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

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taken in only such as are convicted it would have been eluded and rendred ineffectual for want of a Conviction of the greater part of such ubiquitary Recusants The want of due consideration of this Statute in each of these parts of it hath occasioned some mistakes in those who have handled it And Wingate tit Crown numb 78. restrains both parts of it as well relating to those that have no certain place of abode as those whose place of abode is certain to Recusants convicted and makes no mention that this later sort must be in England at the time of their Conviction And in the late Additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 14. 't is not only said that both sorts must be convicted but that they must be in England at the time of their Conviction which two things are only requisite in such who have a certain place of abode and not in the other sort who are within the meaning and danger of this Law without any precedent Conviction for Recusancy See more of this matter Licence to Travel Stat. 3 Jac. 5. and how a Popish Recusant shall be licensed to Travel out of his compass of five miles Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 5. Sect. 8. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 4. A Popish Recusant Copy-holder That every such Offender as is before mentioned which hath or shall have any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments by Copy of Court Roll or by any other customary tenure at the will of the Lord according to the Custom of any Mannor shall forfeit all and singular his and their said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments so holden by Copy of Court Roll or customary tenure as aforesaid for and during the life of such offender if his or her Estate so long continue to the Lord or Lords of whom the same be immediately holden if the same Lord or Lord or Lords be not then a Popish Recusant and convicted for not coming to Church to hear Divine Service but forbearing the same contrary to the Laws and Statutes aforesaid nor seized or possessed upon Trust to the use or behoof of any such Recusant as aforesaid And in such Case the same forfeiture to be to the Quéens Majesty Provided always Stat. Sect. 5. Popish Recusants shall notifie their coming and deliver in their names and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all such persons as by the intent and true meaning of this Act are to make their repair to their place of dwelling and abode or to the place where they were born or where their Father or Mother shall be dwelling and not to remove or pass above five miles from thence as is aforesaid shall within twenty days next after their coming to any of the said places as the Case shall happen notifie their coming thither and present themselves and deliver their true names in writing to the Minister or Curate of the same Parish and to the Constable Headborough or Tithingman of the Town and thereupon the said Minister or Curate shall presently enter the same into a Book to be kept in every Parish for that purpose Which shall be certified to the Sess●ons and enrolled there And afterwards the said Minister or Curate and the said Constable Headborough or Tithingman shall certifie the same in writing to the Iustices of the Peace of the same County at the next general or Quarter Sessions to be holden in the same County and the said Iustices shall cause the same to be entred by the Clerk of the Peace in the Rolls of the same Sessions Goods and Lands where not forfeited A Popish Recusant repairs to the place appointed him by this Act and keeps within his compass of five miles but doth not present himself or deliver in his name he doth not forfeit his Goods or Lands For there is no particular penalty inflicted in this part of the Act for that omission nor yet in the subsequent Branch for him that hath clearly twenty marks per annum in Freehold or Goods and Chattels worth forty pounds But yet such person may be Indicted for such neglect and fined upon the general words of the Statute which commands the thing to be done For where an Act of Parliament commands any thing to be done and inflicts no penalty an Indictment lies against the person who ought to do it for his neglect or omission Co. 2. Inst. 55. 163. Vide Cro. Hill 41 Eliz. 655. Crouthers Case Stat. Sect. 6. The penalty of a Popish Recusant of small ability offending against this Act. And to the end that the Realm be not pestered and overcharged with the multitude of such Seditious and dangerous people as is aforesaid who having little or no ability to answer or satisfie any competent penalty for their contempt and disobedience of the said Laws and Statutes and being committed to Prison for the same do live for the most part in better Case there then they could if they were abroad at their own liberty The Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled do most humbly and instantly beséech the Quéens Majesty that it may be further Enacted That if any such person or persons being a Popish Recusant not being a Feme Covert and not having Lands Tenements Rents or Annuities of an absolute Estate of Inheritance or freehold of the clear yearly value of twenty marks above all charges to their own use and behoof and not upon any secret trust or confidence for any other or Goods and Chattels in their own right and to their own proper use and behoof And not upon any such secret trust and confidence for any other above the value of forty pounds shall not within the time before in this Act in that behalf limited and appointed repair to their place of usual dwelling and aboad if they have any or else to the place where they were born or where their Father or Mother shall be dwelling according to the tenor and intent of this present Act And thereupon notifie their coming and present themselves and deliver their true Names in writing to the Minister or Curate of the Parish and to the Constable Headborough or Tithingman of the Town within such time and in such manner and form as is aforesaid or at any time after such their repairing to any such place as is before appointed shall pass or remove above five miles from the same And shall not within three months next after such person shall be apprehended or taken for offending as is aforesaid conform themselves to the obedience of the Laws and Statutes of this Realm in coming usually to the Church to hear Divine Service and in making such publick Confession and Submission as hereafter in this Act is appointed and expressed being thereunto required by the Bishop of the Diocess or any Iustice of the Peace of the County where the same person shall happen to be or by the Minister or
Curate of the Parish That in every such Case every such Offender being thereunto warned or required by any two Iustices of the Peace or Coroner of the same County where such offender shall then be shall upon his or their corporal Oath Abjuration before any two Iustices of the Peace or Coroner of the same County abjure this Realm of England and all other the Queéns Majesties Dominions forever And thereupon shall depart out of this Realm at such Haven and Port and within such time as shall in that behalf be assigned and appointed by the said Iustices of Peace or Coroner before whom such abjuration shall be made unless the same Offenders be letted or stayed by such lawful and reasonable means or causes as by the Common Laws of this Realm are permitted and allowed in Cases of abjuration for felony And in such Cases of let or stay then within such reasonable and convenient time after as the Common Law requireth in Case of abjuration for felony as is aforesaid Abjuration to be entred of Record and certified And that every Iustice of Peace and Coroner before whom any such abjuration shall happen to be made as is aforesaid shall cause the same presently to be entred of Record before them and shall certifie the same to the Iustices of Assizes or Goal delivery of the said County at the next Assizes or Goal delivery to be holden in the same County If any such person or persons being a Popish Recusant That is any Popish Recusant within the former Branches of the Statute and none but such What Popish Recusants are within this Branch and which not Dalton V. cap. 45. tit Recusants applies this Clause to Popish Recusants convicted as if it concerned them and them only and so both at once extends and restrains the Statute contrary to its true meaning For these words any such person or persons neither extend to all that are convicted nor are restrained to such only as are convicted For the Popish Recusant who hath a certain place of aboad within this Realm although he be convicted is not within this Statute unless he were a Popish Recusant and in England at the time of his Conviction And the Popish Recusant who hath no certain place of aboad within this Realm is within this Statute although he were never convicted so that either of these sorts of Popish Recusants who have an Estate under value viz. he who hath no certain place of aboad and he who having a certain place of aboad was convicted when a Popish Recusant and in England and no other are liable by this Act to Abjuration Of the clear yearly value Clear yearly value of Twenty marks above all Charges A Rent-charge of 40 l. per Annum is issuing out of Lands worth 100 l. per Annum a Popish Recusant liable to be confined by this Statute purchases for his Life or in Fee parcel of the Lands of the clear yearly value of Twenty marks over and above what his proportion of the said Rent-charge comes to This is an Estate of the clear yearly value of Twenty marks within the meaning of this Act and shall free him from abjuration For although in strictness of Law his Estate be not clearly so much above all charges For that 't is chargeable with an yearly Rent of Forty pounds yet in equity he shall pay no more then his proportion of it which the Land he purchased will discharge and yet yield Twenty marks per Annum clearly besides Or Goods and Chattels This Statute being in the disjunctive Lands or Goods an Estate partly of Lands Goods and Lands not to be valued together and partly of Goods will not satisfie the intent thereof And therefore if a Popish Recusant who offends against this Act hath fifteen Marks per Annum clearly in Lands and be worth Thirty pounds in goods although this taken together be in truth an Estate of more value then is here required yet it shall not free him from Abjuration For the Statute doth not warrant any valuation of the Lands and Goods together so as to supply the defect of the yearly value of the Lands by the Goods or the defect of the value of the Goods by the Lands and therefore the Recusant must have such an Estate in the one or the other as will answer the Statute And this is not like the Case of Jurors upon the Statute of 2 H. 5. Stat. 2 H. 5. 3. cap. 3. where 't is said That the Iuror shall have Lands of the clear yearly value of Forty shillings if the Debt or Damage declared amount to Forty marks in which Case although it be in the disjunctive debt or damage yet it hath been adjudged that where the debt and damages both amount to Forty marks it is sufficient and the Juror must have Forty shillings per Annum Co. 1. Inst 272. For in that Case the word or is cumulative and debt or damage both amount to no more then one intire thing viz. the value of the Cause or Action depending And it appears plainly to be the intent of the makers of the Law that no Cause declared to be of the value of Forty marks shall be tried by Jurors of a less Estate but in our Case the Lands and Goods are things of different nature one real the other personal and cannot be regularly reduced under one and the same head and therefore shall not be valued together unless the Act had expresly appointed such a Valuation But yet if a Popish Recusant hath a Lease for years But leases for years and personal goods may and personal Goods and both do amount in value to above Forty pounds he shall be out of the danger of Abjuration For although the Lease is in the realty and the Goods are personal yet they shall in this Case be valued together For that by this Copulative and the Statute expresly so appoints without distinguishing between the values of either but makes it sufficient if both of them be of that value Money secured upon a Mortgage Mortgage of Lands is within the meaning of these words Goods and Chattels And if the Popish Recusant hath above Forty pounds owing to him upon such Mortgage he cannot be required to abjure Within three months next after such person shall be apprehended or taken Wingate in abridging this Clause tit Crowne numb 80. clearly mistakes the meaning of it For he saith that a Popish Recusant whose estate is under value must make the submission prescribed by this Act within three months next after his arrival at his place of aboad which is a complicated Error For he quite leaves out him who is to repair to the place where he was born or his Father or Mother dwels He makes the party liable to such submission before he becomes an offender by not repairing or not presenting himself and giving in his true name or travelling above five miles He speaks nothing of his being
137. 3 H. 6. c. 3. of the Kings Customs 70. 184. 23 H. 6. c. 10. of Sheriffs 86. 3 H. 7. c. 4. of Fraudulent deeds 87. 3 H. 7. c. 7. of the Kings Customs 70. 4 H. 7. c. 20. of Actions popular 79. 21 H. 8. c. 13. of Pluralities and Non-residence 22 23. 82. 85. 233. 247. 23 H. 8. c. 4. of Brewers 82 85. 24 H. 8. c. 8. of Obligations to the Kings use 182. 25 H. 8. c. 19. of Delegates 7. 26 H. 8. c. 1. of the Kings Supremacy revived 2. 26 H. 8. c. 13. of Treason 152. 27 H. 8. c. 10. of Jointures 213 214. 215. 221 222. 32 H. 8. c. 1. of Wills 171. 32 H. 8. c. 30. of Jeofailes 73. 33 H. 8. c. 9. of unlawful Games 83. 33 H. 8. c. 39. of Debts to the King 150. 152 153. 182. 35 H. 8. c. 2. of Trial of Treasons 92. 188. 35 H 8. c. 3. of the Kings Supremacy revived 2. 35 H. 8. c. 17. of Woods 83. 37 H. 8. c. 9. of Usury 73. 1 E. 6. c. 7. of Discontinuance of Suits 81. 2 3 E. 6. c. 2. of Soldiers 188. 2 3 E. 6. c. 13. of Tythes 13. 5 E. 6. c. 1. for Uniformity of Common Prayer revived 19 20. 5 E. 6. c. 4. of drawing weapons in the Church 53. 5 E. 6. c. 7. of buying Wools 77. 5 E. 6. c. 11. of Treason 152. 5 E. 6. c. 14. of Forestallers Ingrossers and Regrators 83. 7 E. 6. c. 5. of selling Wines 83 85. 1 Mar. c. 2. of Repeal repealed in part 19. 1 2 Ph. Mar. c. 8. restoring the Popes usurped Authority repealed except touching Praemunire 1. 2. 15. 1 2 Ph. Mar. c. 10. of Trial of Treasons 92. 4 5 Ph. Mar. c. 5. of Woollen Cloaths 82. 5 Eliz. c. 4. of Trades and Apprentices 83. 5 Eliz. c. 9. of Perjury 67. 126. 5 Eliz. c. 14. of Forgery 258. 13 El. c. 5. of Fraudulent deeds 87. 13 Eliz. c. 12. of Reading the Articles 22 23. 233. 18 Eliz. c. 5. of Informers 76. 78. 82. 85. 18 Eliz. c. 14. of Jeofailes 73. 29 Eliz. c. 5. of Suits on Poenal Laws 75. 31 Eliz. c. 5. of Informers 60. 73 74. 121. 160. 31 Eliz. c. 6. of Simony 229. 31 El. c. 10. of Suits on poenal Laws 75. 35 Eliz. c. 6. of Buildings 131. 35 El. c. 14. of General Pardon 108. 43 Eliz. c. 2. of the Poor 118. 1 Jac. c. 11. of having two Wives living 188. 1 Jac. c. 27. for Preservation of Game 249. 7 Jac. c. 11. for Preservation of Game 249. 21 Jac. c. 4. of Informers 83 84 85. 21 Jac. c. 13. of Jeofailes 73. 14 Car. 2. of Uniformity 21. 64 65. Subjection Subject See Natural King Obedience Kings Subjects who 185. Subject of this Realm who intended 189 190. Local Subject who 189. Natural Subject who 185. 190. Natural Subjection is not local 186. 190. Where a man born out of the Kings Dominions yet may be his natural Subject 186. Submission see Conformity Successors see King Suit see Recusants Sunday An Information may be exhibited on a Sunday 78. Superstition Superstitious things brought into the Realm see Agnus Dei. Supremacy See King Oath of Supremacy Sureties Where to be taken 60. 181 182. Where not to be required or taken 82. 175. Where Popish Recusants convict cannot be Sureties 64. Suspition See Seminary A bare suspition is not sufficient Justification 247 248. Suspition not traversable but the cause of it 248. By whom to be tried and determined 248. Tail see Forfeiture Tenant by Courtesie Where a man is disabled to be Tenant by the Courtesie 220. Tender see Oaths Tenement Quid 255. Terme When the Term is open 37. When full Term 37. Test see Transubstantiation Testament see Probate Time See Discovery The several times limited for prosecution 13 14 15. 29 30. 65. 73 74 75. 121 122. 160. 189. No time limited in case of Treason 65. Tythes see Plea Town-Clerk see Recusants Tradesmen see Recusants Transubstantiation Who shall take and subscribe the Test or Declaration against Transubstantiation and the penalty if they neglect so to do 265 266. Treason See Alien Time Trial. Vniversity High Treason 13. 36. 42. 45. 50. 57 58. 90. 92. 184 185 186. Forfeiture for High Treason 152. Where the refusal of the Oath of Supremacy upon the second tender is not Treason 45. Indicting a man for High Treason where actionable 58. Trées Trees cut down not seizable for Recusancy 168 169. Trial. See Péers Where he that refuses the Oath of Supremacy shall be tried 41. Where an offender shall be tried in the County where he is imprisoned 188. Serving or going to serve a forraign Prince c. contrary to 3 Jac. 4. in what County it shall be tried 194. Where the Trial shall be in the County where part of the offence happened 194. Treason done in Ireland may be tried in England 92 93. Where Treason committed out of the Realm cannot be tried upon the Statute of 35 H. 8. 2. 188. Suspition shall be tried by the Justices 248. The Ecclesiastical Court cannot try the limits or bounds of Parishes 28. Offence where not triable 139 140. Trust Lease to a Recusant in Trust whether seizable for Recusancy 169. Whether a convicted Recusant be incapable of a Trust 169. Whether Lands conveyed in trust for a convicted Recusant may be seized 169. Value Clear yearly value 136. Where Lands and Goods shall be valued together and where not 136 137. Verdict See Covin Informations Vniversity See Advowson Covin Where the University of Cambridge or Oxford shall present or nominate to an Ecclesiastical living c. whereof a Popish Recusant convict is Patron and where not 227 228 229 230 231 232. What is thereby given them 229 230. Whom they may Present or Nominate and whom not 227. 233. Chancellor and Schollers where a good description of the University 229. They shall not Present unless the Recusant remained convict at the time of the Avoidance 230. Not necessary that he remain convict when they bring their Quare Impedit 230. What acts of the Recusant shall bar the University from presenting c. 230 231 232. Whether his being attainted of Treason Felony or Praemunire shall bar them 232 233. Void see Informations Vsher see Schoolmaster Vtlawry See Conformity A Term sold upon Utlawry shall be restored upon Reversal 179 180. Where upon Reversal of an Utlawry the Patron shall be restored to his Presentment and where not 180. Imprisonment by Covin shall not avoid an Utlawry 256. Wast See Guardian Recusants Warrant see Iustices of Peace Wast Where security must be given not to commit Wast in the Recusants Lands 173. Will see Probate Witness Where no Indictment or Arraignment without sufficient proof 16 17. 47 The Witnesses to be produced face to face at the parties Arraignment 17. A Popish Recusant convict is disabled to be a Witness 216. Women See Baron Feme Seas FINIS WHereas since the Expiration of the late Act for Printing many Persons do unjustly take liberty to Print the Copies of other Men to their great Damage and least we should be censured to be guilty of the like illegal and unjust Practise These are to satisfie all Persons Booksellers and others That the Statutes concerning RecusantS Printed in this Book were not done without the leave of the Proprietors first obtained and satisfaction to them given for the same John Wright Ric. Chiswell ERRATA Preface read concern Instead of Goal and Goal delivery read Gaol and Gaol delivery PAge 6. l. 4. r. C. p. 14. l. 20. r. Put. p. 19. l. 5. r. Whereas p 22. l. 41. r. Statutes p. 23. l. 30. r. until alter p. 24. l. 35. r. tent p. 25. l. 39. r. this p. 26. l. 7. r. him l. 34. r. 41. p. 30. l. 7. r. Assize p. 31. l. 30. r. Leppingwells p. 37. l. 37. r. the full l. 41. r. c. 193. p. 38. Margent r. Eliz. p. 41. l. 15. r. disallowed p. 60. l. 27. r. Plaintiff Qui tam c. p. 61. l. 10. r. or for p. 62. l. 28. r. two hundred and twenty pounds p. 67. l. 17. r. here given p. 69. l. 29. r. C. 138. p. 76. l. 24. r. Co. 11.65 p. 81. r. cap. 1. l. 36. r. Information c. p. 83. l. 35. r. before cited p. 85. l. 16. r. Keymer p. 86. l. 19. r. Manwood p. 87. Margent r. Sect. 12. p. 89. l. 3. r. disobedient p. 90. Margent r. Sect. 3. p. 99. Margent r. Sect. 1. p. 100. Margent r. 23 Eliz. l. 38. r. Reports p. 103. l. 32. r. 20 l. p. 104. l. 5. r. without Proclamation p. 107. l. 9. r. and that p. 125. r. Stat. 35 Eliz. p. 127. l. 3. r. places p. 130. l. 6. r. conclusion p. 131. Margent r. Sect. 3. p. 153. Margent r. Sect. 5. p. 160. l. 5. r. afterwards p. 172. l. 30. r. Sect. 20. p. 175. l. 20. dele Bishop or l. 24. r. that case p. 178. l. 17. r. in my Conscience p. 183. l. 31. r. are p. 184. l. 38. r. of p. 188. l. 19. r. of Trial. p. 190. l. 4. r. on p. 196. l. 12. r. other person p. 207. l. 34. r. on such l. 35. r. talis p. 208. l. 4. r. this recital p. 222. Margent r. Sect. 16. p. 223. l. 33. r. of disability p. 229. l. 43. r. Provisors p. 260. r. 261. In the Table title Seminary r. By whom examinable and To what questions
but forbear the same contrary to the tenor of a Statute made in the first year of the Reign of the said late Quéen for Vniformity of Common Prayer and being thereof lawfully convicted should forfeit to the said Quéen for every month after the end of the said Session of Parliament which he or she should so forbear twenty pounds of lawful English money as in and by the said Act of Parliament more at large appeareth And whereas afterward by another Act of Parliament of the said Quéen It was further Enacted by the Authority of the said Parliament amongst other things how and when the said payments of the said 20 l. should be made and that if default should be made in any part of any payment of the said twenty pounds contrary to the form in the said last specified Statute limited that then and so often the said Quéen should and might by Process out of her Highness Exchequer take seize and enjoy all the Goods and two parts as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms of such Offender as of all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid by the true meaning of the said Act of Parliament leaving the third part only of the same Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms to and for the maintenance and relief of the same Offender his Wife Children and Family as in and by the last specified Statute more at large also may appear Now forasmuch as the said penalty of twenty pounds monthly is a greater burden unto men of small living then unto such as are of better ability and do refuse to come unto Divine Service as aforesaid who rather then they will have two parts of their Lands to be seized will be ready always to pay the said twenty pounds according to the limitation of the said Statutes and yet retain the residue of their livings and Inheritance in their own hands being of great yearly value which they do for the most part imploy as experience hath taught to the maintenance of Superstition and Popish Religion and to the relief of Iesuits Seminaries Popish Priests and other dangerous persons to the State Therefore to the intent that hereafter the penalty for not repairing to Divine Service might be inflicted in better proportion upon men of great ability Be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament The King may refuse 20 l. a month and take two parts of a Recusants Lands That the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall from and after the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel next coming after the end of this Session of Parliament have full power and liberty to refuse the penalty of twenty pounds a month though it be tendred ready to be paid according to the Law and thereupon to seize and take to his own use and the uses intents and purposes hereafter limited two parts in threé to be divided as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms that at the time of such seizure shall be or afterward shall come to any the said Offenders in not coming to Church or any other to his or her use or in trust for him or her or at his or her disposition or whereby or wherewith or in consideration whereof such Offender or his Family or any of them shall be relieved maintained or kept as of all other Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in any wise or at any time liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid and the same to retain to his own and other uses intents and purposes hereafter in this Act appointed till every such Offender shall conform him or her self respectively as aforesaid in lieu and full recompence of the twenty pounds monthly that during his such seizure and retainer shall incur any thing in the said Statutes or any of them or any other Statute to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding saving to our Soveraign Lord the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors and all and every person and persons Saving the Right of others bodies politick and corporate their Heirs and Successors other then the said Offender his or her Heirs and all claiming to his or their use or in trust for him or them or at his or their will or disposition all and all manner of Leases Rents Conditions and other Rights and Titles whatsoever had made and done bona fide and without fraud and covin before such seizure Though it be tendred or ready to be paid By this Branch of the Act a new advantage is given to the King against the Recusant For whereas by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. the convicted Recusant had his Election to pay the King twenty pounds per month and so prevent the seizure of the two third parts of his Lands now by this Statute that Election is taken away Election taken from the Recusant and given to the King and the choice is given to the King whether he will accept of the twenty pounds per month or refuse it and seize two third parts of the Recusants Lands in lieu thereof and if the King chooses the Lands the tender of the twenty pounds per month at the Exchequer will not save the seizure but the King shall enjoy the Lands notwithstanding Jones 24 25. Standen versus University of Oxford Hereditaments An Advowson is an Hereditament Hereditament Advowson and passes by that word 18 Eliz. Dyer 351. and is devisable by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 1. of Wills as an Hereditament and if it be an Advowson in gross yet it may be seized by the King by force of this Act as part of his two parts of the Recusants Hereditaments Jones 23 24. Standen versus University of Oxford For 't is a thing valuable and shall be Assets and is extendable for the Kings Debt and upon a Writ of right of an Advowson there shall be a Recovery in value scil for every mark twelve pence Fitzh Recovery in value 9. 11. Hobart 304. London versus the Chapter of Southwell Co. 1. Inst 374. Britton 185. In the late Additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 23. 't is said That the King may refuse the twenty pounds per month and take to two parts of the Recusants Lands and all the Goods c. And an Advowson is without that Clause and the said Case of Standen and the University of Oxon is there cited for Authority But this is a mistake as to the Clause it self and as to the point in Law and the Authority brought for it For in truth there is no such Clause in this Statute nor in any other that the King upon refusal of the twenty pounds per month should take the Recusants Goods For the seizure of the Goods is given where the Offender fails of payment of the twenty pounds per month Where a Recusants Goods cannot be seized but not