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A81194 A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein. Methodically digested under their proper heads. By H.C. sometime of the Inner Temple. Curson, H. (Henry) 1699 (1699) Wing C7686A; ESTC R231895 237,927 672

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That their Proceedings Judgments and Executions shall remain good and available in Law without any Redress to be had by Suit in any other Court as you may see more at large by the Statute and Exposition thereof in Coke's Fourth Institutes And the other is concerning Colledges Hospitals or Almshouses for Charitable and Lawful purposes and Uses BY the Statute of 39 Eliz. cap. 6. The Lord Chancellor or Chancellor for the Dutchy of Lancaster for Lands in that County may award Commissions to the Bishop of the Diocess and his Chancellor and other persons of good and sound Behaviour To enquire of all Colledges Hospitals and other places Founded or Ordained for the Charitable relief of Poor Aged and Impotent people Maimed Soldiers Schools of Learning Orphans or for such other good charitable and lawful Purposes and Intents And of all Lands c. given or appointed for those uses As also for Reparations of all High-ways Bridges and Sea-Banks for Maintenance of Free-Schools and Poor Scholars and of Orphans and Fatherless Children and such like good and lawful Charitable uses and to enquire of the Abuses Misdemeanors Mis-employments Falsities defrauding the Trusts Alienations Misgovernments c. And to set down such Orders Judgments and Decrees that the same may be observed in full ample and most liberal sort c. Which Orders Judgments and Decrees not being contrary to the Orders or Decrees of the Donors shall be firm and good and are to be certified by the Commissioners into the Chancery of England or of the County Palatine of Lancaster c. And it is to be observed that when any Act of Parliament doth authorize the Lord Chancellor or Keeper to make a Commission under the Great Seal he may do it without further Warrant the King being party to the Act of Parliament But this Statute was afterwards Repealed by 43 Eliz. 4. Saving for the Excution of Orders and Decrees before made by Commissioners according to the Statute And by the Statute of 43 Eliz. 4. It shall be lawful for the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper for the time being and for the Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster within that Precinct to Award Commissions into any part of the Realm respectively to the Bishop there and his Chancellor if any at that time and to other Persons of Good Behaviour Authorizing Four or more of them to Inquire as well by the Oaths of Twelve or more Lawful Men as otherwise of all Grants Gifts Augmentations Limitations and Appointments and of all Abuses and Misemployments of all Land Tenements and Hereditaments and of all Goods and Chattels given limitted or appointed to Charitable uses c. See the Statute at large and 21 Jac. 1. cap. 1. The Court of Justices of Gaol-Delivery BY the Law Ne homines diu detineantur in Prisona but that they may receive Plenam celerem Justitiam The Commission of Gaol-Delivery was Instituted 4 E. 3. and by this Commission Goals ought to be delivered Thrice in the year and oftner if need be and the Authority given thereby consisteth in these few Words Constituimus vos Justiciarios nostros ad Gaolam nostram Castri nostri de C. de Prisonibus in ea existentibus hac vice deliberand ' And these Justices may arraign any man in that Goal upon any Indictment for Felony Trespass c. before Just●ces of Peace though not found before themselves which Justices of Oyer and Terminer cannot do and they may take a Pannel of a Jury Return'd by the Sheriff without making any Precept to him which Justices of Oyer and Terminer may not To these Justices Commissions of Association Writs of Admittance and Si non omnes like as to Justices of Oyer and Terminer are directed and other Authorities Jurisdictions and Priviledges they have of which you may Read at large Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 30. By the Statute of 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 By the Statute of 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 Kings-Bench it shall be as for the most part of 100 years last past hath been wont to be done By the Statute of 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 Carlisle and not elsewhere according to the Statute of 6 R. 2 5. By Stas de Finibus levatis cap. 3.27 E. 1. Justices of Assize presently after the Assizes taken shall deliver the Gaols but if one of them be a Clerk the other that is Lay associating unto him one of the most discreet Knights of the County shall deliver the Gaols The Justices shall then also Enquire Whether Sheriffs or any other have let out by Plevin any Prisoners not pleviable or have offended in any thing against the Statute of Westm 2.13 E. 1. and shall punish them according to the force of the said Statute By the Statute of 2 E. 3 2. Justices of Gaol-delivery and Oyer and Terminer procured by Great Men shall not be made against the Form of the Statute of 27 E. 1. cap. 3. And Assizes Attaints and Certifications shall be hereafter taken before Justices commonly assigned being good and lawful Men and having knowledge in the Law according to the Statute of Westm. 2.29 Ed. 1. By the Statute of 4. E. 3.2 good and discreet Persons shall be assigned in all Shires of England to take Assizes Juries and Certifications and to deliver the Gaols Three times in the year at least Justices of Gaol-delivery shall have power to Deliver the Gaols of those that stand Indicted before the Kee●ers of the Peace which Keepers shalt send those Indictments before the Justices of Gaol-delivery who shall have power to Enquire of and punish Sheriffs Gaolers and others which do any thing against this Act. Judges ought not to Deliver their Opinions before-hand of any Criminal Case tha● may come before them Judicially For how can they ●e indifferent who have delivered their Opinions before hand wi●hout hearing of the party Co. 3 Inst 29. By the Statute of 19 H. 7.10 the Sheriff of every County shall have the keeping of the Common Gaol there except such as are held by Inheritance or Succession Also all Letters Patents of the keeping of Gaols for Life or Years are annulled and void Howbeit neither the Kings-Bench nor Marshalsea sh●●l be in the custody of any Sheriff a●d the Patents of Edward Courtney Earl of Devon and John Morgan for Keeping of Prisons are excepted By the Statute of 6 Hen. 8.6 the Justices of the King 's Bench have power by their Discretions to Remand as well the Bodies of Felons as their Indictments
Priviledges and Franchises are taken from them and a Guardian set over them as was done by Hen. the Third and Ed. the First He is usually Knighted by the King before the end of his Mayoralty if he had not that Honour before His and the Sheriffs Tables are open to all comers and for his Grandeur is allowed● 1000 l. for his Sword-bearers Table His Domestick attendance is very Honourable and hath Four Officers reputed Esquires by their places viz. The Sword-bearer Common Hunt who keepeth a Kennel of Hounds Common Cryer and the Water Bailiff There is also the Coroner Three Serjeant Carvers Three Serjeants of the Chamber A Serjeant of the Channel Four Yeomen of the Water-side One under Water Bailiff Two Yeomen of the Chamber Three Meat weighers Two Yeomen of the Wood-wharfs most of which have their Servants allowed them and have Liveries for themselves Upon the Death or Demise of the King he is said to be the Prime Person of England On the day of the Kings Coronation he claims to be chief Butler and to bear the Kings Cup amongst the Highest Nobles of the Kingdom His Authority reaches not only over all the City but part of the Suburbs and on the River of Thames Eastward as far as Yendale or Yenleete and Westward as far as Colney Ditch above Stanes Bridge and keeps several Courts in the Counties adjacent to the Thames for Conservation of the River and Punishment of Offenders therein And there are Two Sheriffs of London who are also Sheriffs of the County of Middlesex and are Annually chosen by the Citizens from among themselves in the Guild-hall upon Midsumer day approved by the King and then upon Michaelmas Eve Sworn and presented to the Barons of the Exchequer to be allowed by the Barons and Sworn If the Persons so chosen refuse to hold they incur a Penalty unless they will make Solemn Oath they are not worth 10000 l. Twenty six Aldermen Preside over the 26 Wards of the City When any of these die The Lord Mayor and Aldermen chuse another out of the most substantial Men of the City and if any so chosen refuse to hold he is commonly fined 500 l. All the Aldermen who have been Lord Mayor and the Three eldest who have not yet arrived to that Honour are by their Charter Justices of Peace And this City of London is Camera Regis Reipublicae Cor totius Angliae Epitome To the Lord Mayor and the City of London belong divers Courts of Judicature amongst which the chief is The Court of Hustings DOmus Causarum Hus being in the Saxon Tongue House and Dhing Things It is the Highest Court of London And is holden before the Lord Mayor and Sheriff or now in the Sheriffs absence Six Aldermen which sit in Court there every Tuesday altho' that it may not seem to Vary from the Command of St. Edward the Confessor that it should be holden every Monday it is still written to be holden on the Monday And hath Cognizance of all Pleas Real mixt and Personal For the Rule in the Register is Quodlibet breve quod tangit Liberum Tenementum in London dirigitur Majori sive Custodi Vicecomitibus Et ●lia Brevia tantum Vicecomitibus By Fleta lib. 28 48. It appears that the name or Court is not appropriated to London only for the King hath his Court in Civitatibus Burgis Locis Exemptis sicut in Hustingis London Winton Lincoln Eborum apud Shepway ubi Barones Cives Recordum habent c. One Week the Judges sit upon Pleas Real The next upon Actions mixt or of any other nature So that all Lands Tenements Rents and Services within London and the Liberties and Suburbs thereof are Pleadable at Guild-Hall in two Hustings one called Husting de placito Terrae and the other Husting Commun ' Placitorum And if a Man be impleaded in the Common Pleas of Lands in London The Tenant shall say the Lands are in London and time out of mind c. every one hath been impleaded for them within the City in the Hustings But since Real Actions have grown out of use by trying Titles by Ejection● firmae The ancient Customs and Practise of this Court are much declined The Sheriffs Court in London THe Two Sheriffs keep each of them a Court of Record within the City by Prescription or Custom where they hold Plea of all personal Actions and have belonging to these Courts Two Prisons called Compters the one in Wood-street The other in the Poultry They hold Two Court-days each in every Week That for Wood-street on Wednesdays and Fridays And that for the Poultry Compter on Thursdays and Saturdays In Plaint of Debt the Custom is the Sheriffs Ore Tenus send to the Serjeants to Summon or Attach the Defendant without Warrant and upon Nihil Returned within the City the Serjeants by Commandment from the Sheriff have used to Attach and Arrest the Defendant to have his Body at the next Court before the Sheriff at the Guild-Hall They certifie their Records in that manner but the usual practise is to enter an Action in the Office for that purpose at one of the Compters which Action must be carefully entred for it is the Original of that Court by which you declare and from which there can be no variance And when an Action is entred the Serjeant may Arrest the Defendant and bring him into Custody until he find Bail to answer the Condemnation which Bail is taken by one of the Clerk Sitters at the Compter who constantly attend The Plaintiff ought to declare the first Court after the Defendant is Arrested although further time is usually given Ex gratia Curiae per mot ' But if the Plaintiff have no Attorney the first Court a Non-suit may be had by the Defendant If the Defendant be a Freeman he hath four defaults But they are allowable only in Debt Accompt or Covenant broken and not otherwise If the Defendant be in the Compter he is brought to the Bar by a Duci facias which is but the Sheriffs Mandate made by the Clerk of the Papers They have in each Court a Steward or Judge who is Learned in the Laws and besides their particular Customs their Proceedings are generally according to the Common Law at Westminster But of their particular practise Vide Compleat Sollicitor and others There is also in London a Court of Chancery or Equity held before the Lord Mayor which is commonly called The Court of Conscience WHerein they do proceed by English Bill Answer Replication and Rejoynder much like the Proceedings in the High Court of Chancery And the Custom of London is when a Man is Impleaded before the Sheriff The Mayor may send for the Parties and for the Record upon Suggestion of the Defendant and Examin the Parties upon the Pleas and if it be found upon Examination that the Plaintiff is satisfied The Mayor may award the Plaintiff shall be Barred But by no Custom he
And sometimes the Kings of England have called the Nobles of Ireland to come to the Parliaments of England Coke's 4 Inst 350. And by Special Words the Parliaments of England may bind the Subjects of Ireland Co. 4 Inst ibid. And seeing good Acts of Parliament made in England since the Reign of King John extended not to Ireland unless it were especially named or by General Words included a Right profitable Act was made at a Parliament holden in Ireland Anno 10 Hen. 7. before Sir Edward Poynings then Deputy or Pro-Rex in Ireland and thereupon called Poyning's Law That all Statutes late made in England concerning the publick Weal should be accepted used and executed in Ireland Co. 4 Inst. 351. In what manner a Parliament is to be holden in Ireland and how Bills offered to the Parliament there shall be first Transmitted hither under the Great Seal of that Kingdom and having received Approbation here shall be returned hither to be preferr'd to the Parliament and several Questions and Doubts Resolved concerning this matter Vide Co. 4 Inst 353. By the Statute of 3 Hen. 2. all Persons having Lands Tenements or Offices Ecclesiastical or Temporal shall Reside upon the same and those that have Castles must there reside and repair and fortifie them And if they Depart they must appoint some able to supply their room or the Governour may dispose half their Living to such Defence Co. 4 Inst 356. At a Synod holden by St. Patrick in Ireland it was unanimously agreed That Irish Priests should have Wives Co. 4 Inst 356. There is an Ancient Record concerning Ireland necessary to be Explained In these Words REX Thesaurario Hiberniae Solutem Cum Edwardus primogenitus noster terram Hiberniae habeat teneat de dono nostro cum omnibus pertinentiis suis adeo libere quiete sicut eam in manu nostra teneremus per quod charissima filia nostra Alianora Consors dicti filij nostri Aurum suum tam de finibus quam sponte Oblatis in terra Hiberniae habere Debet sicut charissima Consors nostra Alianora Regina Angliae Aurum suum habet de eisdem in Regno nostro Angliae Vobis mandamus c. quatenus praefat ' Consorti filij nostri praedicti Aurum praedictum de finibus sponte oblatis etiam de quibuscunque aliis finibus praedictis habere facias in forma praedicta Et hoc c. In cujus c. Teste Rege 29 die Februarij Anno 52 Hen. 3. By this Record first it appeareth that as the Law was taken at that Day by Gift of King Henry the Third his Eldest Son Prince Edward was Lord of the Dominion and Lordship of Ireland Secondly That albeit the Wife of Prince Edward was not Queen in Name but had the Effect of it therefore she should have a Duty called Aurum Reginae as well as the Queen of England being but Lady in Ireland For albeit the Kings of Ireland were until the Statute of 33 Hen. 8. styled by the Name of Lords of Ireland yet was he Supremus and absolutè Dominus and had Royal Dominion and Authority and that his Consort was in rei veritate Regina or else she could not have had Aurum Reginae Albeit this Royal Dominion and Land of Ireland was of ancient time permitted to be granted De facto to the King's Sons before-mentioned yet by the Law the King by his Letters Patent could not grant so Royal a Member of his Imperial style to any no more than he could do of the Kingdom of England Co. 4 Inst 357. What was the Duty of Aurum Reginae and when due Vide 4. Coke's Inst 358. At a Parliament holden in Ireland by Howel Duke of Clarence Lieutenant there Anno 40 Edw. 3. called The Statute of Kilkenny The Brehon Law which was the Irish Judges Law is no Law but a Lewd Custom crept in of later times and never was the Law of the Ancient Britains from whom they are descended Co. 4 Inst 358. The Pro-Rex there hath been sometime called Custos Warden Lieutenant Chief Justice Deputy of Ireland Coke's 4 Inst ibid. If an Archbishoprick or Bishoprick in Ireland be void then the Chapter shall Sue to the King in England to go to Election and after Election made they ought upon Certificate thereof made to the King to obtain his Royal Assent to this Election and thereupon a Writ shall be directed out of the Chancery here to the Chief Justice of Ireland or his Lieutenant rehearsing all this matter and commanding him to take Fealty of the Bishop and to restore him to his Temporalties But now the Course is in Ireland to make such Writs there in the Name of the King But the King Names the Archbishops and Bishops there as he doth in England and then the Chapter chuse him whom the King Names and thereupon Writs are made of Course Coke's 4. Institutes 359. And whereas some have Divided this Kingdom into the English Pale and Wild Irish let Oblivion bury it for now all are reduced to Obedience and civil Behaviour● So as a Man may justly say of the Old Britains Sunt in Bello fortes in Pace fideles And whereas some have said the Crown of England had the Country of Ireland by Donation from the Pope the following Record will manifest the Truth therein Altitonantis Dei largiflua Clementia qui est Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium ego Edgarus Anglorum Basileus omniumque rerum Insularum Oceani qui Britanniam circumjacent cunctarumque Nationum quae infra eam includuntur Imperator Dominus gratias ago ipsi Deo Omnipotenti Regi meo qui meum imperium sic ampliavit exaltavit super regnum patrum meorum Qui licet Monarchiam Totius Angliae adepti sunt à tempore Athelstani qui primus Regum Anglorum omnes Nationes quae Britanniam incolunt sibi armis subegit nullus tamen eorum ultra fines Imperium suum Dilatare aggressus est Mihi tamen concessit propitia Divinitas cum Anglorum imperio omnia regna Insularum Oceani cum suis ferotissimis Regibus usque Norvegiam maximamque partem Hiberniae cum sua Nobilissima Civitate de Dublina Anglorum regno Subjugare quos etiam omnes meis imperiis colla subdere Dei favente gratia Coegi Quapropter ego Christi gloriam laudem in regno meo exaltar● ejus servicium amplificare devotus deposui Et per meos fideles fautores Dunstanum viz. Archiepiscopum Ayelyolanum ac Oswaldum Archiepiscopos quos mihi patres spirituales consiliatores eligi magna ex parte disposui c. Facta sunt haec Anno Domini 964 Indictione 8. Regni vero Edgari Anglorum Regis 6 in Regia urbe quae ab incolis Ocleayeceastrie nominatur in natale Domini festivitate Sanctorum Innocentium feria 4 c. ✚ Ego Edgar Basileus Anglorum Imperator Regum gentium cum consensu principrim
Certificate of Tenths which ought to have been there inserted That Court shall have power to enter it into the said Original Record to the end it may from thenceforth be chargable therewith By Stat. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 47. The Bishop of Norwich and his Successors shall Collect the Tenths of all Spiritual Promotions within his Diocess notwithstanding the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. not Printed which did Exempt them from the Collection thereof By Stat. 34 and 35. Hen. 8. cap. 17. The Ten●hs and Pensions reserved upon the Patents of the Five new Bishops of Chester Gloucester Peterborough Bristol and Oxford shall be paid in the Court of the First fruits and Tenths and not elsewhere But note That the Court was afterward annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliament and Patents of Hen. 8. and Queen Mary By Stat. 2 and 3 Ed. 6. cap. 20. The penalty for default of Payments of Tenths shall be the Forfeiture of that only Benefice out of which the same is due notwithstanding the Statute of 26 Hen. 8. cap. 3. By Stat. 7. Ed. 6. cap. 4. The Collectors of Tenths shall before Midsummer next give good Security to save the Bishop harmless against the King The Bishop shall have the last day of May for the payment of Tenths and for making Certificates for such as have refused to pay them notwithstanding the Statute of 26 Hen. 8. cap. 3. If a Benefice be void so that no Tenth can be there received the Bishop upon Certificate shall be discharged thereof and then the King shall have it levied upon the Glebe by way of Seisure The Patent of a Collector of Tenths shall be good no longer than during the continuance of the Grantor in the See By Stat. 1 Eliz. cap. 4. The First-fruits and Tenths restored to the Crown the Statutes prescribing the Grant and Order of them recontinued The Statute of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary by which they were taken away repealed and they shall from henceforth be within the Survey of the Court of Exchequer All Advowsons of Vicaridges incident to any of the Queens Impropriations shall be re-setled in her notwithstanding any Act done by Cardinal Pool or Grant made by Queen Mary saving unto all Persons except such unto whom such Grants have been made their Right and Interest into or out of such Impropriations Pensions and all other yearly Payments shall be paid as before the Act of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary All Persons in Arrear for those Duties shall not be answerable for them to the Queen If an Incumbent continue in the Benefice half a year after the last avoidance and die or be legally ousted before the end of the year He his Executors Administrators or Sureties shall only pay the Fourth part of the First fruits if he live out the year and die or be ousted within Six Months after the year only half the First-fruits shall be paid And if he live out the year and half and die or be ousted within one year only the quarter thereof shall be paid Discharge of First-fruits and Tenths heretofore granted by any of the Queens Predecessors to the Universities or the Colleges in them or to those of Eaton and Winchester shall remain good notwithstanding this Act Also the Dean and Canons of Windsor shall be from henceforth discharged thereof All Grants of Impropriations belonging to the Arch-deaconry of Wells shall remain good notwithstanding this Act yet the said Arch-deaconry and all Spiritual Promotions Assigned to it shall from hence forth pay First-fruits and Tenths All Impropriations and other Profits or Emoluments Ecclesiastical which were formerly within the Survey of the Dutchy Court of Lancaster shall be recontinued notwithstanding this Act or that of 2 and 3 Philip and Mary The Revenues of Hospitals and Schools shall not be charged with the Payment of First fruits or Tenths notwithstanding this Act. By Stat. 28 Hen. 8. cap. 11. The year in which the First-fruits shall be paid to the King shall begin immediately after the avoidance or vacation of the Benefice In the time of Hen. 8. There were 3 new Courts erected amongst others viz. Those of the Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths and General Surveyors But these were afterwards annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliament and Letters Patents of Hen. 8. and Queen Mary Nevertheless in some of these Acts there remains yet somewhat in force As you may see in the Statutes concerning Courts By Stat. 1 Mary Parl. 2.10 The Queen may by her Letters Patents Alter Dissolve or Reduce into one or more the Courts of Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths Wards Surveyors and the Dutchy or may annex any of them together or unto any other Court of Record or erect of the same any other new Court or Courts Provided That nothing in the said Letters Patent to be contained shall charge the Subject otherwise than as he ought to have been charged before the Second day of this Parliament and that the Officers of the said Courts shall not hold Plea but only where the Queen is party against any of her Subjects Provided also That if the Queen shall annex any of the said Courts to the Exchequer all things within the Survey of the said Court or Courts so annexed shall be ordered the Exchequer way saving to all persons their Offices Rents Annuities and Fees to be paid out of any of the Queens Courts where shall be sufficient Revenue to answer the same Vide le Statute To the Court of Ancient Demesne IN the Book of Doomes-day it self it appeareth that it was made in the time of the Conquerour And as Tenants in Ancient Demesne are careful to preserve their Priviledges so the Lord is as careful to preserve his Seigniority and the Tenure of his Tenancy in Ancient Demesne And therefore if the Tenant Levy a Fine or suffer a Recovery in the Court of Common Pleas c. whereby for a time the Land is become Frankfee the Lord by a Writ of Disceit may not only restore himself to his true Seigniority but utterly avoid the Fine and restore his Tenant against the Recovery and his own Fine to the Land again in his former Estate and the Reason thereof is for that the Recovery or Fine was not suffered or Levied before a Competent Judge in the Right Court which ought to have been in the Court of Ancient Demesne And therefore after the Reversal in the Writ of Disceit it is now Tanquam coram non Judice and the Parties to the Fine or Recovery shall be Fined and Imprisoned pro deceptione Curia But if in a Writ of Right Close in Ancient Demesne the Demandant maketh his Protestation to Sue in the nature of Assize of Mortdancester the Tenant Pleads in Abatement of the Writ and the Writ by Judgment is abated the Demandant brings a Writ of false Judgment wherein the Writ is affirmed to be good the Court of Common Pleas shall proceed as the inferiour Court should have done and
altho' that Judgment be given to recover the Land in the Common Pleas yet the Land is not Frank-see but remains Ancient Demesne because the beginning and foundation thereof was in Ancient Demesne They may Levy a Fine in Ancient Demesne which by Custom is said to be a Bar of an Estate Tail but certainly that will not hold If the Tenant remove the Plea for the cause mentioned in the Recordare he may come into the Kings Court and Assign other Cause And Twenty if he hath to maintain the Jurisdiction of the Kings Court Coke's 4 Inst cap. 58. All those Manors which were in the Hands of St. Edw. the Confessor were caused to be Written in Doomes-day Book Sub Titulo Regis and all the Lands holden of the said Manors are held by Tenure of Ancient Demesne And the Tenants shall not be Impleaded out of the said Manors and if they be they may shew the Matter and abate the Writ But if they Answer to the Writ and Judgment be given then the Lands become Frank-fee for ever And Tenants in Ancient Demesne which held their Lands by Soccage That is by Service with the Plow are called Sockmans That is Tenants or Men that hold by Service of the Plow or Plowmen for Sock signifies a Plow Terms del Ley. All the Lands that are in the Kings Hands are Frank-fee and Pleadable at the Common Law F. N. B. 35. The Manor it self and the Demesne Lands within the Manor is Pleadable at Common Law and a Man ought to Sue his Action for the Manor and for the Lands which are Parcel of the Manor at the Common Law and in the Common Pleas F. N. B. 24. But if a Man Sue for Lands holden of the Manor in the Hands of a Free Tenant he ought to Sue the Writ of Droit Close directed to the Lord of the Manor and there he shall make his Protestation to Sue in the same Court the same Writ in the nature of what Writ he will Declare And if false Judgment be given the Tenant or Demandant may Sue a Writ of false Judgment F. N. B. 24. But he who holdeth in Ancient Demesne by Copy of Court Roll at the Will of the Lord who is called Tenant by base Tenure and anciently Tenure in Villenage if he be ousted of his Lands he shall not have this Writ of Droit Close but ought to Sue by Bill in the Court of the Lord of the Manor and shall make Protestation to Sue there in nature of what Writ he will but he shall not have a Writ of false Judgment or other Remedy but to Sue to the Lord by way of Petition F. N. B. fo 26 27. And when the Writ of Droit Glose cometh to the Lord or his Bailiffs he ought to hold a Court and if he will not hold it The Demandant may Sue a Writ out of Chancery commanding him to hold it and thereupon an Attachment directed to the Bailiff returnable in the Kings Bench or Common-Pleas whereupon he shall recover Damages or the like against the Bailiff And if the Lord oust his Tenant that holds in Fee he may have a Writ of Droit Close or an Assize or other Writ at Common Law against the Lord for those Lands F. N. B. 26. No Lands are Ancient Demesne but Lands holden in Soccage And By this Tenure is intended that the Tenants shall do the Service of the Plow● viz. To Plow and Till the Lords Lands to Mow the Lords Meadows and such like Services as are for the maintaining of the Kings Sustenance or Victuals and his Subjects And for such Services the Tenants have divers Liberties and Priviledges in Law as to be quit of Toll and Taxes if not charged upon Ancient Demesne To be free from Charges of Knights of Parliament and not to be put on Enquests out of their Manors unless they have other Lands c. And if the Lord Distrein for other Service or Customs than they are used to do they may have a Monstraverunt F. N. B. fo 30 31. The Lord shall not answer to Attachment upon the Monstraverunt before the Court be certified by the Treasurer and Chamberlain of the Exchequer whether the Land be Ancient Demesne F. N. B. 35. The Lord shall have a Writ of Disceit against him who levieth a Fine of Demesne Lands and he who is Tenant shall avoid the Fine But if he Release to him in Possession it shall bind F. N. B. 216. Lands in Ancient Demesne may be extended by the Statute de Mercatoribus 13 E. 1. Coke's 2 Inst 397. And upon Statute Staple And general Statutes extend to it Coke's 4 Inst 270. Fine in Ancient Demesne by Custom Bars an Estate Tail Coke's 2 Inst 207 270. The Jurisdiction extends not to personal Actions Coke's 2 Inst 224 270. The Demandant in a Writ of Droit Close cannot remove the Plea out of the Lords Court for any cause c. nor can the Tenant remove the Plea out of the Ancient Demesne if not for Causes which prove the Land to be Frank-fee and not Ancient Demesne And when the Court is removed by Recordare he ought to shew some Special matter to prove the Land to be Frank fee and not Ancient Demesne otherwise the Plea shall be sent back unto the Lords Court But to shew a Fine levied in the Kings Court of the same Land or a Recovery had upon a Praecipe quod Reddat is a good cause to prove the Land to be Frank-fee c. Tenants in Ancient Demesne may make Attorneys Coke's 2 Institutes 700. Ancient Demesne Tryable by Book of Doomes-day Coke's 4 Inst 270. In a Replevin Writ of Mesne Writ of Ward in Accompt against Guardian in Soccage Ancient Demesne is a good Plea for the Appearance and Common Intendment that the Realty doth come in Debate so in Accompt against a Bailiff For it is brought for the Issue and Profits of the Land which is Ancient Demesne which ought to be determined in the Court of Ancient Demesne And in Assize brought by Tenant by Elegit Ancient Demesne is a good Plea For the manner of Proceeding and Tryal See Coke's 5 Rep. 105. Alden's Case 105. If Ancient Demesne be pleaded of a Manor and denied it shall be Tryed by the Record of the Book of Doomes-day in the Exchequer But if Issue be taken that certain Acres are parcel of the Manor which is Ancient Demesne it shall be Tryed by Jury for it cannot be Tryed by the same Book Coke's 9 Rep. 31. Case of the Abbot of Strata Marcella If a Man Levy a Fine of Land in Ancient Demesne to another at Common Law now the Lord shall have a Writ of Disceit against him who levied the Fine and him who is Tenant and thereby he shall make void the Fine and the Conusor shall be restored to the Possession which he hath given by the Fine But if the Conusor after the Fine Release to the Conusee by his Deed being in Possession or by
his Deed confirm his Estate in the Land then the Conusee shall retain and have the Land notwithstanding the Fine be avoided Coke's 10 Rep. 50. Lampet's Case In a Praecipe if one plead That the Manor of D. is Ancient Demesne and the Land in Demand is parcel of the Manor and so Ancient Demesne The Demandant cannot say That the Land in Demand is not Ancient Demesne for the same is the conclusion upon the precedent proposition viz. The first That the Manor is Ancient Demesne The second That the Land in Demand is parcel of the Manor for Sequitur Conclusio super Praem●ssis and therefore cannot be denied Coke's 11 Rep. 10. Priddle and Napper's Case The like in Case of Tithes ibid. Neither the Lord of Ancient Demesne Nor of a Court Baron Nor the Sheriff in the County Court when the Plea is holden by Writ of Right Justicies Admeasurement c. are Judges but the Suitors who by the Common Law are the Judges of the Court Coke's 6 Rep. 12. Jentleman's Case The Writ of Droit Close is directed unto the Lord of Ancient Demesne and lieth for these Tenants who hold their Lands by Charter in Fee-simple Fee-Tail for Life or in Dower if any of them be Ousted or Disseized he or his Heir may Sue this Writ F.N.B. 23 c. If any Land in Ancient Demesne be in variance between the Tenants then the Tenant so grieved shall have against the other a Writ of Right Close after the Custom of the Manor and that shall be always brought in the Lords Court and thereupon he shall Declare in the Nature of what Writ he will and this Writ shall not be removed but for a great Cause or Non power of the Court Terms del Ley. If the Lord in Ancient Demesne confirm the Estate of the Tenant to hold by certain Service at the Common Law altho' the Estate of the Tenant be not changed nor any Transmutation of the Possession yet the quality of his Estate is changed for the Tenant shall not be afterwards Impleaded by Petit Writ of Droit And the Land by the Confirmation is discharged from the Customs of the Manor Coke's 9 Rep. 140. Beaumont's Case Monstraverunt is a Writ that lieth for Tenants in Ancient Demesne who hold by Free Charter but not those Tenants who hold by Copy of Court Roll Or by the Rod according to the Custom of the Manor at the Will of the Lord. And it is directed to the Lord commanding him not to Distrein his Tenant to do other Service And if the Tenants cannot be in quiet they may have an Attachment against the Lord to appear before the Justices and all the names of the Tenants shall be put in the Writ although but one of them be grieved F.N.B. 31 32 33 c. The Lord shall not be put to Answer to the Writ of Attachment upon the Monstraverunt before the Court be certified by the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer whether the Manor be Ancient Demesne And it therefore behoveth the Plaintiff to Sue forth a Writ directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlain for that purpose Fitz. Herb. N. B. fo 31. to 35. If a Lord in another place out of Ancient Demesne Distrein his Tenant to do other Service than he ought He shall have a Writ of Right called Ne injuste Vexes and it is a Writ of Right Patent which shall be Tryed by Battail or Grand Assize Terms del Ley. See before in Court of Ancient Demesne Page 196. To the Court of Commissioners of Sewers SEwers seems to be a Word compounded of two French Words Seoir to Sit and Eau Water for that the Sewers are Commissioners that Sit by Virtue of their Commission and Authority Grounded upon divers Statutes to Enquire of all Nusances and Offences committed by the Stopping of Rivers Erecting of Mills not Repairing of Banks and Bridges c. and to Tax and Rate all whom it may concern for the amending of all defaults which tend to the hindrance of the free passage of the Water through the old and ancient Courses See the Statute of 6 H. 6. cap. 5. and 23 H. 8. cap. 5. for the form of their Commission Commission is as much in the Common Law as Delegate in the Civil and is taken for the Warrant or Letters Patent which all Men using Jurisdiction either Ordinary or Extraordinary have for their Power to hear and determin any Matter or Action Yet this word sometimes extends more largely than to matters of Judgment as the Commission of Purveyors c. And all Commissions are grounded upon the Words in Magna Charta Terrae Legem And have this Clause Facturi quod ad Justitiam pertinet secundum Legem Consuetudinem Angliae And no new Commission can be raised but by Statute Coke's 2 Inst 51 54 57. The King may send his Commission to Repair a Bridge F. N B. 281. Legal Commissions have their due Forms as well as Original Writs and therefore cannot be newr famed without Act of Parliament The like of Oaths Coke's 2 Inst. 478 479. Rumney Marsh in Com. Kanc. containing 24000 Acres Is at this day and long time hath been governed by certain Ancient and equal Laws of Sewers made by a Venerable Justice Henry de Bathe in the Reign of Hen. the 3d from which Laws not only other parts in Kent but all England receive Light and Direction For Example The General Act of 23 Hen. 8. cap. 5. in the Clause which giveth power to the Commissioners to make Statutes Ordinances and Provisions c. necessary and behoveful after the Laws and Customs of Rumney Marsh in the County of Kent or otherwise by any means or ways c. Both the Town and Marsh of Rumney took their name of one Robert Rumney which Robert as it appeareth by the Book of Doomes-day held this Town of Odo Bishop of Baieux wherein he had 13 Burgesses who for their Service at Sea were discharged of all Actions and Customs of Charge except Felony Breach of the Peace and Forestalling The Lord Mayor hath Jurisdiction for the time being for the Conservation and Rule of the Water and River of Thames and the Issues Breaches and Lands over-flowed c. from the Bridge of Stanes unto the Water of Yendal and Medway And in all Commissions touching the Water of Ley The Mayor of London shall be one By Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 14. Sewers that fall into the Thames shall be Subject to the Commission of Sewers Coke's 4 Inst. cap. 62. The Commissioners ought to Tax all who are in danger to be endamaged for the not repairing equally and not he who hath the Land next adjoyning to the River only And Walmesley Justice held and it was not denied by any That if the Owner of the Land were bound by Prescription to Repair the River Bank that yet upon such Commission Awarded the Commissioners ought not to charge him only but ought to Tax all who had Land in danger And to this
of the King 's Writ it doth not change the Nature and Jurisdiction of the Court. For as these without Writs are not Courts of Record so when the Plea is holden by Writ the Courts are of the same Nature For upon a Judgment given in both Cases a VVrit of false Judgment lieth and not a Writ of Error But it is true the King may create a new Court and appoint new Judges in it but after the Court is established and created the Judges of the Court ought to determine Matters in the Court. And therefore neither the Lords of Ancient Demesne nor the Court Baron nor the Sheriff in the County Court when the Plea is holden by Writ of Right Justicies Admeasurement c. are Judges but the Suitors who by the Common Law are the Judges of the Court But in some Cases the Sheriff is made Judge by Parliament as in the Redisseisin by the Stat. of Merton cap. 3. And all his proceeding by force of that Act is of Record and a Writ of Error doth lie of a Judgment given against him Coke's 6 Rep. 11 12. Jentleman's Case In some Actions the Defendant shall be fined in one Court and but amerced in another and yet the Offence shall be all one as in a Writ of Recaption if it be brought in the Common Pleas and Judgment be there given the Defendant shall be fined and imprisoned But if the Writ be brought in the County Court and the Defendant be convict before the Sheriff in the County the Judgment shall not be Quod capiatur quia nulla Curia quae Recordum non habet potest imponere finem neque aliquem mandare carceri quia ista spectant tantummodo ad Curias de Recordo and therefore in such cases he shall be only amerced Coke's 8 Rep. 60. Beecher's Case By Stat. W. 1.33 3 E. 1. No Sheriff shall suffer Barretors or Maintainers of Quarrels or Stewards of great Lords or other unless Attorney for his Lord to make Suit or to give Judgment in the Counties or to pronounce them if he be not required so to do by all the Suitors and Attorneys of the Suitors there present in Pain that both the Sheriff and they shall be grievously punished by the King By Stat. 19 H. 7.24 the Shire Court for Sussex shall be holden one time at Chichester and the next at Lewis alternis vicibus in pain that the Court otherwise kept and the things therein transacted shall be void By Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 County Courts shall be adjourned from Month to Month and no longer The Sheriff of Northumberland shall keep his County Court at Alnwicke and not elsewhere Stat. 2 3 E. 6.25 This Court is incident to the Office of Sheriff and cannot be divided from it by Letters Patent or otherwise but by Act of Parliament Coke's 4 Rep. 33. Mitton's Case See the Court of the Tourn and the Court Leet and after in the Court of the Hundred and Court Baron See before in The County Court Page 228. To the Court of the Hundred AFter King Alfred had divided the Realm into Shires called so from the Saxon Scyran signifying to cut he divided the Shires into smaller Parts called Lathes of the Word Gelathian which is to Assemble together Others Tythings because there were in each of them Ten Persons whereof each one was Surety or Pledge for the others good a bearing Others Hundreds because they contained Jurisdiction over one Hundred Men or Pledges dwelling in Two Three or more Parishes Boroughs or Towns in which he appointed Administration of Justice severally among them of the same Hundred In Stat. of Marlebridge cap. 11. hundredum is taken pro Visu Franci Plegii so as the Sense is That he who hath Tenements in the Town and in some other View of Frankpledge of some other Lord or in divers Views of Frankpledge he shall not need to come to any other but where he is conversant and Hundreds there are named because Sheriffs keep their Tourns in every Hundred If a Man hath a House and Family in two Leets he shall be taken to be conversant where his Bed is If a man hath a House and Family in Two Hundreds yet he shall do his Suit to the Tourn or Leet where his Person is commorant Coke's 2. Inst. 122. A Man may have a Writ to the Sheriff for discharging him from coming to the Sheriff's Tourn or Hundred or Leet or other Place than in the Leet or Precinct of the Hundred where he dwelleth and if the Sheriff distrain him to come contrary to the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 10. and a Writ be delivered to him he shall have an Attachment against the Sheriff All the Tenants in Ancient Demesne may have this Writ And if a Man be distrained to do Suit twice in the Year appertaining to the Leet he shall have a Writ upon Magna Charta but it is otherwise of the Hundred because Suit is there from There Weeks to Three Weeks Vide F. N. B. 356 to 360. Articuli super Chartas 28 E. 1. Bailywicks and Hundreds shall not be let to Farm at over-great Sums whereby the People may be over-charged to make Contributions to such Farms See the Statute and in Court of the Leet and County Court See before in The Court of the Hundred Pag. 233. To Court Baron THE Court Baron is so called because amongst the Laws of King Edward the Confessor it is said Barones vero qui suam habent Curiam de suis hominibus c. taking his Name of the baron who was Lord of the Manor or for that properly in the Eye of the Law it hath relation to the Freeholders who are Judges of the Court. And in Ancient Charters and Records the Barons of London and the Barons of the Cinque-Ports signifie the Freemen of London and of the Cinque-Ports Coke's 1 Inst 58. a. The Lord of a Manor that hath a Court Baron of common Right and by Course of Law all Pleas therein are determinable by Wager of Law and yet by Prescription the Lord may prescribe to determine them by Jury In a Writ of Right Patent directed to the Lord of the Manor Plea shall be holden of Freehold and the Court in that Case may give an Oath for there is the King 's Writ of Praecipe quod reddat Coke's 2 Inst. 143. Before the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 22. Lords would distrain their Free Tenants to come and shew their Deeds especially the Original Deed whereby they might know by what Rent and Services the Tenancy was held of them and obliquely many times perusing the Deeds which are the Secrets and Sinews of a Man's Land brought in question the Title of the Freehold it self Another Mischief was That the Lords of Court Barons Hundreds c. where the Suitors were Judges would constrain them to swear between Party and Party both which Mischiefs are taken away by the said Statute Coke's 2 Inst 142. Fines for Beaupleader are yet paid in some
Court Barons Coke's 2 Inst. 123. Copyhold Lands cannot be transferred but by Surrender into the Hands of the Lord according to the Custom of the Manor Coke's 4 Rep. 25. Copy-hold Cases Severance by the Lord shall not destroy the Estate of the Freeholder ibidem The Grantee having but one single Copyhold cannot hold Court Coke's 5 Rep. 27. Copyhold Cases Underwood and Herbage may by Custom be granted by Copy And when a Copyholder shall alledge Custom and when and how he ought to prescribe See Coke's 4 Rep. 31 32. Copyhold Cases The Attorney in surrendring a Copyhold ought to pursue the Custom strictly Coke's 4 Rep. 76. Comb's Case 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 of such Court in Pain to be disabled to be Steward in any Court and to forfeit 40 l. between King and Prosecutor Stat. 1 Jac. 1.5 Of the Diversity of Customs of Manors and other Matters concerning this Court you may read at large in Coke's 4 Rep. Copyhold Cases Shepherd's Court-keeper's Guide and others If a customary Tenant who is out of the Realm shall not be bound by Nonclaim upon a Fine which is a matter of Record à fortiori he shall not be bound by Nonclaim upon a Descent which is a Matter in Fact Coke's 8 Rep. Sir Richard Letchford's Case See before in The Court Baron Page 235. To the Court of the Coroner STat. 3 H. 7. gives the Coroner a Fee of Thirteen Shillings and Four Pence super visum corporis of the Goods of the Murderer Coke's 2 Inst 176. See in County Court See before in Court of the Coroner Page 237. To the Court of Escheator BY Stat. W. 1. cap. 24. No Seisure can be made of Lands or Tenements into the King's Hands before Office found But if the Sheriff seise Lands by Commandment of the Justices then is the Sheriff excused tho' the Justices therein did Err and if he did of his own Head then had the Party Remedy by Assize against the Sheriff and therefore the Party was required to sue out a Writ to the Justices to certifie if the Seisure were by their Commandment If the Escheator taketh an Office virtute Officii he may seise the Land but if of his own Head he seise the Land without Office that Seisure is colore Officii and an Assise is maintainable against him sic de caeteris Coke's 2 Inst 206 207. Upon the Assise the Party shall recover the Land and double Damages and the Escheator shall be in the grievous Mercy of the King ibid. Where before Stat. 34. E. 3.36 E. 3. and 8 H. 6. the Party grieved by any Office might have had his Travers or Monstrans de droit by Common Law and where he was driven to his Petition and how relieved by those Statutes See Coke's 2 Inst 688. Coke's 4 Rep. 54 55. A Termer could not traverse an Office by the Common Law but if it were found in the Office he might have a Monstrans de droit and so of others that had but Chattels Real Where there is double matter of Record to intitle the King to a Chattel Personal as an Attainder and an Office that the Person attainted was possessed of a House the Office may be Traversed because Chattels Personal are Bona peritura and cannot abide the delay of a Petition Coke's 2 Inst 689. By Stat. Lincoln de Escheatoribus the Escheator cannot seise before Office ibidem Houses and Lands which lie in Livery and whereof there is Profit presently taken the Party by finding the Office is out of Possession But of Rents Commons Advowsons and other Inheritances incorporeal which lie in Grant it is otherwise Coke's 2 Inst. 694. Upon Attainder of Felony the King cannot be Entitled without Office but if a special Office were found that the Husband had nothing but in Right of his Wife there the Heir was not put to his Petition Coke's 1 Rep. 50. Alton Wood's Case Tenant for Life or Years of a Manor shall have an Escheat Coke's 2 Inst 146. See before in The Court of Escheator Page 239. To the Court of Admiralty THERE is a Felony punishable by the Civil Law because it is done upon the High Sea as Pyracy Robbery or Murder whereof the Common Law did take no notice because it could not be tryed by twelve Men. If this Piracy be tryed before the Lord Admiral in the Court of Admiralty according to the Civil Law and the Dilinquent there attainted yet shall it work no Corruption of Blood nor Forfeiture of his Lands otherwise it is if he be Attainted before Commissioners by force of the Stat. 28 Hen. 8. And Pirate cometh from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a Rover at Sea Vide Coke's 1 Inst 391. a. If any Injury Robbery Felony or other Offence be done upon the high Sea Lex terrae extendeth not to it therefore the Admiral hath Conusance thereof and may proceed according to the Marine Law by Imprisonment of the Body and other Proceedings as have been allowed by the Laws of the Realm Coke's 2 Inst 51. The like of things done in a Foreign Kingdom which shall be tryed before the Constable and Marshal ibid. Wreck are such Goods only which are cast and left upon the Land by the Sea Flotsam is when a Ship is sunk or otherwise perished and the Goods float upon the Sea Jetsam is when a Ship is in danger to sink and for lightning the Ship the Goods are cast into the Sea and afterwards notwithstanding the Ship perisheth Lagan or rather Ligan is when the Goods so cast into the Sea and afterwards the Ship perisheth and such Goods so cast are so heavy that they sink to the bottom and the Mariners to the intent to have them again tie to them a Buoy or Cork or such thing which will not sink And none of these are called Wrecks unless by the Sea put upon Land And so Flotsam Jetsam and Lagan being cast upon the Land shall pass by the Grant of Wreck Coke Part 5.106 Vid. Termes del Ley. Wreck of Sea therefore is when the Goods are by the Sea cast upon the Land and so infra Comitatum whereof the Common Law taketh Conusance but the other three are all upon the Sea and therefore of them the Admiral hath Jurisdiction Bracton lib. 3. cap. 3. When Wreck is claimed by Prescription as by Law it may be the Pleading is Bona Wreccata super mare ad terram project ' The Soil upon which the Sea floweth and ebbeth scil between the high Water and low-Water-Mark may be Parcel of the Manor belonging to a Subject and yet resolved in Lacy's Case Trin. 25 Eliz. That when the Sea floweth and hath plenitudinem maris the Admiral shall have Jurisdiction of every thing done upon the Sea between the High-Water-Mark and Low-Water-Mark by the ordinary Course of the Sea as
that there need not be any Written Law had thereof And we find so many Secundary Reasons in the Laws of England that many are willing to affirms the whole Law of England to be proved by Reason which notwithstanding is by no means to be affirmed as by another Example By a certain Statute it is Ordained That he who hath abjur'd the Realm whilst he is in the publick High-way shall be in peace with our Lord the King and not in any sort molested and by the Custom of the Kingdom he is to be conducted from Town to Town by the Constables c. to the Sea-port c. Now if he Escape the Constable ought not to be charged to the King because by reason of the Statute he could not keep him in safe Custody or use any Force or Imprisonment whereby he might be kept in safe Custody and the Reason is grounded upon that Statute And some say Robbery is to be prohibited from Reason Primary even before the Law of Property for that it was not Lawful even when all things were in Common to take any thing from another by force or to throw him out of his Habitation but that such Robbery is to be punished with Death is from the Custom of the Law of England Also from the General Law of Property aforesaid by the Laws of England are excepted Birds Wild beasts and Beasts of Warren in which by the Laws of England is no Property to any One unless they be Tame yet nevertheless by the Laws of England in the Eggs of Herons and such like Building in the Woods of any is a Property And for that every Deduction of Reason in the Laws of England proceeds from the first Principles or from somewhat from those Principles derived no Man althô the most Wise can Judge justly or Argue rightly in the Laws of England if he know not these Principles The Second Fundamental of the Law of England is Lex Divina whereby to punish the Transgressors against the Divine Law The Law of England in many Courts of our Lord the King doth Inquire of Hereticks Also if any Statute be made or set forth against them as that none shall give Alms it ought to be of no force also Persons Excommunicated in the Laws of England may not Prosecute nor have Communication with others whilst the Excommunication is certified And from the same Fundamental the Law of England admits the Spiritual Jurisdiction of Tithes and other things which do of right belong to the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction and receives Canonical or Ecclesiastical Laws Quae non Excedunt potestatem ferentis so that in many Cases it behoves the Kings Justices to Judge according to the Laws of the Church As if the Law of the Church be that the Sentence of Divorce is not in force till it is affirmed upon Appeal The Judges of our Lord the King shall form their Judgment according to the Laws of the Church And if A. B. and C. D. have Goods and Chattels joyntly and A. B. by his last Will give his part to E. F. the Ecclesiastical Judges are bound in this case to adjudge this Will void The Third Fundamental of the Law of England is the General Customs of the Kingdom which are divers General Customs used and approved of in Ancient time throughout the whole Kingdom of England and who attempts any thing against them Works against Law and Justice And these are properly called the Common Law and ought always to be determined by the Judges whether a General Custom or not and not by the Country and of these and other Principles or Maxims a great part of the Law of England depends and therefore the King by his Coronation Oath promiseth inter alia that he will faithfully observe all the Customs of the Kingdom and the Ancient Customs of the Kingdom is the Original and Foundation of divers Courts in the same Kingdom Whereof one is The Chancery of the Kingdom in which inter alia Writs original are obtained directed to other Courts of the King another The Kings-Bench in which are handled all Treasons Murders Homicides Felonies and other things done against the Kings Peace another Court is called The Common Bench in which Common Pleas are handled That is to say of Lands and Tenements Debts and Chattels and such like another Court is called The Kings Exchequer in which are handled divers matters touching the King alone as of Sheriffs Escheats or Receivers Bayliffs and other the Kings Officers and the like and these are called Courts of Record because those who preside as Judges ought to be assigned by the Kings Letters Patent and these Courts have many and divers other Authorities of which we shall speak more hereafter in their proper places and likewise of divers other Courts of inferiour Authority in the Kingdom of England And althô in divers Statutes and Books mention is made of the Authority of these Courts yet we have no written Law of their Institution for their Institution depends upon the Custom of the Kingdom which hath so great Authority that they may not be altered or their Names changed or altered but by Act of Parliament Also there is an Ancient Custom which is confirmed by the Statute of Marlebridge That all shall do and receive Justice in the Kings Court and another that none shall be put to Answer or be judged but according to the Law of the Land and this is confirmed by Magna Charta And there are other General Customs in the Kingdom of England which retain the force of Law as that the eldest Son shall succeed the Father in the Inheritance and many more not here to be recited From whence it appears that Customs in the Laws of England may not be proved by Reason alone for how can it be proved by Reason that the Husband shall have the Wife's Land for Term of his Life as Tenant by that Law and that the Wife shall have only the Third part scilicet that it shall be so done and not otherwise And it is certain that the Law of Property is not the Law of Reason but a Customary Law and ought to be accounted amongst the General Customs of the Kingdom and there is not any Statute or written Law of the Institutions of the Customs of the Law of England but according to the Skilful in the Law of England The Ancient Customs of the Law of England are of themselves of sufficient Authority and the Customary Law is the most firm Law provided such a Custom be not against the Law of God or the Law of Reason The Fourth Fundamental of the Law of England consists of Divers Principles which the Learned in the Law call Maxims always esteemed and held for Law of this Kingdom of England which none Learned in the Law may contradict because every one of them gives Faith or Credit to it self and whether a Maxim or not is to be tried by the Judges as before is said of General Customs of
hand of a Subject 2ly Not to be Impannelled to appear at Westminster or else where upon any Inquest or Tryal 3ly To be Free of all Tolls for things concerning Husbandry or Sustenance 4ly To be Free from Taxes and Tallages by Parliaments unless specially named 5ly Of Contributions to Expences of Knights of Parliament 6ly If they be severally distrained for other Services they all may join in a Writ of Monstraverunt to save charges And these Priviledges remain altho' the Manor be come to the hands of Subjects and altho' their Services of the Plough is for the most part changed into Money Lands in ancient Demesne may be extended upon a Statute Merchant Staple or Elegit and regularly all general Statutes extend to ancient Demesne But Redisseisin and some others do not lie in ancient Demesne For which see Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 58. and their Priviledge doth not extend to Personal Actions in which by common Intendment the Title of the Freehold cannot come in debate The Demandant cannot remove the Plea but the Tenant may for Seven Causes Vide Coke supra Those Manors are called Ancient Demesne of the Crown which were in the hands of St. Edward the Confessor or William the Conqueror and so expressed in Doomesday Book begun in the 14 year of Will the Conqueror 1081 and finished in Six years And against this Book for Trial of Ancient Demesne lies no Averment And therefore is like the Doom and Judgment at Doomes-day The Court of Commissioners of Sewers THeir Authority is by Commission under the Great Seal Now grounded and warranted by the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 5. where upon mentioning only some Observations made by the Lord Coke we shall briefly set forth their Juisdiction and Authority First That the Commissioners shall be named by the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer and two Chief Justices or any Three of them whereof the Lord Chancellor to be one Secondly Every Commissioner must take the Oath prescribed by the Act before the Lord Chancellor or Justices of Peace in their Quarter Sessions And ought to have Lands c. of Forty Marks yearly and no Farmer of Lands within the Precinct of the Commission unless he have Lands of Freehold worth 40 l. yearly Thirdly The Avowry or Justification for a Distress taken shall be generally that the Distress was taken by force of the Commission for a Lot or Tax Assessed by the Commission or for such other cause Fourthly There must be Six Commissioners to Sit by force of the Commission Fifthly The Act of 23 Hen. 8. Doth not extend to reform Nusance by Sand rising out of the Sea and driven to Land by Storms A special Provision is therein made for the County of Glamorgan Sixthly A Commission of Sewers shall continue Ten years unless repealed or determined by any new Commission or by Supersedeas Seventhly That Laws Ordinances and Constitutions made by force of such Commission and written in Parchment and Indented under the Seals of the Commissioners or Six of them whereof one part to remain with the Clerk and the other in such Place as Six of the Commissioners shall appoint shall without the Royal Assent or any Certificate stand in force Eighthly That if any such Commission be determined by Expiration of Ten years from the Teste Then such Laws so Indented and Sealed shall stand in force for a year after and the Justices of the Peace or Six whereof One to be of the Quorum shall have Power to Execute the same Ninthly Upon granting a new Commission during that year the Power of the Justices shall cease Tenthly The Commissioners not to make any Certificate or Return of their Commission orany their Ordinances Laws and doings by force of the same Eleventhly See an Alteration by the Statute of 13 Eliz. concerning Fees Twelfthly Neither the Commissioners of Sewers nor any other have any such Absolute Authority but their proceedings are bound by Law By Act of Parliament 3 Jac. 1. Walls Ditches Banks Gutters Sewers Gates Causeys Bridges and Water-courses in or about the City of London where is no Passage for Boats nor the Water doth Ebb and Flow are made subject to the Commission of Sewers which they were not before And of their Jurisdiction and Authority to Supervise all Walls Sewers and Gutters c. upon the Sea-Coasts and else where and to enforce all Persons concerned to pay a proportionable part according to the Lands or Estate they have towards the Repair of them and to that end to make Laws and Ordinances and to force the Observation of them Vide F. N. B. fo 113 114. Coke's 4. Inst cap. 62. And the Statutes at large And it is to be noted that Sewer or Suera is derived from the word Sue or Issue as the Lord Coke observes and taken for a Sewer Channel or Gutter of Water The Court of Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts THe name and wickedness of Bankrupts comes from Foreign Nations for B●ruque in French is Mensa and a Banqueror or Exchanger is Mensarius in Latine and Rout is a Sign or Mark metaphorically taken for one that hath so spent his Estate that nothing remains but the Mark or mention thereof The Commission upon complaint made in Writing to the Lord Chancellor is granted under the great Seal of England and their Jurisdiction and Authority is declared and warranted by the Statute of 34 Hen. 8. being the first made against English Bankrupts and the Statute of 13 Eliz. 7. and 1 Jac. 1. cap. 15. and 21 Jac. 1. cap. 19 c. And the Commissioners must pursue the Power given by those Acts or they are liable to the Action of the Party grieved But they may plead generally They have power to Examine the Offender upon Oath and after he be declared a Bankrupt to Examine his Wife upon Oath and Witnesses also And have power to break open any Houses Ware houses Chambers Trunks Chests c. of the Offenders For all which see Coke's 4 Inst cap. 63. and the Statutes at large There is a Court called Curia Cursus Aquae apud Gravesend and others like it in private Of which it belongs not to us to treat Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses COmmissioners and Examiners are not bound strictly to the Letter of the Interrogatory but ought to Explain every other thing which necessarily ariseth thereupon for manifestation of the whole Truth They ought not to discover to either Party or any other any of the Depositions taken before publication granted Nor ought to confer with either Party after the Examination begun or take any new Instructions They must take the Depositions Gravely Temperately and without Menace or Interruption in hindrance of the Truth which are grievously to be punished And after the Depositions taken must Read the same distinctly to the Witnesses and suffer them to explain themselves and it is safe that the Witnesses subscribe their Names or Marks to the Paper-Book But they must be certified in Parchment
the nature of the Writ doth not warrant a Capias and the Sheriff could not grant the same neither doth the Writ of Justicies alter the nature of the Court of the County for therein the Sheriff is not Judge but the Suitors and upon a Judgment given therein a Writ of False Judgment doth lie and not a Writ of Errour And in divers Real Actions a Writ of Justicies doth lie as in Breve de Admeasurement of Dower of Pasture De Nusance c. As by our Books may appear And Pleas ought not to be hence removed without cause as appears by the Writs of Pone Recordare The Writ of False Judgment Accedas ad Curiam which are yet in use In this Court upon the Exigent after Quint ' Exact ' The Coroners give Judgment Ideo Utlagetur per Judicium Coronatoris But by this Judgment No Goods are forfeited before the Outlary appear of Record and that is the Reason that no Man can Claim the Goods of Outlaws by Prescription neither shall such an Outlawry disable the party till the Exigent be returned This Court is holden at any place within the County except in Northumberland Sussex and Chester where it is limited to be held at certain places by Statute And is to be holden once every Month counting 28 days to the Month. No Fine can here be inposed because it is no Court of Record But a Man may be there amercied for Contempt or Disturbance of the Court In the presence of the Court. And in this Court are these Officers The Sheriff who is Elected yearly Crastino Animarum by the Statute of 9 E. 2. and 14 E. 3. cap. 7. And his Letters Patents bear date commonly the sixth of Novemb. unless in case of necessity And before the next County day after his Election and Discharge of the old Sheriff he ought to depute A County Clerk who according to Fleta ought to be Endued with Circumspection Fidelity Providence Humility Peace and Modesty Expert in the Laws and Customs of his Country and of ability to direct the Bailiffs and other Ministers in Dubious Things He may not Practise as an Attorney at the same time nor Act without consent of Suitors he must Depute honest able Bailisss to Execute the Process and Precepts of the Court and after Plaints entred which must be in full County Sedente Curia Except in case of Replevins he must Issue sufficient Precepts directed to his Bailiff to Attach or Warn the Defendants to appear at next County Court and at the Adjournment of every Court must appoint a day certain for the next Court To the intent the Country may know when to Resort thither to hear the King's Exigents and Proclamations read The Coroner is a Principal Officer being chosen in this Court by a Writ De Coronatore eligendo directed to the Sheriff whereupon he is chosen by the Freeholders or Suitors in full Court and is there published and afterwards his Election certified into the Chancery by the Sheriff and the County Clerk Administers to him an Oath for due Execution of his Office then he Sits there with the Sheriff every County Court where Exigents and Proclamamations being proclaimed five County days Once in open Sessions and once at the Church Door If at the fifth County day the Defendant appear not the Coroner gives Judgment That he be out of the King's Protection and out of the Aid of the Law A Man being then said to be Outlawed as it were Extra Legem positus because he is supposed to be once Sworn to the Law But a Woman is said to be waved Waviatur because she was never Sworn to the Law The Attorneys may do all things in the Name and as the Act of him who gave them the Authority as if he did it himself For he is Aliorum Negotiorum Gestor and Qui per alium facit per seipsum facere videtur And these ought to be honest and just according to their Oath And ought not to delay their Clients Argenti gratia not demand Moneys otherwise than is allowed them by the Court. The Bailiffs are Servants and Ministers of the Law and by Consequence to the party at whose Suit he is to distrain And therefore ought to be True Vigilant and not exoculated with Bribes Ought to be contented with the Fees allowed for if they Extort more or commit any Error contrary to their Precept they forfeit Forty shillings by the Stature of 27 Eliz. No Bailiff or other Person ought to take a Distress or Execute Process till he be Sworn but now Experience shews the Contrary King Alfred hanged Judge Arnold for saving a Bailiff from Death who had robbed the People by Distress and for Extorting of Fees The Court of the Hundred AS the Leet was derived for the Ease of the People out of the Tourn So this Court of the Hundred for the same cause was derived out of the Court of the County And is in nature a Court Baron where the Suitors are Judges and is no Court of Record The Stile of this Court is Curia E. C. Milit is Hundredi sui de B. in Com' Bucks Tent ' c. coram A. B. Senceschallo ibidem Officers Incident to this Court are chiefly the Constables of the Hundred commonly called The Chief Constables so named because the Constables of Towns are called Petit Constables The Constables of the Hundred are Created by the Statute of Winchester 13 E. 1. And their Authority thereby limitted to five things 1st To make view of Armour 2ly To present before Justices Assigned all such Defaults they see in the Country about Armour 3ly Defaults of Suits of Towns 4ly Of High-ways 5ly To present such as lodge Strangers in uplandish Towns for whom they will not Answer And these disperse all Warrants of the Justices of Peace to the Petit Constable and divers other Authorities are given to them and the Petit Constables by Acts of Parliament which they must strictly observe For that no Officer constituted by Act of Parliament may Prescribe as the Officer by the Common Law may Term. 2 Car. Regis Fortescu of Bucks Plaintiff and the Sheriff of the same Defendant The Plaintiff had divers Hundreds granted to him for Life Reserving a Rent which the Sheriff disallowed and put in Bailiffs of his own And the Attorney General was commanded to avoid the like in other Counties for that they were against Law and belonged to the Office of the Sheriff And this division of Counties into Hundreds is very Ancient and thought to be so called at first either for containing an Hundred Houses or an Hundred Men bound to bear Arms and hath commonly a Bailiff an Ancient Officer but now of small Authority And if there be a Bailiff of a Liberty Or a Sheriff's Bailiff of a Hundred Wapentake or Tything which hath not Lands or Tenements sufficient within the County there lieth a Writ De Ballivo Amovendo by the Statute of 4. E. 3. cap. 9. The
The Grant of Earl Marshal of England by Letters Patents of Rich. the 2d and other Grants thereof you may see more at large Coke's 4 Institutes cap. 17. The Maritime Power of England ALL the King 's Maritime Forces are under the Command of the Lord High Admiral of England so called from Amir in Arabick and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek that is Praefectus Marinis A compound word from the Eastern Empire introduced into England after the Wars in the Holy Land by King Richard or King Edward the first His Patent was antiently Angliae Hiberniae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus But now it is Angliae Hiberniae Dominiorum Insularum eorundem Villae Calesiae Marchiarum ejusdem Normandiae Gasconiae Acquitaniae Magnus Admirallus Praefectus Generalis Classis Marium dictorum Regnorum And this Office for the Great Trust and Honour is usally given to the King 's younger Son near Kinsman Or one of the Principal Nobility He hath power to Commissionate a Vice-Admiral a Rear-Admiral All Sea Captains And also Deputies for particular Coasts Coroners Commissioners and Judges for the Court of Admiralty to Imprison Release c. and sometimes to confer Knighthood on such as deserve it at Sea To him by Law and Custom belong Penalties and Amerciaments of Transgressors at Sea on the shore in Ports and from the first Bridge on Rivers towards the Sea Also the Goods of Pirates Felons or Capital Faulters condemned Outlawed or Horned All Waifs Strays Goods Wrecks of Sea Deodands a share of lawful Prizes Lagon Jetsam and Flotsam that is Goods lying in the Sea on the Ground Goods Floating on the Sea and Goods cast by the Sea on Shore not granted to Lords of Mannors adjoyning to the Sea All great Fishes as Sea-Hogs and others of Extraordinary bigness called Royal Fishes Except Whales and Sturgeons To the Crown of England belongs the Sovereignty of the Narrow-Sea round the Island of Great Britain whereof by Ancient Right it hath had Possession in all times and King Edgar stiled himself Sovereign of the Narrow-Seas In Testimony whereof the Swedes Danes Hollanders c. were wont to aske leave to pass the British-Seas and to take Licenses to Fish therein And to this day Strike Sail to all the Ships of War belonging to the King of England as oft as they pass by any of them thereby acknowledging his Sovereignty according to an Ordinance made at Hastings in Sussex by King John about 450 years ago To maintain this Right Protect Trade and Defend their Kingdoms The Kings of England have Ships of War for Strength Beauty and Sailing Surpassing all other in the World of these such as Ships then were King Edgar is said to have 3600 And the late King Charles had 7 of the First Rate 9 of the Second Rate 22 of the Fifth and 18 of the Sixth Rate besides 30 Fireships and several Small Vessels for Tenders and Victuallers The Royal Sovereign Built by King Charles the first 1637 being of the First Rate was in Length by the Keel 127 Foot in Breadth by the Beam 47 Foot in Depth 49 Foot her Draught of Water 21 Foot Burthen in all 2072 Tunns and 1492 Tunns besides Guns and Tackle hath 6 Anchors the biggest 6000 l. weight and the least 4300 l. weight 14 Cables the greatest 21 Inches compass and weighs 9000 l. weight the least 8 Inches compass weighing near 1300 l. weight 18 Masts and Yards the Main Mast 113 Foot long and 38 Inches Diameter the Main Yard 105 Foot long and 23 Inches Diameter and her Main Top 15 Foot Diameter Had 10 several sorts of Sails Her greatest called the Main Course contained with her Bonnet 1640 yards of Canvas Ipswich double The least called the Foretop Gallant Sail 130 yards of Canvas The compleat suit cost 404 l. The weight of Sea store in point of Ground Tackle and other Cordage 60 Tuns 800 and odd Pounds Shee carried a Long boat of 50 Foot a Pinnace of 30 Foot and a Skiff of 27 Foot long The weight of her Rigging 33 Tun She hath 3 Tires of Guns 44 in the Upper 34 in the Second and 22 in the Lower Tire in all 100 Guns She carried Officers Soldiers and Mariners in all 850 Men. The charge for Victuals Ammunition Wages Wear and Tear every Month at Sea costs 3500 l. The Charge of Building a First Rate Ship with Guns Tackle and Rigging doth usually amount to 62432 the lesser Rates Charge is proportionable A Second Rate carries from 56 to 80 Guns A Third Rate from 58 to 70 Guns A Fourth Rate from 40 to 60 Guns A Fifth Rate from 24 to 32 Guns A Sixth Rate from 6 to 18 Guns The Lord High Admiral may fitly be reputed Vice-Roy of the Maritime Kingdom of England Nam in Mari sunt Regna distincta idque Jure Gentium sicut in arida Terra The Vice-Admiral is an Officer to whom next under the High Admiral it belongs to see the Royal Navy kept in good Repair The Wages of Mariners and Shipwrights duly paid and the Ships provided of all things necessary The Lord High Admiral doth appoint in divers parts of the Kingdom Vice Admirals with their Judges and Marshals by Patent under the Great Seal of the Admiralty These do Exercise Jurisdiction in Maritime Affairs within their Limits and if any be aggrieved by their Sentence or Decree he may Appeal to the High Court of Admiralty and of these round the Coasts are about 22 in England and Wales The Lord High Admiral hath Courts for the Maritime Affairs whereof the Principal is at London and called The Court of Admiralty IN this Court Erected as some hold by Edward the Third The Lord Admiral hath a Lieutenant called Judge of the Admiralty who is commonly some Learned Doctor of the Civil Law Because The Proceeding is in all Civil Matters according to the Civil Law The Sea being without the Limits of the Common Law and by Libel they Proceed to the Action the Plaintiff giving caution to prosecute the Suit and to pay what shall be adjudged against him if he fail therein The Defendant also giving Security or Caution as the Judge shall think meet that he will appear in Judgment and pay that which shall be adjudged against him and that he will ratify whatever his Proctors shall do in his name Besides the Civil Law The Laws of Rhodes and Oleron are here used The former for their Excellency being Incorporated into the Volumes of the Civil Laws And Oleron being an Island in the Bay of Aquitain belonging to the Crown of England King Richard the first there Compiled such Excellent Laws for Sea Matters that in the Ocean Sea Westward they had almost as much Repute as the Rhodian Laws in the Mediterranean and these Laws were called La Rool de Oleron Many Statutes and Ordinances were made by King Edward the Third and other Princes and People as at Rome Pisa Genoa Marseilles Barcelona and
Hath the Oversight of all the Officers of the Wardrobes at all his Majesties Houses and of the removing Wardrobes of the Tents Revels Musick Comedians Hunting Messengers Trumpetters Drummers of all Handicrafts and Artisans Heralds Pursuivants Serjeants at Arms Phisicians Apothecaries Chyrurgeons Barbers c. and Chaplains although himself be a Layman Also the charges of Coronations Marriages Entries Cavalcades Funerals c. His Fee is 100 l. yearly and 16 Dishes each Meal with the Appurtenances And most of the Places before mentioned are in his Gift or Disposal The Master of the Horse is the Third Great Officer And hath now the ordering of the King's Stables and Races and Breed of Horses and hath Power over Escuries and Pages over Footmen Grooms Riders of the Great Horse Farriers Smiths Coachmen Sadlers and all other Trades working to the King's Stables To all whom he or by his Warrant the Avenor giveth an Oath to be True and Faithful He hath the charge of all Lands and Revenues appointed for the King's Breed of Horses and Charges of the Stable and for Litters Coaches Sumpter horses c. He only hath priviledge to make use of any Horses Pages or Footmen belonging to the King's Stables At Solemn Cavalcades he Rides next the King and leads a Leer Horse of State His Fee is 666 l. 16 s. 4 d. yearly And a Table of 16 Dishes each Meal Under these Three principal Officers of his Majesties Houshold are almost all other the Officers and Servants The Compting House SO called because Accompts for all Expences of the King's Houshold are there daily The Lord Steward The Treasurer of the Houshold The Comptroller The Cofferer The Master of the Houshold The Two Clerks of the Green Cloth And the Two Clerks Comptrollers who also make Provisions for the Houshold according to the Law of the Land and make Payments and Orders for well Governing of the Servants of the Houshould And the Cofferer is to pay the Wages of the King's Servants below Stairs and the Lord Chamberlain above Stairs Vide 39 Eliz. cap. 7. And he is accomptable in the Exchequer for about 40000 l. And in the Compting House is The Court of Greencloth SO called of the Green Cloth whereat they sit and is composed of the Persons last above mentioned whereof the Three first are usually of the King 's Privy Councel To this Court being the first and most ancient Court of England is committed the Oversight of the King's Court Royal for Matters of Justice and Government with Authority for maintaining the Peace within Twelve Miles distance wheresoever the Court shall be and within the King's House the Power of correcting all the Servants therein that shall any way offend The Treasurer of the King's Houshold in the absence of the Lord Steward hath Power with the Comptroller and Steward of the Marshalsea to Hear and Determin Treasons Felonies and other Inferiour Crimes committed within in the King's Palace and that by Verdict of the Houshold He bears a White Staff and his yearly Fee is 124 l. 14 s. 8 d. And a Table of 16 Dishes each Meal The Comptrollers Office is to Comptrol the Accompts and Reckonings of the Green Cloth and his yearly Fee is 107 l. 12 s. 4 d. And bears a White Staff and hath 16 Dishes each Meal The Cofferer is a principal Officer and hath special charge over other Officers of the House for their good Demeanor and Carriage and is to pay the Wages to the King's Servants and for Provisions by the Direction of the Green Cloth He hath a Fee of 100 l. yearly and a Table of 7 Dishes daily The Master of the Houshold is the next Officer who is to Survey the Accompts of the House His Fee 100 Marks and 7 Dishes daily Two Clerk's Comptroller's are to Tolt and Allow all Bills of Comptrolment Parcels and Brievements And the Two Clerk's of the Green Cltth are to Sum them up And the Fee to each of these Four Clerks is 48 l. 13 s. 4 d. And between them Two Tables of 7 Dishes to each Table The rest of the Compting House being less considerable we pass over And come to give a brief Accompt of the Officers or persons in the several Offices As first in the Acatery is a Serjeant a Clerk Purveyors Yeomen In all Twelve Poultry a Serjeant a Clerk Yeoman Grooms Purveyors in all Ten. Bakehouse a Serjeant Clerk Yeomen Grooms and Pages in all Eighth Woodyard a Serjeant a Clerk Yeomen Grooms and Pages in all Eight Scullery a Serjeant a Clerk Yeomen Grooms and Pages in all Twelve Lardour a Serjeant Clerk Three Yeomen Three Grooms Two Pages Pastry a Serjeant a Clerk Yeomen Grooms and Children in all Eleven Pantry a Serjeant a Yeomen Grooms Pages Cellar a Serjeant a Gentleman Yeomen Grooms Purveyors Pages in all Twelve Buttery a Gentleman Yeoman Grooms Pages Purveyors in all Eleven Pitcher-house a Yeoman Grooms Page and Clerk in all Five Spicery Three Clerks and a Grocer Chandlery a Serjeant Two Yeomen Two Grooms and a Page Wafery a Yeoman and a Groom Confectionary a Serjeant Two Yeomen a Groom and a Page Ewry a Serjeant a Gentleman Two Yeomen a Groom and Two Pages Laundry a Yeoman a Groom Three Pages and a Draper Kitchen Three Clerks to the King and Two to the Queen The chief of these Clerks hath a Fee and Diet equal to an Officer of the Green Cloth A Master Cook to the King A Master Cook to the Queen A Master Cook to the Houshold each of these Three a Table of 5 Dishes Six Yeomen Seven Grooms Five Children in all Twenty six Persons Boyling House a Yeoman Two Grooms Scalding House Yeoman Grooms and Pages in all Six Harbingers Office a Knight Three Gentlemen and Seven Yeomen Harbingers The Knight Harbingers Office is by Letters Patent under the Great Seal of England during Life So oft as the King goes broad either in England or beyond Seas He doth by himself or his Deputy provide and appoint all Lodgings and Harbingage for all Great Persons All Noblemen Bishops All his Majesties Servants and Attendants and for all other his Liege People for Ambassadors and Foreigners c. His Salary 20 Marks per Annum and 10 s. per diem Out of the Exchequer besides Fees for Honour given by the King and Homage done to his Majesty and divers other Perquisites Porters at Gate a Serjeant Two Yeomen Four Grooms Clerks of the Carriage Two Yeomen Cart Takers Six in Number Surveyors of the Dresser Two one above Stairs and another below Marshals of the Hall Four Sewers of the Hall Five Waiters of the Hall Twelve Messenger of the Compting House One Bellringer One Long Cart Takers Four Wine Porters Eight Woodbearer One The Cock of the Court One. Besides the aforesaid Officers b●low Stairs there are also under the Lo●d Steward all the Officers belonging to the Queens Kitchin Cellar Pantry c. And to the Kings Privy Kitchin and to the Lords Kitchin together with
can Examine after Judgment 10 Hen. 6.14 15. Also there is a practise called Marking of a Cause before the Lord Mayor which is after a Verdict given for the Plaintiff in the Sheriffs Court the Defendant may get the Cause marked by one of the Clerks in the Lord Mayor's Court to stay Judgment and Execution until the matter be Examined in Equity where the Lord Mayor doth oftentimes mitigate the Damages or give the Defendant time to pay it c. This Court is held Mondays Tuesdays and every day if the Lord Mayor please to sit The Court of the Mayor and Aldermen THis is a Court of Record consisting of the Lord Mayor Recorder and Twenty three Aldermen whereof the Two Sheriffs are part And their Proceedings is by Arrest of the Body or Attachment of the Defendants Goods and in that case much like the other Courts of Common Law By the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 12. They have power to correct Errors used for default of good Governance c. in the City The Court of Orphans THe Mayor and Aldermen by Custom have the Custody of Orphans within the City And if they commit the custody to another Man he should have a Ravishment of Ward if the Orphan be taken away And they shall have custody of the Lands and Goods of such Orphans A Recognizance may be acknowledg'd in this Court before the Mayor and Aldermen to the Chamberlain for Orphans and he being a sole Corporation the Recognizance and Bond made to him and his Successors concerning Orphans shall by Custom go to his Successors Executors or Administrator are to Exhibite true Inventories before the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and give Security by Rocognizance or the Court may commit them to Prison till they do it If the Father advance any of his Children by part of his Goods that shall bar him to demand any further unless the Father under his Hand or by Will declare it was but in part of Advancement and then that Child putting his part in Hotchpot with the Executors and Widow may have a Third part of the whole and this the Civil Law calls Collatio Bonorum How the Goods of a Freeman shall be divided See Coke's 1 Inst Sect. 207. The Court of Common Councel THis is held by the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty Resembling the High Court of Parliament The Commonalty being chosen out of every Ward constitute the Lower House and Represent all the Commonalty of the City Here they make Acts for the better Government of the City For the Execution of the Laws and Statutes of this Realm Pro Bono publico and for the better advancement of Trade and Traffick Provided such Constitutions be not contrary to the Laws of the Realm And these being made by Mayor Aldermen and Commonalty do bind within the City And they of the Common Assembly do give their Assent by holding up their Hands The Court of Wardmote Inquest THis Resembles the Country Leets Every Ward being as a Hundred and the Parishes as Towns And in in every Ward there is an Inquest of Twelve or more Sworn every year to Inquire of and present Nusances and other Offences within the Ward The Court of Hallmote THis is as much as to say The Court of the Hall being the Court which every Company in London keeps in their Halls which was anciently called The Hallmote or Folke Mote The Chamberlain 's Court for Apprentices BEfore the Chamberlain all Indentures of Apprentices are or ought to be Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled and if they be not Inrolled the Apprentice may refuse to Serve and Sue out his Indenture in this Court at his Pleasure and be discharged of his Master The Chamberlain is Judge in all Complaints either of the Servant against the Master or Master against the Servant and punisheth the Offenders at his Discretion In this Court are all Apprentices made Free And that may be Three manner of ways By Service as are Apprentices By Birthright as being the Son of a Freeman which is called Freedom by his Fathers Copy or by Redemption by Order of the Court of Aldermen The Court of the Conservator of the Water and River of Thames THe Lord Major of London for the time being is the Conservator or Governor of the River of Thames and the Issues Breaches and Lands overflown from Stanes Bridge to the Waters of Yendal or Medway And hath Authority for punishment of such as use unlawful Netts or Engins in Fishing or take Fish under Size or unseasonably c. 4 Hen. 7. cap. 15. And in all Commissions touching the Water of Lee the Lord Mayor shall be one 3 Jac. cap. 14. The Court of the Coroner in London THe Mayor is Coroner within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy See Coroner before in the Counties The Court of Escheator in London THe Lord Mayor is also Escheator within the City And this Court is holden before him or his Deputy Vide Escheator before in Counties The Court of Policies and Assurances THis Court Sitteth by Force of the Commission under the Great Seal Warranted by Act of Parliament Ann. 43 Eliz. cap. 12. there being an Officer or Clerk to Register Assurances The Jurisdiction of which Court you may read in that Act of Parliament being for Incouragement of Trade The Judge of the Admiralty Recorder Two Doctors of Civil Law Two Common Lawyers Eight Merchants or any five of them to determine all differences concerning Assurances as they shall think fit without Formalities of Pleadings And to Commit to Prison without Bail all such as disobey their Decrees And to that end they are to meet once a Week at the Assurance Office and not to take any Fee If any be grieved by their Decree he may Exhibit his Bill in Chancery for Re-examination of that Decree The Lord Mayor is Chief Judge at the Court or Sessions of Gaol Delivery held Eight times in the year or oftner at the Sessions-House in the Old Baily for the City of London and County of Middlesex for the Tryal of Criminals and hath power to Reprieve Condemned persons The Tradesmen in London are divided into Corporations or Companies and are so many Bodies Politick of these Twelve are called Chief Companies and he that is chosen Lord Mayor if he be not before must be made Free of one of these Companies viz. Mercers Grocers Drapers Fishmongers Goldsmiths Skinners Merchant Taylors Haberdashers Salters Ironmongers Vintners Cloth-Workers All which Companies have Assembling places called Halls and each of them hath a Master chosen Annually from amongst themselves and Subordinate Governours called Wardens or Assistants And these in their Companies exactly correspond to the General Government of the City Several of our Kings have to honour some of these Companies taken their Freedom of it as VII several Kings had been of the Taylors Company whereof the last of these Seven being King Henry the 7th gave them the Name and Title of Merchant Taylors
To take care of the Church and Church Assemblies The Overseers of the Poor To take care of the Poor Sick Aged Orphans and other Objects of Charity And Lastly The Clerk to wait on him at Divine Service And for The Civil Government of Villages THe Lord of the Manor or Soil who from the Crown immediately holds or mediately holds Dominium Soli Is said to have in him The Royalty as if he were a little King and hath a kind of Jurisdiction and a Court Baron incident to the Manor and sometimes a Court Leet by Grant from the King to which the Inhabitants owe Suit and Service and where smaller Matters as Escheats upon Felonies or other Accidents common Nusances c. Admitting of Tenants passing of Estates Reliefs Herriots Hunting Hawking Fishing c. or other matters Of which you may see more at large in the Description of the Jurisdiction of these two several Courts may be heard and determined And under the Lord is The Constable or Headborough Chosen yearly by the Lord or Steward in the Leet to keep the Peace in case of Quarrels to search any House for Robbers Murderers and others who have broken the Peace to raise Hue and Cry after Robbers to seize Offenders and keep them in the Stocks or other Prison till they can bring them before some Justice of Peace to whom the Constables are subservient upon all occasions either to bring Criminals before them or to carry them by their Command to the Common Prison Thus having in a Brief and Methodical manner described the Constitution of the English Government For the Excellency thereof we may wel● conclude with the Poet O Fortunatos nimium bona si sua Norint Angligenas THE ISLANDS Adjacent to ENGLAND CAlled by Heylin The Sporades not as he saith that they are so named in any Author but being many he thought fit to include them under that general Name The Chief of which are The Isle of Man INsula Euboniae modo Manniae hath been an ancient Kingdom as appears by Walsingham pag. 287. and Coke's Reports Lib. 7. fol. 21. Calvin's Case And yet we find it not Granted or Conveyed by the Name of a Kingdom Sed per Nomen Insulae c. cum Patronatu Episcopatus The Patronage of the Bishoprick of Sodor being a Visible Mark of a Kingdom Est nempe Jus ipsius Insulae ut quisquis illius sit Dominus Rex vocetur cui etiam fas est Corona Aurca Coronari Walsingh 17 R. 2. This Island was taken from the Britains by the Scots and from them regained by Edwin King of Northumberland Afterwards the Norwegians seised it from whom Alexander the Third wrested it and about the Year 1340. William Montacute Earl of Salisbury descended from the Norwegian Kings of Man won it from the Scots and afterwards sold it to W. Lord Scroope who forfeiting the same for Treason to King H. 4 he granted it to H. Percy Earl of Northumberland who being 5 H. 4. Attainted of Treason In 7 H. 4. it was by Parliament Enacted the King should have the Forfeiture of all his Lands and Tenements And afterwards 7 H. 4. the King granted the Isle cum Patronatu Episcopatus unto Sir John Stanley first for Life and afterwards to him and his Heirs Sir John had Issue Sir John Stanley Knight who had Issue Sir Henry Stanly Lord Chamberlain to King Henry the Sixth who Created him Lord Stanley He had Issue Thomas whom King Henry the Seventh Created Earl of Derby to him and the Heirs Male of his Body c. Vide Co. 4 Inst cap. 69. The Laws and Jurisdiction of this Isle differs from other places For they call their Judges Deemsters which they chuse out of themselves And they determine all Controversies without Process Pleading Writing or any Expence at all If any Cases be ambiguous or of greater weight it is referred to Twelve which they call Claves Insulae They have Coroners quos Annuos vocant who supply the Office of Sheriff But altho' the King's Writ runneth not into this Island yet his Commission extendeth thither for Redress of Injustice and Wrong The Bishop was Instituted by Pope Gregory the Fourth is under the Archbishop of York being annexed to that Archbishoprick by King Henry the Eighth but hath neither Place nor Voice in the Parliament of England In hac Insula Judex Ecclesiasticus citat definit infra Octo dies parent aut carcere intruduntur The People are a Religious Industrious and True People They have peculiar Laws or Customs For if a Man steal a Horse or an Ox it is no Felony because he cannot hide them but if he steal a Capon or Pigg he shall be hanged c. In this little Kingdom are Two Castles Seventeen Farishes Four Market Towns and many Villages It is scituate against the South part of Cumberland from which it is distant 21 Miles Is in Length 30 Miles in Breadth 15 but in some part only 8 Miles The Soil is abundant in Flax Hemp Oats Barley Wheat and Bishop Merrick writing to Cambden when he was composing his Britannia saith Our Island for Cattle Fish and Corn hath not only sufficient for it self but sendeth store into other Countries The chief Towns are Balacurri and Russin or Castle-Town the Seat of the Bishop On the Hill Sceaful may be seen England Scotland and Ireland Here are also bred the Soland Geese The People speak a Mixture of the Norwegian and Irish Tongues Anglesey IS accounted a Shire of Wales bordereth on Carnarvanshire is in Length 20 in Breadth 17 Miles containing in former times 360 Towns and Villages the chief whereof are 1. Beaumaris towards Wales 2. Newburg 3. Aberfraw on the South-side This Island for its abundant Fertility is called Mam Cymri i. e. Mother of Wales It was once the Seat of the Druids first Conquered by Suet onius Paulinus and united to the English Crown by the Valour of Edward the First Jersey olim Caesarea IS in Compass 20 Miles and sufficiently strong by reason of the dangerous Seas It containeth 12 Towns or Villages the Chief being St. Hillary and St. Malo and four Castles The Ground is plentiful in Grain and Sheep most of them having four Horns of whose Wool our Jersey Stockings are made Gernsey olim Servia IS distant 20 Miles from Jersey to whom it is much Inferiour in respect of Fertility and Largness but more commodious by reason of the safe Harbours It containeth 10 Parishes the Chief being St. Peters the Port or Haven and Market Town These Islands of Jersey and Gernsey lye both nigh unto Normandy and Bretaign and did in ancient time belong to the Dutchy of Normandy But Henry the First Overthrowing his Elder Brother Robert united the Dutchy of Normandy with these Isles to the Kingdom of England And altho' King John lost Normandy and Henry the Third took Money for it yet these Isles continued Faithful to England the possession thereof being a good Seisin of the whole
Lowland or South Scotland bordering on England The Seat of the old Picts 156 Miles long and 110 broad divided into 22 Counties viz. 1. Lorn chief Town Dunstafag 2. Cantire chief Town Kiltan 3. Argile chief Town Innerera 4. Lennox chief Town Dunbarton 5. Menteith chief Town Dunblain 6. Strathern chief Town Abernethy 7. Fife chief Town St. Andrews 8. Sterlin chief Town Sterlin 9. Lothien chief Town Edinburgh 10. March chief Town Coldingham 11. Tivedale chief Town Jedburg 12. Twedesdale chief Town Pebles 13. Cledesdale chief Town Glascow 14. Cunningham chief Town Irwing 15. Kile chief Town Aire 16. Carrick chief Town Bargenny 17. Galloway chief Town Kircowbrig 18. Niddesdale chief Town Dumfrees 19. Annandale chief Town Annand 20. Eskedale 21. Eusdale and 22. Isle of Arran Edinburgh is the Chief of the Kingdom and Seat of the former Kings These Provinces are divided into Sheriff-doms which are Hereditary and into 13 Diocesses for Ecclesiastical Government by Malcolm 3d Anno 1072. And into the two Arch-bishopricks of St. Andrew and Glasco Ann. 1478. St. Andrew having 8 Bishops under him and Glasco 3. The Archbishop of York before that time being Metropolitan of Scotland And Palladius Anno 411 was sent by Celestinus Bishop of Rome to be their first Bishop The chief Rivers are two viz. 1. Spey and 2 Tey The chief Hills are those of Cheviot and Albany The chief Lakes 1 Lomond 2 Nessa and 3 Tay. The miraculous things 1. The Lake of Mirton part of whose Waters Congeal only 2. The Lake of Lennox 24 Miles round in which are 30 Islands one of them driven with every Tempest and 3. the Deaf-stone 12 foot high and 33 Cubits thick The Archbishopricks two Bishopricks 12 and Universities 4. The Arms Sol a Lyon Rampant Mars with a double Tressure Counterflowry added upon making the perpetual League with France Barbarons were the Feides here and the Custom changed into Mercheta Mulieris by Malcolm Conmer at Request of his Wife Sister to Edgar Atheling Scotland was an Heptarchy but now a Monarchy King James the first endeavoured in Parliament to make a Union of both Kingdoms But the Judges Resolved That Anglia had Laws and Scotia had Laws But the new Erected Kingdom of Britannia should have no Laws and therefore till there was a Union of the Laws there could be no Union of the Kingdoms The mighty and ancient Kingdoms of England and Scotland were anciently but one and as their Religion and Language was one so there was one kind of Government and one Law which Ruled both with many Unanimous Agreements between them which evidently appeareth by many Proofs First That the Laws of Scotland are divided as the Laws of England into the Common Laws Acts of Parliament and Customs their Common Laws being principally contained in two Books One called Regiam Majestatem because it beginneth as doth Justinian's Institutes with those words And agreeth in substance with our Glanvil and most commonly de Verbo in Verbum and many times our Glanvil is cited therein The second Book is called Quoniam Attachiamenta it beginning with those Words Secondly The Descent of the Crown of Scotland and of Lands to Subjects is the same with England Thirdly They have the like High Court of Parliament consisting of Lords Spirituals Lords Temporal and Commons But of latter times the Lords Spiritual chuse eight Temporal Lords and the Lords Temporal eight Spiritual Lords These Sixteen make choice of eight for Counties and eight of Cities and Burroughs in all 32 But whatsoever is agreed upon by them the King or his High Commissioner doth allow or disallow by moving of the Scepter c. Fourthly They have the same Degrees of Nobility as Dukes Marquisses Earls Viscounts and Barons Fifthly The same great Officers as Chancellor Treasurer Lord Privy Seal Secretary c. Sixthly The same Ministers of Justice as Sheriffs Coroners c. Seventhly The same Laws for the most part appropriated unto England viz. Tenant by the Curtesy because they had Laws as England had Eighthly The like Writs as De Recto Assisa de Novel Disseisin Mort de Ancestor de Gard de Ideot ' inquirend ' Replegiar ' Attachm ' c. Ninthly They agree with Magna Gharta concerning Ward-ships Tenthly With Charta de Foresta for it is lawful for Bishops Earls and Barons coming or returning through the Kings Forests at the Kings Command to kill own or two Beasts in the sight of the Forester Or otherwise in his Absence to blow his Horn that he appear not to take it Thievishly Eleventhly The Lord of whom the Land is holden per Antiquius Feoffamentum shall have the Wardship of the Body Twelfthly The Sheriffs should cause the Acts of Parliament to be proclaimed as heretofore in England Thirteenthly The Sheriffs there have Inheritance in their Office as sometimes in England and still in Cumberland they have Fourteenthly The same Vocables of Art are used in both Kingdoms But by reason of their Acts of Parliment which in many Points have altered diminished and abrogated many of the old and made new Laws and other Proceedings the distinct Kingdoms as they now stand have many different Laws Coke's 4 Inst. 345 346. By the Statute of 1 Jac. 1.2 An Authority is given to certain Commissioners of both Houses of Parliament to Treat with certain Commissioners of Scotland concerning the Settlement of an Union and Peace between the Kingdoms of England and Scotland By the Statute of 4 Jac. 1. Laws of Hostility and the dependences thereof between the two Nations of Scotland and England are Repealed Felonies Committed by English Men in Scotland shall be Tried in Cumberland Westmorland or Northumberland before Commissioners and Jurors of England for which see more in the Statute By the Statute of 7 Jac. 1.1 If an English Man shall commit Felony in Scotland and then fly into England the Justices of Assize or one of them the Justices of Gaol Delivery in their Gaol Delivery or four of them or the Justices of Peace in Sessions or four of them may send the Offender into Scotland to be Tried By the Statute of 19 Car. 2. cap. 13. Twelve persons to be nominated by the King shall be Commissioners for this Kingdom who or five or more of them after the 10th of January 1667 and before the 25th of March 1688 and so from time to time may meet at such place in England as the King shall appoint with Commissioners for the Realm of Scotland and Treat and Determine concerning the Liberty of Trade between the two Kingdoms by suspending Impositions c. charged since the 25 of March in 12 year of the Kings Reign upon Commodities of the Growth or Manufacture of either Kingdom or of any of the English Plantations or other Commodities Exported out of England into Scotland their Determinations to be reduced into Writing under the Hands and Seals of the Commissioners and being Ratified by the King shall be in force for a year from the Date of such
the Second in Propriety unto the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon George Duke of Albemarle William Earl of Craven John Lord Berkley Anthony Lord Ashley after Earl of Shaftsbury Sir George Carteret after Lord Carteret Sir John Coleton Knight and Baronet and Sir William Berkley Knight By which Letters Patent the Laws of England are to be in force in Carolina But the Lords Proprietors have power with the Consent of the Inhabitants to make By Laws for the better Government of the said Province so that no Money can be Raised or Law made without the Consent of the Inhabitants or their Representatives They have also power to appoint and impower Governours and other Magistrates to grant Liberty of Conscience make Constitutions c. with many other great Priviledges as by the said Letters Patent will more largely appear And the said Lords Proprietors have there settled a Constitution of Government whereby is Granted Liberty of Conscience and wherein all possible Care is taken for the equal Administration of Justice and for the lasting Security of the Inhabitants both in their Persons and Estates by the Care and Endeavours of the said Lords Proprietors and at their very great Charge Two Colonies have been settled in this Province the one at Albemarle in the most Northerly part the other at Ashley River which is in the Latitude 32 Degrees odd Minutes Care is taken by the Lords Proprietors That no Injustice be done the Natives who are here in perfect Friendship with the English in order to which is established a particular Court of Judicature to Determine all Differences The Lords Proprietors do at present Grant to all Persons that come to Inhabit there several reasonable Advantages to all Conditions of Men and sell their Land to any after the Rate of 50 Pounds for 1000 Acres The manner of Purchasing is The Party seeks out a place to his mind not possessed by any other then applies to the Governovr and Proprietors Deputies who thereupon Issue out their Warrant to the Surveyor General to measure him out a Plantation who making Certificate That he hath Measured out so much Land appointed a Deed is prepar'd of course which is Signed by the Governour and the Lords Proprietors Deputies and the Proprietors Seal affixed to it and Registred which is a good Conveyance in Law of the Land therein mentioned to the Party and his Heirs for ever Thus having Travelled the Main Land of America we must Cross the Seas and take a View of the Islands belonging to the Crown of England in the West Indies The first being Bermudas OR Summers Islands which are a Multitude of Broken Isles some write no less than 400 scituate directly East from Virginia from which they are distant 500 English Miles and 3300 Miles from the City of London so named from John Bermudaz a Spaniard after Summers Islands from the Shipwreck of Sir George Summers there The Island of more Fame and Greatness than all the rest and to which the Name of Bermudaz is most properly ascribed is scituated in the Latitude of 32 Degrees and 30 Min. North. The Air is sound and healthy very agreeable to the English Bodies the Soil as fertile as any well Watered plentiful in Maize of which they have Two Harvests yearly that which is sowed in March being cut in July and what is sowed in August is mowed in December No Venemous Creature is to be found in this Isle nor will Live if brought thither and besides these Advantages it it so fenced about with Rocks and Islets that without knowledge of the Passages a Boat of Ten Tun cannot be brought into the Haven yet with such knowledge there is Entrance for the Greatest Ships The English have since added to these Natural Strengths such Artificial Helps by Block Houses Forts and Bulwarks in convenient places as may give it the Title of Impregnable It was first Discovered rather Accidentally than upon Design by John Bermudas a Spaniard about 1522 and thereupon a Proposition made in the Council of Spain for settling a Plantation therein as a place very convenient for the Spanish Fleet in their Return from the Bay of Mexico by the Streights of Bahama yet was it neglected and without any Inhabitants till the like Accidental coming of Sir George Summers sent to Virginia with some Companies of the English by the Lord De la Ware in 1609 who being Shipwreck'd on this Coast had the Opportunity to survey the Island which he so well liked that he Endeavoured to settle a Plantation in it at his Return in 1612. The first Colony was sent over under Richard More who in Three years Erected 8 or 9 Forts in convenient places which he planted with Ordnance In 1616 a New Supply was sent over under Captain Tucker who apply'd themselves to sowing of Corn setting of Trees brought thither from other parts of America and Planting that gainful Weed Tobacco In 1619. the Business was taken more to Heart and made a Publick Matter many Great Lords and Persons of Honour being interested in● it Captain Butler was sent thither with 500 Men. The Isle was divided into Tribes or Counties a Burrough belonging to each Tribe and the whole reduced to a settled Government both in Church and State according to the Laws of England After this all succeeded so well that in 1623 there were said to be 3000 English and Ten Forts whereon were planted Fifty Pieces of Ordnance their Numbers since increasing daily both by Children born within the Island and Supplies from England All the Isles together represent an Half-Moon and Inclose very good Ports as the Great Sound Harrington Inlet Southampton and Paget's Bay with Dover and Warwick Forts having their Names from the Noble Men who were Undertakers therein The greatest Isle is called St. George five or six Leagues long and almost throughout not above a quarter or half a League broad The Air is almost constantly Clear Except when it Thunders and Lightens is extream Temperate and Healthful few dying of any Disease but Age so that many remove from England hither only to enjoy a long and healthful Life and after having continued there are fearful of Removing out of so pure an Air. The very Spiders here are not Venemous but of divers curious Colours and make their Web so strong that oftentimes small Birds are entangled and caught therein Their Cedar Trees are different from all others and the Wood very sweet In 1685. the Governour hereof was Sir Henry Heydon The Caribee Islands NExt present themselves so called in General because Inhabited by Canibals or Man-eating People at the first Discovery as the word Caribee imports They ly extended from the Coast of Paria to the Isle Porto Rico many in number 27 of them known by proper Names In Nine whereof the English are concerned viz. Barbuda Anguilla Montserrat Dominica St. Vincent Antegoa Mevis or Nevis St. Christophers and Barbadoes And first in Barbuda SCituate in 17 Degrees of North Latitude
purpose the Statutes concerning Sewers were made See the Statute of Hen. 6. cap. 6. In which the Commission of Sewers is formed and specified and other Statutes and Coke's 5 Rep. Rooke's Case and 10 Rep. 139 Keightly's Case And this Commission of Sewers is a Court of Record Coke's 6 Rep. 20. Gregorie's Case See Coke's 10 Rep. The Case of Chester Mill Keightly's Case and Case of the Isle of Ely upon the Commissions of Sewers and the several Acts of Parliament concerning the same where you may Read more at large of this matter See before in the Court of Commissioners of Sewers Page 292. To the Court of Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts THE first Statute made against Bankrupts was against Strangers viz. against Lombards who after they had made Obligations to their Creditors suddainly escaped out of the Realm without any Agreement made with them It was therefore Enacted 51 Ed. 3. That if any Merchant of the Company knowledge himself bound in that manner that then the Company shall answer the Debt so that another Merchant which is not of the Company shall not be thereby Grieved or Impeached neither do we find either any Complaint in Parliament or Act of Parliament made against any English Bankrupt until the aforesaid Statute of 34. Hen. 8. when the English Merchant had rioted in three kinds of Costliness viz. Costly Building Costly Dyet and Costly Apparel accompanied with neglect of his Trade and Servants and thereby consumed his Wealth He is called in Latin Decoctor à Decoquendo for consuming his Estate in Riotous and Delicate Living The Law provideth That the Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts ought to have Three qualities viz. Wisdom Honesty and Discretion Which if it be observed it is the best means for the due Execution of the said Statute and the Life of these Laws doth consist in the due Execution thereof And for such Commissioners if any Action shall be brought against them c. for doing of any thing by force of the said Statutes they may plead Generally and not be driven to any Special Pleading Coke's 4 Inst cap. 64. By Stat. 34. Hen. 8. cap. 4. The Lord Chancellor Treasurer c. might take Order with the Bankrupts Bodies Lands and Goods for the payment of their Debts but this was altered by Stat. 13 El. 7. 1 Jac. 15 c. And by the said Statute of 13 El. 7. It is Enacted That if any Person Subject or Denizen exercising Trade doth depart the Realm conceal him or her self take Sanctuary suffer him or her self to be Arrested Outlawed or Imprisoned without just Cause to the Intent to Defraud Creditors being also Subjects born he shall be Deemed a Bankrupt And that the Lord Chancellor or Keeper upon a Complaint in Writing against 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 and to cause the said Premisses to be Searched Rented Appraised and Sold for the payment of the Creditors Ratably according to their Debts as in the Discretions of such Commissioners or the most part of them shall be thought fit Such of the Commissioners as Execute the Commission shall upon the Bankrupts request render him an Account and also the Overplus if any be unto him his Executors Administrators or Assigns The Commissioners have Power to Convene before them any Person accused or suspected to have any of the Bankrupts Goods Chattels or Debts or to be Indebted unto him and for Discovery thereof to Examin upon Oath or otherwise as they or the most of them shall think fit The Person refusing to Disclose or Swear or Demanding or Detaining any of the Bankrupts Lands Goods Chattels or Debts not justly shall forfeit the Double By Stat. 1 Jac. 1. cap. 15. Any Creditor shall be received to take his part if he comes in within Four Months after the Commission Sued out and pay his part of the Charge otherwise the Commissioners may proceed to Distribution If any Person be suspected to detain any part of the Bankrupts Estate and do not Appear or send some lawful excuse at next Meeting after warning given him or appearing refuseth to be examined upon Oath The Commissioners by Warrant shall cause him to be Arrested and if he still refuse shall Commit him until he Submit If a Bankrupt grant his Lands or Goods or Transfer his Debts into other Mens names except to his Children upon Marriage they being of Age to consent or upon valuable Consideration the Commissioners may notwithstanding sell them and such sale shall be good By Stat. 21 Jac. 19. In the distribution of the Bankrupts Estate no more respect shall be had unto the Debts upon Judgments Recognizances Specialties with Penalties or the like than to other Debts Another Mans Goods in the Bankrupts Possession and Disposition shall be also distributed by the Commissioners as the Bankrupts own Goods No Purchaser shall be Impeached for this or former Acts unless the Commission be sued forth within Five years after he becomes Bankrupt By Stat. 13 14 Car. 2. cap. 24. None that adventure in the East-India or Guinea Company or put Money into any Stock for Carrying on the Fishing Trade and receive their Dividend in Goods which they Sell or Exchange shall by reason thereof only be lyable to the Statutes of Bankrupt Much more of this matter you may Read in the Statutes above mentioned and other later Statutes concerning Bankrupts at large See before in Court of Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts Page 201. To the Court of Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses THe Commissioners albeit named by the Parties reciprocally ought to stand indifferent and do their utmost endeavour to find out by due Examination the whole Truth and to suppress no part thereof for their Authority is to that end meerly and wholly from the King by force of his Commission There may be Propriety but no Superiority amongst Commissioners Witness Is derived of the Saxon word Weten i. Scire Quia de quibus sciunt ●testari debent Et omne Sacramentum debet esse certae Scientiae In Latin a Witness is called Testis à testando testari est Testimonium perhibere unde Regula juris Plus valet unus oculatus Testis quam auriti decem Testis de visu praeponderat alijs And Oath ought to be accompanied with the fear of God and Service of God for the Advancement of Truth Dominum Deum tuum timebis illi soli servies per nomen illius jurabis Testis falsus non erit impunitus Nocte dieque suum gestat sub pectore Testem Vox simplex nec probationem facit nec praesumptionem inducit Testibus deponentibus in pari numero
Jurisdiction of the Ordinary be saved as by 1 Eliz. in case of hearing Mass or 13 Eliz. for Usury or the like neither Clerk nor Layman shall be compelled to take Juramentum Calumniae because it may be an Evidence against him at the Common Law upon the Penal Statutes The Oath Juramentum Calumniae was warranted by Act of Parliament It is an High Contempt to Minister an Oath without Warrant of Law to be punished by Fine and Imprisonment A Christian may not induce an Infidel or Idolater to Swear by false Gods but may take his Credit by so Swearing to a good end Coke's 4 Inst 155. No Ecclesiastical Person shall tender the Oath Ex Officio or any Oath whereby the party shall be compelled to Accuse or Purge himself See Statutes Title Crown 162. The 2 Houses of parliament being either of them Courts may take voluntary Oaths Coke's 2 Inst. 536. The Lord Coke saith I wonder so little consideration is had of an Oath as I daily observe Cum jurare per Deum actus Religionis sit Quo Deus testis adhibetur tanquam is qui sit omnium rerum Maximus c. Coke's 4 Rep. 95. Slade's Case Jurare in propria causa est Saepenumero hoc Seculo praecipitium Diaboli ad destruendas miserorum animas ad infernum Coke's 4 Rep. 95. Slade's Case See before in Commissioners for Examination of Witnesses Page 203. To the King's Swanherd BY Stat. 1 Jac. 1.27 Every Person Convicted by his Confession or 2 Witnesses before 2 or more Justices of Peace To have killed or taken any Pheasant Partridge Pigeon Duck Heron Hare or other Game or to have taken or destroyed the Eggs of Pheasants Partridges or Swans shall by the said Justices be Committed to Prison without Bail unless he pay 20 s. to the use of the Poor for every Fowl Hare and Egg And after one Months Commitment to give Sureties in 20 l. each never to offend Vide Statutes for Preservation of the Game All White Swans not marked which have gained their Natural Liberty and are Swimming in an Open and Common River may be seized to the King's use by his Prerogative Because Volatilia Quae sunt ferae naturae alia sunt Regalia alia Communia And so Aquatilium alia sunt Regalia alia Communia And as a Swan is a Royal Fowl and all those the Property whereof is not known do belong to the King So Whales and Sturgeons are Royal Fishes and belong to the King But the Subject may have property in White Swans not marked as in his own private Waters And if they go out of those private Waters into Open and Common Rivers yet Eousque nostra intelliguntur quandin habuerunt animum revertendi The like are Cervi Pavones Columbae hujusmodi Resolved That every one who hath Swans within his Manor that is to say within his private Waters hath a property in them For a Writ of Trepass was brought of wroungful taking his Swans scilicet Quare Cygnos suos c. 2. One may prescribe to have a Game of Swans within his Manor as well as to have a Warren or a Park 3. He who hath such a Game of Swans may prescribe that his Swans may Swim within the Manor of another 4. A Swan may be an Estray and so cannot any other Fowl Coke's 7 Rep. 16. Case of Swans The Custom of the County of Bucks is for him who hath property of Swans in the Thames to have two Cygnets and Owner of the Land where the Swan buildeth shall have one Cygnet If one ●ave a Cock and tother a Hen the ●ygnets of them shall be equally divided between them None can have a Swan-mark called Cygni-nota but by Grant of the King or of his Officers thereto authorised or by Prescription and if a Man hath a Swan-mark and hath Swans swimming in an open River lawfully marked therewith they belong to him ratione Privilegii and he may grant such Swan-mark over But if he hath not Five Marks per Annum he forfeits his Swan-mark The King may grant Swans unmarked and by consequence a Man may prescribe to have Swans unmarked in such a place In some Creatures which are ferae Naturae a Man hath Jus Proprietatis and in others Jus Privilegii and there are three kinds of Property 1. Absolute 2. Qualified 3. Possessory Of all which you may read in Coke's 7 Rep. 16 to 18. Case of Swans By Stat. 22 Ed. 4.6 None but the King's Son shall have any Mark or Game of Swans of his own or to his use except he hath Lands and Tenements of Freehold worth Five Marks per Annum besides Reprizes in pain to have them seized by any having Lands of that Value to be divided between the King and the Seizor See before in The King's Swanherd Pag. 204. To the King's Aulnager NOte by Stat. 12 Ed. 3.3 No Clothes made beyond Sea shall be brought into the King's Dominions on pain to forfeit the same and to be further punished at the King 's Will. By Stat. 11 Ed. 3.5 Cloath workers of strange Lands which come into the King's Dominions shall have the King's Protection dwell where they please and have convenient Franchises granted unto them By Stat. 17 E. 3. Stat. 1.4 Cloaths shall not be forfeit for want of Measure but the Aulnager shall measure them and fix a Mark thereunto expressing what each Cloath contains By Stat. 3 R. 2.2 the Aulnager shall not feal a pieced Cloath in pain that the Owner shall forfeit the Cloath and the Aulnager his Office By Stat. 17 R. 2.2 No Cloath shall be sold before it be measured and sealed by the Aulnager upon the Pains contained in the Statutes thereof made By Stat. 4. H. 4.24 the Aulnage may be let to Farm by Improvement according to the Discretion of the Lord Treasurer and barons of the Exchequer notwithstanding the Statute of 17 R. 2. And much more of his Office and Duty and Measuring Regulating and making of Cloaths c. you may read in the many divers Statutes concerning the same Vid. the Statutes concerning Drapery See before in the King's Aulnager Page 205. To the Court of the Sessions of the Peace A Justice of Peace may make a Warrant to bring the Party before himself but if the Warrant be any Justice then the Constable may carry the Party before whom he will Coke's 5 Rep. 59. Foster's Case Where Stat. 8 H. 6. speaketh of Justices of Peace Justices of King's-Bench are within the Statute because they have the Sovereign and Supreme Authority in such Cases Stat. 5 H 4. Enacts That no Justice of Peace shall commit any to Prison but only in the Common Goal saving to Lords and others who have Goals their Franchises in such Case Therefore Justices of Peace offend in committing Felons c. to the Compters in London Coke's 9 Rep. 118 119. Lord Sanchar's Case A Justice of Peace upon the View of the Force may commit but he ought to
make a Record of it Coke's 8 Rep. 120. Dr. Bonham's Case Justices of Peace may commit Vagrants to Prison if they will not serve and they may command the Goalers to set 'em at liberty without any other Writ F. N. B. 374. Justices of Peace shall be made of the most sufficient by the Advice of the Chancellor and King's Council without taking others dwelling in Foreign Counties except Lords Justices of Assize and the King 's Chief Steward of Dutchy Lands in North and South St. 2 H. 5. Cap. 2. 18 H. 6. None except Men Learned in the Law or inhabiting Corporations shall be Justices of peace unless their Lands be worth 20 l. per Annum Justices in Middlesex not compellable to keep their Sessions more than twice in the Year but may keep them oftner Stat. 14 H. 6. Vid. the Statutes concerning Justices of Peace Sat. 5 6 W. M. Certiorari to remove Indictments shall not be out of the King's Bench before Trial and from before Justices of General or Quarter Sessions of Peace unless upon Motion of Council and Rule in open Court and the Party indicted find two Manucaptors before one or two of the Justices in the County in 20 l. to plead to the said Indictment in the King's Bench and at their own Charges to procure the Issue joyned upon such Indictment to be tried at next Assizes after the Certiorari returnable Or if in London Westminster or Middlesex then next Term or Sitting after Term unless the Justices appoint some other time of which Notice must be given Costs against the Prosecutor of the Certiorari if he be Convicted In Vacation time Writs of Certiorari shall be granted by any Justice of King's Bench the Justice and Parties Name being indorsed and finding Sureties If upon any Indictment for not repairing High-ways the Title may come in Question upon Affidavit thereof a Certiorari may be granted to remove it into King's Bench upon Sureties found Vid. Washington's Abridgment of Statutes 152. Justices of Peace shall deliver their Indictments to the Justices of Goal-Delivery And Justices of Goal-Delivery may take a Pannel of a Jury returned by the Sheriff without making any Precept which Justices of Oyer and Terminer ought to make Coke's 4 Inst 168. For the Institution of Justices of the Peace and their Duty and Authority and of what they may inquire See the Stat. 4 H. 7. and Coke's 4 Inst 170 to 183. Justices of Peace Sheriffs in their Tourns and Lords in their Leets may enquire of false Weights and Measures c. Coke's 4 Inst 273. If the Commission of Sewers determine the Justices of Peace have Power to execute for one year Coke's 4. Inst 276. By Stat. 2 3 P. M. 18. a new Commission of the Peace or Goal-Delivery for the whole County shall not be a Supersedeas to a former like Commission granted to a City or Town-Corporate being no County Those who desire to see more of their Institution Jurisdiction and Authority may read thereof more at large in Dalt Just Coke's 4 Inst and other Authors who treat thereof and in the Statutes at large See before in Court of the Sessions of the Peace Page 210. To the Court of the Tourne THIS Court of the Tourne is the King 's Leet through all the County and the Sheriff is Judge And whosoever hath a Leet hath the same Authority within the Precinct as the Sheriff hath within the Tourne From this Court are exempted only Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earls Barons all Religious Men and Women and all such as have Hundreds of their own to be kept who are not bound to appear except for some other Cause but only in the Bailywicks where they dwell Stat. Marleb 10.25 H. 3. By Stat. 31 Ed. 3. Sess 1.15 Every Sheriff shall hold his Tourne yearly one time within the Month after Easter and another time within the Month after Michaelmas on Pain to lose his Tourne for the Time This Court is appertaining and incident to the Office of the Sheriff and ought not to be reserved therefrom and the Sheriff is to appoint Clerks under him in his Court such as he will at his Peril answer for but he cannot prescribe to take any thing for the keeping of his Tourne because he is an Officer removeable And by Magna Charta Chap. 35. he is to keep his Tourne in the Hundred at the usual Place It was Enacted by Stat. 1 Ed. 4. That all Indictments and Presentments taken before the Sheriff in his Tourne or County shall be delivered to the Justices of the Peace at the next Sessions in Pain of 40 l. who shall Arraign Deliver make Process and proceed thereupon as if they were taken before themselves and shall deliver indented Estreats of the Fines to the Sheriff to be levied to his own use And here if the Sheriff levy any Fine or commit any to Prison by colour of any such Indictment or Presentment or otherwise than by Warrant from the Justices aforesaid he shall forfeit 100 l. Howbeit Sheriffs of London shall not be restrained by this Act nor such as have had Fines formerly granted unto them Coke's 5 Rep. 112. Mallorie's Case But this extendeth only to Proceedings upon lawful and sufficient Indictments and doth not make any insufficient Indictment good Coke's 9 Rep. 26. Case of the Abbot of Strata Marcella See more in Court-Leet County-Court and Hundred-Court See before in The Court of the Tourne Page 223. To the Court-Leet or View of Frankpledge BY Stat. de Visu Franc. 18 Ed. 2. before mentioned and divers other Statutes the Court of the Leet may enquire of several Offences and amongst the things whereof the Steward of the Leet hath Cognizance and wherewith the Jury is to be charged some are such as may be there enquired of as High-Treason Petit Treason Felonies Burglaries Wilful Burners of Houses or Barns adjoyning thereunto by Night or Stacks of Corn Robbers of Churches and Chappels Takers of Doves out of Dovehouses or young Pigeons or Hawks out of their Nest in the Night or Fishes out of Ponds Stews or Trunks in the Night Stealers of Tame Deer marked Swans or Peacocks Breaking of Prison by Felons Rescuers of Felons and the like and their Accessaries before and after the Felony done Of all which the Jury must make Presentment and this Presentment is to be transmitted to Superior Courts as to the Justices of Goal-Delivery or Justices of Peace in their Sessions And other things whereof this Court hath perfect Cognizance and that may be enquired of and punished here in this Court are 1. By Common Law as the Defaults of Officers and Suitors in doing their Suit to this Court as if any living within the Precinct of the Law-day be not returned of the Decenary or being returned does not appear Or if any above Twelve years of Age have lived within the Leet and had not taken the Oath of Allegiance he was to have been presented here And
if any such Person had come to this Court the Steward ought to have given him this Oath If any Customs or Profits as Treasure Trove Waif Estray or Wreck be withheld from the Lord of the Leet or if any claim any Royal Franchise or levy any new Franchise or abuse any old Franchise within the Leet All common and popular Nusances or Grievances done to the Kings Subjects by Purprestures made in any Land Wood or Water by Walls Hedges Ditches or Houses made up or broken down by straightning turning stopping surrounding or otherwise hurting the common Ways Bridges or Waters by poisoning or corrupting the Air by laying of any Carrion or Filth by selling of corrupt and unwholsom Provision or by the breaking of the due Assize of Bread Beer c. By Erecting Cottages and suffering Inmates by not scowring Ditches or not repairing Highways and Bridges and the like And for all these be the Offend or one Man or a whole Parish he or they may be Amerced and the Jury may order the Reforming of them under a Pain And all great Affrays Outcries and Bloodsheds and such like popular Trespasses which are Trespasses by the Common Law Riots Routs and unlawful Assemblies at the Common Law are punishable in this Court and for this the Offendors are to be Amerced according to Discretion but this must be reasonable and the reasonableness tryable and avoidable by Plea or Judgment of the Court in which the Suit depends Evil Members and persons of ill Behaviour that are dangerous to the Neighbours as Malefactors in Parks such as take Doves by Engines such as are common suspected Thieves or that are the common Messengers of Thieves the common Drunkards the common Haunters of Alehouses or Taverns not having whereon to live Nightwalkers and Day-sleepers that live idlely that have no Estate yet fare well Eves-droppers common Hedge-breakers common Peace breakers Railers and Sowers of Discord between Neighbours Keepers or Haunters of Bawdy-houses common Scolds common Barretors common Usurers Innkeepers who do commonly entertain Thieves and suspicious Persons knowing or suspecting them to be so and such as do remove Bounds or Landmarks between Parishes Hundreds or Counties but not such as remove Bounds between Persons only These last the Steward of this Court heretofore might have bound to the Peace or Good Behaviour but at this day he can only by the Presentment of the Jury Amerce them or make way to have them bound to their Good Behaviour by a Justice of Peace Constables Tythingmen Haywards Aleconners Bailiffs and such like Officers which are chosen and sworn in this Court if any such being chosen refuse the Office and to take the Oath or accepting doth not execute his Office duly or misbehave himself therein as if Constables and Tythingmen do not take care of Watch and Ward keeping the Peace raise Hue and Cry and pursue it for the apprehending Felons when any Felony is done or raise Hue and Cry when none is done or do not punish Rogues and the like or Tythingmen Chief Pledges Surveyors of High-ways Searchers and Sealers of Leather and such like Officers as do not their Duty All that Rescue Persons or Things taken in a course of Law as Rescuers of Persons Arrested or Goods or Cattel Distreined Pound-breakers and the like The lack of Stocks Pillory and Tumbrel Cucking-stool or Common Pound All that use Deceit in Buying and Selling that Sell false Wares for good especially if it be that which is to be Eaten or Drunk That Sell by false Weights and Measures Inn-keepers Victuallers Brewers Bakers Fishers Poulterers or Fishmongers that Sell that which is unwholsome for Food or Sell at unreasonable Prices Bakers and Brewers that do not keep the Assize of Bread and Beer and Millers that take excessive Toll Forestallers Regrators and Ingrossers may be punished in this Court by the Common Law And Usurers as Enemies to Trading But in these and such like Cases the Penalty of the Statute cannot be Imposed for Stewards have no Power by the Statutes but it is punished here as an Offence at the Common Law before the Statute which doth remain still and for these the Offender is to be amerced 2. By Statute Law are punishable Tanners Curriers Shoomakers Searchers and Sealers of Leather such as offend about Fish Malt Archery Guns Unlawful Games Artificers and Labourers Musters Highways Horses Hostlers and Victuallers about the price of Wine Pheasants Partridges Tracers of Hares Hunting in Corn about Cottages and Inmates about Drinking and Drunkenness Watering of Hemp where Cattle Drink about Rogues Crows c. Of all these and some others this Court may Inquire by Authority of divers Acts of Parliament for all which see Shepheard's Court-keepers Guide Coke's 4 Inst. and other Authors and the Statutes at large The Articles to be enquired of by the Leet by 18 Ed. 2. were inquirable therein by the Common Law This Court cannot take Indictments of any Felony for the death of a Man or in any other case where it hath not Cognizance And if it do it is void and it seems the Judge may be punished for it Neither can it take a Presentment of an offence done against a Parish or against a Man The like of Presentments of any thing which is not within the Jurisdiction of the Court. The Jury in this Court may make By-Laws and enquire of the breach of them as they have been used to do And for Cawseys High-ways and Bridges the greater part may bind the rest without consent 44 Ed. 3.19 But no By-Law can be made to Imprison Refusers but Distress and Action of Debt in this Case is the proper Remedy for a Penalty Imposed or Breach of a By-Law Coke's 5 Rep. 64. Shepheard's Court-keepers Guide cap. 39. The manner of Summoning this Court Proceeding therein and Adjournment and Discharging thereof you may see in Kitchins Court Leet Shepheard's Court-keepers Guide and other Authors Visus Franc ' Pleg ' i. e. Libere Fide jussores was instituted for the keeping of the King's Peace that every Freeman at his Age of 12 years should in the Leet if he were in any or in the Tourn take the Oath of Allegiance to the King and that Pledges or Sureties should be found for his Truth to the King and to all his People or else to be kept in Prison This Frank-pledge consisted most commonly of ten Housholds which the Saxons called Theothung in the North parts they call him Tenementale in other places of England Tything whereof the Masters of the Nine Families who were bound were of the Saxons called Freeborgh which in some places is to this day called Freebarow i. e. Free Surety or Frank-pledge And the Master of the 10th Houshold was by the Saxons called by divers Names viz. Theothungmon to this day in the West called Tythingman and Tihenheofod and Freoborher i. e. Capitalis plegius chief Pledge and these Ten Masters of Families were bound one for anothers Family that each Man of their