where the Shire-Courts use to be held the Chancellor by the advice of the Justices shall have power to order that otherwise as need shall be notwithstanding the Statute of 6 R. 2.5 VIII Stat. 20 R. 2.3 No Lord nor other shall sit upon the Bench with the Justices of Assize in pain of great forfeiture to the King and the Justices are there commanded not to suffer it IX Stat. 11 H. 4.3 Justices of Assize shall deliver into the Treasury the Records of Assizes of Novel desseisin Mortdancester and Certifications every second year after the plea determined and judgment given and those Records shall not be amended or impaired after judgment given and recorded X. Stat. 14 H. 6.3 The Sessions of the Justices of Assize and Gaol-delivery in Cumberland shall be holden in the time of peace and truce in the City of Carlile and not elsewhere according to the Statute of 6 R. 2.5 XI Stat. 33 H. 8.24 No Justice or other learned in the Law shall be Justice of Assize in the County where he was born or doth inhabit in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XII This Statute shall not extend to the Clark of Assize or to any Associate or to any such Justice of Assize XIII Neither shall these words Justices of Assize or others learned in the Law extend to Officers in Corporations but that they may be Justices of Assize of fresh force or other Assizes in the place where they dwell or were born XIV This Act shall not be prejudicial to any Justice of the one Bench or the other for hearing and determining Assizes in those Courts nor to any Justice that shall take any Assize by adjournment for difficulty thereof XV. The Clark of Assize shall not during the Sessions be of Council to any within the Circuit otherwise then as to his Office appertains in pain of 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved XVI This Act shall not extend to Justices Clarks nor Clarks of Assize within the Dutchy and County Palatine of Lancaster Justices of both Benches I. West 1. cap. 45. 3 E. 1. One plea shall be decided by the Justices of the King's Bench before another be commenced yet Essoins shall be entred and allowed but let none presume to absent himself at the
like manner as it is for other Cities and Boroughs IX Stat. 35 H. 8.10 An Act for repairing making and mending the Conduits in London Lords I. Stat. 31 H. 8.10 A direction how Lords and other great Officers are to be placed in Parliament See the Statute at large Madder I. Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 30. IMportation of Madder allowed and the plantation thereof in England encouraged and the punishment of such as shall mix it with sand or corrupt it II. The said Act repealed per Stat. 15 Ca. 2. Ca. 16. Stat. 3. in fine ☞ Mainprise and Bail I. Marlb 52 H. 3.27 Albeit a Clark being upon an offence against the Crown after arrest let to bail or replevied by the King's command will not or cannot by reason of his Clarks Office make answer before the Justices yet shall not those who let him to bail or his sureties be amercied so as he appears before the Justices II. West 1.15 3 E. 1. Forasmuch as before this time it hath not been determined what persons are repleviable and what not save only such as be taken for the death of a man or by the command of the King or his Justices or for the Forest it is now provided that Persons outlawed and such as have abjured the Realm Provors and such as be taken with the manner Prison-breakers Thieves openly defamed and known Appellees by provors during the life of such provors house-burners counterfeiters of the King's Seal or Coyn Excommunicate persons manifest Offenders and Traitors are not repleviable by common Writ or without Writ III. Persons guilty of Larceny by Inquests taken before Sheriffs or Bailiffs or of petty Larceny not before detected or accessary to any felony or onely guilty of some light suspicion are bailable by good sureties for which the Sheriff shall be answerable IV. If any Sheriff or other having the custody of a prison set any at large by surety who is not repleviable and be thereof attainted he shall loose his fee and office for ever and if any under officer doth it he shall suffer three months imprisonment and make fine at the King's will V. If any withhold prisoners repleviable after they have tendred sufficient surety he shall be grievously amercied and if he take any reward for the deliverance of such he shall pay double to the prisoner and be also grievously amercied VI. Stat. 3 H. 7.3 Two Justices 1. Qu. have power to let to bail persons bailable by Law until the next Quarter-Sessions or Goal-delivery and shall theoe certifie the same in pain of 10 l. VII The Sheriff and all others having the custody of Gaols shall certifie the names of all prisoners in their custody to the Justices of Gaol-delivery at their geneal Gaol-delivery in pain to forfeit for every such default 5 l. VIII The Statute of 1 R. 3.3 which gave power to one Justice of Peace to bail prisoners is repealed IX Stat. 1. 2 P. M. 13. None shall be let to bail which are forbidden to be bailed by 3 E. 1.15 X. None arrested for Man-flaughter or Felony or suspition thereof being bailable by Law shall be let to bail save only in open Sessions or by two Justices 1. Qu. being both present at the time of such bailment which shall be certified together with the examination of the prisoner and the information of the accusers under their own hands at the next Gaol-delivery and such examination and information shall be taken before the bailment XI The said Justices have power to bind by Recognizance all such as can declare any thing material against the prisoner to appear at the Gaol-delivery and shall there make certificate of the said Recognizance XII The Justices that offend any branch of this Act are liable to be fined by the Justices of Gaol-delivery XIII This Act shall not restrain Justices within London and Middlesex to let to bail prisoners as heretofore they have used only they shall certifie their examinations bonds and bailments at the next Gaol-delivery of their Jurisdiction in pain to be fined as aforesaid XIV Every Habeas Corpus or Certiorari for the removing of a prisoner shall be signed by the chief Justice or one of the Justices of the Court out of which the Writ issues in pain of 5 l. to be forfeited by the writer XV. Stat. 2. 3 P. M. 10. One accused of Manslaughter or Felony who for want of bail is to be sent to the Gaol must be examined by the Justice before he sends him thither and the accusers must be bound over to give in evidence against him whose information must also be taken and committed to writing within two daies after at farthest and all certified in at the next Gaol-delivery as by the Statute of 1. 2 P. M. 13. is limited upon the penalty therein expressed Maintenance * 1. West 1.28 3 E. 1. No Clark of the King or of any Justices shall receive the presentment of any Church for which there is debate in the King's Court without the King 's special licence in pain to lose the Church and his service And that no Clark of any Justice or Sheriff take part in any suites or use fraud whereby common right may be delaied in pain to be punished as aforesaid and more grievously if the trespass require it II. Stat. 1 E. 3. Parl. 2.14 None shall maintain quarrels and parties in the Country to the let and disturbance of the Common Law III. Stat. 20 E. 3.4 None shall maintain any quarrels save their own in pain to have their body lands and goods to be at the King's pleasure IV. Stat. 1 R. 2.4 No great Officer of the King shall maintain quarrels in the County in pain of a fine to be imposed by the King and his Council and no other person in pain of imprisonment and to be fined at the King's will and if he be the King's Officer or houshold servant he shall also lose his Office V. Stat. 7 R. 2.15 The Statutes of 1 E. 3. Parl. 2.14 4 E. 3.11 which see in Nisi prius 1 R. 2.4 and 1 R. 2.9 which see in Feofments made against Maintenance and Champerty shall be duly put in execution * VI. Stat. 32 H. 8.9 All Statutes which concern Maintenance Champerty and Embracery shall be duly put in execution VII None shall buy any pretended right or title to any land unless the Seller hath taken the proofits thereof one whole year next before such bargain in pain that both the buyer and seller shall each of them forfeit the value of the same land to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor VIII None shall unlawfully maintain any suit or Action retain any person for maintenance ●mbrace Jurors or suborn witnesses to the hindrance of justice or the procurement of perjury in pain to forfeit for every such offence 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IX Howbeit purchasing of a pretended title by him that is already lawfully possessed of the thing
their fees for keeping of Castles Houses Parks Chases Forrests or 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
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-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
use confidence or trust of any such person or persons or body politick shall be deemed and adjudged to be in him or them that have such use confidence or trust of any such quality manner form and condition as they had before in or to the use confidence or trust that was in them IX When divers persons are so seised to the use confidence or trust of any of themselves they amongst them that have such use or trust shall likewise have the seisin estate and possession in such quality manner and condition as they had the use or trust X. Howbeit the right title c. of all other except of the persons so seised to any use or trust is saved and all former right title c. is also saved to them XI Where any be seised to any use or intent that another shall have a yearly rent out of the same lands Cestuy que use of the rent shall be deemed in the possession thereof of like estate as he or she had that use and shall distrain for non-payment of the said rent and make Avowries Conusances and Justifications and use all other remedies therein as if the said rent had been actually granted to such Cestuy que use XII Where an estate is made in possession or use to husband and wife and his heirs or the heirs of their two bodies or of one of their bodies or to them for their lives or for the wives life for her Joynture in any of these cases she shall not have dower Howbeit upon a lawful eviction of that Joynture she shall be endowed according to the rate of her husbands land whereof she was dowable XIII Such a Joynture being made after Marriage the wife after her husbands death may refuse it and betake her to her dower unless such Joynture be made by Act of Parliament XIV Provided that this Act shall not extinguish release discharge or suspend any Statute Recognizance or other bond by the execution of any estate setled by force of this Act. XV. All Wills and Testaments heretofore made or hereafter to be made before the first of May 1536. shall be good in law in such manner as they were commonly taken and used within 40 years before the making of this Act. XVI The King shall not take advantage by occasion of the executing of any estate by Authority of this Act before the first of May 1536. viz. by having or demanding any primer seisi● livery Ouster le main fine for alienation relief or Herriot but after that time fines for alienations reliefs and herriots shall be paid to the King and also liveries and Ouster le mains shall be sued for uses trusts and confidences which shall be from thenceforth made and executed in possession by force of this Act neither shall any other Lord demand or take any fine relief or herriot by occasion of this Statute before the said first of May 1536. XVII This Act shall not be prejudicial to any person or persons born in Wales or the Marches thereof who have any estate to them executed by force of this Act in any lands in this Realm whereof any other person now stands seised to their use but such person or persons born there may lawfully have and keep all such lands by authority of this Act according to the tenor thereof ☞ Usury * I. Stat. 37 H. 8.9 None shall sell his wares or merchandize to any and within three months after buy the same again at a lesser price knowing them to be the same wares or buy any corrupt bargain of wares money or other thing or buy any Mortgage of land and take in gain for giving day of payment more then according to the rate of 10 l. per centum for one whole year in pain to forfeit the treble value of the profits of such lands mortgaged to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and besides shall suffer imprisonment and make fine at the Kings will II. Stat. 13 El. 8. All Bonds Contracts and Assurances upon Usury in lending or doing any thing contrary to the Statute of 37 H. 8.9 shall be void and all Brokers and Soliciters thereof shall be adjudged and used as Counsellors Attorneys or Advocates in any case of Praemunire III. He that takes no more then after the rate of 10 l. per centum or less shall only forfeit the interest to be recovered and imployed as the forfeitures of 37 H. 8.9 IV. Justices of Oyer and Terminer of Assize and of Peace in their Circuits and Sessions and Mayors Sheriffs and Bailiffs of Cities have power to hear and determine all offences committed against 37 H. 8.9 V. The Statute of 37 H. 8.9 shall be construed largely and strongly against the party offending by any way or device directly or indirectly VI. This Act shall not extend to any allowances or payments for the finding of Orphans according to the ancient rates of London or of any other City where order is taken for their custody and goods as in London VII The offender against the Statute of 37 H. 8.9 may also be punished by the Ecclesiastical Laws VIII Stat. 21 Jac. 17. None shall upon any contract directly or indirectly take for the loan of any money or other commodities above the rate of 8 l. per centum for one whole year in pain to forfeit the treble value of the money or other things lent IX No Scrivener Broker or Solicitor shall take or receive directly or indirectly for Brokage above the rate of 5 s. for the loan of 100 l. for one whole year nor above 12 d. for making a Bond in pain to forfeit 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and also to to suffer six moneths imprisonment X. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 13. None shall upon a contract directly or indirectly take for the loan of any money wares merchandises or other Commodities above the rate of 6 l. per Cent. for loan of a 100 l. for a year and so proportionably upon pain to forfeit treble the value of the money or other things lent XI No Scrivener Broker or Solicitor shall take or receive for brocage above the rate of 5 s. for the loan of 100 l. for a year nor above 12 d. for making a bond upon pain of forfeiture of 20 l. to be divided between the King and the prosecutor and to suffer half a years imprisonment Wager of Law I. Magna Cart. 28. 9 H. 3. NO Bailiff shall put any man to his open Law or to an oath upon his own bare saying without faithful witnesses brought in for the same II. Stat. 38 E. 3.5 Any man may wage his Law by sufficient people of his condition against Londoners papers and the Creditor shall take surety otherwise if he please but shall not put the party to plead to the Enquest unless he will so do of his own accord III. Stat. 5 H. 4.8 In Actions of debt upon the arrearages of an account feigning to the
between Tine and Tees fees of Earls and Barons in the Marches where the Kings writ runs not and where such Archbishops Bishops Earls and Barons ought to have such Wards albeit they hold of the King in some other place XXXII Prerog Reg. 2. 17 E. 2. The King shall have the marriage of an heir being within age and in his Ward whether his lands have appertained to the Crown of ancient continuance or came by Escheat being in the Kings hands or by reason of another wardship without respect of priority or posteriority of feoffment albeit such heir held also of others XXXIII Prerog Reg. 6. 17 E. 2. If a Woman before her ancestors death that held of the King in chief be married before her age of consent the King shall have the ward of her body untill her age of consent and then it is at her election whether she will have him whom she first married or him whom the King will offer her XXXIV None that holds of the King in chief by Knight-service shall without the Kings licence alien so much of his lands that the residue is not sufficient to do his service Howbeit this is not to be understood of members and parcels of such lands XXXV Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.13 After the death of the Kings tenant in chief the Escheator shall cause to be seised into the Kings hands the lands as to their office appertains without doing waste in houses Woods Parks Ponds or other extortions which may tend to the damage of the heir and forthwith after the Diem clausit extremum delivered to him shall make return thereof by a good and true extent in the Chancery XXXVI After such return if the next friends of the heir to whom the inheritance cannot descend shall come and offer to take the said lands untill the heir be at age and to give for the same as much as another without fraud by accord of the Chancellor and Treasurer they shall have Commission to keep them upon good security untill his full age answering to the King the value thereof XXXVII Howbeit this Act shall not conclude the King from having an Action of waste against such Guardians and Farmers the Heir also may have like Action against them when he comes to age XXXVIII Stat. 39 H. 6.2 Women being of the age of 16 years at the time of the death of their Ancestors shall have livery of their lands descended to them XXXIX Stat. 4 H. 7.17 The Statute of Marlb 6. 52 H. 3. before 4. is confirmed XL. The Lord of Cestuy que use no Will of his Ancestor being declared in his life time shall have a Writ of right of Ward for the body and the land and the heir of Cestuy que use being at full age at the death of his ancestor shall pay relief the heir also of Cestuy-que use shall have like action of waste as if his ancestor had dyed seised and if the Lord be barred in his Writ of right of Ward the Defendant shall recover damages The Court of Wards Vide Courts Numb XXXIV VVares I. Stat. 5 El. 7. None shall bring or cause to be brought into this Realm from beyond Sea any girdles harness for girdles Rapiers Daggers Knives Hilts Pummels Lockets Chapes Dagger-blades Handles Scabbards or Sheaths for Knives Saddles Horsharness Stirrops Bits Gloves Points Leather laces or Pinnes being ready wrought beyond Sea to be sold bartered or exchanged in this Realm or Wales in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor VVarranty I. The Statute of Bigamy 6. 4 E. 1. Indeeds conteining Dedi concessi tale tenementum without non-age or any clause of Warranty and to be holden of the donors and their heirs by a certain service in this case the donors and their heirs are bound to Warranty But where the deed is dedi concessi c. to be holden of the chief Lord of the fee or of other and not of the feoffors and their heirs reserving no service and without homage and the aforesaid clause here the feoffors Heirs shall not be bound to Warranty Howbeit the feoffor himself during his life by force of his own gift is bound to warrant II. The Statute of Glocester 3. 6 E. 1. Where tenant by the curtesy aliens his Wives land his son having no ossets by descent shall not be barred to recover the land by a Writ of Mortdancester of the seisin of his mother albeit his fathers deed mentioneth that he and his heirs shall be bound to warranty but in case any land descend to the heir of his fathers side he shall be barred for the value of the inheritance so descended III. Also if afterwards any inheritance descend to him by the same father the tenant shall recover against him of the seisin of his mother by a Judicial writ to be issued out of the Rolls of the Justices before whom the plea was pleaded to resummon his warranty as hath been heretofore used in cases where the warrantor pleads ●iens per descent from him by whose deed he is vouched IV. Likewise the issue of the son may recover by Writ of Cousinage Ayel and Besayel neither shall the heir of the Wife be barred of his action after the death of his father and mother by writ of Entry for land which his Father did alien in the time of his mother whereof no fine is levyed in the Kings Court. Warr. I. Stat. 1 E. 3.7 Whereas Commissioners have heretofore prepared men of Arms and conveyed them to the King of Scotland Gascoigne and elswhere at the charge of the Shires whereby the Commons have been much impoverished The King wills That it shall be done so no more II. Stat. 18 E. 3.7 Men of Arms Hoblers and Archers chosen to go in the Kings service out of England shall be at the Kings wages from the day that they depart out of the Countreys where they are levied till their return III. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 None shall be constrained to find men of Arms Hoblers or Archers but by tenure of land or grant in Parliament IV. Stat. 4 H. 4.13 The Statutes of 1 E. 3.7 18 E. 3.7 and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 shall be holden in all points yet so as Lords and all others that have lands in Wales or the Marches thereof or hold of the King by Escuage or other service shall in no wise be excused of their service and devoirs due to the King for their lands fees annuities pensions or other profits V. Stat. 11 H. 7.18 Every person in England and Wales having any office fee or annuity of the Kings grant shall personally attend upon him when he goes himself in person in the Wars unless he have the Kings licence or be letted upon some just cause well proved in pain to forfeit such office fee and annuity Howbeit this Act shall not extend to any spiritual person the Master of the Rolls or other
Knight-service and other Lands in Soccage or of the nature of Soccage may give dispose or assure by will or otherwise by Act executed in his life two parts of the knight-service land or so much thereof as shall amount to the yearly value of two parts as aforesaid and also all the soccage-land at his pleasure saving to such Lord for his custody and wardship so much of the knight-service land as shall amount to the yearly value of the third part thereof X. Every person having mannors lands c. holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief or any mannors lands c. holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief and other mannors lands c. holden of any other person by knight-service and also other mannors lands c. holden of any other person in soccage or in the nature of Soccage may give dispose will devise and assure by his last Will or otherwise by act executed in his life two parts of the said Knight-service-Land or so much thereof as shall amount to two parts of the yearly value thereof as aforesaid and all the soccage-land at his will and pleasure Howbeit here also the custody and Wardship of so much of the said Knight-service mannors lands c. as shall amount to the yearly value of the third part thereof are saved to the King and other Lords respectively and if the King or other Lord have not in this case a full third part set out for them they may respectively take into their possession so much of the other two parts as will make it a full third part XI Provided that all persons shall sue liveries for possessions reversions or remainders and pay reliefs and heriots as they did before the making of this Act. XII Fines for alienations shall be paid in Chancery upon Writs of entry in the Post for common recoveries suffered of any Mannors Lands c. holden of the King in chief in like manner as upon alienations of such Mannors Lands c. by fine or feoffment Howbeit no other fine shall be paid there for any such Writs but only such fines for alienation XIII Where two or more hold any Mannors Lands c. of the King by Knight-service joyntly to them and the heirs of one of them and he that hath the inheritance dyeth his heir being within age the King shall have the Ward and Marriage of such Heir the life of the freeholder or Freeholders notwithstanding saving to every Woman her Interest of Dower in such lands to be assigned out of the two parts thereof severed from the third part as abovesaid and not otherwise and saving also to the King the reversions of all such tenants by joynt-tenure and Dower after the death of such tenants in case they happen to dye during the nonage of the Kings Ward XIV Stat. 34.35 H. 8.5 Where the Statute of 32 H. 8.1 mentioneth mannors lands c. of inheritance it shall be expounded and taken of estates in fee-simple XV. Every person having a sole estate in fee-simple or seized in co-parcenery or in common in fee-simple in any Mannors Lands tenements rents or other hereditaments in possession reversion or remainder and having no Mannors lands c. holden of the King or of any other by Knight-service may give dispose will or devise to any person or persons except bodies politick and corporate by his last Will and Testament in writing or by Act executed in his life by himself solely or by himself and others joyntly severally or particularly or by all those wayes or any of them as much as in him of right is all his said mannors lands tenements rents and hereditaments or any of them or any rents commons or other profits out of the same or any parcel thereof at his free will and pleasure XVI Every person having such an estate or seized as aforesaid of or in any mannors lands rents c. in possession reversion or remainder or of or in any rents or services incident to any reversion or remainder holden of the King by Knight-service in chief or of the nature of Knight-service in chief may give dispose will or assign to any person or persons except bodies politick and corporate by his last Will and Testament in writing or by an Act executed in his life by himself solely or by himself and others joyntly severally or particularly or by all those wayes or any of them as much as in him of right is two parts as well of all the said Mannors lands c. as of all other rents and hereditaments or of any of them or any rents commons profits or commodities out of or to be perceived of the same two parts or out of any parcel thereof in three parts to be divided or as much thereof as shall amount to the yearly value of two parts thereof in three parts to be divided of what person or persons soever they be holden at his free will and pleasure XVII Such Will so declared shall be good for two parts of the said Mannors lands c. although it be made of the whole or more then the two parts thereof the said division to be made by the devisor or owner of the said Mannors lands c. by will in writing or otherwise in writing and in default thereof by Commission out of the Court of Wards upon inquiry of the true value thereof by the oaths of 12 men and upon return thereof in the same Court the division shall be made by the Master of the Wards if the said Master and parties cannot otherwise agree upon the division and the issues and profits of the two parts shall be restored to them that shall have right thereunto from the death of the owner or deviser XVIII Every person being seised solely in co-parcenery or in common as aforesaid of any mannors lands rents c. in possession reversion or remainder or of any ●ents or services incident to any reversion or remainder holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief or of any other person by Knight-service may give dispose will or devise to any person except to bodies politick by his last Will and Testament in writing or by act executed in his life solely or joyntly as aforesaid two parts thereof or any rents common or profits to be perceived out of the same two parts or out of any part thereof c. And such Will shall be good for such two parts albeit it be made of the whole lands so holden or of more then the said two parts and shall also be good for all lands not holden in Knight-service and for all rents commons and other profits to be perceived out of the same XIX Here also the division of the third part is to be made as before where it concerns the Kings Interest but where it concerns other Lords the division shall be by Commission out of the Chancery if such Lords and the parties in the mean time cannot agree
in the wild of Surrey XIX Stat. 13 El. 25. All Woods or Copices intended by the Statute of 35 H. 8.17 to be enclosed and the springs thereof preserved shall be so saved by the space of two years more then in the several clauses of the said Act is severally limited according to the age of such Woods felled upon such pains as in the said Acts are contained And none shall put any Cattel into any such Copice woods from the time of their sale until the end of five years nor from the end of five years until the end of six years any Cattel but Calves and yearling Colts onely until the end of six years if the wood was under 14 years growth at the last fall or until the end of 8 years if it was above 14 years growth And this Addition shall continue as long in force as the said Statute of 35 H. 8.17 XX. Stat. 23 El. 5. None shall convert into Coal or other fuel for the making of Iron or Iron Mettal any Wood or Underwood growing within the compass of 22 miles of London or the Suburbs thereof or of the River of Thames from Dorchester in Com. Oxon. downwards or within four miles of the foot of the Downs betwixt Arundel and Pemsey in Com. Sussex or of Winchelsey or Rie or within two miles of Pemsey or three miles of Hastings in pain to forfeit for every load so converted 40 s. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor XXI This Act shall not extend to any woods growing in any such part of the wildes of Surrey Sussex or Kent within 22 miles of London or Thames as is distant above 18 miles from London or Thames XXII No new Iron-works shall be erected within 22 miles of London 14 miles of Thames or four miles of the said Downs Pemsey Winchelsey Hastings or Rie in pain of 100 l. to be imployed as aforesaid XXIII This Act shall not extend to the woods of Christopher Darrell Gentleman in Newdigate in the weld of Surrey XXIV Stat. 27 El. 19. None shall make or set up within the Counties of Sussex Surrey or Kent any Iron Mill furnace finary or blomary for the making of Iron or Iron Mettal other then upon some old Bayes or Pens whereupon such works have been lately standing or else upon such lands where such works may be continually furnished with sufficient supply of the parties own woods growing upon his own soil being his in fee-simple fee-fee-tail or for life without impeachment of waste nor shall convert to coal or other fuel for the making of such Iron or Iron-Mettal any sound Timber-tree of Oak Ash or Elm which will bear a foot-square at the stub or any part thereof in pain to forfeit for every such new work set up 300 l. and for every Timber-tree so converted 40 s. to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor XXV Howbeit the lops and offal of such Timber-trees may be converted to Coal for the purposes aforesaid within the welds of Sussex Surrey and Kent so as it be not within eighteen miles of London eight miles of Thames four miles of Rie or Winchelsey 3 miles of Hastings or 4 miles of the foot of the Downs betwixt Arundel and Pemsey aforesaid XXVI Stat. 15 Car. 2. Cap. 2. Stat. 3. Reciting the Statute 43 El. Cap. doth not sufficiently prevent nor punish the cutting and spoiling of Woods Enacted that every Constable Headborough and other person in every County City or other place where they shall be Officers or Inhabitants shall and may apprehend or cause to be apprehended every person they shall suspect having carrying or conveying any burden or bundel of Wood Poles young Trees Bark bast of Trees Gates Stiles Posts Pales Rails or Hedge-wood Broom or Furze XXVII And by Warrant under the hand and seal of any one Justice of the Peace directed to any Officer such Officer may enter into and search the houses yards Gardens and other places belonging to the houses of every person or persons they shall suspect to have any kind of such Wood or other the said Trees c. and where they shall find any such to apprehend every person suspected for cutting and taking the same and as well those apprehended carrying any kind of wood or other the trees and premises as those in whose houses or other places belonging to them any of the same shall be found to carry before any one Justice of the Peace of the same County And such persons suspected do not give a good accompt how they came by the same by the consent of the owner such as shall satisfie the said Justice or within some convenient time to be set by the said Justice produce the party of whom they bought the said wood or some credible witness upon Oath to prove such sale which Oath the said Justice may administer then such persons so suspected and not giving such good accompt nor producing such witness shall be judged as convicted for cutting and spoiling of woods underwoods poles trees gates stiles posts pales rails hedge-wood broome or furze within the meaning of the said Statute of Queen Elizabeth and lyable to the punishments therein and of this Act appointed XXVIII Every person so convicted shall for the first offence give the owner satisfaction for his damages within such time as the Justice shall appoint and over and above pay down to the Overseers of the poor of the Parish where such offence is such sum of money not exceeding 10 s. as the said Justice shall think meet in default of either of which payments the said Justice may commit such offendor to the house of Correction for such time not exceeding one month as he shall think fit or to be whipt by the Constable or other Officer as in his judgement shall seem expedient XXIX And if such persons shall again commit the said offence and be thereof convicted as before that then the persons offending the second time and convicted shall be sent to the house of Correction for one moneth and there be kept to hard labour And for the third offence convicted as before shall be adjudged and deemed as Incorrigible Rogues XXX Provided also whosoever shall buy any burdens of wood or any the premises mentioned in this Bill suspected to be stolen or unlawfully come by the Justices Mayors or chief Officers or any one of them within their respective Jurisdictions upon complaint may examine the matter upon Oath And if they find the same was bought of any person suspected to have stolne or unlawfully come by the same then any one of the said Justices or chief Officer shall and may award the party that bought the same to pay treble the value thereof to the party from whom the same was stolne or unlawfully taken And in default of present payment to issue forth their respective Warrants to levy the same by distress and sale of the offendors goods rendering the overplus to the party And in default of such