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

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shall be paid by the King LXVI This Act shall not extend to any Colledge or Hall in the Universities the Free-Chappel at Windsor the Colledges of Winchester and Eaton N wton Chappel in the Isle of Ely nor to any of the lands belonging to them nor to any Chappel of Ease nor to any Chappel whereunto only a Church-yard a little house or Close doth belong Nor to any Cathedral where there is a Bishops See nor to their lands other then such Chanteries Obits Lights and Lamps used within such Cathedrals within five years before this Paliament and unto which this Act doth extend LXVII The King may during his life alter the Names of such Chanteries and their Foundations LXVIII The right of all persons except only the Governors Incumbents c. of such Chanteries c. their Founders and the heirs and successors of every of them also the grantees or any of the premises to the uses aforesaid or to the use of any such Chantery c. or without the Kings licence is saved likewise all services rents annuities profits and offices of right due to Founders Donors c. and leases made before the beginning of this Parliament whereupon the accustomed rent is reserved are saved LXIX The Bargainor of any of the premises or his Executors shall repay unto the Bargainee his Executors or Administrators the money received upon sale thereof within three months after request thereof made and upon non-payment thereof such bargainee shall recover it by action of debt wherein no essoin c. shall be allowed LXX The premises given to the King by this Act together with their revenues shall be within the survey of the Court of Augmentations or such other Court as the King shall appoint LXXI All leases made by the said Governors Incumbent c. since the 23 of November 37. H. 8. whereupon the old rents are reserved shall be void but all others shall continue in force LXXII This Act shall not extend to any Lands whereof such Governours Incumbents c. are seised or possessed to their own uses and not annexed to such Chanteries Free-chappels c. nor to any Mannors Lands Pensions c. not parcel of the premises granted by H. 8. or granted or to be granted by E. 6. to any of the said Governors Incumbents c. LXXIII Every person which had any rent or yearly profit out of the lands of any Chantery c. shall still enjoy them notwithstanding this Act. LXXIV All payments of First Fruits to be made by any such Governor Incumbent c. after the beginning of this Parliament shall be remitted LXXV Payments answered yearly into the Exchequer out of the premises shall be still continued LXXVI All Assurances made of the premises by H. 8. or E. 6. or by either of their licence or to either of them by any such Governour Incumbent c. shall be good The right of others being saved LXXVII This Act shall not extend to make good any Grant made by any Parson or Vicar nor to prejudice the Lord Cobham or any Corporation or the Chantery of Attlebo●ough in Norfolk LXXVIII All such Chanteries Free-Chappels c. given to the King by this Act as are within the Dutchy of Lancaster together with their lands c. shall be within the survey of the Dutchy-Court and all Commissions to be issued out concerning them shall be under the great Seal but shall be certified into the said Dutchy LXXIX The King may impower Commissioners to alter the nature and condition of Obits to better uses and none shall take advantage of any remainder use or condition for not finding of a Priest Obit Anniversary Light or Lamp LXXX This Act shall not extend to give Copyhold-lands to the King but the said Incumbents shall have them during their lives towards their maintenance LXXXI This Act shall not extend to lands recovered from a Chantery Priest by a good title without fraud LXXXII All Letters Pattents made by H. 8. and E. 6. of Chantery-lands and other the premises are confirm'd LXXXIII Stat. 1.2 P. M. 8. Pars inde None shall molest any person for any abbey-Abbey-Lands in pain to incur a Praemunire Vide 1 El. 1. ☞ Money * I. The Statute of great money incerti temporis None upon grievous forfeiture shall expend utter or receive any money or any other Coyn then English Irish or Scotch nor import more money into this Realm then may serve him for his expences nor land unless forced by tempest at any other then the known Ports and there shall shew his money to such person as the King shall assign without concealment in pain to forfeit his body and moneys II. None shall hide his money within Clothes Fardels Bales or otherwise in pain that the finder thereof shall have 4 d. for every pound so found and the King the rest and the body of him in whose hands any false or clipt money shall be found shall be arrested untill he find surety if he be a suspitious man Also he that finds any other coyn than English Irish or Scotch shall break the same and restore the pieces to the party that ows it and none shall oppose him in pain of great forfeiture but false money shall be pierced without restoring it III. Because poor people cannot well discover light moneyes they shall receive and pay them by weight of 5. of even weight by the Tumbrel to be delivered unto them by the Warden of the Exchange and marked by the Kings mark and it shall be lawful fon any man to pierce money not weiging the Tumbrel Howbeit 4 d. shall be allowed in every pound weight being then 20 s. and so it be only worn 6 d. * IV. The Statute of small money 20 E. 1. No Merchant or other shall import into this Realm any mony clipt or counterfeited or traffick therewith in pain for the first time to forfeit the mony for the second the mony and all his goods for the third his body and goods V. Others which have clipt money shall pierce it and carry it to the Kings Exchange to be new coyned * VI. Stat. 9. E. 3.1 None without the Kings Licence shall export any gold or silver in money or plate in pain to forfeit the same * VII Cap. 2. None shall import into any of the Kings Dominions any false or counterfeit money in pain to forfeit the same Howbeit any person stranger and other may bring to the Kings Exchange good money or bullion and receive convenient exchange for the same * VIII Cap. 3. Small money viz. half-pence or farthings shall not be molten into vessel or any thing else by any Goldsmith in pain to forfeit the money so molten and to suffer imprisonment until he hath paid the one half thereof IX Cap. 4. Black money shall not be current in this Realm X. Cap. 5. The Prosecutor against the offenders of this Statute shall be allowed a fourth part of the forfeiture XI Cap. 6. There shall
and to cause the said premisses to be searched rented appraised and sold for the payment of the Creditors rateably according to their debts as in the discretion of such Commissioners or the most part of them shall be thought fit IV. The Vendees of copihold-Copihold-lands shall compound with the Lord for their fines and the shall be admitted and make fealty according to the custom of the Mannor V. Such of the Commissioners as execute the Commission shall upon the Bankrupt's request render him an account and also the overplus if any be unto him his Executors Administrators or Assigns VI. The Commissioners have power to convene before them any person accused or suspected to have any of the Bankrupt's goods chattels or debts or to be indebted unto him and for discovery thereof to examine upon oath or otherwise as they or the most of them shall think fit VII The person refusing in that behalf to disclose or swear shall forfeit the double value of the goods chattels or debts so concealed to be ordered and imployed by the Commissioners or the most part of them as if they were the Bankrupts VIII The person demanding or detaining any of the Bankrupt's lands goods chattels or debts not justly due shall forfeit the double value to be levied recovered and employed as aforesaid IX If after all the creditors are paid out of the Bankrupt's estate and the forfeitures any surplusage shall remain it shall be by the Commissioners divided betwixt the Queen her heirs and successors and the poor of the place where such Bankrupt happens to be X. If any person indebted absent himself from his usual place of abode upon complaint the Commissioners or the most of them shall award five Proclamations to be made upon five sundry Market-days near the said place commanding him to render himself to the Commissioners or one of them which if he do not within convenient time he shall be adjudged out of the Queen's protection and the party wittingly receiving or concealing him shall upon information of the Commissioners or the most part of them suffer such imprisonment and pay such fine as the Lord Chancellor or Keeper shall think fit XI The Creditor not sully satisfied by this means may notwithstanding this Act take his course at Law against the Bankrupt for the residue of his debt XII The estate which happeneth to the Bankrupt by purchase or descent after he becomes a Bankrupt shall also be extendable by the Commissioners or the more part of them XIII This Act shall not extend to annual estates of Land Free or Copy by him conveyed before he became Bankrupt so that they were so conveyed bonâ fide and not to such as were privy to his fraudulent purpose XIV Stat. 1 Jac. 15. Every Subject born or Denizon who using Trade shall depart the Realm keep house absent him or her self take Sanctuary suffer him or her self to be arrested for debt not justly grown due to be outlawed imprisoned fraudulently procure his person to be arrested or goods attached depart from home make any fraudulent grant of lands or goods with intent to deceive his other Creditors being Subjects born or being arrested lie in prison six moneths or more shall be adjudged a Bankrupt XV. The Bankrupt hereby described shall be proceeded against as is limited by the Stat. of 13 El. 7. in like manner as if he had been there so fully described XVI Any Creditor shall be received to take his part if he come in within four moneths after the Commission sued out and pay his part of the charge otherwise the Commissioners may proceed to distribution XVII If a Bankrupt grant his lands or goods or transferr his debt 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 XVIII If upon warning in writing left three times at the most usual place where he dwelt within one year before he became Bankrupt he appear not before the Commissioners they may cause him to be proclaimed at some publick place or places and if upon five such Proclamations he yield not himself they shall by warrant cause him to be brought before them to be examined the concerning his estate c. XIX If the Bankrupt shall refuse to be examined the Commissioners shall commit him until he conform or if being examined he commit perjury in prejudice of the Creditors to the value of 10 l. or more he shall be indicted for the same and after conviction stand upon the Pillory and have one of his ears nailed thereto and cut off XX. If any person be known or suspected to detain any of the Bankrupt's estate and do not appear or send some lawful excuse at the 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 XXI The witnesses shall have convenient charges allowed them ratably by the Creditors and such of them as shall be perjured and their procurers shall be indicted upon the Statute of 5 El. 9 which see in Perjury XXII The Forfeitures of this Act shall be recovered by the Creditors and the costs of suit deducted shall be ratably divided amongst them XXIII The Commissioners have power to assign the Bankrupt's debts to the Creditors and by such assignment they shall be recoverable by the Creditors as their proper debts XXIV No debtor shall be prejudiced by payment of his debt to the Bankrupt before he have notice that he is a Bankrupt XXV The Commissioners shall make such account to the Bankrupt and likewise pay him the overplus as by 13 El. 7. is ordained and the Creditors being all satisfied the Bankrupt may recover the remaining debts XXVI If any of the Commissioners or other person imployed by them be sued for any act done by force of the Commission the Defendant may plead Not guilty or justify and the whole matter shall be brought in evidence according to the very truth thereof and if the Verdict pass for the Defendant he shall have his costs XXVII The Commissioners shall proceed to execution notwithstanding the death of the Bankrupt XXVIII Stat. 21 Jac. 19. All Laws made against Bankrupts shall be beneficially construed for the Creditors XXIX All persons of Trade and Scriveners that procure protection except of Parliament and all such as by exhibiting Petitions endeavour to compel their Creditors to take less then their due debts or to gain time for the payment thereof or being indebted in 100 l. or more shall not satisfie the same within 6 months after the same grows due and the debtor arrested or within six moneths after the original Writ sued out and notice given thereof or left in writing at the place of his abode or after arrest lie six months in prison or escape out of prison or procure enlargement by
thereupon a Writ awarded to the Sheriff and returned into the Common Pleas and the Statute there mee shewed albeit the process thereof be after that discontinued yet the party shall have the process re-continued and shall also have re-execution upon the same Statute without shewing it again to the Court. XXXI Stat. 11 H. 6.10 He that sueth for a Scire facias in Chancery to defeat an Execution upon a Statute-staple shall find surety both to the King and the Recognizee to prosecute his Suit with effect c. XXXII Stat. 23 H. 8.6 The Chief Justices of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas or either of them or in their absence out of the Term the Mayor of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of London joyntly together shall have power to take Recognisances for the payment of debts in this sorm following XXXIII Noverint universi per praesent nos A.B. D.C. teneri firmiter obligari Johanni Style in cent libr. Sterling solvendis eiden Johanni aut suo cert Atornat hot script ostend haered vel execut suit in tal fest c. proxim futur post dat praesent si desecero vel defecerimus in solutione debit praedict Volo conced vel sic Volumus concedimus quod tunc currat super me haered execut meos vel Super nos quemlibet nostrum haered execut nostros poena in statuto Stapul de debit pro Merchandisis in ead emptis recuperand ordinat provis dat talï dir Anno regni regis c. XXXIV Such Obligation shall be sealed with the Seal of the Recognisor or Recognisors as also with such a Seal as the King shall appoint for that purpose and with the Seal of one of the chief Justices or the Seals of the said Mayor of the Staple and Recorder and every of the said Justices and the said Mayor and Recorder shall have the custody of one such Seal to be appointed by the King as aforesaid XXXV The Clerk of the Recognisances to be also appointed by the King or his sufficient Deputy or Deputies shall write and inroll such Obligatiors in two several Rolls indented whereof one shall remain with such of the said Justices or with the said Mayor and Recorder that take such Recognisance and the other with the writer thereof Also such Clerk or his Deputy or Deputies shall be dwelling or abiding in London and shall not be absent from thence by the space of two days in pain to forfeit 10 l. XXXVI The Clerk or his Deputy at the request of the Creditors their Executors or Administrators shall certifie such Obligations into the Chancery under his or their Seal XXXVII The Recognisees of such Obligations their Executors and Administrators shall have in every point degree and condition against the Recognisors their Heirs Executors and Administrators such Process Execution commodity and advantage as hath been had upon an Obligation of the Statute of the Staple and shall also pay like Fees for the same XXXVIII Here the Recognisor so bounden or otherwife grieved by such an Obligation shall have like remedy by Audita Qucrela and all other remedies in the Law as upon Obligations of the Statute of the Staple XXXIX Upon the sealing of the process for the execution of every such Obligation the King shall have an half-peny in the pound XL. The Tenant by such a Recognisance his Executors or Administrators being outed shall have like remedy as upon an Obligation of the Statute of the Staple XLI The Justices or the Mayor and Recorders fee for taking such a Recognisance is 3 s. 4 d. and the Clerks fee is as much and his fee for certifying such an Obligation is 20 d. And none of them shall take more in pain of 40 l. XLII From henceforth the Mayor or Constable of the Staple shall take no Recognisance of the Statute of the Staple in pain of 40 l. except between Merchants being free of the same Staple for Merchandize of the said Staple between them lawfully bought and sold XLIII The forfeitures abovesaid are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and proved by Information Action of Debt Bill or Plaint in which no Essoin c. shall be allowed XLIV Stat. 16 and 17 Car. 2. cap. 5. When any Judgment Statute or Recognisance shall be extended it shall not be avoided or delayd by occasion of omission of any part of the Lands or Tenements extendible saving always the remedy of contribution against such persons whose Lands be or shall be extended out of such Extent from time to come XLV Provided This Act give no extent or contribution against any heir within the age of 21 years during such minority further then might have been before this Act. XLVI Provided This Act extend only to such Statutes as be for payment of moneys And to such Extents as shall be within 20 years after the Statute Recognisance or Judgment had This Act to continue 3 years and from thence to the end of the next Session of Parliament and no longer ☞ Records I. Stat. 9 E. 3.5 Justices of Assize Goal-delivery and Oyer and Terminer shall yearly at Michaelmas send all their Records and Processes determined and put in execution into the Exchequer which the Treasurer and Chamberlains there shall receive under their seals and keep them in the Treasury Howbeit the said Justices shall first take out the Estreats of the said Records and Processes to send them to the Exchequer as they were wont to do Recoveries I. Stat. 7 H. 8.4 Recoverers of Mannors Lands Tenements and Advowsons their Heirs and Assigns may distrain for Rents Services and Customs due and unpaid and make Avowry and justifie the same and have like remedy for recovering them as the Recoverer might have done or had Albeit the said Recoverers were never seised thereof And shall also have a Quare Impedit for an Advowson if upon a Voydance any disturbance be made by a stranger as the Recoverers might have had albeit they were never seised thereof by presentation II. Here every Avowant or Bailiff in any R●plegiarie or second Deliverence if their Avowrie Conusance or justification be found for them or the Plaintiff be otherwise barred shall recover his damages and costs III. Stat. 21. H. 8.15 A Termer for years may falsifie a feigned Recovery had against them in the Reversion and shall retain and enjoy his Term against the Recoverer his Heirs and Assigns according to his Lease IV. Also the Recoverer shall have like remedy against the termer his Executors or Assigns by Avowrie or Action of debt for Rents and Services reserved upon such Lease and due after such recovery and also like action for waste done after such recovery as the lesser might have had if such recovery had never been V. No Statute of the Staple Statute-Merchant or execution by Elegit shall be avoided by such feigned recovery but such tenants shall also have like remedy to falsifie such recoveries as is
Ceremonies or Rites of the Church by mis-using the Orders appointed in the Book of Common-Prayer the Queen by like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitan may ordain such further Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for Gods glory the edifying of the Church and reverence of Christs holy Ministeries and Sacraments XXX All other Laws made for other service shall be void XXXI Stat. 5 El. 28. An Act for translating of the Bible and Book of Common-Prayer into the Welsh Tongue Also there shall be an English Bible and Book of Common Prayer in every Church of Wales XXXII Stat. 3 Jac. 1. All Ministers in every Cathedral and Parish Church or other usual place for Common Prayer within the Kings Dominions shall alwayes upon the fifth day of November say morning Prayer and give thanks to God for the happy deliverance of the King Queen Prince and both Houses of Parliament upon that day XXXIII Every person within the Kings Dominions shall alwayes upon that day diligently resort to his Parish Church or Chappel or to some usual Church or Chappel where the said Common Prayer Preaching and other service of God shall be used and there orderly abide during the said solemnity XXXIV Every Minister shall give warning publickly in the Church at morning Prayer the Sunday before every such fifth of November for the due observation of the said day and after morning Prayer or Preaching upon the said fifth day of November shall read publickly and distinctly this present Act. See more Title Religion Severn I. Stat. 34. 35 H. 8.9 A penalty for casting any Ballast or Robul in King-rode in any part of the Haven in Bristol II. None shall load any Corn in any Vessel by the water of Severn to be transported beyond Sea before he be bound to the Customer of Bristol to bring it first to Bristol to be there viewed by the Mayor there for the time being in pain to forfeit both the grain and Vessel III. The penalty where one bringeth more Corn to Bristol to be measured and thence to be transported then is contained in his Cocket or License which is to be delivered unto him by the said Mayor when he takes bond of him as aforesaid IV. The penalty for denying to measure the Corn at Bristol is five pounds for every time to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor See the Statute at large ☞ Sewers I. Stat. 6 H. 6.5 During ten years several Commissions of Sewers shall be made to divers persons by the Chancellor of England to be sent into all parts of the Realm where need shall be according to the form in the said Statute expressed for which see the Statute at large being here omitted because a latter Commission was afterwards ordained by the Statute of 23 H. 8.5 which see after in the proper place II. Stat. 8 H. 6.3 Commissioners of Sewers shall have power to do ordain and execute all such Statutes Ordinances and other things as shall be made according to the effect and purport of the Commission of Sewers ordained by the Statute of 6 H. 6.5 III. Stat. 18 H. 6.10 Commission of Sewers shall be awarded where need shall require during ten years IV. Stat. 23 H. 6.9 The Chancellor of England may grant Commissions of Sewers during fifteen years V. Stat. 12 E. 4.6 The Chancellor of England may grant Commissions of Sewers for 15 years where need shall require VI. Stat. 4 H. 7.1 Commissions of Sewers shall be granted during 25 years VII Stat. 6 H. 8.10 Commissions of Sewers shall be granted during ten years according to the Statute of 6 H. 6.5 and 4 H. 7.1 VIII Stat. 23 H. 8.5 Commissions of Sewers shall be directed into all parts of the Realm from time to time where and when need shall require according to the manner form and tenor hereafter following to such substantial and indifferent persons as shall be named by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer of England and the two Chief Justices or any three of them whereof the Lord Chancellor is to be one IX Henry the eighth c. Know ye that forasmuch as the walls ditches banks gutters Sewers Gates Calcies Bridges streams and other defences by the Coasts of the Sea and Marsh-ground being and lying within the limits of A. B. and C. in the County or Counties of 〈…〉 or in the borders or confines of the same by rage of the Sea flowing and re-flowing and by means of the trenches of fresh water descending and having course by divers wayes to the Sea be so dirupt lacerate and broken And also the common passages of Ships Ballengers and Boats in the rivers streams and other floods within the limits of A. B. and C. in the County or Counties of 〈…〉 or in the borders or confines of the same by mean of setting up erecting and making streams mills bridges ponds fishgarths mill-dams locks habbing-wears hecks flood-gates or other lets impediments or annoyances be letted or interrupted so that great and inestimable damago for default of reparation of the said Walls Ditches Banks Fences Sewers Gates Gutters Calcies Bridges and streams and also by mean of setting up and erecting making and enlarging of the said fish-garths mill-dams locks hebbing-wears hecks flood-gates and other annoyances in times past hath happened and yet is to be feared that far greater hurt loss and damage is like to ensue unless that speedy remedy be provided in that behalf X. We therefore for that by reason of our Dignity and Prerogative Royal we be bound to provide for the safety and preservation of our Realm of England willing that speedy remedy be had in the premisses have assigned you and six of you of the which we will that A. B. and C. shall be three to be our Justices to survey the said Walls Streams Ditches Banks Gutters Sewers Gates Calcies Bridges Trenches Mills Mill-dams Flood-gates Ponds Locks Hebbing-wears and other impediments lets and annoyances aforesaid and the same cause to be made corrected repaired amended put down or reformed as cause shall require after your wisdomes and discretions And therein as well to ordain and do after the tenor form and effect of all and singular the Statutes and Ordinances made before the first day of March in the three and twentieth year of Our Reign touching the premisses or any of them as also to enquire by the oaths of the honest and lawful men of the said Shire or Shires place or places where such defaults or annoyances be as well within Liberties as without by whom the truth may the rather be known through whose default the said hurts and damages have happened and who hath or holdeth any lands or tenements or common of Pasture or profit of fishing or hath or may have any hurt loss or disadvantage by any manner of means in the said places as well near to the said dangers lets and impediments as inhabiting or dwelling thereabouts by the said walls ditches banks gutters gates sewers trenches and
34 35 H. 8.17 2 3 E. 6.20 7 E. 6.4 1 Eliz. 4. Page 232 ad 236 Testaments Probats thereof how to be obtained and the fees thereof 31 E. 3.4 21 H. 8.15 Page 441 442 Transportation what goods and of what kinds may be imported or exported and by whom 32 H. 8.14 1 El. 13. 5 Eliz. 5. 13 El. 11. 39 El. 10. 1 Jac. 24. 12 Car. 2. cap. 18. Page 525 ad 533 Tail Estate tail what and how setled West 2.1 13 E. 1. 32 H. 8.36 Page 545 Taxes No new Taxes shall be taken 25 E. 1. de Tallagio non concedendo cap. 1. Temp. E. 1. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 6. 9 H. 4.7 1 R. 3.2 17 H 7.8 16 17 Car. 2. c. 1. Page 546 547 Tenure Feoffee shall hold feoffors Land by the same services as before Quia emptores terrarum 18 E. 1. Page 547 Where tenure is from the King in chief what shall be done upon alienation or otherwise 1 Ed. 3. Stat. 2.12 13. Page 547 548 Where Lands fall to the King for Treason what shall be the tenure afterwards 7 Ed. 4.5 The King may reserve what tenure he pleaseth 35 H. 8.14 what shall be Soccage or Burgage tenure 37 H. 8.20 1 E. 6.4 Page 548 549 Tiles Tile-earth when it shall be cast up Tiles their several sorts names and bignesses 17 E. 4.4 Page 549 550 Tindale Ridesdale c. offenders there being outlawed shall be taken and their Lands seized 2 H. 5.5 9 H. 5.7 11 H. 7.9 Page 550 Tythes who shall pay them of what to whom how they shall be recovered and the penalty for non payment 5 H. 4.11 27 H. 8.20 28 H. 8.11 32 H. 7. 37 H. 8.12 2 3 E. 6.13 Page 251 ad 255 Tobacco None to be planted in England and the punishment of such as plant it 12 Car. cap. 34. Page 555 Toll The punishment of taking excessive Toll West 1.30 3 E. 1. 18 E. 2. Page 555 556 Towns several Statutes for repairing divers Towns 27 H. 8.1 32 H. 8.18 33 H. 8.36 35 H. 8.4 Page 556 557 Trade Tillage encouraged 15 Car. 2. c. 5. Stat. 3. Page 557 ad 560 Trespasse what shall be a trespass and where it may be sued Glocester cap. 8. 6 E. 1. what may be pleaded to avoid a Trespass 21 Jac. 16. Pars inde p. 565 566 567 Triall where an Inquest shall be taken though the witnesses appear not 9 E. 3. Stat. 1. c. p. 4. An Inquest de Medietate linguae where 8 H. 6.29 Page 567 Felons Murders and Robberies where to be tryed and nothing to be pleaded in barr 4 H. 8.2 27 H. 8.4 33 H. 8.12 23. 2 3 E. 6.24 Page 567 ad 570 V. UTlary and Exigent where a person outlawed shall not be pardoned unless c. 5 E. 3.12 13. against whom Exigents shall be awarded et contra 18 E. 3. Stat. 1. Stat. 2 5. Page 216 217 Proclamation must be before Utlary had and where 6 H. 8.4 1 E. 6.10 5 6 E. 6.26 31 El. 3. Page 217 218 Use and Uses land or goods given to Pious and Charitable Uses how to be inquired of if mis-imployed 39 Eliz. 6. 43 El. 4. Page 287 288 Usurpations upon the King or Purprestures shall be re-seised Stat. de Bigamis 4 E. 1. Page 449 Vacations who shall have the Patronage of Abbeys or Bishopricks during their vacation Mag. Carta 33. Stat. pro Clero 4. 14 E. 3. pro Clero 5. Page 570 Vagabonds Rogues c. Houses of Correction to be built for their punishment who take the care thereof 39 El. 4. who shall be judged a Vagabond 39 El. 17. and how they shall be punished 1 Jac. 7. 7 Jac. 4. pag. 571 ad 576 Victuallers Inholders c. who may sell Wine or Victuals at what prices by what licence 12 E. 3.26 23 E. 3.6 31 E. 3.10 6 R. 2.10 7 R. 2.11 13 R. 2.8 23 H. 6.13 12 E. 4.8 3 H. 8.8 25 H. 8.2 2 3 E. 6.15 1 2 P. M. 5. 21 Jac. 21 Page 576 ad 580 View where a view of Land shall be granted where not West 2.48 Stat. de visu terrae et Essoyn de Servitio Domini Regis 12 E. 2. Page 580 No Victualler shall exercise any Judicial Office 6 R. 2. Stat. 1.9 Page 577 Villenage where the Lord may seize his Villain when exception of cognizance of villenage shall not make the Writ abate Stat. of Purveyors cap. 18. 25 E. 3. 38 E. 3.17 9 R. 2.2 Page 580 581 Union who may unite or consolidate Churches 37 H. 8.21 Several Churches united 1 E. 6.9 1 M. Parl. 1.14 Page 581 Universities the two Universities of Oxford and Cambridg are free from purveyance of all sorts and the punishment of such as incroach upon them 2 3 P. M. 15. 13 El. 21. Page 582 583 Voucher who shall be allowed to vouch to Warranty and where such vouching is good Marlb 29. 52 H. 3. West 1.39 Glocester 12. 6 E. 1. West 1.6 Stat. of Vouchers 20 E. 1. 14 E. 3.18 Page 583 584 585 Upholsters what is an Upholster what goods he shall sell and of what stuff and the punishment for faultiness therein 11 H. 7.19 5 6 E. 6.23 Page 585 Uses where Deeds made to uses are good and where not and several cases therein 1 R. 3.1 1 H. 7.1 3 H. 7.4 19 H. 7.15 27 H. 8.10 Page 585 ad 588 Usury what shall be accounted usury and the punishments laid upon Usurers 37 H. 8.9 13 Eliz. 8. 21 Jac. 17. Page 588 589 W. VVOrsted the makers thereof how many Apprentices they may keep 12 H. 7.1 p. 22 Witchcraft what and how punishable 1 Jac. 12. Page 84 Wooll the Custome thereof 14 E. 3.21 20 H. 6.4 11 H. 7.6 None may sell woollen cloth but in Fairs not dwelling in a Corporation 1 2 P. M. 7. Page 132 133 134 556 Waste no Waste shall be made pendente lite Glocest 13. 6 E. 1. Page 203 Weare none shall erect a Weare c. or destroy the fry of fish 3 Jac. 12. Page 241 624 625 626 Wight Isle who shall hold Farms there 4 H. 7.16 Page 292 Water-men their company erected their orders who may be one and who not and what boats they shall use 2 3 P. M. 16. 1 Jac. 16. Page 414 415 Watch and Wards what Watches shall be kept in great Towns and otherwhere Stat. Winchester cap. 4.6 5 H. 4.3 Page 489 623 Wayes High-wayes leading to Markets their breadth Stat. Winchester cap. 5. Page 489 Wager of Law what it is who shall be put to it and how Magna Charta 28. 38 E. 3.5 5 H. 4.8 Page 589 Wales united to England Statuta Walliae 12 E. 1. So all Lords of the Marches of Wales 28 E. 3.2 Thieves there how to be punished 9 H. 4.4 the punishment of a Welshman that takes an Englishman prisoner 2 H. 5. Stat. 2 5. 27 H. 8.26 18 El. 8. 27 El 9. Page 590 ad 612 Who shail appear at Courts there and
if the Accountant finde himself aggrieved by the Auditors he may appeal to the Barons of the Exchequer and then the Sheriff shall give notice to his Master to attend the Barons at a certain day with the Account where the Barons or Auditors by them assigned shall rehearse the Account and doe justice therein But if then also the Accountant shall be found in arrear he shall be committed to the Fleet. IV. If he flie or will not account a Distringas shall issue out against him to cause him to appear before the Justices to account and upon appearance Auditors shall be assigned him by whom if he be found in arrear and not able to pay he shall be committed to the Gaol as aforesaid But if he flie and the Sheriff return thereupon Non est inventus after exigent he shall be outlawed and then being taken he shall not be repleviable without the Master's consent in pain that the Sheriff Gaoler or c. who doth so bail him being thereupon convict shall answer the Master his dammages and if an inferiour Officer who so doth be not responsible Respondeat superior * V. Stat. 6 H. 4.3 Immediately after the Sheriffs Escheators Aulnagers Customers Controllers and other the King's Officers shall have accounted in the Exchequer Commissions shall be sent down to enquire of their Accounts and if fraud shall be found therein they shall incur the penalty of treble dammages to the King and shall suffer imprisonment not to be enlarged until they have made Fine at the discretion of the Judges VI. Stat. 1 R. 3.14 Accountants for dismes granted by the Clergy of the Provinces of Canterbury or York are not chargeable to answer other mens suits in the Exchequer by reason of their appearance there to account save onely for such things as concern their Account howbeit they may be sued in any other Court notwithstanding such priviledge of being Accountants VII Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 3. All moneys goods Plate Jewels Horses Armes Ammunition and other things whatsoever levied or taken since the 30th of January 1642. by any persons by colour of any late pretended Authority and all Bonds and Securities for the same not pardoned by the Act of Oblivion are declared to be vested in the King his Heirs and Successors who may demand sue for and have the same VIII All persons their heirs executors c. who have received any such money for publick uses and particularly the Revenues of Churches in Wales or County of Monmouth since 1648. shall be accountable for the same and his Majesty his Heirs c. may issue forth Commissions under the great Seal or Seal of Exchequer for discovering and levying the same and all persons accountable to his Majesty shall have power to levy or sue for arrears in the hands of others IX None shall be liable as aforesaid unless they be called to account by information in the Exchequer or other Courts appointed before the 24 of June 1662. and prosecuted with effect within 12 months after the exhibiting thereof X. Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 14. All Collectors Treasurers Receivers Officers of Ships Mariners and other persons whatsoever that have received or had any Prizes Ships Plate Bullion Armes Merchandises or any manner of goods taken for prize since the 30 of January 1642. and have not accounted for them and all such as have bought the same and not paid the money for them shall be chargeable to his Majesty and sued and called to account for the same in the Court of Admiralty and sentenced and execution there accordingly All rights during the Reign of the late King or his Majesty belonging to the Lord Admiral or Lord Ward of the Cinque-Ports usurped or seised since 1648. by any persons or Body politick and not pardoned shall be accompted for to his Highness James Duke of York Lord Admiral and sued for in the Court of Admiralty Provided in cases of defect of Jurisdiction in the Admiralty Court the Court of Exchequer upon Certificate from the Court of Admiralty may proceed for recovery and levying the said prizes and goods XI Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 13. All money from any persons due upon the Imposition called Excise upon Ale Beer or other Commodities heretofore by any Law or pretended Ordinances and all debts owing by obligation or account from farmers of Excise or others and all securities for the same not pardoned are vested in the King and his Heirs and may be sued for and recovered against the persons their heirs executors c. having Assetts according to the Stat. of 33 H. 8. Provided All persons accountable upon this Act have such allowances as persons whose Accounts are excepted in the Act of General Pardon and Oblivion ought to have and no person to be questioned unless he be sued before the 25 Decem. 1662. XII All persons accountable by this Act may levy and sue for Arrears against all such persons as stand indebted unto them for any Impost or Excise as they might have received and levied the same when they first grew due See Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 16. for speedy bringing to Account persons not excepted in the Act of General Pardon Accusations I. Magna Charta 29 9 H. 3. No free man shall be taken imprisoned disseised outlawed exiled or otherwayes destroyed or condemned without trial by his Peers or the Law Justice or right shall not be sold denied or deferred to any II. Stat. 5 E. 3.9 None shall be attached upon any accusation nor fore-judged of life or limm nor his Lands or Tenements Goods or Chattels seised into the King's hands against the form of the great Charter and the Law of the Land III. Stat. 25 E. 3.4 Stat. 5. None shall be apprehended upon Petition or suggestion made to the King or his Council unless by indictment or presentment of lawful men or by process at the Common Law IV. None shall be outed of his Franchises or Free-hold but by way of Law and if any thing be done against the same it shall be redressed and holden for none V. Stat. 28 E. 3.3 None shall be put from his Land or Tenement imprisoned disinherited or put to death without being brought in to answer by due process of Law * VI. Stat. 37 E. 3.18 Promoters of suggestions to the King shall finde surety before the Chancellor Treasurer and the King 's Great Council to pursue their suggestions and to incur the pain which the accused should suffer in case the suggestion hold not And then process shall issue out against the accused without being taken or imprisoned against the form of the great Charter * VII Stat. 38 E. 3.9 If the promoter of a suggestion cannot make it good he shall be imprisoned until he satisfie the party grieved his Dammages and shall also make fine to the King VIII The clause of the 37 E. 3.18 for incurring the like pain shall be taken away IX Stat. 42 E. 3.3 None shall be put to answer an accusation to the
shall be void X. Stat. 1 H. 4.4 The Parliament holden in Ann. 11 R. 2. shall be holden and kept according to the purport thereof as a thing done to the great honour and common profit of the Realm XI Stat. 1 E. 4.1 An Act was made whereby was confirmed all Judicial Acts Exemplifications Concords Recoveries Process in Court c. made in the times of H. 4. H. 5. and H. 6. and all grants and letters Patents of divers things mentioned in the said Act made by any of the said three kings See the Statute at large XII The confirmation of divers particular Statutes See under their proper titles ☞ Conjuration Enchantment and Witchcraft * I. Stat. 1. Jac. 12. If any shall be convicted to have used any invocation or conjuration of any evil Spirit or to have consulted covenanted with entertained imployed fed or rewarded any such Spirit or taken up any dead person or the skin bone or other part thereof to have used in Witchcraft Sorcery charm or inchantment or to have used any of the said Arts to kill consume and lame any person they together with their accessaries before the facts shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie II. If any shall be convicted to have by Witchcraft Sorcery Charm or Inchantment undertaken to tell where any treasure or goods lost or stollen may be found or are become or to provoke any to unlawfull love or to destroy or hurt any cattel goods or person albeit the same be not effected they shall for the first offence suffer one year's imprisonment without bail once every quarter of that year-stand six hours upon the pillory in some open Fair or Market and there make open confession of the offence committed and for the second offence shall suffer as felons without benefit of Clergie III. But in these cases shall be no loss of dower or disherison of heir And a Peer being an offender shall be tried by his Peers ☞ Conspiracie I. Artic. sup Charta 10. 28 E. 1. Against Conspirators false Informers and imbraceors of inquests the King hath provided a Writ in the Chancery and the Justices of either Bench and Justices of Assize shall upon every plaint thereof award inquests thereupon without Writ II. Stat. 33 E. 1. Conspirators are such as bind themselves by oath or other alliance falsly and maliciously to indict and falsly to move and maintain pleas and such as cause children within age to appeal men of felony and retain men to maintain their malicious enterprizes And this extendeth as well to the takers as givers and also Stewards and Bailiffs who by their power maintain debates that concern not their Lords but other parties III. Stat. 7 H. 5. Whereas divers have been indicted for treasons and felonies supposed to be committed in places there being none such to be found every Justice having power to hear and determine such offences by the oath of twelve men whereof each shall have Free-hold within the County of the yearly value of 5 l. besides all reprises shall before Exigent inquire of Office whether there be indeed any such places or no And if there be no such place or places in the County where such appeals or indictments are made they and the process thereupon shall be void and the Indictors shall be punished by imprisonment fine and ransome at the discretion of the said Justices and if any Exigent be awarded before inquisition it shall be also void This Act to continue in force untill the next Parliament IV. Stat. 9 H. 5.1 The Stat. of 7 H. 5. shall continue in force untill the next Parliament after the King's return from beyond Sea V. Stat. 18 H. 6.12 The Statute of 9 H. 5.1 made perpetual because H. 5. dying beyond Sea some were of opinion it was expired Constable and Marshal I. Stat. 8 R. 2.5 The Constable and Marshall shall not have conusance of Pleas or suits which ought to be discussed at the Common Law II. Stat. 13 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 The Constable of England hath cognisance of things concerning Arms and Wars which cannot be discussed by the Common Law III. In this Court the Plaintiff shall plainly declare his matter in his Petition before the Defendant be sent for IV. When a Plea is commenced before the Constable and Marshall which may be tried at the Common Law the party grieved shall have a privy Seal to cause the Constable and Marshall to cease untill it may be decided by the King's Councel whether it may be tried there or at the Common Law Contra formam Collationis I. West 2.41 13 E. 1. If lands given to Abbies Priories Hospitals or other Religious Houses or to maintain a Chantery a light or Alms be alienated the King shall seize it and the purchaser shall lose both the land and his money II. If the house were founded by a Subject he shall recover the land by a Writ which see in the Statute at large III. If it were given to maintain a Chanterie a light or Alms and not aliened but the duty withdrawn two years together the donor or his heir shall recover it by Cessavit Conventicles 1. Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 4. The Stat. of 35 El. cap. 1. declared to be in force and further remedies against the dangerous practices of seditious Sectaries and other meetings in Conventicles under colour of exercise of Religion and the Act at large being upon continuance for 3 years after the end of this Parliament and to the end of the next session of Parliament after the said 3 years and no longer Conusance I. Stat. 9 H. 4.5 Where in Assizes and Pleas of land or rent within Franchises and ancient Demesne against certain persons the names of the Mayors Bailiffs or Communalties in Franchises and of the Lords or Bailiffs in ancient Demesne are therein also by collusion inserted supposing them also to be disseisors or tenants of the land and with purpose to exclude them from the conusance of the matter in Plea which by reason of their Franchises and Liberties ought to be discussed before them in such Assizes and Writs the Justices shall upon request first inquire by the same Assize whether they be indeed disseisors or tenants or whether their names be inserted by fraud as aforesaid II. If it shall be found by fraud the Assizes or Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be grievously amercied notwithstanding there be others named therein who are in truth disseisors or tenants III. Stat. 8. H. 6.26 In Assizes or personal actions if the Defendant make default by collusion with purpose that Mayors Bailiffs or other Communalties or Lords and Bailiffs should lose their jurisdictions the Justices shall upon request inquire thereof by Assizes or inquests where both the Plaintiffs and the owners of such Franchises and Liberties may have their challenges And if collusion be found the Writs shall abate and the Plaintiff shall be amercied Copiholds I. Stat. 7 Jac. 21. Compositions made by Decrees in the Exchequer
disposed as aforesaid IX In other places where there are no Wardens the Head-officers shall doe it and shall have the like power and advantage as those of London X. This shall not prohibit a Beer-brewer to keep in his house a servant for to mend his vessels XI If any shall diminish a vessel by taking out the head or a staff thereof the vessel shall be burnt and the offender shall forfeit 3 s. 4 d. to be disposed as aforesaid and shall be farther punished at the discretion of the Head-officers XII An Ale-brewer may also retain a Couper in his service to mend his vessels XIII Every Couper shall make his Ale-vessel according to the Assize exprest in the Treatise called Compositio mensurarum viz. every eight Gallons thereof to contain a Bushel according to the Assize limited by that Ordinance which was made 51 H. 3. in pain to forfeit for every vessel otherwise made 3 s. 4 d. to be disposed as aforesaid XIV Every Couper shall mark his vessel with his own mark in pain of 3 s. 4 d. to be levied and recovered as abovesaid XV. The Searchers shall not put out the Ale to measure the vessel whereby it may be made worse XVI This shall not prohibit to carry Ale to the Houses of his Majesty and Honourable persons in great vessels as Butts Pipes c. And Ale-brewers may convey Ale to any man's house in Barrels Kilderkins and Firkins being the due content * XVII Stat. 8 Eliz. 9. So much of the Statute of 23 H. 8.4 as concerns the prices of vessels is repealed XVIII Coupers shall sell their vessells at such rates as shall be yearly assessed in Corporations by the head-officers and in the Country by the Justices of Peace or the more part of them in the Sess after Easter XIX If after proclamations of the rates so assessed any Couper shall sell otherwise he shall incurr such penalties as by the said Statute of 23 H. 8.4 is ordained viz. for every Barrel Kilderkin and Firkin 3 s. 4 d. to be imposed and disposed as in the same Statute is exprest for selling such vessel above the due price Courts I. In the time of H. 8. there were amongst others three new Courts erected viz. those of the Augmentations First-fruits and Tenths and General Surveyors But these were afterwards annexed to the Exchequer by divers Acts of Parliaments and Letters Patents of H. 8. and Qu. M. Nevertheless in some of these Acts there remains yet somewhat in force as hereafter followeth II. Stat. 33 H. 8.39 All Obligations and Specialties concerning the King shall be made to him and his heirs Kings in his own name by these words Domino Regi and to no other person and then for payment Solvendum Domino Regi haeredibus vel executoribus suis with other words used in common Obligations and such Obligations shall be of the nature of Statutes-staple and if the King die leaving such Obligations they shall remain to his heirs or executors at the King's pleasure III. If any take Obligation that concerns the King in another manner they shall suffer imprisonment as shall be ordered by the King's Council IV. All suits for the King's debts in any Court mentioned in this Act upon any Obligation or Specialty delivered before this Act or to be delivered before the second day of May next shall be prosecuted in the King's name to what person soever such Obligation or Specialty were made and they shall be of the nature of Statutes-staple as before V. The King in all suits for debts shall recover his costs and dammages VI. Suits for the King's debts shall be in the proper Courts where they shall be due whether it be the Exchequer Dutchy Augmentations Surveyors Wards and Liveries First-fruits and Tenths or any of them out of which such processes shall issue for the speedy recovery of them as the Court shall think fit VII The said Courts shall have power to hear and determine all actions defaults offences and other things which shall arise upon any matter committed to the governance of the same Courts wherein the King shall be onely party and also all Estates for term of years betwixt party and party concerning the premisses all treasons felonies and estates of freehold and inheritance other then joyntures for term of life onely excepted VIII If any person shall make title to any lands sold or exchanged to any in fee-simple or fee-tail by the King's Letters Patents upon which a rent is reserved to the King his heirs and successors in the Court of Augmentations or shall demand any rents annuities officers fees or other profits out of lands in fee-simple or in fee-tail comprised in any Letters Patents or if the King shall make like title or claim to any lands of inheritance or profits out of lands assigned to the said Court in any Letters Patents that the said Court or more part of them shall hear and determine such titles and claims and without other Warrant make recompence to the party grieved IX If any Decree of the Court of Augmentation for any of the premisses extend onely to the loss of the Patentee for the life of the Demandant or Plaintiff or for term of years then shall the Chancellor of that Court without any other Warrant make recompence in money or out of lands limited to the survey of the same Court X. The aforesaid Courts shall have power to set fines and amerciaments and upon trials and other proceedings there to examine by such proofs and in such manner as they shall think fit and the proceedings and decrees of the said Courts shall be effectual in Law XI The chief Officers of those Courts may without any other warrant discharge all bonds and recognisances there hanging the debts being satisfied and the conditions performed and may also make void all recognisances for appearance or other contempt XII If any person to whom the King hath granted with reservation of rent any lands of inheritance or for life within the survey of any of the said Courts do not pay yearly unto the Treasurer or Receiver General of the said several Courts at the day limited or within three moneths after all summs of money so reserved or make sufficient tender thereof unto the said Treasurer or Receiver he shall forfeit so much as the fourth part of the said yearly rent shall amount unto and if he pay not the rent and money forfeited as aforesaid within six moneths he shall forfeit so much as half the rent amounts unto and for every half year after shall forfeit so much as the whole year's rent doth amount unto XIII The Treasurer or Receiver General may distrain for the said rents and forfeitures and the Head-officers of the said Courts may issue out process for the recovery of the same at their discretions XIV A Treasurer or Receiver general or particular shall sign with his own hand a lawful acquittance ready made to be signed by him without any fee in
II. Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 2. Reciting the Act of 17 Car. 1. cap. 27. for disinabling all persons in holy orders to exercise any temporal jurisdiction or authority and that the same having made several alterations prejudicial to the ancient rights of Parliament and contrary to the laws of the land and by experience is found inconvenient doth repeal and adnull the said recited Act to all intents and purposes whatsoever III. Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 12. An explanation of a clause contained in the Act of 17 Car. 1. cap. 11. touching the repeal of a branch of the Statute of 1 El. cap. 2. viz. It is declared That neither the said Act nor any thing therein contained doth take away any ordinary power or authority from the said Arch-bishops Bishops or persons therein named but that they may use all Ecclesiastical jurisdiction as formerly in causes belonging to the same IV. Proviso and enacted that it shall not be lawfull for any Arch-Bishop Bishop Chancellor or other Ecclesiastical Judge Officer or person having or exercising spiritual or Ecclesiastical jurisdiction to tender or administer unto any person whatsoever the oath Ex officio or any other oath whereby such persons to whom the same is administred may be charged or compelled to confess or accuse or purge him or her self of any criminal matter or thing whereby he or she may be liable to censure or punishment V. Proviso Not to give any other jurisdiction to any Arch-Bishops c. then they had by law before the year 1639. nor to abridge or diminish the King's supremacy in Ecclesiastical matters nor to confirm the Canons made in the year 1640. nor any laws or Canons not formerly confirmed or enacted by Parliament or established by the Laws as they stood in the year 1639. ☞ Cross-bows and Hand-guns * I. Stat. 33 H. 8.6 None shall shoot in or keep in his house any Cross-bow Hand-gun Hagbut or Demihake unless his lands be of the value of 100 l. per annum in pain to forfeit 10 l. for every such offence II. None shall shoot in or have any Hand-gun under the length of one yard nor Hagbut or Demihake under the length of three quarters of a yard in pain to forfeit 10 l. And it shall be lawfull for any man having lands of 100 l. per annum to seize any such Gun or any Cross-bow used or kept contrary to the form of this Statute but then he ought to break them within 20 days after in pain of 40 s. III. None shall travell with a Cross-bow bent or Gun charged except in time of war or shoot within a quarter of a mile of a City Borough or Market-Town except for the defence of himself or his house or at a dead mark in pain of 10 l. IV. None shall command his servant to shoot in any Gun or Cross-bow except at a dead mark or in time of war in pain of 10 l. V. The penalties abovesaid shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor VI. Howbeit the followers of Lords Spiritual or Temporal Knights Esquires Gentlemen and the inhabitants of Cities Burroughs or Market-towns may keep in their houses and use to shoot but at a dead mark onely with Guns not under the lengths abovesaid so may the Owner of a Ship for the defence of his Ship and also he that dwells two furlongs distant from a Town or within five miles of the Sea-coast and this last may shoot at any wilde beast or fowl save onely Deer Heron Shovelard Fesant Partridge wild Swan or wilde Elke VII Those which have power from the King to take away Guns and Cross-bows in Forests Parks and Chases may retain the same notwithstanding this Act so likewise may Smiths and Merchants that make or sell them the several lengths abovesaid being duly observed ☞ VIII It shall be lawfull for any person to convey the party offending against this Act before the next Justice of Peace who upon due examination and proof shall have power to commit him to prison there to remain till he hath satisfied the penalty which in this case shall be divided betwixt the King and the party that so takes the offender IX Every Placart granted by the King which expresseth not at what beasts or fowl the Grantee shall shoot and where the Grantee entreth not into a Recognisance of 20 l. in the Chancery to shoot at no other shall be adjudged void X. Justices of Peace in Sessions and Stewards of Leets have power to hear and determine these offences XI When the conviction is in Sessions the whole forfeiture is to be levied to the King's use when in a Leet the one half is the King 's and the other half ought to be divided betwixt the Lord and the prosecutor XII Here if a Jury shall willingly conceal any thing the Justices or Steward have power to impannel another Jury by whom if the first Jury be found guilty of concealment they shall forfeit 20 s. a piece viz. to the King if it be in Sessions but if in a Leet then the one half to the Lord and the other half to the prosecutor XIII Forfeitures arising by this Act shall be sued for viz. by the King within one year and by a common person within six months otherwise they shall be lost XIV A servant upon command may use his Master's Cross-bow or Gun not prohibited by this Act so as he shoot at no fowl Deer or other game and may also by a license in writing carry it to any place to be mended * ☞ XV. Stat. 2. 3. E. 6.14 None under the degree of a Baron shall shoot in any Hand-gun within any City or Town at any fowl whatsoever or with any hail-shot in pain of 10 l. and 3 months imprisonment XVI This Act shall not restrain those who according to the value of their land are authorized to shoot by 33 H. 8.6 so that they forbear to use any hail-shot and all other that presume to shoot shall present their own names viz. in a Corporation to the Mayor or Head-officer and in the County to the next Justice of Peace in pain of 20 s. and the said Justice or Head-officer is to see them recorded at the next Sessions in like pain of 20 s. which forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Crosses I. West 2.33 13 E. 1. Lands where Crosses be set with purpose that the tenants thereof should defend themselves against the chief Lord or Lords by the Privileges of Templars and Hospitallers shall be forfeited as lands aliened in Mortmain ☞ Crown I. Stat. 14 E. 3. The Realm and people of England shall not be subject or obedient to the King or kingdom of France II. Stat. 7 H. 4.2 The Crown of England and France were intailed to the King and his four sons by name III. Stat. 35 H. 8.1 The Crown of England is intailed to the King's daughter the Lady Mary the remainder to the Lady Elizabeth the
pain to incurr a Praemunire Vide infrá CXXVII The Warden of the Cinque-ports or some authorized by him shall take the bond and minister the Oath aforesaid where any person passeth beyond Sea out of them or any of their members CXXVIII Stat. 3 Jac. 5. The person that within three days notice shall discover to a Justice of Peace any that entertains a Popish Priest or any which have heard or said Mass shall have a third part of the forfeiture due for the same offences if the whole exceed not 150 l. and then onely 50 l. thereof to be delivered unto him by the Sheriff or other Officer which shall have power to levy the same CXXIX No convicted Recusant shall come into the Court without command from the King or warrant from the Privy Council under their hands in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the discoverer CXXX A Popish Recusant convicted or indicted or any person not coming to Church by the space of three moneths together which remains in London or within 10 miles distance thereof shall within ten daies after such conviction or indictment depart from thence and also shall deliver their names in London to the Lord Mayor there and in the County to the next Justice of Peace in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor Howbeit this clause shall not extend to Trades-men or such as have no other habitation then in London or within 10 miles distance as aforesaid CXXXI It shall be lawful for a Recusant to go about his necessary occasions as far as a licence obtained from the King or from three of the Privy Council under their hands or four of the next Justices of Peace under their hands and seals with the assent in writing of the Bishop Lievtenant or Deputy-Lievtenant of the same County shall give him leave notwithstanding the Stat. of 35 El. 2. which licence shall not be granted by the said Justices till the party hath made oath of the true reason of his journey and that he will make no causless stays CXXXII No convicted Recusant shall practise the Common Law Civil Law Physick or Art of Apothecary or be an officer of or in any Court or bear any office amongst Souldiers or in a Ship Castle or Fortress in pain of 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor CXXXIII No Popish Recusant convict or whose wife is a Popish Recusant convict shall exercise any publick office in the Commonwealth by himself or his Deputy unless he bring up his children in the true Religion and together with his children and servants repair to the Church and receive the Sacraments at such times as by the Law are limited CXXXIV A married woman being a Popish Recusant convict her husband being none that doth not conform her self as aforesaid by the space of one whole year before her husband's death shall forfeit two third parts of her Dower or Joynture and shall be incapable of being Executrix or Administratrix to her husband and of enjoying any part of her husband's goods CXXXV A Popish Recusant after conviction shall be reputed to all intents as a person excommunicate until he shall conform go to Church receive the Sacraments and take the Oath of Obedience ordained by 3 Jac. 4. Howbeit he may sue for his interest in lands not seized into the King's hands CXXXVI A Popish Recusant convict which is married otherwise then in open Church and by a lawful Minister according to the Orders of the Church of England shall not be tenant by the Courtesie and a woman also in this case shall be disabled to enjoy her Dower Joynture Widow's estate or any of her husband's goods And where a man cannot be tenant by the Courtesie he shall forfeit 100 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor CXXXVII Every Popish Recusant shall within one moneth after the birth of his child cause it to be baptized by a lawful Minister in pain to forfeit 100 l. if he out-live the moneth if not then his wife is to pay the same forfeiture which shall be divided into three parts whereof the King shall have one the prosecutor another and the poor of the Parish the third CXXXVIII Every Popish Recusant shall be buried in the Church or Church-yard and according to the Ecclesiastical laws of this Realm in pain that his Executor Administrator or the party that caused him to be otherwise buried shall forfeit 20 l. to be divided into three parts and dispersed as aforesaid CXXXIX A child being no Souldier Mariner Merchant or Apprentice or Factor to a Merchant shall not be sent or go beyond Sea without license of the King or six of the Privy Council whereof the principal Secretary shall be one in pain to be thereby incapable to enjoy any lands or goods by descent or grant untill being eighteen years of age or above he take the said Oath of Obedience before some Justice of Peace of the County where his parents do or did dwell And in the mean time the next of his kin being no Popish Recusant shall enjoy the lands and goods but shall be accountable to the other in case he after conform himself as aforesaid And he that so goes out of the Kingdom without license shall forfeit 100 l. to be divided and imployed as aforesaid CXL A Popish Recusant convict shall be disabled to present to a Benefice but in stead of him the Chancellor and Scholars of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge shall present within several Counties respectively For which see the Statute at large Howbeit they shall not conferr it upon a man already beneficed CXLI A Popish Recusant convict shall not be an Executor Administrator or Guardian but the next of kin being no Recusant and unto whom the land cannot lawfully descend shall have the wardship and tuition of an Heir or orphan in that case CXLII A grant of the King's ward to a Popish Recusant convict shall be void CXLIII None shall bring from beyond Sea print sell or buy any Popish Primers Ladie 's Psalters Manuals Rosaries Popish Catechisms Missals Breviaries Portals Legends or Lives of Saints in what Language soever they shall be printed or written nor any other superstitious Books printed or written in the English tongue in pain to forfeit 40 s. for every such Book to be divided into three parts and imployed as aforesaid CXLIV Two Justices of Peace and all Mayors Bailiffs and Head-officers have power to search the houses and lodgings of Popish Recusants convict and of every person whose wife is a Popish Recusant convict for Popish books and reliques and to burn and deface such as they shall find in their custody but such as are of value shall be defaced in open Sess and afterward restored to the owner CXLV All the Armour Gunpowder and Munition of a Popish Recusant convict shall be taken from him by warrant from four Justices of Peace at the General Sess other
to the true intent of this Act shall be void Decies tantum * I. Stat. 38 E. 3.12 If a Juror take any thing of either party to give his verdict and be attainted thereof by process contained in the Article of Jurors of the 34 E. 3.8 which see in Jurors he shall pay ten times so much as he hath taken to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor And all imbraceors that procure such Inquest shall incurre the like punishment II. If the Juror or Embraceor have not whereof to make gree he shall suffer a years imprisonment III. But no Justice or other Officer shall inquire of this offence ex officio Declaration I. Stat. 36 E. 3.15 By the ancient terms and forms of pleaders no man shall be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Declaration and in the writ Deeds and Writngs I. Stat. 1 M. Parl. 1 Sess 2. cap. 4. All Statutes Recognizances and writings made by or to any person since the sixth of July last and before August under the name of any other then the Queen shall be good II. This Act shall not extend to make good any letters patents commissons grants or other writings made by the Lady Jane Dudley since the said sixt of July last Demurrers I. Stat. 27 El. 5. After Demurrer joyned and entred the Judges shall proceed and give judgment according to the right of the cause and matter in law without regard to any defect in the proceeding except such onely as the party shall express together with his demurrer after which time no judgment shall be reversed by writ of Errour for any other defect then such as he shall there mention And if there happen to be any other the Judges may amend them II. This Act shall not extend to the proceeding in an Appeal of felony or murther upon an Indictment Presentment or penal Statute Dilapidations I. Stat. 13 El. 10. If any Ecclesiactical persons who are bound to repair the buildings whereof they are seized in right of their Place or Function suffer them to fall into decay for want of repair and make fraudulent gifts of their personal estate with purpose to hinder their successors from recovering dilapidations against their executors or Administrators in such case the successors shall have like remedy in the Ecclesiastical Court against the grantee of such personal estate as he might have had against the executor or administrator of the predecessor II. Stat. 14 El. 11. All moneys recovered for dilapidations shall within two years be imployed upon the buildings for which they were paid in pain to forfeit to the Queen c. double so much as shall not be so imployed ☞ Deceit * I. West 1.29 3 E. 1. If any person do act or consent to any thing in deceit of the Court or party and thereof be attainted he shall suffer a year and a days imprisonment at least and if he be a pleader he shall be also expelled the Court and if they shall deserve greater punishment it shall be at the King's pleasure II. Officers Criers of Fee and Marshals of Justices in Eyre shall not take money otherwise then they ought to do in pain to pay the treble thereof to the complainants III. Stat. 2 E. 3.17 A Writ of deceit shall be maintainable as well in case of garnishment touching a Plea of land as in case of summons in Plea of land Discontinuance of right or estate I. Stat. 11 H. 7.20 If a woman that hath an estate in Dower for life or in tail joyntly with her husband or onely to her self or to her use in any lands c. of the Inheritance or purchase of her husband or given to the husband and wife by the husbands ancestors or any seized to the use of the husband or his ancestors do sole or with an after taken husband discontinue or suffer a recovery by coven it shall be void and he to whom the land ought to belong after the death of the said woman may enter as if the woman were dead without discontinuance or recovery II. Provided that the woman may enter after the husbands death but if the woman were sole the recovery or discontinuance barreth her for ever III. This Act extends not to any recovery or discontinuance with the heir next inheritable to the woman or by his consent of record enrolled Discontinuance of process I. Stat. 11 H. 6.6 No suit before Justices of Peace shall be discontinued by a new Commission of Peace II. Stat. 1 E. 6.7 The death of the King shall not discontinue any suit betwixt party and party neither shall the variance between the original and judicial process in respect of the King's name be material as concerning any default to be alledged therefore III. Assizes of Novel disseisin Mortdancester Juris utrum or Attaints shall not be discontinued by reason of death new Commissions Associations or the not coming of the same Justices or any of them IV. Preferment of the demandant or plaintiff to be Duke Archbishop Marquess Earl Vicount Baron Bishop Knight Justice of the one Bench or the other or Serjeant at Law shall not make the suit abatable V. Preferment of a Justice of Assize Goal-delivery or Peace or of any other Commissioner to the dignities aforesaid or to be Sheriff shall not lessen his power But note that to be Sheriff is altered by 1 M. Parl. 1.8 which see in Sheriffs VI. New Justices of Goal-delivery may give judgment of a prisoner found guilty of treason or felony though he were reprieved by other Justices VII No process or suit before Justices of Assize Goal-delivery Oyer and Terminer or Peace or other of the King's Commissioners shall be discontinued by a new Commisson or by the alterations of any of their names ☞ Dispensations I. Stat. 28 H. 6.16 All Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations from the Bishop or See of Rome to any of the Kings subjects in any of the Kings Dominions shall be void and shall not be used in pain of a Praemunire II. Former lawfull marriages are confirmed III. A confirmation of all Arch-bishops and Bishops and their authority and of other Ecclesiastical persons and orders by authority of this Act and not by any forreign power IV. The effect and contents of all Bulls Breves and other faculties purchased of the See of Rome which are allowable shall be confirmed under the great Seal Distresses I. Stat. de districtione Scaccarii 51 H. 3. The owner of impounded cattel may give them food without disturbance II. A distress taken for the Kings debt shall not be sold within fifteen days and upon shewing of a tallie and giving surety for his appearance in the Exchequer upon the next accompt the distress shall cease the Sheriff shall also attach the party that received the debt to be there also at the same time III. Neither draught nor cattel nor sheep shall be distrained except for damage feasant so long as other goods may be
Commissioners of both Houses of Parliament named in this Statute to treat with certain Commissioners of Scotland concerning the settlement of an union and peace between the Kingdoms of England and Scotland II. Stat. 4 Jac. 1. Laws of hostility and the dependancies thereof between the two Nations are repealed but this Act in that point is not to take effect until the like be acted in Scotland III. None shall be troubled for any wrong done before the death of Queen Eliz. by the laws of the Borders IV. Felonies committed by English-men in Scotland shall be tried in Cumberland Westmerland or Northumberland before Commissioners and Jurors of England and here the felon shall be admitted to have his witnesses examined upon oath and the prosecutor and his witnesses shall by any Justice of Peace of any of those Counties be bound by recognizance to prosecute and give evidence the prosecutor first tendring such witnesses their reasonable charges V. Here also the accessary shall be so tried albeit the principal be not convicted or attainted and neither principal nor accessary shall be allowed Clergy or peremtory challenge above five and the Indictment shall be good notwithstanding the words Contra pacem Coronam dignitatem nostras be omitted VI. No Sheriff or other Minister shall return any Juror upon such trial but such as have freehold worth 5 l. per annum in the County where the trial is had in pain of 40 l. for every Juror otherwise returned to be divided betwixt the King and him that will sue for it VII Here the offender shall not forfeit any lands nor have his bloud corrupted neither shall his wife lose her dower but he shall forfeit all his goods chattels and credits VIII The like act being intended to be made in Scotland when the like offence is committed in England by a Scotch-man afterwards fled into Scotland Justices of Oyer and Terminer Gaol-delivery and Peace of England have power to binde over by recognizance both the prosecutor and witnesses they being tendred their charges as before to appear in Scotland upon the trial which recognizance upon failer being certified into the Exchequer-chamber shall by decree there be made a debt to the King IX Scotch-men coming into England to prosecute or give evidence against an Offender in Scotland shall be free from arrests for any offence or cause whatsoever except treason and murther so long as they are in England for that purpose X. The offence shall be alledged in the indictment to be done in the place where indeed it was done XI He that is once tried in Scotland shall not be again called in question for the same offence but his former trial shall be a good plea for him unless by certificate from Scotland some other cause may be discovered XII No English man shall be sent out of England to be tried in Scotland But this is altered by the Statute following XIII The Jurors or the greater part of them may allow or reject any of the witnesses of either party as they shall in their discretions finde cause XIV Here the trial of a Peer shall be by his Peers XV. Stat. 7 Jac. 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 Offendor into Scotland to be tried Howbeit this Act shall not take effect until another of the like nature vice versa be made in Scotland XVI Stat. 16. 17 Car. 17. An Act for the confirmation of the Treaty of Pacification between the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland See the Statute at large XVII Stat. 16. 17 Car. 18. An Act for securing by publick faith the remainder of the friendly assistance and relief promised to our brethren of Scotland See the Statute at large Engleschire I. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 4. Presentment of Engleschire is clearly abolished Entry and Writs of Entry I. Marlb 29. 52 H. 3. When so many alienations have been made that the Writ of Entry cannot be made in the usual form the Plaintiff shall have a Writ to recover his Seisin without mention of the degrees And this is called a Writ of Entry sur disseisin en le Post II. Glocest 7. 6 E. 1. If a woman alien her dower in fee or for life the heir or other person to whom the land ought to revert after her death shall immediately recover it by a Writ of Entry Entry lawful I. Stat. 32 H. 8.33 Where a disseisor dieth seized of lands that discent shall not take away the entry of the disseisee or his heir unless the disseisor had peaceable possession thereof five years next after such disseisin committed Errour I. Stat. 5 E. 3.2 in fine 10 E. 3. Stat. 2.3 Where Errour is made before the King's Steward and Marshal the Plaintiff may be Writ remove the Record into the King's Bench and may there have it redressed II. Stat. 31 E. 3. Stat. 1.12 The Lord Chancellor and Treasurer calling to them such of the Justices and other sage persons as they shall think fit as also the Barrons of the Exchequer to give the reasons of their judgments may examine erroneous judgments given in the Exchequer and if any errour be found may correct the Rolls to the end the Exchequer may proceed to execution III. Stat. 32 El. 3. Fines and Recoveries and all matters concerning them now extant and in being may be inrolled which inrolment shall be of as great validity as the same so extant and remaining in being IV. No Fine Proclamation or Recovery shall be reversable for false Latine rasure interlining mis-entring mis-returning not returning or any other matter of form and not of substance V. This Act shall not bar any from a Writ of errour upon any fine or recovery heretofore had and pursued within five years after this Parliament or which before the first of June 1582. was exemplified under the great Seal nor a feme covert Infant non compos mentis one in prison or beyond Sea so that they or their heirs pursue such writ within seven years after such imperfection restraint or absence removed and if any of them happen to die hanging the suit their heir may undertake it within one year after the said seven years and if the heir be under age then within one year after his full age VI. The day and year of the acknowledgment of a fine and of the warrant of Attorney for the suffering of a recovery shall be certified together with the concord or warrant and none shall be inforced so to certifie but within one year after such acknowledgment made or warnt given VII No Officer shall receive any writ of covenant or entry without the day so certified in pain of 5 l. VIII No Attornment upon any fine in a Quid juris clamat Quem redditum reddit or
party at the time of his apparance was in prison beyond sea or in the Queen's service shall be discharged The Exchequer-Fees for respect of Homage The value of the Land The Queen's Fee The Remembrancer's Fee The Entry The Attourney's Fee   li.   li. sh d. sh d. sh d.     sh d. A 100 ad 60 10 00 01 08 00 04 By some   03 04 A 60 ad 30 06 08 01 08 00 04 By some   01 08 A 30 ad 20 05 00 01 08 00 04 By some   00 00 A 20 ad 15 03 04 01 01 00 04   l. sh d A 15 ad 10 02 00 01 08 00 04 By some voluntary annuities for all matters 2 00 0 A 10 ad 10 m 01 80 01 08 00 04 1 00 0 A 10 m ad 5 li. 01 00 00 00 00 04 0 13 4 A 5 li. ad 3 li. 05 08 00 08 00 04 0 10 0 A 3 li. infra 00 04 00 04 00 04 0 06 8                     0 05 0                     These never lose issues but have their fines paid whether they come or not LII The Treasurer's Remembrancer shall fatisfie every subjects charges that shall be vexed upon a supposal to be set by the Court so also shall his Clerks pay the issues lost when the subject hath duly paid his respect of Homage to be proved by the acquittance LIII The Treasurer's Remembrancer may by order of the Exchequer issue out process for the discovery and preservation of tenures notwithstanding this Act Howbeit no such tenure appearing the party shall be discharged without plea or fee. ☞ Escheators I. Stat. 14 E. 3.8 Escheators shall be chosen by the Chancellor Treasurer and chief Baron calling to them the two chief Justices as Sheriffs use to be chosen and they shall not continue in their office above one year II. Stat. 34 E. 3. Stat. 1.13 Every Escheator shall take his Enquests of good and lawful men well inherited and good same and inhabiting the County where the inquiry is made And the Enquest so taken shall be indented between him and the Jurors otherwise they shall be void The Enquests shall also be taken in good towns openly and not privily III. Stat. 34 E. 3. Stat. 1.14 Traversees of offices found before the Escheators shall be tried in the Bench. * IV. Stat. 36 E. 3. Stat. 1.13 An Escheator shall have no fee of the lands of the King's ward neither shall he commit any waste therein in pain of forfeiting treble dammages at the ward's own suit or by his friends The same law is also of other land seised by Enquest of office V. Land seised into the King's hand by an Escheator shall be let to farm by the Chancellor to him which tendreth a traverse to the office VI. Enquests shall be taken openly and by Indenture as aforesaid and if the Escheator do contrary to this Act he shall suffer two years imprisonment and be ransomed at the King's will VII Stat. 42 E. 2.5 None shall be Escheator unless he have 20 l. of land at least in fee He shall execute his office in proper person and upon the putting in of another his office determines VIII Stat. 8 H. 6.16 No Escheator or Commissioner shall take any Enquests but such as are impannelled by the Sheriff of the County within which he bears that office in pain of 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party grieved IX Lands seised by the Escheator shall not be let to farm before the officer be fully returned and then they shall be let to him that tendreth a traverse to the office he finding surety to prosecute it with effect and to answer the profits in case he cannot maintain the traverse but then he must tender his traverse within a moneth after the return X. The Escheator or Commissioner shall return the office within a moneth in pain of 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XI Stat. 18 H. 6.6 No lands shall be granted before the King's title thereunto be found by inquisition nor within a moneth after unless it be to him that tendreth his traverse as aforesaid * XII Stat 18 H. 6.7 The Escheator shall return an office found before him into the Chancery or Exchequer within one moneth after the taking thereof in pain of 40 l. given by the Stat. of 8 H. 6.16 and besides to answer so much to the King as he is damnified for not returning the same XIII Stat. 23 H. 6.17 The Escheator shall take his inquest within one moneth after the delivery of the Writ unto him and that in some good Town openly XIV He shall not take above 40 s. for the execution of one writ in one County and that onely when his labour and costs require it otherwise he ought to take less and all this in pain of 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XV. If any will traverse an office no protection shall lie for the Patentee and concerning the demise of the lands to him that tenders a traverse the Statutes of 36 E. 3.13 8 H. 6.16 18 H. 6.6 shall be duly observed XVI Stat. 12 E. 4.9 None shall take upon him to be an Escheator or Deputy to an Escheator unless the Escheator himself hath free-hold within the County worth 20 l. per annum in pain of 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVII His Deputy or Farmer shall be a sufficient man and shall certifie into the Exchequer his deputation within 20 dayes next after it is made upon the like pain of 40 l. to be divided as aforesaid XVIII Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine these defaults and give judgment for the recovery of the said forfeitures XIX This Statute shall not restrain Corporations which have power by their Charter to appoint Escheators XX. Stat. 1 H. 8.8 No Office shall be returned into any of the King's Courts but such as is found by Jury in pain to forfeit 5 l. to the party grieved XXI The yearly revenue of an Escheator or Commissioner shall be fourty Marks in free-hold in the same County so that they shall not execute any Writ unless they have lands of that value in pain of 20 l. and the Commissioner not having such an estate may refuse to sit and shall be discharged upon oath without fine or fee. XXII They shall sit in open places according to former Statutes and shall take their evidence openly in pain of 40 l. XXIII Here if the Sheriff return a Juror not having 40 s. per annum free-hold in the same County he shall forfeit 5 l. XXIV The Inquisition shall be taken by Indenture whereof one part shall remain with the fore-man and the other part is to be delivered by the Commissioners or Escheator into the Petty-Bag-office from whence it is afterwards to
be transcribed into the Exchequer And the Juror shall present by Indenture in pain to forfeit 20 s. a piece the Escheator also or the Commissioners or some of them shall receive the Jurors presentment without delay in pain of 5 l. XXV The officer in the Petty-Bag shall file the office within three days after receit thereof in pain of 40 l. XXVI The officer in the Exchequer that refuseth to receive an office upon tender shall forfeit 40 l. and then the Escheator or Commissioners shall be discharged of their forfeiture of 40 l. for not returning the officer within a moneth so that they return another into the Chancery or Exchequer as the cause requires within a moneth after that first moneth XXVII The Clerk of the Petty-Bag shall send a transcript of the office into the Exchequer the next term after he receives it in pain of 5 l. XXVIII None shall be Escheator above a year nor within 3 years after and the abovesaid forfeitures of 5 l. the party grieved shall have but the rest shall be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XXIX This Act shall not restrain such as by reason of any franchise prescription or grant may depute Escheators but that such Escheators may hold their offices above a year XXX Neither shall the branch of this Act concerning the yearly value of estates of Escheators and Jurors extend to Corporations or priviledged persons and places the County Palatine of Lancaster and Chester onely excepted XXXI Neither shall this Act extend to prejudice Justices of Peace for doing any thing which concerns the Commission of Peace XXXII Stat. 1 H. 8.10 Lands seized into the King's hands upon an inquest of Office shall be let to farm to him that tendreth to traverse the same within three moneths after such office found notwithstanding the Statute of 8 H. 6.16 XXXIII Stat. 33 H. 8.22 He that is certified in the Chancery by the Treasurer to be Escheator shall within one moneth take upon him the office or shew cause in the Exchequer why he doth it in pain of 20 l. XXXIV The Escheator shall not sit virtute officii where the lands be 5 l. per annum or above in pain of 5 l. XXXV The Escheator shall forfeit 5 l. if he take for the finding of an office of lands that exceed not 5 l. per annum above 15 s. viz. for his own fee 6 s. 8 d. for writing the office 3 s. 4 d. for the Juries charges 3 s. and for the officers above that are to receive the office 2 s. XXXVI The officers appointed to receive Inquisitions shall receive them upon tender within a Moneth after their finding in pain of 5 l. XXXVII The abovesaid forfeitures shall be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor XXXVIII Stat. 2. 3 E. 6.8 The Estates and Interest of others shall be saved though they be not found in the office XXXIX Where an heir of full age is found within age he shall have a writ of Aetate probanda and may proceed to sue out his Livery or Ouster le main as his case is and receive the profits of his lands notwithstanding such office found XL. Where after the King's tenants death more heirs then one are found or if one untruly be found a Lunatick Idiot or dead the party grieved may have his traverse as in other cases of untrue Inquisitions XLI A travese or Monstrance de droit is given without petition though the King be intitled by double matter of Record XLII When the Jury findes de quo vel de quibus c. ignorant or per quae servitia ignorant the first shall not make a tenure of the King nor the last a tenure in capite but in such case a melius inquirendum shall issue forth XLIII Traverse given to an office where a wrong tenure is found XLIV The rents of mean Lords shall be paid during the nonage of the ward by the officer that receives the revenue of the Ward 's lands XLV This Act shall not extend to Inquisitions taken before the 20 of March 1548. XLVI Upon every traverse a scire facias or two writs of search shall issue forth viz. the first against the King 's Patentee and the other when by the Common Law the party grieved was put to his Petition XLVII Notwithstanding a traverse the King 's former right shall be reserved Escuage I. Magna Charta 37. Escuage shall be taken as it was wont in the time of King Henry our Grandfather Essoin I. Marlb 13. 52 H. 3. After issue joyned in Dower Darrein presentment or Quare impedit one Essoin or one default shall be onely allowed and if the party come not at the day given or make default the second day the Enquest shall be taken and judgment given II. If the Enquest be taken in the County before the Sheriff or Coroners it shall be returned before the Justices at a certain day when if the party appear not another day shall be assigned by the Justices and then shall issue a command to the Sheriff to cause the party to come to hear the judgment when if he come not the Justices shall proceed to judgment In like manner it shall be done if he come not at the day given by the Essoin III. Marlbr 19. 52 H. 3. In Counties Hundreds Court-Barons or other Courts none shall need to swear to warrant his Essoin IV. West 1.41 3 E. 1. In Assize Attaints and Juris utrum after apparence the tenant shall not to be Essoined V. West 1.42.3 Parceners or tenants joyntly enfeoffed shall not forch by Essoin VI. West 1.43 3 E. 1. Essoin ultra mare shall not be allowed but shall be turned into a default if the Demandant will prove that the tenant was within the four Seas the day of the summons and three weeks after Howbeit this is onely to be done before Justices VII Glocester 10. 6 E. 1. The husband and wife being impleaded shall not fourch by Effoin VIII West 1.2 13 E. 1. There shall be no Essoin for an Appellant IX West 2.17 13 E. 1. In the Circuit of the Justices an Essoin de mato lecti lieth not for lands in the same County unless the party be sick indeed for if at the instance of the demandant it be proved by inquest that the tenant is not sick the Essoin shall be turned to a default X. Neither shall such an Essoin lie in a writ right between two claming by one descent XI West 2.27 13 E. 1. An Essoin may be allowed at the next day after inquest but none at any of the other days following nor after day given prece partium XII West 2.28 13 E. 1. In Assize after apparence the demandant shall not be Essoined XIII Stat. Of Essoins 12 E. 2. Essoins do not lie in the insuing cases where the land is taken into the Kings hands where the party is distrained by his lands where any judgment is given thereupon if
will not hold the lands of persons convict of Felony longer then a year and a day and then they shall be delivered to the Lords of the Fee II. Stat. 17 E. 2.14 The King shall have the Escheats of the lands of free-holders of Arch-bishops and Bishops which happen in time of Vacation to dispose of at his pleasure the said free-holders being attainted for felony saving to such Prelates the service that thereto is due and accustomed III. Stat. 17 E. 2.16 The King shall have all the goods of felons and fugitives and the year day and waste of their land and then the lands shall be dilivered to the Lord of the Fee who may also if they please compound with the King for the year day and waste IV. Here certain lands are excepted viz. 1. in Glocester-shire where after the year and day the land shall descend to the next heir 2. In Kent lands called Gavelkind where the Father may go to the Bough and yet the Son to the Plough And in Gavelkind all the heirs-male shall divide the inheritance and so shall the heirs-female but women shall not make partition with men also a woman shall be indowed of the moiety and if she commit fornication in her widdow-hood or marry she shall lose her Dower V. Stat. De Catallis felonum None taken for felony for which he shall be imprisoned shall be disseised of his lands or chattels until he be convicted thereof but as soon as he is taken his tenements and chattels shall be viewed by the Sheriff and other officers of the King and lawful men and Inventoried and kept by the Bailiff of him that is so taken who shall give surety to the Justices of the chattels or the price saving to the accused and his family their necessaries as long as he shall be imprisoned and his reasonable estover so that when he is convicted the residue of his chattels besides his estover may remain to the King with the year and day of his lands but if he be acquit his chattels shall be restored Vide Rast Forfeiture 7. VI. Stat. 31 E. 3. Stat. 1.3 If any charged with the goods of fugitives and felons will in discharge of himself alledge another that is chargeable therewith he shall be heard and right shall be done him VII Stat. 34 E. 3.12 There shall be no forfeiture of lands for treason of dead persons not attainted in their lives VIII Stat. 1 R. 3.3 None shall seize the goods of any arrested for suspition of felony before he be convict or attainted thereof or the same goods be otherwise lawfully forfeited in pain to forfeit to the party grieved double the value of the goods so taken to be recovered by Action of debt c. wherin no essoin c. shall be allowed IX Stat. 11 H. 7.1 None that attends upon the King for the time being in his person and doth him faithful service of Allegiance in his wars within the Realm or without or is in other places at his common shall be convict or attainted of High Treason or any other offence for so doing whereby he may forfeit any thing but shall be clearly discharged of all vexation and loss which he may incur by reason of the same And if any Act or process of Law hereafter happen to be made thereupon it shall be void Provided that none shall take benefit by this Act which shall hereafter decline from his Allegiance X. Stat. 24 H. 8.5 If any be indicted or appealed for the death of one attempting to murther rob or commit burglary and so found by verdict he shall forfeit no lands or goods for the same but shall be fully acquit and discharged thereof ☞ Forger of false Deeds * I. Stat. 5 El. 14. If any alone or with others shall wittingly subtilly and falsly forge or make or cause to be forged or made any false Deed Charter or writing sealed Court-Roll or Will in writing to the intent that the free-hold or inheritance of lands or the right or title thereof may be troubled defeated or charged or shall publish or shew forth in evidence any such forged writing as true knowing the same to be false and forged and shall be thereof convicted upon an Action of Forger of false Deeds to be founded upon this Statute at the suit of the party grieved or otherwise shall pay to the party grieved double costs and dammages to be assessed in the Court where such conviction shall be shall be set upon the Pillory in some Market-town or other open place and there have both his Ears cut off and also his nostrils slit and feared with an hot iron he shall also forfeit to the Queen her heirs and successors the Issues of his lands and suffer perpetual imprisonment during his life and the said costs and dammages shall be fist levied upon the goods and issues of the lands of the offender notwithstanding the Queen's title thereunto II. For such forging c. of a lease for years of lands not Copy-hold or of an Annuity Obligation Bill Acquittance Release or other discharge of any personal thing the offender shall pay double costs to the party grieved to be assessed as before be set upon the Pillory lose one of his ears and suffer a years imprisonment without bail III. The party grieved may have his remedy for his double costs and dammages by original writ out of the Chancery as in case of trespass by bill in the King's Bench or in the Exchequer in which suit no essoin c. shall be allowed IV. Howbeit he that is once punished for his offence shall not after be impeached for the same and albeit the Plaintiffs release or discontinuance of suit may discharge his own remedy yet the rest of the punishment shall be nevertheless inflicted by judgment and command of the Court. V. The second offence is felony without Clergy whereof the offender being convicted or attainted he shall forfeit his lands and goods as other cases of felony saving to all other persons their right c. neither shall such conviction or attainder extend to loss of Dower or disherison of heir VI. Provided this Act shall not extend to charge any Ordinary Commissary or Official for putting their seal of Office to any will not knowing the same to be forged nor for writing such a will or the probate thereof VII Justices of Oyer and Terminer and Assize in their Sessions shall hear and determine these offences VIII Provided this Act shall not extend to any Proctor Advocate or Register for writing setting forth or pleading of any Proxie for the apparence of any person cited to appear in the Ecclesiastical Court nor to any Arch-deacon or Official for putting their seal to such Proxie nor to any Ecclesiastical Judge for admitting the same nor to any Attorney or Counsellor for pleading or giving in evidence any such forged writing being nor party nor privy thereunto nor to any person that shall plead or shew forth any writing
an hundred of salt fish 4 d. and for a last of Sprats 8 d. And of one not priviledged for a last of hering 2 s. 4 d. for an hundred of salt fish 4 d. and for a last of Sprats 8 d. as they did before Hundreds I. Artic. super Chartas 14 28 E. 1. Bailiwicks and Hundreds shall not be let to farm at over great summs whereby the people may be over-charged by making Contributions to such Farms ☞ Hunters and Hunting * ☞ I. Stat. 13 R. 2.13 No lay-man who hath not lands of 40 s. per annum nor Clerk who hath not 10 l. revenue per annum shall have or keep any Grey-hound Hound Dog Feret Net or Engine to destroy Deer Hares Conies or any other Gentleman's game in pain of one whole years imprisonment which Justices of Peace shall have power to inflict II. Stat. 19 H. 7.11 None shall keep any Deer-hays or Buck-stalls save in his own Forest or Park in pain to forfeit for every moneth they are so kept 40 s. neither shall any stalk with any bush or beast to any Deer except in his own Forest or Park in pain of 10 l. III. None shall take an old Heron without his own ground in pain of 6 s. 8 d. nor a young Heron in pain of 10 s. for which forfeitures every man that will may sue by Action of debt or otherwise ☞ IV. Any two Justices of Peace in Sessions may examine the Offendors aforesaid and commit them to prison till they have satisfied the said forfeitures whereof the said Justices are to have the tenth part ☞ * V. Stat. 14 15 H. 8.10 None shall trace destroy or kill any Hare in the snow And Justices of Peace in Sessions and Stewards in Leets have power to inquire of such Offenders and shall assess upon every such Offender 6 s. 8 d. which penalty assessed in Sessions shall go to the King but in a Leet to the Lord thereof * VI. Stat. 3 Jac. 13. None shall without the owners licence kill or chase any Deer or Conies in any Parks or inclosed grounds in pain to suffer three moneths imprisonment to pay treble dammages to the party grieved to be assessed by the Justices before whom he shall be convict after the said 3 moneths expired and to be bound with 2 good sureties to the good behavior for 7 years after or to reman still in prison till he find such sureties but here the party grieved being satisfied hath liberty to release the behavior ☞ VII Justices of Oyer and Terminer Assize and Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine these offences and Justices of Peace in Sessions upon confession and satisfaction to the party grieved have power to release the behavior VIII If any person not having 40 l. per annum in lands or 200 l. in goods or some inclosed ground used for Deer or Conies worth 40 s. per annum at least shall use any gun bow or cross-bow to kill any Deer or Conies or shall keep any buck-stall feret dog net or other engine it shall be lawful for any person having lands worth 100 l. per annum to take such gun c. from any such person and to convert the same to his own use IX This Act shall not extend to any Park or inclosed ground hereafter to be made or used for Deer or Conies without the King's license X. Stat. 7 Jac. 13. It shall be in the election of the party grieved whether he will take for satisfaction 10 l. in money or treble dammages as by the Statute of 3 Jac. 13. is limitted * XI Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 10. None shall unlawfully course kill hunt or carry away any Deer in any Forest Chace Purlieu Wood Park or other ground where Deer have been usually kept within England and Wales without the consent of the owners or party chiesly trusted with the custody thereof or be aiding or assisting therein upon pain being convicted by confession or one witness before any Justice of the Peace within 6 moneths after the offence of 20 l. to be levied by distress by warrant of the said Justices one moiety to the informer the other to the owner of the Deer and for want of distress to be committed for 6 moneths to the house of Correction or common Gaol for one year and not discharged till sufficient sureties be given for their good behavior XII Provided that upon punishment by this Statute the penalty of no other law be incurred ☞ Husbandry I. Stat. 4 Jac. 11. The Owners and Farmers of lands in Marden Bodenham Wellington Sutton S. Michael Sutton S. Nicholas Murton upon Lugge and Pipe in the County of Herreford may inclose some part thereof with divers other provisions for the better improvement of those places For which see the Statute at large II. Stat. 7 Jac. 18. All persons within Devon and Cornwal may fetch sea-sand for the bettering of their land III. Boat-men may fetch sea-sand and cast it out of their boats where it hath been used to be landed and carry the same thorow usual wayes See the Statute IV. Stat. 15 Car. 2. ca. 5. Vid. Trade Identitate nominis I. Stat. 37 E. 3.2 IF the Lands Goods or Chattels of any person outlawed for want of a good declaration of his Sirname shall happen to be seized by any of the King's Officers he may have a writ of Identitate nominis to discharge them as hath been used in times past And in such case the Officer shall take security without fee of the party to answer to the King the value of the thing so seized if he cannot discharge them and if the Officer be attainted of doing otherwise he shall pay double dammages to the party grieved and be also grievously punished to the King II. Stat. 9. H. 6.4 A writ of Identitate nominis shall be maintainable by executors as well as by the testator himself if he were living Jeofaile I. Stat. 32 H. 8. cap. 30. After an issue tried there shall be judgment given netwithstanding any Jeofaile or mispleading II. Stat. 18 El. 14. After Verdict given in any Court of Record there shall be no stay of judgment or reversing thereof for want of form in any writ original or judicial Count Declaration Plaints Bill Suit or Demand or for want of any writ original or judicial or by reason of any imperfect or insufficient return of the Sheriff or other Officer or for want of any warrant of Attorney or for any default in progress upon or after Ayd prayer or Voucher III. This Act shall not extend to any writ declaration or suit of appeal of felony or murther or to any Indictment or presentment of felony murther treason or other matter or to any process upon any of them or to any writ bill action or information upon any penal Statute IV. Provided that all Attorneys in any suit in a Court of Record shall deliver in the Warrant of Attorney in such suit to be entred
compound with any Defendant before answer nor then but by consent of Court in pain of 10 l. and the Pillory VI. Where the Informer delayes or discontinues his suit or otherwise is non-suit or overthrown the Court shall assign costs to the Defendant to be immediately levied by execution issuing out of the same Court VII Justices of Oyer and Terminer Assize and Peace in their Sessions have power to hear and determine these offences VIII This Act shall not restrain Actions brought for Maintenance Champerty buying of title or Imbracery nor any certain person or body Politique to whom any forfeiture or penalty is specially limited nor certain Officers who have lawfully used to exhibit informations IX Stat. 29 El. 5. in fine If any shall be sued upon any penal Law in the King's Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer where such person is bailable by law or may appear by Attorney the person so sued shall at the day contained in the first process appear by Attorney to defend the same and shall not be urged to personal apparence or to put in bail to answer the same X. Stat. 31 Eliz. 10. The said clause of 29 Eliz. 5. shall only extend to natural born subjects or free Denizons and none others ☞ Inrolments I. Stat. 6 R. 2.4 Deeds that were inrolled and late torn or imbezeled by Rebels in the late Insurrection being exemplified shall be of the same force as the deeds themselves would have been if they had been extant II. Stat. 27 H. 8.16 Bargains and sales to raise an use of Inheritance or free-hold must be by deed indented and inrolled within six moneths after the date thereof in some Court of Record at Westminster or in the County where the land lyeth before the Custos Rotulorum two Justices of Peace and the Clerk of the Peace or two of them whereof the Clerk to be one And here the fee to be paid for such inrolment when the land is not worth 40 s. per annum is 2 s. and when it is more 10 s. to be equally divided betwixt the Justice or Justices then present and the Clerk of the Peace who ought to inroll them in parchment and to deliver them unto the Custos Rotulorum within one year after III. This Act shall not extend to lands tenements or hereditaments in Corporations where an Officer or Officers there have lawfully used to inrol deeds or other writing IV. Stat. 34. 35 H. 8.22 All Recoveries deeds inrolled and releases acknowledged or taken before any Officer or Officers of any Corporation having authority to receive the same shall remain in force notwithstanding the Statute of 32 H. 8.28 which see in Leases V. Stat. 5 El. 26. All inrolments of such writings indented as are mentioned in the Statute of 27 H. 8.16 of lands c. in the Counties of Lancaster Chester and the Bishoprick of Durham being inrolled within six moneths after the Date thereof viz. those in Lancashire in the Chancery at Lancaster or before the Justices of Assize there those in Cheshire in the Exchequer at Chester or before the Justices of Assize there and those in the Bishoprick in the Chancery at Durham or before the Justices of Assize there shall be as good in law as if they were inroled in any of the Courts at Westminster Intrusion I. Prerog Beg. Cap. 13. 17 E. 2. When the King's Tenant in chief dies and his heir enters into the land before he hath done homage to or received seisin of the King he shall thereby gain no free-hold and if he die seized during that time his wife shall not be endowed thereof as it fell out in the case of the wife of Mansel the Marshal II. Stat. 21 Jac. 14. When the King or any claiming under his title shall be out of possession or not have received the profits of lands c. within the space of 20 years before any information of Intrusion brought to recover the same In this case the Defendant shall plead the general issue if he think fit and shall not be pressed to plead especially and shall also retain the possession thereof until the title be found for the King III. Where an information of Intrusion may fitly be brought on the King's behalf no Scire facias shall issue whereunto the subject shall be forced to a special pleading and be derprived of the grace intended by this Act. Ipswich I. Stat. 13 El. 21. The streets of Ipswich in the County of Suffolk and of the Suburbs thereof shall be paved with good paving stone and for ever repaired by the Owners Landlords or Terre-tenants along from and against their houses lands and tenements adjoyning to the street viz. so much of the said street in length as his house lands c. so adjoyning extend unto and in breadth during all the length to the Channel or to such place as the Channel there shall be appointed by the Bailiffs to extend unto in pain to forfeit for every yard square not sufficiently repaired 8 d. II. The Bailiffs of Ipswich and the Portmen there the Church-wardens and four of every Parish shall have authority to tax upon every house ground and tenement there free and copy reasonable summs of money to be yearly paid as well towards the finding of a convenient stipendary Minister within every Parish as for the reparation of the Churches Ireland I. In the Book of Magna Charta is an Ordinance for Ireland concerning divers matters intituled Ordinatio pro statu terrae Hiberniae II. Stat. 17 E. 1. cap. 1. The King's officers in Ireland shall purchase no land there without the King's licence III. Cap. 2. King's Officers in Ireland shall make no purveyance there but by writ out of the Chancery there or in England that in time of necessity onely and by the advice of the Council there IV. Cap. 3. All kind of Merchandizes may be exported out of Ireland except to the King's enemies and if any Officer restrain them he shall satisfie double damages to the party grieved and be also punished by the King V. Cap. 4. The fees for every Bill of grace in Ireland under the seal of the Justice there shall be 4 d. for the Bill and 2 d. for the writing thereof VI. Cap. 5. The Marshal's fee for a Prisoner when he shall be delivered is 4 d. VII Cap. 6. No pardon of the death of a man or other felony or for flying for the same shall be granted by the Justices there but onely at the King's command and under his seals VIII Cap. 7. No Officers there shall receive any original writ which is not sealed by the seal of Ireland or by the Exchequer-seal there of things concerning that Court. IX Cap. 8. The Justice of Ireland shall not delay or adjourn Assize of Novel disseisin there save onely in the County where he is and while he shall remain there X. Stat. 34 E. 3.17 All kind of Merchandize may be exported and imported out of and into Ireland as
contrary Here also the right of all others save of the King and the Governours and Governesses is saved XXVIII Such Lands Parsonages appropriate c. belonging to the said Religious houses as before their coming into the Kings hands or dissolution were discharged of Tithes shall so continue XXIX All rents services and other duties are saved to the King notwithstanding this Act. XXX Such Monasteries c. As were heretofore exempt from the jurisdiction of the Ordinary shall from henceforth be within the jurisdiction and visitation of the Ordinaries in whose Diocess they shall be scituate XXXI The grant of the Abbey of Sipton in Suffolk is confirmed to the Duke of Norfolk and the Colledge or Chantery of Cobham in Kent to the Lord Cobham notwithstanding this Act The right of others being saved XXXII Stat. 37 H. 8.4 All Colledges Free-Chappels Chanteries Hospitals Fraternities Brother-hoods Guilds and other promotions made to have continuance for ever and chargeable with first-fruits and tenths and also all the Mansion-houses mannors lands tenements hereditaments rights members and appurtenances unto them belonging which between the fourth of February 27 H. 8. and the 25 of December the 37 H. 8. were dissolved relinquished or otherwise extinct other then such of them as now are or were in the Kings possession and have been granted by the Kings Licence or recovered by a former right or title shall be adjudged in the actual possession of the King and of his heirs and successors in as large manner ●s the Governours Incumbents Patrons Donors or Founders of them or any of them have since the said fourth of February 27 H. 8. injoyed the same or do now injoy them XXXIII All Covenants Bonds and Grants of any Rent or Annuity made to any Chantery Priest or other having any of the said promotions in consideration of any bargain grant or other assurance of the said promotions or any part thereof shall be void XXXIV Every person being in life which for any sum of money hath sold any of the said promotions shall repay upon request unto the Bargainee his Executors or Assigns the money so received And for non-payment thereof the said Bargainee shall maintain an Action of debt against them that so sold the same unto the said Bargainee or his testator in which Action no essoine c. shall be allowed XXXV All gifts grants surrenders and other assurances made to the King of any of the said promotions between the said fourth of February and the 25 of December shall be good against the bargainors their successors and assigns and also against their Founders Donors and Patrons heirs and successors XXXVI All Letters Patents made by the King of any of the said promotions or any part thereof and all assurances thereof made with the Kings assent by any having such promotions shall be good against the grantors their heirs and successors and against their Founders Donors and Patrons their heirs and successors XXXVII The King during his life may direct Commissions by warrant to be signed by his own hand to such persons as he shall think fit giving them power to enter into so many of the said promotions chargeable with first-fruits and tenths as shall be expressed in such several Commissions and to seize and take the same into the Kings possession to have and hold the same to him his heirs and successors XXXVIII The Commissioners or any two of them may enquire into any part in the name of the whole and by such thei● ter and seisure albeit the Lands be in several mens occupations or lie in several Counties the King shall be adjudged in the actual possession thereof without any inquisition office or other entry XXXIX The Commissioners or any two of them after such seisure made shall certifie and return every such Commission making mention in writing of their doing therein according to the words and authority thereby given them XL. All such Chanteries and other promotions aforesaid seised and to be seised as aforesain shall be within the order and survey of the Court of Augmentations and all suits tending to the detriment of the Mannors lands and other hereditaments belonging to them shall be also heard and determined in that Court Howbeit suits between party and party concerning the said Mannors Lands c. shall be heard and determined by the Common Law and Statutes of this Realm and not in the said Court XLI All Assurances made of any Inheritance or Free-hold without the Kings assent by any Chantery Priest or other Governour having any of the said promotions being not made to the King shall be void as well against the King as against the successor of such Chantery Priest or other Governour XLII The right of others is saved other then the Governors and their Founders Patrons or Donors their heirs and successors and other then such persons their heirs successors and assigns as claim any free-hold or inheritance by conveyance from any such Governor without the Kings assent thereunto XLIII If any such Governour within one year before the 23. of Novemb. in the 27 H. 8. hath made or shall hereafter make any lease for life or years of any such promotion or any part thereof which was not for the most part of twenty years before such lease let to farm but in their own occupation Or within the said time hath made or shall hereafter make any such lease in reversion the old lease not being then expired Or within the said time hath made or shall hereafter make any such lease without reserving the accustomed yearly rent paid for the same twenty years next before the said 23. of November Or have made any Wood sale the Woods being yet standing that then every such lease and grant shall be void XLIV This Act shall not extend to any Lands or other Hereditaments whereof such Governors now are or hereafter shall be seised or possessed to their own use nor united nor annexed to their promotions nor to Lands or Pensions granted or to be granted by the King unto such Governors for life only under the Great Seal or the Seal of the Augmentations XLV The Governors from whom the King by force of this Act taketh any Lands c. shall be proportionably abated for the same in their Tenths and First-fruits XLVI Every person having any Annuity or rent issuing out of any such promotion shall still enjoy them notwithstanding this Act Also he that hath bought and paid for any wood shall have his money again or the same wood XLVII All payments for the First-fruits hapning after such seisure as aforesaid are discharged XLVIII All Rents Services Issues and Profits payable out of such promotions into the Exchequer shall be still continued notwithstanding this Act. XLIX Stat. 1 E. 6.14 All Colledges Free Chappels and Chanteries in esse within five years before the first day of this Parliament which were not in the actual and real possession of the late King nor of E. 6. nor excepted in
Mint for which the Master shall presently pay him half the value thereof to his own use XLVI Stat. 14 15 H. 8.12 The Coiners of every hundred pounds worth of gold brought to the Mint to be coined shall make 20 l. thereof in half Angels then called pieces of 4 d. and of every hundred pounds worth of silver 50 l. in groats 20 l. in two pences 20 l. in pence 10 Marks in half-pence and 5 Marks in farthings in pain that the Mint-master shall forfeit 10 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XLVII The half-pence and farthings shall have several stamps to the end they may be the better distinguished by the common people XLVIII When the value of the Plate or Bullion is under 100 l. the owner thereof shall receive a tenth part in half-pence and farthings XLIX This Act shall not be prejudicial to the Coiners and Mint-masters in York Duresm or Canterbury L. Stat. 14 El. 3. If any shall falsly forge or Counterfeit any coin of gold or silver nor current in this Realm he and his procurers aidors and abettors after conviction shall be imprisoned and forfeit their lands and goods as in case of misprision of treason Monopolies I. Stat. 21 Jac. 3. All Monopolies and all Commissions of or for the sole buying selling making working or using of any thing within the Kings Dominions or of any other Monopolies or of Power liberty or faculty to dispence with any others or to give licence or toleration to do use or exercise any thing against the tenor of any Law or Statute or to give or make any Warrant for such dispensation licence or toleration or to agree or compound for any penalty or forfeiture limited by any Statute or for any grant or promise of any benefit or profit of any such penalty forfeiture or sum of money before Judgment thereupon had and all Proclamations Inhibitions Restraints Warrants of assistances and other matters and things whatsoever any way tending to the erecting strengthening or countenancing thereof are contrary to the Laws of the Realm and shall be void and of none effect II. All the matters and things aforesaid shall be examined heard tried and determined by the Common Laws of the Realm and not otherwise And all persons are prohibited to use exercise or put them in ure III. The party grieved by pretext of any of the matters or things aforesaid shall recover in one of the Courts at Westminster treble damages and double costs in which suit no essoin or other delay shall be allowed nor any more then one Imparlance And if any person after notice given that such action depending is grounded upon this Statute shall cause to be stayed or delayed before Judgment by any Order Warrant Power or Authority save only of the Court where it is so depending or shall after Judgment had cause or procure the execution thereof to be staid or delayed by colour or means of any such Order Warrant Power or Authority save only by writ of Error or Attaint he or they so offending shall incur a Praemunire IV. Letters Patents of new Manufactures heretofore granted for 21 years or under to the Inventors thereof where they are not contrary to Law or any way prejudicial to the Common-Wealth are saved so also are such as have been heretofore granted for more then 21 years good for 21 years from the date of their Patent notwithstanding this Statute V. Neither shall this Act extend to grants of new Manufactures hereafter to be made to the Inventors thereof for 14 years or under being not contrary to Law or prejudicial to the Common-wealth nor to grants heretofore confirmed by Act of Parliament so long as such acts continue in force Nor to any warrant of Privy Seal granted or to be granted to the Justices of the Kings Bench or Common-Pleas the Barons of the Exchequer Justices of Assize of Oyer and Termine Goal-●elivery or Peace or other Justices to compound for the forfeitures of any penal Statute depending in suit before them after plea pleaded by the party defendant VI. This Act shall not be prejudicial to London or any other Corporation for any grant made them concerning their Customs Nor to any Corporation Company or Fellowship of any Art Trade or Mystery nor to any Company or Society of Merchants VII Neither shall it extend to any grant of Priviledg for Printing digging or making or compounding of Salt-Peter or Gunpowder or casting or making of Ordnance or shot for Ordnance nor to any grant of any office now in being other then such as are decreed by the Kings Proclamation Nor to the liberties of New-Castle concerning Sea-coals Nor to licensing of Taverns so the King receive the benefit Nor to the Patent granted to Sir Robert Mansfield for making of Glass nor to that granted to James Maxwel Esquire for transportation of Calves skins Nor to that of Abrah●m Baker for making of Smalt nor to that of Edward Lord Dudl●y for melting of Iron Ewer and making the same into Cast-works Mortdancester I. Marlbridge 16.52 H. 3. If the Lord will not render unto the heir his Land when he comes to Age without plea the heir shall recover his Land by Assize of Mortdancester together with all his damages II. If the heir at his Ancestors death be at full age and then seised of the Inheritance the Lord shall not out him nor meddle with any thing there but shall only take simple seisin thereof that he may be known to be Lord And if the Lord shall then put him out whereby he is driven to his writ of Mortdancester or Cosinage he shall recover his damages as in a writ of Novel disseisin III. The King shall have primer seisin of lands holden in chief as in times past neither shall the heir or any other intrude into the Inheritance before he have received out of the Kings hands as formerly hath been used IV. This Statute is to be understood of lands accustomed to be in the Kings hands by reason of Knight-service Serjeancy or right of Patronage V. The Statute of Glocester 6. 6 E. 1. If one die having many H i●s of whom one is Son or Daughter Brother or Sister Nephew or Neece and the other be a farther degree off the heir shall recover by a writ of Mortdancester ☞ Mortmain I. Magna Charta 36. 9 H. 3. If any shall give lands to a religious House the grant shall be void and the land forfeit to the Lord of the fee. II. The Statute of Glocester alias de Religiosis 7 E. 1. If lands be any way alienated in Mortmain to a Religious person or other the King or other Lord immediate may enter within a year after such alienation and if such Lord neglect it the next Lord to him may enter within half a year after and if all the mean Lords being of full age within the four Seas and out of prison neglect to do it after the year the King may enter III. West
2. 31 E. 1. Ecclesiastical persons being debarred by the former Statutes to obtain lands in Mortmain by alienation endeavoured fraudulently to obtain them by default in a suit And therefore in such case it was ordained by this Statute that it should be inquired by the Countrey whether or no the demandant had a just title thereto and if so then he should recover seisin but if otherwise the Lord of the fee should enter as aforesaid And by this Statute each mean Lord hath a full half year given him after the Lord next before him until it come to the King And here also the Lords as also the King are allowed their challenges IV. After the judgement given the lands shall remain clear in the Kings hand until it be deraigned by the demandant or some other chief Lord and the Sheriff shall be charged to answer for it in the Exchequer V. Ordinatio de perquirendis libertatibus 27 E. 1. To obtain licence to make a Park or to amortize lands the writ Ad quod damnum shall issue out of the Chancery to inquire concerning the same VI. Here inquisitions of Lands that shall be found by extent to be worth yearly more then 20 s. shall be returned into the Exchequer and there the parties shall make fine for the Amortizements and for the Park if the Inquisition passe for them And afterwards the Chancellor or his Deputy shall have order to do his duty therein VII When the yearly value of the lands exceed not 20 s. the inquisition shall be returned to the Chancellor and he or his Deputy shall rate and take the fine according to the quantity of the land VIII The like shall be done by such as purchase lands holden of the King in chief IX If persons dwelling beyond Sea and having lands or rents in England are desirous to purchase Letters of protection or would make general Attorneys they shall be first sent to the Exchequer to make their fines and from thence to the Chancellor or his Deputy for that which he ought to do therein X. In like manner shall they do that will purchase any Fair Market Warren or any other liberty also such as will purchase instalment of their debts shall be sent into the Exchequer XI Also such as are unable to travel or dwell in remote parts from the Chancery which plead or be impleaded shall have a writ out of the Chancery to some sufficient man that shall receive their Attorneys when need is XII For the better remembrance of these things there shall be a tripartite Indenture made whereof one shall remain in the Chancery another in the Exchequer and the third in the Gardrobe XIII The Statute of Amortizing Lands 34 E. 1. Lands shall not be aliened in Mortmain where there be mean Lords without their consent declared under their seals Neither shall any thing passe where the donor reserveth nothing to himself or when the Inquisition is made and returned without war viz. without the Writ original returned with the Inquisition and unlesse the original make mention of every thing according to the new Ordinance devised by the King XIV The Statute of Writs for making Inquisition of Lands to be put to Mortmain Incerti temperis Writs ad quod damnum for amortizing lands shall not be granted but upon Petition in full Parliament XV. Stat. de Clero 3. 18 E. 3. If Prelates Clerks beneficed or other people of Religion being impeached for purchasing lands in Mortmain shew the Kings Charter of Licence and process thereupon made by an Inquest of ad quo ● damnum or of the Kings Grace or by Fine they shall be in peace And albeit they cannot sufficiently shew that they have entred by due process after licence to them granted in general or in special yet they shall be well received to make a convenient fine for the same XVI Stat. 15 R. 2.5 It is within the compass of the Statue of 7 E. 1. to convert any Land into a Church-yard albeit it be done by the consent or connivence of the ter-tenant and confirmed by the Popes Bull. XVII If any be seised of any lands or other possessions to the use of any spiritual person with purpose to amortize them and whereof such spiritual person takes the profits they shall before the Feast of S. Michael next cause them to be amortized by the licence of the King and other Lords or dispose of them to some other use otherwise they shall be forfeit according to the form of the said Statute as lands purchased by people of Religion Add no such purchase to the use of such spiritual persons shall be hereafter made upon the like pain XVIII The same Law shall be of Lands or other possessions purchased to the use of Guilds and Fraternities Also lands purchased by Corporations or to their use shall be within the compass of the said Statute de Religiosis XIX Stat. 23 H. 10. If any grant of Lands or other Hereditaments shall be made in trust to the use of any Churches Chappels Church-wardens Guilds Fraternities Commonalties Companies or Brotherhoods or to have perpetual Obits or a continual service of a Priest for ever or for 60 or 80 years or to such like uses or intents All such uses intents and purposes shall be void they being no Corporations but erected either of devotion or else by common consent of the people XX. Such uses and intents may be made and declared to continue 20 years from the time of such limiting of them but no longer XXI Collateral assurances made for the defending of this Statute shall be void and this shall be interpreted most beneficially for the destruction of such uses as aforesaid XXII This Act shall not prejudice Corporations where there is a custome to devise lands in Mortmain XXIII This Act shall not prejudice the Executors of Jannis and Terry late Aldermen of Norwich ☞ Mortuaties I. Stat. 21 H. 8.6 No spiritual person his Bayliff or Lessee shall take or demand more for a Mortuary then as is hereafter expressed nor shall convent any person before any Ecclesiastical Judge for the recovery of more for the same then as is hereafter declared in pain to forfeit so much as he takes or demands more and likewise 40 s. to the party grieved to be recovered by action of debt wherein no essoin c. shall be allowed II. None shall take or demand for a Mortuary any thing at all where by the Custom they have not been usually paid nor upon the death of a Woman Covert a Child a person not keeping house a wayfaring man one not residing in the place where he happens to die nor where the goods of the dead person debts deduct d amount not to the value of 10 marks Nor above the sum of 3 s. 4 d. when they exceed not 30 l. nor above 6 s. 8 d. when they exceed 30 l. but not 40 l. nor above 10 s. when they amount to 40 l. or above And if
from the Bars to Cow-Cross Water-lane in Fleet-street the streets behind Saint Clements-Church without Templ●-Bar the way from the West-bars in Tothil-street in Westminster to the West-end of Petit-France the way without Bishops-gate above Shore-d●tch Church Strand-bridg and the way leading from thence towards Temple-Bar and Foskue-lane leading down to Strand-bridg And in this Act the Justices of Middl sex have also power to set Fines upon the defaulters at their discretion VIII Stat. 13 El. 23. Another Act of like nature for paving and keeping in repair the way without Algate called the Bars without Algate another leading from the Old-Cag● there to the North-end of Nightingal-lane and another between the said Old-Cage and Cross-Mill in the Parish of Saint Mary the pain for default being 3 s. 4 d. to the Queen for every yard square not so paved or repaired This Act likewise provides for the scowring and cleansing of certain Ditches thereabouts IX Stat. 18 El. 19. An Act for the paving of Chichester X. Stat. 23 El. 12. Another Act for the paving of the Minories being an additional Act to 13 El. 23. And the Ditch in Hoglang shall be scowred and cleansed by the owners of the lands lying on the North-side of the said Lane in pain to forfeit 6 s. 8 d. for every pole uncleansed And by this Act the Justices of Peace in London and Middlesex shall appoint Scavengers XI Stat. 3 Jac. 22. Another Act for the paving and keeping in repair the street in St. Giles in the Fields and Drury-lane ☞ Peace I. Stat. 2 E. 2. The Statute of Winchester and other Statutes made for the keeping of the Peace shall be duly observed II. The Justices assigned shall have power to punish resisters of the Peace III. Stat. 2 R. 2.2 Peace shall be kept and Justice and Right duly administred to all persons See also the Statutes of 1 H. 4.1 2 H. 4. and 1. 7 H. 4.1 to the like effect Pensions Portions and Corodies I. Stat. 34 35 H. 8.19 Pensions Pertions Corodies Indemnities Synodies Proxies and all other profits due out of Religious lands dissolved shall be paid to Bishops Arch-deacons and other Ecclesiastical persons by the occupiers of the same lands if such Ecclesiastical person were seised thereof within ten years before their dissolution And if upon suits in the Ecclesiastical Court for the same the Defendant be convict the Plaintiff shall recover the value thereof in damages together with his costs of suit The like he shall recover at the Common Law when the cause is thereby determinable II. Provided that if the King hath demised any of the said lands with a Covenant to discharge the tenant of such charges that then the party claiming the same shall sue for them in the Court of Augmentations and not elswhere ☞ Perjury * I. Stat. 5 El. 9. None shall suborn a witness to give restimony in any Court of Record concerning any lands goods debts or damages in pain of 40 l. and if the offender being convicted thereof hath not wherewithall to satisfie the said forfeiture he shall suffer 6. moneths imprisonment without bail stand upon the Pillory one whole hour in the same or next Market-town where the offence was committed and be for ever after disabled to give testimony in any Court of Record until the judgement given against him be reversed by Attaint or otherwise II. He that commits wilful perjury shall forfeit 20 l. suffer six moneths imprisonment without bad and be ever after disabled to give evidence until the judgement given against him be reversed as aforesaid and here also if he hath not wherewithall to discharge the fine in the Countrey the Sheriff or in a Corporation the Head Officer shall cause him to be set upon the Pillory in some Market-place and to have both his ears nailed III. The forfeitures abovesaid shall be divided betwixt the Queen and the party grieved IV. Judges of the Courts where such offences shall happen to be committed Justices of Assize Goal-delivery and of Peace have power to hear and determine the same offences V. This Act shall be proclaimed at every Assize VI. This Act shall not extend to any Court Ecclesiastical but that they may there proceed as in times past VII This Act shall not restrain the power of the Star-chamber nor of the Councils of Wales or in the North to punish heinous perjuries But that they may proceed as formerly so as for-the said offences they inflict no less punishment then by this Statute is ordained ☞ Physicians and Surgeons * I. Stat. 3. H. 8.11 None in London or within seven miles thereof shall exercise as a Physician or Surgeon except first examined and admitted thereunto by the Bishop of London or Dean of Pauls calling to him or them for the first examination four Doctors of Phyfick and for Surgery other expert persons in that facul●y and afterwards of them that so shall be approved in pain to forfeit for every moneth they exercise Physick or Surgerie not so examined and admitted 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor II. In other places without the said Precinct of seven miles none shall exercise the said Professions unless examined and approved by the Bishop of the D●ocess or in his absence by his Vicar general ●alling to them expert men in those Professions at their discretion and giving Letters testimonial under their Seal to him they shall so approve upon the like pain to be divided as aforesaid III. This Act shall not extend to the Universities IV. Stat. 5. H. 8.6 The Surgeons of London shall be exempt for bearing the Office of Constable or any other Office watching bearing of Arms or to serve upon Inquests in London so that their incorporation exceed not the number of 12. V. This Act shall also extend to Barber-Surgeons approved and admitted according to the Statute of 3 H. 8.11 VI. Stat. 14. H. 8.5 The Kings Charter for the Incorporating of the Colledge of Physicians in London bearing date the 13. of September in the tenth year of his Reign is confirmed the substance whereof is as followeth VII A perpetual Colledge of Physicions is granted and erected in London and within seven miles compass of the same who shall have power to chuse yearly a President for the better government of the same and shall also have perpetual succession a common Seal and ability to purchase Lands not exceeding 12 l. per annum They may sue and be sued make Ordinances for the good Government of the Colledge and of all others that practise Physick within the said limits Ne●ther shall any practise Physick within that Circuit unless approved under the Seal of that Colledge in pain of 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the same Colledge Likewise four Physicians of London shall be yearly chosen to supervise the rest as also their Medicines and Receipts so that such as offend may be punished by fines amerciaments inprisonment or other due means Lastly Physicians
the Parish oftentimes the Churchwardens and Overseers for the poor of the said parish where the child is born may seise and take so much of the goods and chattels and of the rents and profits of the lands of such reputed fathers or mothers as shall be ordered by two Justices of the Peace for and towards discharge of the Parish for providing for such bastard and by order of the Sessions may sell the said goods or so much thereof as the Court shall think fit and so much of the rents and profits of the lands for the said purposes XLIX The Defendant sued for any thing done upon this Act may plead the general Issue and upon Verdict for him Nonsuit or Discontinuance shall recover treble damages L. The poor of the Counties of Lancashire Cheshire Derby-shire York-shire Durham Cumberland and Westmerland and other Counties of England and Wales shall be maintained and set on work within their respective Parishes according to the intent of this Act and in case of default the several penalties herein to be incurred And the Justices of the Peace in the said Counties may execute all powers there under the like penalties as in the Statute of 43 El. cap. 2. to be levyed as therein mentioned LI. Proviso Impowring the Justices of the Peace in their Quarter-Sessions to transport convicted Rogues Vagabonds and sturdy Beggars to English plantations beyond the Seas LII Proviso for saving the Franchises and Liberties of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster and this Act as to all matters except what relates to the Corporations to continue till the end of the first Session of the Parliament after the 29th of May 1665. and no longer Post-Office I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 34. A Post-Office for the carriage of Letters and providing post-horses erected in London the Master whereof to be appointed by the Kings Letters Pattents under the Great Seal and the rates for carrying Letters ascertained as well Inland as beyond Sea II. Postmasters not providing sufficient horses for such as have occasion forfeit 5 l. for every offence one moyety to the King the other moyety to the party that will sue for the same in any the Kings Courts of Record III. No horses to be seised or used for any service within the said Act without consent of the owners IV. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 14. Stat. 3. The profits of the said Post-Office and power of granting Wine-Licenses setled on the Duke of York and the heirs Males of his body ☞ Prerogativa Regis I. West 1.48 3. E. 1. Forasmuch as the King hath ordained these things viz. this Statute of Westm 1. for the honour of God and the Church and for the Common-wealth and for remedy of such as are grieved he would not that at any other time it should turn in prejudice of him or of his Crown but that such right as appertain to him should be saved in all points President of the Council I. Stat. 21 H. 8.20 Pars inde The President of the Kings Council if he be present may associate the Lord Chancellor Treasurer and Privy Seal at naming of Sheriffs setting of prizes of Wines and at all other Acts limited by any Statute to be done by the said Chancellor and Treasurer or Keeper of the Privy Seal Primer Seisin I. Prerog Reg. 3. 17. E. 2. The King shall have Primer seisin after the death of his Tenant in chief of all the lands whereof he dyed seised in Demesne as of Fee of what age soever the Heir be taking the issues of the same lands until inquisition be made and he have taken homage of such heir Printing See Books c. Per tot ☞ Prison Prisoners Goal Goalers I. Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 1.7 The Justices of either Bench Assize and Goal-delivery shall hear and determine all plaints made against Sheriffs and Goalers who shall compel or procure prisoners to become approvers viz. to accuse others II. Stat. 5 E. 3.8 Endictees and Appellees in the Kings Bench shall be safely kept in Prison by the Marshals there and not suffered to go at large according to the charge given them by the Justices And if any complain thereof the Justices shall do him right during the Terms III. At the end of every Term the Marshalls shall acquaint the Justices in what Town they will keep such Prisoners and shall there allow them houses at their own charge IV. The Marshals who suffer any such prisoner to go at large shall suffer half a years Imprisonment and be ransomed at the Kings will which the Justices shall have power to enquire of when they see time V. The proceedings against Marshals shall be within the Verge and if the Marshalls suffer any to escape they shall be proceeded against according to Law howbeit the King intended not by this Statute to lose the escape where he ought to have it VI. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.10 Goals which were wont to be in she Sheriffs custody shall be again rejoyned to their Bailiwicks and they shall put in such keepers for whom they will answer VII The Goaler which by dures compells a prisoner to become an approver shall have judgment of life and member VIII Stat. 13 R. 1.15 The Kings Castles and Goals which were wont to be joyned to the bodies of the Counties and be now severed shall be rejoyned to the same IX Stat. 5 H. 4.10 Justices of Peace shall imprison none but in the common Goal saving to Lords and others who have Goals their Franchise in this case X. Stat. 19 H. 7.10 The Sheriff of every County shall have the keeping of the common Goal there except such as hold any by inheritance or succession also all Letters Patents of the keeping of Goals for life or years are annulled and void howbeit the Kings Bench nor Marshalsey shall be in the custody of any Sheriff and the Patents of Edmard Courtney Earl of Devon and John Morgan for keeping of prisons are excepted XI Stat. 6 H. 8.6 The Justices of the Kings Bench have power by their discretions to remand as well the bodies of Felons as their Indictments into the Counties where such Felonies were committed And also to command the Justices of Goal-delivery of Peace and all other Justices and Commissioners there to proceed and determine such Felonies in like manner as if their bodies and Indictments had not been removed XII Stat. 23 H. 8.2 The Justices of Peace in Essex Suffolk Dorset Sussex Surrey Nottinghans Glocester Bedford Buckingham Huntington Wilts Kent Warwick Staff Oxon Bark Ieic Rutl. Linc. Heref. North. Salop. Norf. Cornwal and Derby or the greater part of them in their respective Counties have power within one year to appoint the Towns and places within their respective limits where common Goals may be edified and to tax the several Counties for building and furnishing the same Howbeit this tax was not to extend to corporate Towns having Justices and Common Goals of their own XIII Felons shall be committed to the
here provided for the Lessee for years VI. Stat. 34 35. H. 8.20 No feigned recovery hereafter to be had by assent of parties against any tenant or tenants in tail of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments whereof the reversion or remainder at that time of such recovery had shall be in the King shall bind or conclude the Heirs in tail whether any condition or Voucher be had in any such feigned recovery or not but that after the death of every such tenant in tail against whom such recovery shall be had the heirs in tail may enter hold and enjoy the lands tenements and hereditaments so recovered according to the form of the gift in tail the said recovery notwithstanding VII And here the heirs of every such Tenant in tail against whom any such recovery shall be had shall take no advantage for any recompence in value against the Voucher or his heirs VIII This Act shall not extend to prejudice the Lessee or Lessees of any such Tenant in tail made in writing indented of any Mannors Lands c. for 21 years or three lives or under whereupon the accustomed rent or rents is or shall be yearly reserved during the same Term or Terms but the same Lessee or Lessees shall injoy his or their Term or Terms according to the Statute of 32 H. 8.28 which see in Leases this Act notwithstanding IX Stat. 14 El. 8. All recoveries had or prosecuted by agreement of the parties or by covin against Tenants by the curtesie Tenants in tail after possibility of issue extinct for term of life or lives or of estates determinable upon life or lives or of any lands tenements or hereditaments whereof such particular tenant is so seised or against any other with Voucher over of any such particular tenant or of any having right or title to any such particular estate shall from henceforth as against the reversioners or them in remainder and against their heirs and successors be clearly void X. This Act shall not prejudice any person that shall by good title recover any lands c. without fraud by reason of any former right or title Also every such recovery had by the assent and agreement of the person in reversion or remainder appearing of record in any of the Queens Courts shall be good against the party so assenting Re-disseisin I. Merton 3. 20 H. 3. If any be disseised of their fee-hold and before the Justices in Eyre hath recovered seisin by Assise of Novel disseisin or by confession of the disseisors and hath had seisin delivered by the Sheriff if afterwards the same disseisors disseise the Plaintiff of the same free-hold and be thereof convict they shall be imprisonod until the King hath discharged them by redemption recognition of Assize Judgement or some other way II. This is the form of punishing of such convict persons The Plaintiff shall procure a Writ from the Kings Court directed to the Sheriff and containing the plaint of disseisin done upon disseisin By this Writ the Sheriff shall be commanded that he taking with him the Keepers of the Pleas of the Crown and other lawful Knights shall in proper person go to the Land or Pasture whereof the plaint was made where if they find him disseised again the Sheriff is to do as is above provided but if not the Plaintiff shall be amerced and the other shall go quit Howbeit the Sheriff shall not execute any such plaint without the Kings special Command III. There is the like Law for such as recover their seisin by Assise of Mortdancester or by Enquests if they be re-disseised by the first disseisors IV. Marlb 8. 52 H. 3. Persons imprisoned for re-disseisin shall not be delivered with the Kings special command and shall make fine to the King for their trespass And if the Sheriff deliver any contrary to this Ordinance he shall be grievously amerced and yet the persons so delivered shall be also grievously punished for their trespass V. West 2.26 13 E. 1. In Writs of re-disseisin double damages shall be awarded and the re-disseisors shall not be repleviable by the common Writ VI. Those that recover by default redition or otherwise without recognition of Assises or Juries shall have Writs of re-disseisin as well those which recover by Assise of Novel disseisin Mortdancester or other Juries provided for by the Statute of Merton 20. Relief I. Magna Cart. 2. When Lands holden of the King in chief by Knight-service descend to an heir of full age The reliefs are as followeth For an Earldom 100 l. For a Barony 100 Marks For one whole Knights fee 100 s. And he that hath less shall give less according to the old custom of the fees Religion * I. Stat. 14. Ca. 2. Ca. 4. The Stat. of 1 Eliz. Ca. 2. recited for uniformity of Common Prayer and considered by certain Commissioners appointed by the King for reviewing and altering the same and afterward being also reviewed by the Convocation The said Book of Common Prayer so altered c. is allowed and recommended to the Parliament by the King to be used under such sanctions and penalties as the Houses of Parliament shall think fit the same is enjoyned to be red in all Churches Chappels and places of publick Worship in England Wales and Town of Barwick upon Tweed in such order as is enjoyned by the said Book annexed to the said Act. II. Every Parson Vicar or other Minister in possession of any Ecclesiastical Benefice enjoyned to read the Common Prayer upon some Lords day morning and evening before the Feast of St. Bartholomow 1662. and after such reading the same make the Declaration verbatim as followeth I. A. B. do here declare my unfained assent and consent to and every thing contained and prescribed in and by the Book intituled The Book of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England according to the use of the Church of England together with the Psalter or Psalms of David pointed as they are to be sung or said in Churches and the form or manner of making ordaining and consecrating of Bishops Priests and Deacons Upon penalty there being no lawful impediment and within one month after such impediment removed of being deprived ipso facto as if the person neglecting or refusing so to do were dead III. All Parsons Vicars and Ministers to be after presented or put into any Ecclesiastical Benefice enjoyned to read the Common Prayer as aforesaid and to make the aforesaid Declaration within two months after they shall be in actual possession upon the same penalty as aforesaid IV. All Incumbents that reside upon their livings and keep Curates shall once every month themselves read the said Common Prayer upon pain of forfeiture of 5 l. to the use of the poor of the upon conviction by two credible Witnesses before two Justices of the Peace to be levyed by distress and sale of the offendors goods by Warrant from the said
endeavour your self for your part to the best of your knowledg and power to the making of such wholesome just equall and indifferent Laws and Ordinances as shall be made and devised by the most discreet and indifferent number of your fellows being in Commission with you for the due redress reformation and amendment of all and every such things as are contained and specified in the said Commission And the same Laws and Ordinances to your cunning wit and power cause to be put in execution without favour meed dread malice or affection as God you help and all Saints XIV All Statutes of Sewers heretofore made are confirmed XV. The Commissioners have power to make and ordain Laws Ordinances and Decrees and all and every thing mentioned in their Commission according to the true meaning thereof and the same to reform repel and amend and make new as need shall require XVI If any person assessed to any lot or charge for any lands tenements or hereditaments within the limits of any Commission do not pay the same according to the Ordinance of the Commissioners by reason whereof the said Commissioners decree the same lands tenements or hereditaments from the owner or owners thereof and their heirs to any other for years life or in fee for the payment of the said lot or charge Every such Decree and Ordinance by them made ingrossed in parchment and certified into the Chancery under their seals with the Kings assent thereunto also had shall bind all such person or persons having any Estate in the premisses in use possession reversion or remainder their heirs and scoffees and shall not be otherwise reformed then in Parliament XVII The Kings Lands Tenements and Hereditaments shall be as liable to the Laws Ordinances and Decree of the Commissioners or any six of them as those of any other XVIII If a Commissioner not sworn as aforesaid or being sworn and not having lands tenements or hereditaments to his own use in fee or for life worth 40 marks per annum besides reprises except resiant and free of a Corporation and having moveables worth 100 l. or else an utter Barister do attempt to execute the said Commission he shall forfeit for every time so doing 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XIX Avowry and Justification of a distress taken or of any other Act done by reason of the said Commission shall be made without any express or rehearsal of any other matter contained in this Act or any Commission Laws or Ordinances thereupon made whereupon the Plaintiff shall be admitted to reply that the Defendant did take the said distress or did any other act or trespass of his own wrong and thereupon the issue shall be tryed by the Verdict of twelve men and not otherwise And upon the trial the whole matter on both parts shall be given in evidence And here if the verdict pass for the Defendant or the Plaintiff be non-suit the Defendant shall recover his treble damages and costs to be assessed by the same Jury or a Writ to inquire of damages as the cause shall require XX. The Commissioners shall have for their pains 4 s. a day and the Clerks 2 s. a day out of the taxes aforesaid c. Also the Commissioners or any six of them have power at their discretions to allow out of the said taxes more to the Clerk for Writing-Books and Process and to Collectors and others that take pains in the due execution of the same Commission XXI When any such Commission is directed for the reformation of any thing within the Dutchy of Lancaster the Commissioners shall be named by the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer the two chief Justices and the Dutchy or any three of them whereof the Lord Chancellor and Chancellor of the Dutchy are to be two And in this case two Commissions shall issue forth viz. one under the Great Seal and the other under the Seal of the Dutchy XXII The fees for every such Commission shall be 2 s. 6 d. to the King for the Seal and 5 s. to the Clerk for writing and enrolling it and no more XXIII A Commission of Sewers shall continue in force but three years from the Teste and the King by a Supersedeas out of the Chancery may discharge any Commission or Commissioner at his pleasure XXIV The Laws Decrees or Ordinances of the Commissioners shall continue no longer in force then their Commission unless they be engrossed in parchment and certified under their seals into the Chancery and the Kings assent obtained thereunto XXV When any such Commission is directed into Wales and any other County Palatine two Commissions shall issue out viz. one under the Great Seal and the other under the Seal of such County Palatine in like manner as is above ordained for the Dutchy of Lancaster XXVI The Kings assent aforesaid shall be certified into the Chancery under his Privy Seal without fee only the Clerk shall have two shilling for writing the Certificate and not above XXVII The Chancellors of the Principality of Wales or any other County Palatine having the custody of the Seal there upon request made and upon sight of the Commission under the Great Seal may thereupon make out another under the Seal of such County Palatine according to the tenor of the Kings Commission and also to the Commissioners therein named except within the Dutchy of Lancaster for which the provision abovesaid shall be observed XXVIII Stat. 25 H. 8.10 None shall be compelled to be sworn or to sit or travell in the execution of any Commission of Sewers unless he be dwelling within the County whereof he is assigned a Commissioner XXIX If any Commissioner being required by any having authority by the Kings Writ or otherwise to give him the Oath provided by 23 H. 8.5 shall refuse to take it upon such refusal or contempt done in Chancery or returned thither with the said Writ he shall lose five marks for every such contempt unless he alledg sufficient cause in Chancery the same Term wherein such return is made for his excuse and discharge in that behalf XXX Stat. 3. 4 E. 6.8 The Statute of 23 H. 8.5 is made perpetual in such manner as it may stand with the sequel and additions hereafter mentioned XXXI All sums of money rated by Commission of Sewers upon any of the Kings land shall be leviable by distress or otherwise as may be done in the lands of other persons and acquittances under the hand of such Collector or Receiver as shall be appointed by the Commissioners or any six of them shall be a sufficient discharge as well to the Tenants of the Kings Lands as also to the Receiver Auditor or other Officer for the allowance of the said rates to such Tenants XXXII Like fees shall be paid for Commissions and Dedimus Potestatem under the Dutchy Seal as are paid for them obtained under the Great Seal XXXIII A Commission of Sewers shall endure five years unless
have Lands in the same County sufficient to answer the King and his people LXXXX Every Sheriff having obtained a Quietus est as by the Act 21. Iac. Ca. 5. he might the Sheriff his Heirs Executors Land and Tenements shall be clearly discharged of all accompts and debts whatsoever unless he be prosecuted and Judgement given within 4 years after the same and every Officer by whose default any process shall be sent contrary to this Act shall incur the same penalty as aforesaid Provided this Act not to extend to the Counties of Chester Lancaster Durham or the Counties of Wales being Counties Palatines as to the manner of their accompting who are to accompt before the respective Auditors as formerly 2. Not to extend to enjoyn the Remembrancers to tran●tribe to the Engroser of the great Roll any Inquisitions or seisures but such as have been formerly charged in the forraign accompts of Sheriffs But Inquisitions upon attainders and other forfeitures to be put in charge as formerly 3. Nor to exclude his Majesties Remembrancer from writing forth process for his Majesties Debts Duties Outlawries or other charge or process of levari fac at any persons suit to levy Issues of Lands seised or venditioni exponas for goods for any debt to the King or upon Outlary or to alter any pleading touching the same 4. That no Debt Duty Fine Amercement or seisure charged in the great Roll of the Pipe by any Record in the Office of the Kings Remembrancer nor any proceeding thereupon be stayed compounded or discharged but by order or Judgment entred in the said Office of the Kings Remembrancer where the original of such debt or charge remaineth 5. If any the debts seisures fines or other be not levyed or payd upon process of summons of the Pipe the Clerk of the Pipe shall the next Terme after return of such process certifie the Office of the Kings Remembrancer who shall issue process for levying the same 6. Antient and lawful fees belonging to the Office of the Kings Remembrancer not abridged by this Act. The Act to continue to the end of the first Session of the next Parliament and no longer Ships I. Stat. 38 E. 3.8 No owner of a Ship shall forfeit the same for any small thing put thereinto without his knowledg not customed for II. Stat. 5 R. 2.3 None of the Kings Subjects shall export or import any Merchandize but only in Ships of the Kings allegiance in pain to forfeit all Merchandise otherwise conveyed or the value thereof whereof the finder shall have a third part of the Kings gift III. Stat. 6 R. 2.8 The Statute of 5 R. 2.3 shall onely have place where able and sufficient Ships of the Kings allegiance may be found otherwise the Merchants may hire other Ships the said Statute notwithstanding IV. Stat. 14 R. 2.6 English Merchants shall fraight within the Realm in English Ships and not in ships of strangers so as the owners of such English ships take reasonably for their fraights V. Stat. 4 H. 4.20 Pars ind● All Merchandize imported and exported shall be charged and discharged in great Sea-Ports and not in creeks and small arrivalls in pain to forfeit to the King all Merchandize otherwise charged or discharged except any Vessell shall be driven into such small Creek by tempest VI. Stat. 15 H. 6.8 None shall ship any Wooll woolfels or other Merchandize pertaining to the Staple but only at the Keys and Ports assigned by the Statute where the Kings Weights and Woolls are set VII Every Master of a Vessel wherein such Merchandize is shipped shall give good security to the Customers there to transport the same to the Staple at C●lats and to bring a certificate thereof from thence saving to all Merchants of Jean● Venice Tuscany Lombardy ●lorence and Catal●i● and to the Burgesses of Barwick their liberty formerly granted by Statute VIII Stat. 4 H. 7.10 No Gascoign or Guien-wine or Tholonse-woad shall be imported into this Realm but in English-vessels in pain to forfeit the same IX None shall fraight in any strangers ship any Merchandize to be imported or exported into or out of this Realm if he may have sufficient fraight in the same Port in a Denizers ship in pain to forfeit all Merchandize otherwise shipped to be divided betwixt the King and the seisor X. This Act shall not extend to any ship having Merchandize forced by tempest into any part within this Realm so as the owner thereof make no sale of such Merchandize within this Realm save only for necessary victual or repairing of the ship and tackle XI Stat. 32 H. 8.14 Gascoigne or Guian Wines or Tholouse-Woad may be imported into this Realm in any other ships as well as English notwithstanding the Statute of 4 H. 7.10 XII Stat. 1 El. 13. The Statute of 5 R. 2.3 and 4 H. 7.10 are made void XIII If any owner of any Merchandize shall in time of Peace embarque or unload any part thereof Mastraff Pitch Tar and Corn only excepted out of or into any other then an English bottom he shall pay custome for the Queen for the same as an alien XIV No English man shall cross the Sea with any Hoys or Plats in pain to forfeit the same to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XV. Provided that Merchants at their several shippings of cloth or ●ooll out of the Thames to be twice in the year at the most may in●●●que Merchandize in a strangers ship so long as there are not English ships enough and convenient to convey such Merchandize ●● Flanders Holland Zealand or Brabant without paying any greater custome than English men use to do Also Bristoll men shall do the like by reason of greater losses lately suffered by them XVI Stat. 5 El. 5. Any Subject may export out of this Realm without paying custome for the same But this Act was expired by the Queens death XVII None shall set price make restraint or demand toll of any Sea-fish imported into this Realm by any of the Queens Subjects in pain to forfeit the value of such fish so set price of restrained or tolled XVIII This Act shall not restrain the Inhabitants of Hull to take Toll and Custome according as is limited by the Statute of 33 H. 8.33 which see in Hull 1. Howbeit they shall not take liberty thereby to transport Herring or salt-fish XIX No Purveyor shall take any Sea-fish of any that shall take the same in any Subjects ship in pain to forfeit the double value thereof Howbeit Composition fish of people travelling into Ireland due to the Queen and other persons shall be paid as formerly XX. No Herring shall be bought of a stranger or out of his bottome being not sussicsently salted pickled and casked in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof except such Vessell be driven in by shipwrack XXI No fish victual wares or things shall be transported in a strangers bottom from one Port to another within this Realm
unless his Ancestors have done it before the said voyage III. Such as be at a suit-fine shall be free from suit paying their Fine IV. The Parcenor having the eldest part shall do suit for his or her fellows and the rest shall be contributary V. Also one Joynt-tenant or Tenant in common shall do the suit and if there be no mean to acquit him the rest shall contribute VI. If a Lord distrain for suit not due the parties upon complaint shall have an attachment against the Lord to appear in the Kings Court at a short day when one only Essoin shall be allowed and the distress shall be delivered to the Plaintiff and there remain untill the Plea be determined VII If the Lord appear not at the day the Sheriff shall have command to distrain him by his goods and to have his body before the Justices at another day when if he appear not the Plaintiff shall go without day and the distress shall remain with him untill the Lord have recovered and in the mean time no more distresses shall be made saving to Lords their right to recover their suits when they will sue for them But here if the Lord be convict he shall allow the Plaintiff damages VIII Like Justice shall be done to Lords against Tenants that withdraw their Suits as to limiting of days and awarding of distresses and damages also if they recover but Lords shall not recover seisin of such Suits against their Tenants by default as they were wont to do And as concerning suits withdrawn before the time above-mentioned let the Common Law run as it was wont to do Swans I. Stat. 22 E. 4.6 None but the Kings Son shall have any mask or game of Swans of his own or to his use except he have Lands and Tenements of Freehold worth five Marks per annum besides reprises in pain to have them seised by any having lands of that value to be divided betwixt the King and the Seisor ☞ Swearing and Cursing * ☞ I. Stat. 21 Jac. 20. If any shall swear or curse within the hearing of a Justice of Peace or shall be convicted thereof by his own confession or the evidence of two witnesses upon oath before the same Justice he shall forfeit 12 d. to the use of the poor where the offence shall be committed to be levied by the Constable Church-wardens and Overseers of the Poor there upon warrant from such Justice by distress and sale of goods and in default of distress if the offender be above 12 years old he shall upon warrant as aforesaid be set in the stocks 3 hours but if under then shall he be whipped by the Constable or by the Parent or Master in the Constables presence II. Here if the Officer be sued for the due execution of his Office he may plead the general issue and yet give special matter in evidence III This offence shall be complained of and proved as aforesaid within 20 days after it is committed And this Act shall be read in the Church twice in the year upon Sunday after Evening-Prayer Tail I. West 2.1 13 E. 1. WHere Lands are given to a man and the heirs of his body or to husband and wife and the heirs of their two bodies upon condition That if such man or such husband and wife die without issue that then the land should revert to the Donor or where land is given in frank-marriage and such a condition is conceived to be annexed or implied In all such cases heretofore the Feoffees after issue had had power to Alien and to dis-inherit the issue contrary to the mind of the Donors Wherefore now it is ordained That the Will of the giver according to the form in the Deed of Gift manifestly expressed shall be from henceforth observed so that they to whom the land was given under such condition shall have no power to alien the land so given but it shall remain to their issue after their death or shall revert to the giver or his heirs if issue fail neither shall the second husband of any such woman from henceforth have any thing of the land so given upon condition after the death of his wife by the Law of England nor the issue of such second husband and wife shall succeed in the inheritance but immediately after the death of the husband and wife unto whom the land was given it shall return unto the issue of the giver or his heirs as aforesaid II. Hereupon a new Writ of Formedon in descender is granted in this form Praecipe A. quod juste c. reddat E. Manerinm de F. cum suis pertinentiis quod C. dedit tali viro tali mulieri haeredibus de ipsis viro muliere exeuntibus or thus Quod C. dedit tali viro i● liberum maritagium cum tali muliere quod post mortem praedictorum viri mulieris praedicto B. filio corum viri mulieris descendere debeat per formam donationis praedictae ut dicit c. vel Quod C. dedit tali haeredibus de corpore suo exeuntibus quod post mortem illius talis praedicto B. filio praedicti talis descendere d beat per formam c. III. This Act shall extend to gifts hereafter to be made and not to gifts heretofore made and a Fine hereafter to be levied upon such lands shall be void in Law Neither shall the heir or reversioner albeit they be of full age in England or out of prison need to make their claim But this Law concerning a Fine is in some sort altered by 32 H. 8.36 which see in Fines Taxes Tenths Fifteens Benevolences Ship-money I Stat. 25 E. 1. Certain Taxes then before taken shall not be taken in custome but by the common assent of the Realm except antient Aids and Taxes II. Stat. De Tallagio non concedendo cap. 1. Temp. E. 1. No tallage or aid by us or our heirs shall be levied without the will and assent of the Archbishops Bishops Earls Barons Knights Burgesses and other free Commons of our Realm III. Stat. 1 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 6. Whereas after Taxes rated levied and paid into the Exchequer Commissions of review issued out by colour whereof the Justices thereto assigned took Fines of the Taxers and others it is ordained That from henceforth the people shall be taxed after the old manner and not otherwise IV. Stat. 11 R. 2.9 No imposition or charge shall be put upon Wooll Leather or Woolfels other than the Custom and Subsidy granted to the King in this present Parliament and if any be the same shall be annulled saving always unto the King his ancient right V. Stat. 9 H. 4.7 Goods shall be chargeable towards the payment of Tenths or Fifteenths in the place where they were at the time the same were granted howbeit none shall be twice charged for his goods VI. Stat. 1 R. 3.2 The Subjects of this Realm shall not be hereafter charged by any
Tile before the first of March and shall likewise be tryed and severed from stones malne marle and chalk II. A plain Tile shall contain in length ten inches and an half in breadth six inches and a quarter and in thickness half an inch half a quarter at least A roof or cross-tile in length thirteen inches and in thickness as before with convenient deepness accordingly a gutter and a corner-tile in length ten inches and an half with convenient thickness breadth and deepness III. If any shall sell Tile otherwise made he shall forfeit to the buyer the double value thereof to be recovered by Action of debt and besides shall make fine and ransom at the Kings will IV. Justices of Peace shall hear and determine these defaults and effences as well at the suit of the King as of the party grieved and shall not set less fine upon an offender against this Act then after the rate of 5 s. for every thousand of plain Tile 6 s. 8 d. for every hundred of roof-tile and 2 s. for every hundred of corner or gutter-tile V. The said Justices have also authority to appoint searchers of Tile who shall diligently execute that office in pain to forfeit to the King for every default 10 s. and shall have of every Tile-maker for such search after the rate of 1 d. for every thousand of plain Tile ob for every hundred of roof-tile and qu. for every hundred of corner and gutter-tile and shall make presentment of all defaults found at the next Sessions which shall be as effectual in Law as a presentment of twelve men VI. None shall put any Tile to sale before such search be made in pain to forfeit the same and the Justices of Peace have also power to hear and determine in the defaults of the said searchers Tindale Ridesdale and Examshire I. Stat. 2 H. 5.5 If any person of Tindale or Examshire commit any murder treason manslaughter or robbery or consent thereunto out of the said Franchises Process shall be made against him until he be outlawed and after outlawry returned the Justices before whom it is so returned shall make certificate thereof to the Ministers of the said Franchises who shall take such Felons and seize their lands and tenements into the hands of the Lords of the same Franchises as forfeit but their lands and tenements out of those Franchises shall be seized to the use of the King and other Lords having Franchise there as forfeit saving to the King the forfeitures of such offenders which to him belong in right of his Crown II. Stat. 9 H. 5.7 The Statute of 2 H. 5.5 made against offenders in Tindale and Examshire shall be extended against the like offenders in Ridesdale III. Stat. 11 H. 7.9 The North and South-Tindale and all the lands within the same shall be guildable and parcel of the County of Northumberland and no Franchise shall be there but all the Kings Writs and Officers shall be there obeyed IV. None shall demise any lards for years life or at will there but the Lessor shall before find two sureties having at least 40 s. per annum within the County of Northumberland to be bound by Recognisance in 20 l. to the King to make answer within 8 days warning to all such offences as aforesaid And the Lessor shall forfeit 40 s. for every acre otherwise let to the King and Justices and such Lease shall be void The Justices of Peace also shall inquire of such Recognisances forfeited See the Statute at large ☞ Tithes * I. Stat. pro Clero 7. 18. E. 3. No Scire facias shall be awarded to warn a Clerk to answer for his Tithes before any secular Judge saving to him his right II. Stat. 1. R. 2.14 Where in an Action of goods carried away the Defendant maketh his title for Tithes due to his Church in such case the Plaintiffs general averment shall not be taken without shewing specially how the same were his lay-chattel III. Stat. 5. H 4.11 The Farmers of Aliens shall pay Tithes to the Parsons and Vicars of the Parishes where the lands in farm do lie notwithstanding they be seised into the Kings hands or any prohibition made to the contrary ☞ IV. Stat. 27. H. 8.20 If the Judge of an Ecclesiastical Court make complaint to two Justices of Peace 1. qu. of any contumacie or misdemeanour committed by a Defendant in any suit there depending for Tithes the said Justices shall commit such Defendant to prison there to remain till he shall find sufficient surety to be bound before them by Recognisance or otherwise to give due obedience to the Process Proceedings Decrees and Sentences of the said Court V. This Act shall not extend to any Citizen of London neither shall it restrain any person from having their defence and remedy according to the Ecclesiastical Laws and the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom VI. This Act shall not have longer force then that the King and such 32 persons as he shall appoint shall have established the Ecclesiastical Laws for the Church of England after which time Tithes shall be paid according to those Laws and not otherwise * VII Stat. 28 H. 8.11 The year in which the first-fruits shall be paid to the King shall begin immediately after the avoidance or vacation of the Benefice and the Tithes and other profits of any such Benefice arising during the time of the vacation shall belong to the Presentee or his Executors towards payment of the first-fruits which if any Archbishop Bishop or other hinder him to have he shall forfeit the treble value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and such incumbent Howbeit such Archbishop Bishop Ordinary or other officer shall be allowed the charge of the Cure and of inning Tithes and other profits VIII Here also the incumbent before his death may make and declare his will of the grain sown by him upon the Glebe-lands IX But the successor upon a months warning shall have the Parsonage-house and the Glebe not sowen X. If the fruits of such Spiritual Promotion received be not sufficient to pay the Curate the next incumbent shall do it within 14. days after his induction ☞ XI Stat. 32 H. 8.7 All persons shall duly set forth and pay all Tithes and Offerings according to the custom of the places where they grow due XII If Tithes or Offerings be not so set out and paid the party grieved may convent him that so detains them before the Ecclesiastical Judge who hath power to hear and determine the matter in question ordinarily or summarily according to the Ecclesiastical Laws and to give sentence thereupon accordingly XIII Here if any of the parties appeal the Judge upon such appeal shall adjudge to the other party reasonable costs and compel the Appellant to satisfie them by Process and censures Ecclesiastical taking surety of the other party to whom the costs shall be adjudged to restore the costs in case the principal cause passe against him
Prohibition granted the other party shall upon request have Consultation and double Costs and Damages awarded by the said Court and may recover such costs and damages by action of debt XXXV This Act shall not give power to any Ecclesiastical Judge to hold plea of any matter against the meaning of the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 5. Articuli cleri circumspecte agatis sylva caedua the Treatise De regia prohibitione nor of 1 E. 3.10 nor any of them nor where the Kings Court ought of right to have jurisdiction XXXVI No Tithes of marriage-goods shall be paid in VVales nor the Marches thereof Tobacco * I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 34. None shall sow set or plant any Tobacco within England Wales Isles of Guernsey or Jersey Town of Berwick upon Tweed or Ireland upon penalty of forfeiture of the said Tobacco or 40 s. for every rod or pole so planted one moity whereof to the King the other moity to the Informer II. All Sheriffs and other Officers may destroy any Tobacco sown or planted contrary to this Act and any person resisting such destruction shall forfeit 5 l. to be divided and recovered as aforesaid and by distress of the offenders goods and sale thereof III. Proviso Not to extend to Tobacco planted in any Garden for Physick or Surgery not exceeding one Pole in any one Garden IV. Vid. the Act title Trade Numb XIV ☞ Tolls I. West 1.30 3 E. 1. If excessive Toll be taken in a Market-Town where it is the Kings Town the Franchise shall be seised but where it is anothers if it be done by the Lords consent the Franchise shall be seised as before but if done by a Bailiff or other Officer he shall restore as much more to the Plaintiff as was so taken and suffer 40 days imprisonment II. Citizens or Burgesses who have the King or his Fathers grant for murage to inclose their Towns if they take for murage more then they ought to do by their grant and be thereof attainted they shall lose their grant and be also grievously amerced to the King III. Stat. 18 E. 2. Ordinance of Bakers How Toll shall be taken at a Mill. Towns I. Stat. 27 H. 8.1 A remedy for repair of decayed houses and buildings upon waste ground in Nottingham Shrewsbury Ludlow Bridge-north Quinborow Northampton and Glocester See the Statute at large II. Stat. 32 H. 8.18 A remedy for repair of decayed houses and building upon waste ground in York Lincoln Canterbury Coventry Bath Chichester Salisbury Winchester Bristol Scarborow Heresord Colchester Rochester Portsmouth Pool Linae Feversham Worcester Stafford Buckingham Pomsr●t G●antham Exeter Ipswich Southampton Great Yarmouth Oxsord Great W●combe Gilford Stratford Kingston upon Hull Newcastle upon Tine Beverley Bedford Leicester Berwick See the Statute at large III. Stat. 32 H. 8.19 A like Statute for re-edifying of Shaftsbury Shirborn Birdport Dorchester Weymouth Plimouth Plimton Barnstable Tavestock Dartmouth Lanceston Lyskerde Lestythiel Bodmyn Truro Helstone Bridgwater Taunton Somerton Ilchester Malden in Essex and VVarwick See the Statute at large IV. Stat. 33 H. 8.36 A like Statute for Canterbury Rochester Stamford Great Grimsby Cambridg Derby Gilford Dunwich The Cinque-Ports with the members Lewes and Buckingham See the Statute at large V. Stat. 35 H. 8.4 A like Statute for Shrewsbury Chester Ludlow Haverford West Pembroke Denby Carmerdin Montgomery Cardiffe Swannesse Cowbridge New Rador Prestend Brecknoke Monmouth Malden in Essex Abergavenny Usk Curlion Newport in Monmouthshire Lancaster Preston Liverpool and VVygan See the Statute at large VI. Stat. 1 2. P. M. 7. None dwelling in the Country out of a Corporation or Market-Town shall sell or cause to be sold by retail any Woollen-Cloth Linnen-Cloth Haberdasher-Wares Grocery-wares Mercery-wares in any such Corporation or Market-Town or the Suburbs or Liberties thereof except in open Fairs in pain to forfeit for every time so offending 6 s. 8 d. and the whole wares so sold or offered to be sold The one moity of which forfeiture shall be to the King and Queen and the other to the seisor or prosecutor VII Howbeit any person may sell such wares in the said places by whole-sale in gross and by retail also he being made free of the said places or it being cloth of his own making that is so sold VIII The Liberties of the Universities are saved IX Stat. 18 El. 21. It shall be lawful for any person freely to buy and sell in New VVoodstock all Wools and Yarn brought thither upon the usual Markets or Fair days and the same to use and employ to their best profit notwithstanding any Statute Law or Usage to the contrary Trade I. Stat. 15 Car. 2. cap. 5. Stat. 3. for encouragement of Tillage When prices of Corn and Grain Winche●●er measure exceed not the Rates at the Havens or places to be shipped at viz. Wheat 48 s. Barley or Malt 28 s. Buck Wheat 28 s. Oats 13 s. 4 d. Rye 32 s. Pease or Beans 32 s. The Quarter The same may be transported beyond the Sea from the said Havens or Places as Merchandise II. When prices of Corn and Grain exceed not the said Rates at the said Havens and shall be imported from beyond Sea there shall be paid for Custome and Poundage viz. for Wheat 5 s. 4 d. Rye 4 s. Barley or Malt 2 s. 8 d. Buck Wheat 2 s. Oats 1 s. 4 d. Pease or Beans 4 s. The Quarter III. When the same exceed not the prices at the said places or Markets in the said first clause mentioned All persons not forestalling or selling the same in the Market within 3 months after the buying may buy the same in open Market and lay up and keep the same IV. No Commodity of the growth production or manufacture of Europe shall be imported into any Island Plantation or place to the King belonging or to belong but what be laden and shipped in England Wales or Berwick in English built shipping And whereof the Master and 3 fourths of the Mariners at least are English And which shall be directly thence carried to the said Islands Plantations and places and ●in no other place upon pain of forfeiture of all such goods imported in any of them into any other place by land or water If by water of the Ship importing them with her Guns Ammunition and Apparel one third part whereof to the King one third part to the Governor of such Island or place where the goods be imported the other third part to him who shall seise or sue for the same in any of the Kings Courts in such Islands or places where the offence is committed or in any Court of Record in England V. Provided It shall be lawful to ship and lade in such Ships so navigated as aforesaid in any part of Europe salt for the Fisheries of Newfound-land and New-England and in the Madera's Wines of the growth thereof And in the VVestern Islands or Azores Wines of their growth and to Ship-servants or horses in Scotland or
Treason or Felony V. To ride armed with men of arms with purpose to kill rob or imprison another untill he hath made fine and ransome shall not be adjudged Treason but Felony or Trespass as hath been heretofore used And if any such attempt hath been heretofore adjudged Treason and thereupon Lands seised into the Kings hands withheld of other Lords they shall be restored to such Lords saving to the King his year and waste VI. Stat. 1 H. 4.10 Treason shall not be adjudged otherwise then as it was ordained by 25 E. 3. VII Stat. 26 H. 8.13 Pars inde Treason committed out of this Realm shall be enquired of in such County and before such persons as the King shall appoint by Commission and upon every Indictment and presentment so found and certified into the Kings Bench like Process and other circumstance shall be there had and made against the offender as if such Treason had been found to have been committed within the Realm Also all Process of Outlawry within the Realm against such offender being resiant out of the Realm at the time of the Outlawry pronounced shall be as good in Law as if such offender had been resident within the Realm at the time of the Process awarded and such Outlawry pronounced VIII Every such offender being lawfully convict by presentment confession verdict or process of Outlawry shall forfeit to the King all such Lands Tenements and Hereditaments which he shall have of any estate of inheritance in use or possession by any Right Title or Means within the Kings Dominions at the time of such Treason committed or after IX The Rights Titles Interests Possessions Leases Rents Offices and other profits of all persons their heirs and successors except of the offenders or others claiming to their use are saved X. Stat. 33 H. 8.20 If any person commit High Treason when he is of perfect memory and after accusation examination and consession thereof before any of the Kings Council shall fall into Lunacy he shall be enquired of in any County where the King by his Commission shall assign and if he be there indicted he shall be there arraigned without his personal presence and if he be found guilty he shall suffer death and forfeit as if he had been of perfect memory But this is altered by 1 2. P. M. 20. which see after XI If any person be attainted of High Treason by the Common Law or Statutes of this Realm such attainder by the Common Law shall be of as good force as if it had been done by Parliament and the King shall have as much benefit thereby viz. of lands tenements hereditaments goods chattells uses rights entries conditions possessions reversions remainders and all other things of such offender and shall be as well adjudged in actual and real possession of all such things of the offender which the King ought lawfully to have or which the offender ought or might lawfully lose or forfeit as if he had been attainted by the Parliament without any Office or Inquisition to be found of the same XII The right c. of all others except of the offenders c. is saved XIII Stat. 35 H. 8.2 All Treasons misprisions of Treason and concealments of Treason committed out of the Realm shall be enquired heard and determined before the Justices of the Kings Bench by lawful men of the County where the Bench shall then sit or before Commissioners in such County as the King shall assign by lawful men of the same County in like manner as if the offence had been committed in the same Shire where it is so enquired heard and determined But here a Peer shall be tryed by his Peers XIV Stat. 1 E. 6.12 All former Statutes which make any offences Treason or petty Treason are repealed save only what is so made by 25 E 3. Stat. 5. cap. 2. and by this Statute XV. It shall be High Treason to affirm by writing printing or Deed that the King is not Supream Head of the Church of England and Ireland or that any other is But this clause is repealed by 1 2. P. M. 8. XVI It shall be High Treason to interrupt any person to whom the Crown is limited by 35 H. 8.1 But this is also expresly repealed by the general words of 1. M. Sess 1. XVII If any compass to depose the King or do affirm that he ought not to be King for the first offence he shall forfeit his goods and suffer imprisonment at the Kings will for the second he shall lose the issues of his lands during life and suffer perpetual imprisonment and for the third shall be guilty of High Treason But so much hereof as concerns Treason petty Treason or misprision of Treason is also repealed by the general words of 1. M. Sess 1. XVIII Stat. 5 6 H. 6.11 It is High Treason to affirm by writing printing painting carving or graving that the King is an Heretick Schismatick Tyrant Infidel or Usurper of the Crown or rebelliously to detain from the King any of his Castles Holds Ships Ordnances Artillery or other Fortifications of War But this part of this Statute is repealed expresly by 1 M. Sess 1. XIX Treason committed out of the Realm shall be enquired of in such County and before such persons as the King shall appoint by Commission and upon every Indictment and Presentment so found and certified into the Kings Bench like process and other circumstances shall be there had and made against the offender as if such Treason had been found to have been committed within the Realm Also all Process of Outlawry within the Realm against such offender being resiant out of the Realm at the time of the Outlawry pronounced shall be as good in Law as if such offender had been resident within the Realm at the time of the Process awarded and such Outlawry pronounced XX. If the party within one year after the Outlawry or Judgment given thereupon yield himself to the Chief Justice of England and offer to traverse the Indictment or Appeal whereupon he was so outlawed he shall be admitted to such traverse and being thereupon acquit shall be discharged of the Outlawry and all forfeitures by reason thereof XXI The offender in Treason being lawfully convict thereof shall forfeit to the King all such lands tenements and hereditaments as he shall have of an Estate of Inheritance in his own right in use or possession in the Kings Dominions at the time of the Treason committed or at any time after XXII Concealment of Treason shall be deemed misprision of Treason But quaere whether this clause be not also repealed by the general words of 1 M. 1. XXIII None shall be attainted of Treason but by the testimony of two lawful accusers who shall be brought in person before the party accused unless he will willingly without violence confess the offence XXIV Here the right of all other is saved XXV The wife shall lose her Dower where the husband is
in London York and Coventry are excepted * XIII Stat. 25 H. 8.2 The prizes of victual in all places except Corporations shall be assessed by the Kings Councellors Justices of either Bench and some other great Officers For which see the Statute at large XIV Provided that Head-officers in Corporations and others having authority to prize victual may still assess the prizes thereof as if this Statute had not been made XV. No Corn Beefs Muttons Veals Porks or other victual shall be transported beyond Sea except for victualling of Ships and barrelled butter and meal to be earried into Island in pain to forfeit the value thereof to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor XVI Stat. 2 3 E. 6.15 Butchers Brewers Bakers Poulterers Cooks Costermongers or Fruiterers which conspire or promise together that they will not sell their victuals but at certain prizes shall forfeit for the first offence 10 l. to the King and if they pay it not within six dayes after conviction they shall suffer twenty dayes imprisonment and during that time shall have no sustenance but bread and water for the second offence they shall forfeit 20 l. and that not paid within six dayes as aforesaid shall suffer the pillory And for the third offence shall forfeit 40 l. and that not paid within the time above limited shall again suffer the Pillory lose one of their ears and be ever after taken as men infamous and not to be credited and if such conspiracy be acted by the major part of a Company of such victuallers their Corporation shall be thereupon dissolved XVII Justices of Peace Mayors Bayliffs and Stewards in Sessions Leets and Courts have power to hear and determine these offences * XVIII Stat. 1 2 P.M. 5. None shall transport beyond sea or into Scotland any corn or grain of English growth or malt made there or any beer butter cheese herring or wood without lawful authority in pain that the owner of the vessel in which they are so transported shall forfeit his vessel the owner of the said Commodity so transported the double value thereof and the Master and Marriners all their goods and suffer a years imprisonment without bail Neither shall any convey by any vessel any of the aforesaid commodities to any other Ship or Vessel to be transported in pain to incur the like forfeitures and penalties XIX The one moyety of the said forfeitures shall accrue to the King and Queen and the other to the prosecutor XX. In case the King and Queen their heirs or successors grant license to transport such commodities the licensed shall not transport more then the license allows in pain to forfeit the treble value thereof and to suffer a years imprisonment without bail And such license shall ship the said commodities at one and the same place in pain to forfeit all his goods and chattels to be divided as followeth viz. the one moyety to the King and Queen and the other to the prosecutor XXI Justices of the Peace have power to examine all offenders against this Act and to hear and determine by the oaths of 12 lawful men the offences committed against the same XXII Provided that when wheat shall not exceed the price of 6 s. 8 d. Rye of 4 s. and Barley of 3 s. 4 d. the quarter it shall be lawful to transport them notwithstanding this Act Neither shall this Statute impeach the necessary victualling of Ships or the Admirals Jurisdiction Howbeit as to the transportation of Corn this Statute hath since been divers times altered by sundry subsequent Acts viz. 13 El. 1 Jac. 25. and 21 Jac. 28. and last of all by 3 Car. 4. which see in Corn and so it stands at this day XXIII Stat. 21 Jac. 21. The Statute of 32 H. 8.41 together with other Statutes coneerning horse-bread is repealed XXIV Inholders and Hostlers shall make no horse-bread shall sell their hay provender and victuals at reasonable prizes and shall take nothing for litter XXV This Act shall not restrain those that dwell in a Thorow-fair which is no Market-town and wherein there is no Baker to make horse-bread according to the just assize XXVI Justices of Oy●r and Terminer Justices of Peace Sheriffs in turns and Stewards in Leets have power to hear and determine these offences XXVII If any Inholder or Hostler which hath power by this Act to make horse-bread observe not the Assize or if he or any other offend this Law in any other kind whatsoever for the first offence they shall be fined for the second suffer a months imprisonment without bail for the third be set upon the Pillory and for the sourth shall be fore-judged from ever keeping an Inne again View I. West 2.48 13 E. 1. View of Land shall not be granted but where it is necessary for example if one lose land by default and afterwards moveth for a Writ to demand the same Land or when one by an exception dilatory abateth a Writ after view had as by non-tenure misnaming of the Town or the like In these cases upon purchase of another Writ view shall not be granted if he had view in the first Writ so in a Writ of Dower when the Dower in demand is of Land which the husband aliened to the Tenant or his Ancestors whereof the Tenant ought not to be ignorant Here albeit the husband dyed not seised yet view shall not be granted to the tenant Also in a writ of entry which abated because the Demandant misnamed the entry here if the demandant purchase another Writ of Entry the tenant having had view in the first Writ shall not have it in the second Likewise in all Writs where Lands are demanded by reason of a Lease made by the demandant or his ancestor to the tenant himself being within age non compos mentis in prison or the like view shall not be granted but if the demise were made to his ancestor view shall lye as hath been heretofore used II. Stat. De visu terrae Essoin de servitio Domini Regis 12. E. 2. View shall be granted in a writ of ward of customs and services of Advowson of a Church viz. when there be more Churches then one in a Town and all of one Saint of Dower to be assigned and of Nuper obiit Villenage I. The Statute of Purveyors cap. 18. 25 E. 3. Notwithstanding adjournment made in Eyre by writ de libertate probanda purchased in favour of Villeins to delay their Lords in their Actions for such Villeins the Lord may in all Writs plead the exception of Villenage against them whether such Writ were purchased by deceit or otherwise The Lords also may seize their bodies as well as they might have done before such Writs de libertate probanda purchased II. Stat. 38 E. 3.17 No Writ shall be abated by exception of Cognizance of Villenage if the Demandant or Plaintiff will aver that the party alledging the exception was free the day of the Writ purchased
demandant shall be also received if the tenant will abide thereupon but if not the tenant shall be compelled to another as before unless the Vouchee be present and will immediately enter into Warranty and then also the demandant may have like exception as before V. If the Tenant have a deed that comprised Warranty of another man his recovery by a Writ de Warrantia carta out of the Chancery shall be saved to him howbeit the plea shall not be delayed by reason thereof VI. The Stat. of Glocester 12. 6. E. 1. If a man impleaded for a tenement in London vouch a foreigner to Warranty he shall have a Writ out of the Chancery to summon the Warrantor at a certain day before the Justices of the Bench and another to the Mayor and Bailiffs of London to surcease the matter before them until the plea of the Warranty be determined in the Bench and when the plea at the Bench shall be determined then shall the Vouchee be commanded to go into the City to answer the chief plea and a Writ shall also be awarded at the Demandants suit by the Justices to the Mayor and Bailiffs to cause them to proceed in the plea And if the Demandant recover against the tenant the tenant shall come before the Justices of the Bench who shall direct a Writ to the Mayor and Bailiffs to cause the land so lost by the tenant to be extended and valued and to return that extent at a certain day unto the Bench and after the Sheriff of the County where the Warranty was summoned shall be commanded to deliver to the Voucher land of the Vouchee answerable in value to the land that the Voucher hath lost See a correction and some inlargement of this Statute 9 E. 1. VII West 1.6 13. E. 1. As the tenant shall lose the land in demand in case where his Vouchee dischargeth himself of the Warranty so also shall the Vouchee lose where he denieth the Warranty and it be tried against him Also where an Enquest is depending between the tenant and his Vouchee and the Demandant will require a Writ to cause the Jury to come it shall be granted him VIII The Statute of Vouchers 20 E. 1. This counterplea of Voucher viz. that neither the Vouchee nor his Ancestor● had ever any thing in the land so that he might a feofment make with Warranty shall be received albeit the Vouchee be ready to enter into Warranty IX Stat. 14 E. 3.18 Where the tenant voucheth to Warranty ● dead-man the Demandant shall be received to aver that the Vouchee is dead and that there is none such Upholsters * I. Stat. 11. H. 7.19 None shall put to sale in Fairs or Markets any Featherbeds Bolsters or Pillows except such as are stuffed with one sort of stuff viz. dry pulled feathers or clean down and not with scalded feathers fen-down or any other unlawful corrupt stuff in pain to forfeit the same Howbeit any for their private use may make or cause to be made any such unlawful stuff or wares so as the same be not exposed to Sale in Fairs or Markets upon the like pain II. Also Quilts Mattresses and Cushions shall be stuffed with one sort of stuff only viz. clean wooll or clean flocks and not with horse-hair Fen down Nets-hair Goats hair or other unlawful stuff in pain to forfeit the same * III. Stat. 5. 6 E. 6.23 None shall make to the intent to sell or offer to be sold any Fether-bed Bolster or Pillow except the same be stuffed with dry pulled feathers or clean down only without mingling of scalded feathers Fen-down Thistle-down Sand Lime Gravel or other unlawful or corrupt stuff in pain to forfeit the same so offered to be sold or the value thereof IV. None shall make to the intent to sell or offer to be sold any Quilt Mattress or Cushions stuffed with any other stuff then feathers wool or flocks alone in pain to forfeit the same so sold or put to sale or the value thereof V. The Forfeitures aforesaid are to be divided betwixt the King and the Prosecutor Uses I. Stat. 1. R. 3.1 All grants conveyances recoveries and other assurances made by Cestuy que use being of full age compos mentis and at large shall be good against him and all others claiming as his heir or heirs or to his use But here the right of all others is saved II. Stat. 1. H. 7.1 The Demandant in a Formedon in descender or remainder may have his Action against the Pernor of the profits and such Pernor shall have such Voucher Lyen aids prayer and all other advantages as he should have if he were tenant indeed or his Feoffors should have if the action were brought against them And if such Pernor happen to die his heir being within age his heir shall also have his age and all other advantages as if his ancestor had died seised of the land in demand Also all recoveries had against such Pernors their Heirs or their Feoffees or Cofeoffees and their heirs shall be as good as if such Pernors were tenants indeed or feoffees to their use at the time of such actions brought III. Stat. 3. H. 7.4 All Deeds of gift of goods and Chattels made in trust to the use of the grantor shall be void IV. Stat. 19. H. 7.15 The Sheriff or other Officer having a Writ to execute upon lands against any person upon any Judgment Statute or Recognisance may deliver Execution to the Plaintiff of all lands and tenements whereof any other is seised to the use of him against whom execution is so sued V. Also the heir of Cestuy que use of land in soccage shall pay relief Herriot and all other duties to the Lord of the Fee as if his ancestors had died seised thereof VI. Howbeit upon such execution served as aforesaid Cestuy que use shall have all such advantage as he might have if he were seised of the land VII Cestuy que use being a bond man the land may be seised by his Lord. VIII Stat. 27. H. 8.10 Where any person or persons stand or be seised of any Honours Mannors Lands Tenements Rents Services Reversions Remainders or other Hereditaments to the use confidence or trust of any other person or persons or of any body politick by reason of any bargain sale feofment fine recovery covenant contract agreement will or otherwise In every such case every such person and persons and body politick having such use con●dence or trust in fee-simple fee-tail for life or years or otherwise or any use confidence or trust in remainder or reverter shall stand and be seised deemed and adjudged in lawful seisin estate and possession of and in the Honours Castles c. with their appurtenances of and in such like Estates as they have in use trust or confidence of or in the same And the estate title right and possession of such person or persons as are seised of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments to the
use confidence or trust of any such person or persons or body politick shall be deemed and adjudged to be in him or them that have such use confidence or trust of any such quality manner form and condition as they had before in or to the use confidence or trust that was in them IX When divers persons are so seised to the use confidence or trust of any of themselves they amongst them that have such use or trust shall likewise have the seisin estate and possession in such quality manner and condition as they had the use or trust X. Howbeit the right title c. of all other except of the persons so seised to any use or trust is saved and all former right title c. is also saved to them XI Where any be seised to any use or intent that another shall have a yearly rent out of the same lands Cestuy que use of the rent shall be deemed in the possession thereof of like estate as he or she had that use and shall distrain for non-payment of the said rent and make Avowries Conusances and Justifications and use all other remedies therein as if the said rent had been actually granted to such Cestuy que use XII Where an estate is made in possession or use to husband and wife and his heirs or the heirs of their two bodies or of one of their bodies or to them for their lives or for the wives life for her Joynture in any of these cases she shall not have dower Howbeit upon a lawful eviction of that Joynture she shall be endowed according to the rate of her husbands land whereof she was dowable XIII Such a Joynture being made after Marriage the wife after her husbands death may refuse it and betake her to her dower unless such Joynture be made by Act of Parliament XIV Provided that this Act shall not extinguish release discharge or suspend any Statute Recognizance or other bond by the execution of any estate setled by force of this Act. XV. All Wills and Testaments heretofore made or hereafter to be made before the first of May 1536. shall be good in law in such manner as they were commonly taken and used within 40 years before the making of this Act. XVI The King shall not take advantage by occasion of the executing of any estate by Authority of this Act before the first of May 1536. viz. by having or demanding any primer seisi● livery Ouster le main fine for alienation relief or Herriot but after that time fines for alienations reliefs and herriots shall be paid to the King and also liveries and Ouster le mains shall be sued for uses trusts and confidences which shall be from thenceforth made and executed in possession by force of this Act neither shall any other Lord demand or take any fine relief or herriot by occasion of this Statute before the said first of May 1536. XVII This Act shall not be prejudicial to any person or persons born in Wales or the Marches thereof who have any estate to them executed by force of this Act in any lands in this Realm whereof any other person now stands seised to their use but such person or persons born there may lawfully have and keep all such lands by authority of this Act according to the tenor thereof ☞ Usury * I. Stat. 37 H. 8.9 None shall sell his wares or merchandize to any and within three months after buy the same again at a lesser price knowing them to be the same wares or buy any corrupt bargain of wares money or other thing or buy any Mortgage of land and take in gain for giving day of payment more then according to the rate of 10 l. per centum for one whole year in pain to forfeit the treble value of the profits of such lands mortgaged to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and besides shall suffer imprisonment and make fine at the Kings will II. Stat. 13 El. 8. All Bonds Contracts and Assurances upon Usury in lending or doing any thing contrary to the Statute of 37 H. 8.9 shall be void and all Brokers and Soliciters thereof shall be adjudged and used as Counsellors Attorneys or Advocates in any case of Praemunire III. He that takes no more then after the rate of 10 l. per centum or less shall only forfeit the interest to be recovered and imployed as the forfeitures of 37 H. 8.9 IV. Justices of Oyer and Terminer of Assize and of Peace in their Circuits and Sessions and Mayors Sheriffs and Bailiffs of Cities have power to hear and determine all offences committed against 37 H. 8.9 V. The Statute of 37 H. 8.9 shall be construed largely and strongly against the party offending by any way or device directly or indirectly VI. This Act shall not extend to any allowances or payments for the finding of Orphans according to the ancient rates of London or of any other City where order is taken for their custody and goods as in London VII The offender against the Statute of 37 H. 8.9 may also be punished by the Ecclesiastical Laws VIII Stat. 21 Jac. 17. None shall upon any contract directly or indirectly take for the loan of any money or other commodities above the rate of 8 l. per centum for one whole year in pain to forfeit the treble value of the money or other things lent IX No Scrivener Broker or Solicitor shall take or receive directly or indirectly for Brokage above the rate of 5 s. for the loan of 100 l. for one whole year nor above 12 d. for making a Bond in pain to forfeit 20 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor and also to to suffer six moneths imprisonment X. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 13. None shall upon a contract directly or indirectly take for the loan of any money wares merchandises or other Commodities above the rate of 6 l. per Cent. for loan of a 100 l. for a year and so proportionably upon pain to forfeit treble the value of the money or other things lent XI No Scrivener Broker or Solicitor shall take or receive for brocage above the rate of 5 s. for the loan of 100 l. for a year nor above 12 d. for making a bond upon pain of forfeiture of 20 l. to be divided between the King and the prosecutor and to suffer half a years imprisonment Wager of Law I. Magna Cart. 28. 9 H. 3. NO Bailiff shall put any man to his open Law or to an oath upon his own bare saying without faithful witnesses brought in for the same II. Stat. 38 E. 3.5 Any man may wage his Law by sufficient people of his condition against Londoners papers and the Creditor shall take surety otherwise if he please but shall not put the party to plead to the Enquest unless he will so do of his own accord III. Stat. 5 H. 4.8 In Actions of debt upon the arrearages of an account feigning to the
the Kinsfolk that have such Ward from the time that Writs of impleading have not been granted which seems to be by Magna Charta 27. See before 3. shall have such Wardship to the heirs advantage without making waste sale or destructions as aforesaid XIV West 1.21 3 E. 1. Guardians shall keep the Lands in Ward without destruction according to Magna Charta so also shall Archbishopricks Bishopricks Abbacies Churches and all spiritual dignities be kept in time of vacation XV. West 1.22 3 E. 1. The Statute of Merton 6. before 4. as to the marriage of heirs without their Guardians consent is confirmed XVI The Lord may hold the land of heirs females two years after their age of 14. within which two years if he marry them not they shall go quit without giving any thing for the Wardship or Marriage and if they will not accept a convenient marriage tendered by the Lord he shall hold their land till their age of 21 years and over untill he have taken the value of the marriage XVII West 2.16 13 E. 1. Where one holdeth sundry lands of divers Lords by Knight-service that Lord shall have the marriage by whom the childs Ancestor was first enfeoffed without having respect to the sex or the quantity of the land but only to the more ancient Feoffment XVIII West 2.35 13 E. 1. Where children whose marriage belongeth to another are taken away the ravisher having no right to marriage albeit the ravisher afterwards restore the child unmarried or pay for the marriage yet for his offence he shall be punished by two years imprisonment and in case he do not restore or marry the child after years of consent and be not able to satisfie for the marriage he shall abjure the Realm or hav perpetual imprisonment and thereupon the Plaintiff shall have a Writ of Ravishment of Ward in this form XIX Si A. secerit te securum de clamore sue c. tunc pone per vad c. B. quod sit coram Justic c. oftensurus quare talem haeredem ins●●a aetatem existentem cujus maritagium ad ipsum pertinet tali loco inventum rapuit abduxit contra voluntatem ipsius A. contra pacem nostram c. XX. If the heir be in the same County then this clause is to be added Et diligenter inquiras ubi ille haeres sit in baliva tua ipsum ubicunque fuerit inventus capias salvo secure custodias ita quod eum habeas coram praefat Justic nostris ad praefat terminum ad reddendum cui praedictorum A. vel B. reddi debeat XXI Process shall be made against the offender by distress if he have whereby to be distrained or else for his contumacy he shall be outlawed XXII If the heir be married or carried into another County the Writ shall be directed to the Sheriff of that other County in this form Questus est nobis A. quod B. nuper talem haeredem infra aetatem in custodia sua existentem tali loco in tali Comitatu rapuit de Comitatu tali ad talem locum in Com. tuo abduxit Contra voluntatem ipsius A. contra pacem nostram c. Et ideo tibi praecipimus quod praedicium haeredem ubicunque in baliva tua invenire poteris capias salvo secure eum custodias Ita quod eum habeas coram Justic nostris c. tali dic quam idem A. habet versus praedict B. ad reddendum cui de jure reddi debeat XXIII The death of the heir before he can be found or restored to the Plaintiff shall not stop the Suit nor excuse the ravisher from punishment or if the Plaintiff die his heir shall revive the Suit if the right did belong unto the Plaintiff by reason of his proper fee but if it were by gift sale or the like the suit shall be revived by his Executors or in case the Defendant die the suit shall be re-summoned betwixt the Plaintiff his heirs or executors and the Executors of the Defendant or his heirs if the Executors be not sufficient to satisfie the value of the marriage but not as to the pain of imprisonment for none shall be punished for anothers offence XXIV Also in a Writ de Communi custodia if either party die hanging the Suit resummons shall be made betwixt the heirs and executors of the Plaintiff and the heirs and executors of the Defendant and when they have passed to the great distress day shall be given within which time three Counties may be holden at least in every of which proclamation shall be made that the deforceor shall appear in the Bench at the day contained in the Writ to answer the Plaintiff at which day if he come not and the proclamation be returned once twice or thrice the Judgment shall pass for the Plaintiff saving the defendants right if after he will claim it The like also shall be done in a writ de ejectione custodiae XXV The Stat. of Wards and Reliefs 28 E. 1. where any relief is given there Wardship is incident contra XXVI Unto Grand Serjeancy viz. to go with the King in his Host ward and relief are incident but not to petty Serjeancy as to bear shield or spear there XXVII A free Sokeman shall neither give ward or relief but shall double his rent after the death of his Ancestor and shall not be unmeasurably grieved XXVIII There are two kinds of Writs to recover Wards viz. the one is where land is holden in Knight-service and the other where it is holden in soccage The Ward of Land in Knight-service belongs to the Lord and the marriage also which ought to be without disparagement untill he attains to the age of 21 years XXIX The Ward of an Heir that holdeth in soccage if the land descended on the mothers side belongs to the next friend on the Fathers side contra XXX There are three manner of Writs to recover Wards 1. When both the land and heir is demanded called a Writ de Communi custodia and in this case the chief Lord shall recover both the Ward and marriage 2. When the tenant hath purchased lands holden of several Lords in which case the Lord of whom the land last purchased is holden shall neither have the land nor heir but the Lord that first enfeoffed the tenant shall have them 3. When one hath lands by reason of a Ward but hath not the Heir here he may have a Writ to demand the heir and not the land and this is called a Writ of Ravishment of Ward XXXI Prerog Reg. 1. 17 E. 2. The King shall have the Ward of all lands holden of him in chief by Knight-service whereof the Tenant dyed seised of whomsoever they hold by like service so as they held anciently any land of the Crown until the Heir came to his lawful age except the fees of the Archbishop of Canterbury the Bishop of Du●●sme
between Tine and Tees fees of Earls and Barons in the Marches where the Kings writ runs not and where such Archbishops Bishops Earls and Barons ought to have such Wards albeit they hold of the King in some other place XXXII Prerog Reg. 2. 17 E. 2. The King shall have the marriage of an heir being within age and in his Ward whether his lands have appertained to the Crown of ancient continuance or came by Escheat being in the Kings hands or by reason of another wardship without respect of priority or posteriority of feoffment albeit such heir held also of others XXXIII Prerog Reg. 6. 17 E. 2. If a Woman before her ancestors death that held of the King in chief be married before her age of consent the King shall have the ward of her body untill her age of consent and then it is at her election whether she will have him whom she first married or him whom the King will offer her XXXIV None that holds of the King in chief by Knight-service shall without the Kings licence alien so much of his lands that the residue is not sufficient to do his service Howbeit this is not to be understood of members and parcels of such lands XXXV Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.13 After the death of the Kings tenant in chief the Escheator shall cause to be seised into the Kings hands the lands as to their office appertains without doing waste in houses Woods Parks Ponds or other extortions which may tend to the damage of the heir and forthwith after the Diem clausit extremum delivered to him shall make return thereof by a good and true extent in the Chancery XXXVI After such return if the next friends of the heir to whom the inheritance cannot descend shall come and offer to take the said lands untill the heir be at age and to give for the same as much as another without fraud by accord of the Chancellor and Treasurer they shall have Commission to keep them upon good security untill his full age answering to the King the value thereof XXXVII Howbeit this Act shall not conclude the King from having an Action of waste against such Guardians and Farmers the Heir also may have like Action against them when he comes to age XXXVIII Stat. 39 H. 6.2 Women being of the age of 16 years at the time of the death of their Ancestors shall have livery of their lands descended to them XXXIX Stat. 4 H. 7.17 The Statute of Marlb 6. 52 H. 3. before 4. is confirmed XL. The Lord of Cestuy que use no Will of his Ancestor being declared in his life time shall have a Writ of right of Ward for the body and the land and the heir of Cestuy que use being at full age at the death of his ancestor shall pay relief the heir also of Cestuy-que use shall have like action of waste as if his ancestor had dyed seised and if the Lord be barred in his Writ of right of Ward the Defendant shall recover damages The Court of Wards Vide Courts Numb XXXIV VVares I. Stat. 5 El. 7. None shall bring or cause to be brought into this Realm from beyond Sea any girdles harness for girdles Rapiers Daggers Knives Hilts Pummels Lockets Chapes Dagger-blades Handles Scabbards or Sheaths for Knives Saddles Horsharness Stirrops Bits Gloves Points Leather laces or Pinnes being ready wrought beyond Sea to be sold bartered or exchanged in this Realm or Wales in pain to forfeit the same or the value thereof to be divided betwixt the Queen and the Prosecutor VVarranty I. The Statute of Bigamy 6. 4 E. 1. Indeeds conteining Dedi concessi tale tenementum without non-age or any clause of Warranty and to be holden of the donors and their heirs by a certain service in this case the donors and their heirs are bound to Warranty But where the deed is dedi concessi c. to be holden of the chief Lord of the fee or of other and not of the feoffors and their heirs reserving no service and without homage and the aforesaid clause here the feoffors Heirs shall not be bound to Warranty Howbeit the feoffor himself during his life by force of his own gift is bound to warrant II. The Statute of Glocester 3. 6 E. 1. Where tenant by the curtesy aliens his Wives land his son having no ossets by descent shall not be barred to recover the land by a Writ of Mortdancester of the seisin of his mother albeit his fathers deed mentioneth that he and his heirs shall be bound to warranty but in case any land descend to the heir of his fathers side he shall be barred for the value of the inheritance so descended III. Also if afterwards any inheritance descend to him by the same father the tenant shall recover against him of the seisin of his mother by a Judicial writ to be issued out of the Rolls of the Justices before whom the plea was pleaded to resummon his warranty as hath been heretofore used in cases where the warrantor pleads ●iens per descent from him by whose deed he is vouched IV. Likewise the issue of the son may recover by Writ of Cousinage Ayel and Besayel neither shall the heir of the Wife be barred of his action after the death of his father and mother by writ of Entry for land which his Father did alien in the time of his mother whereof no fine is levyed in the Kings Court. Warr. I. Stat. 1 E. 3.7 Whereas Commissioners have heretofore prepared men of Arms and conveyed them to the King of Scotland Gascoigne and elswhere at the charge of the Shires whereby the Commons have been much impoverished The King wills That it shall be done so no more II. Stat. 18 E. 3.7 Men of Arms Hoblers and Archers chosen to go in the Kings service out of England shall be at the Kings wages from the day that they depart out of the Countreys where they are levied till their return III. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 None shall be constrained to find men of Arms Hoblers or Archers but by tenure of land or grant in Parliament IV. Stat. 4 H. 4.13 The Statutes of 1 E. 3.7 18 E. 3.7 and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.8 shall be holden in all points yet so as Lords and all others that have lands in Wales or the Marches thereof or hold of the King by Escuage or other service shall in no wise be excused of their service and devoirs due to the King for their lands fees annuities pensions or other profits V. Stat. 11 H. 7.18 Every person in England and Wales having any office fee or annuity of the Kings grant shall personally attend upon him when he goes himself in person in the Wars unless he have the Kings licence or be letted upon some just cause well proved in pain to forfeit such office fee and annuity Howbeit this Act shall not extend to any spiritual person the Master of the Rolls or other
Knight-service and other Lands in Soccage or of the nature of Soccage may give dispose or assure by will or otherwise by Act executed in his life two parts of the knight-service land or so much thereof as shall amount to the yearly value of two parts as aforesaid and also all the soccage-land at his pleasure saving to such Lord for his custody and wardship so much of the knight-service land as shall amount to the yearly value of the third part thereof X. Every person having mannors lands c. holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief or any mannors lands c. holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief and other mannors lands c. holden of any other person by knight-service and also other mannors lands c. holden of any other person in soccage or in the nature of Soccage may give dispose will devise and assure by his last Will or otherwise by act executed in his life two parts of the said Knight-service-Land or so much thereof as shall amount to two parts of the yearly value thereof as aforesaid and all the soccage-land at his will and pleasure Howbeit here also the custody and Wardship of so much of the said Knight-service mannors lands c. as shall amount to the yearly value of the third part thereof are saved to the King and other Lords respectively and if the King or other Lord have not in this case a full third part set out for them they may respectively take into their possession so much of the other two parts as will make it a full third part XI Provided that all persons shall sue liveries for possessions reversions or remainders and pay reliefs and heriots as they did before the making of this Act. XII Fines for alienations shall be paid in Chancery upon Writs of entry in the Post for common recoveries suffered of any Mannors Lands c. holden of the King in chief in like manner as upon alienations of such Mannors Lands c. by fine or feoffment Howbeit no other fine shall be paid there for any such Writs but only such fines for alienation XIII Where two or more hold any Mannors Lands c. of the King by Knight-service joyntly to them and the heirs of one of them and he that hath the inheritance dyeth his heir being within age the King shall have the Ward and Marriage of such Heir the life of the freeholder or Freeholders notwithstanding saving to every Woman her Interest of Dower in such lands to be assigned out of the two parts thereof severed from the third part as abovesaid and not otherwise and saving also to the King the reversions of all such tenants by joynt-tenure and Dower after the death of such tenants in case they happen to dye during the nonage of the Kings Ward XIV Stat. 34.35 H. 8.5 Where the Statute of 32 H. 8.1 mentioneth mannors lands c. of inheritance it shall be expounded and taken of estates in fee-simple XV. Every person having a sole estate in fee-simple or seized in co-parcenery or in common in fee-simple in any Mannors Lands tenements rents or other hereditaments in possession reversion or remainder and having no Mannors lands c. holden of the King or of any other by Knight-service may give dispose will or devise to any person or persons except bodies politick and corporate by his last Will and Testament in writing or by Act executed in his life by himself solely or by himself and others joyntly severally or particularly or by all those wayes or any of them as much as in him of right is all his said mannors lands tenements rents and hereditaments or any of them or any rents commons or other profits out of the same or any parcel thereof at his free will and pleasure XVI Every person having such an estate or seized as aforesaid of or in any mannors lands rents c. in possession reversion or remainder or of or in any rents or services incident to any reversion or remainder holden of the King by Knight-service in chief or of the nature of Knight-service in chief may give dispose will or assign to any person or persons except bodies politick and corporate by his last Will and Testament in writing or by an Act executed in his life by himself solely or by himself and others joyntly severally or particularly or by all those wayes or any of them as much as in him of right is two parts as well of all the said Mannors lands c. as of all other rents and hereditaments or of any of them or any rents commons profits or commodities out of or to be perceived of the same two parts or out of any parcel thereof in three parts to be divided or as much thereof as shall amount to the yearly value of two parts thereof in three parts to be divided of what person or persons soever they be holden at his free will and pleasure XVII Such Will so declared shall be good for two parts of the said Mannors lands c. although it be made of the whole or more then the two parts thereof the said division to be made by the devisor or owner of the said Mannors lands c. by will in writing or otherwise in writing and in default thereof by Commission out of the Court of Wards upon inquiry of the true value thereof by the oaths of 12 men and upon return thereof in the same Court the division shall be made by the Master of the Wards if the said Master and parties cannot otherwise agree upon the division and the issues and profits of the two parts shall be restored to them that shall have right thereunto from the death of the owner or deviser XVIII Every person being seised solely in co-parcenery or in common as aforesaid of any mannors lands rents c. in possession reversion or remainder or of any ●ents or services incident to any reversion or remainder holden of the King by Knight-service and not in chief or of any other person by Knight-service may give dispose will or devise to any person except to bodies politick by his last Will and Testament in writing or by act executed in his life solely or joyntly as aforesaid two parts thereof or any rents common or profits to be perceived out of the same two parts or out of any part thereof c. And such Will shall be good for such two parts albeit it be made of the whole lands so holden or of more then the said two parts and shall also be good for all lands not holden in Knight-service and for all rents commons and other profits to be perceived out of the same XIX Here also the division of the third part is to be made as before where it concerns the Kings Interest but where it concerns other Lords the division shall be by Commission out of the Chancery if such Lords and the parties in the mean time cannot agree
ingrossing and forestalling so as they carry the same to Halifax and there sell it to such poor people of that or other Parishes adjoyning as to their knowledg shall work them in cloth or yarn and not to the rich Clothier nor any other to sell again XXV If the wool-driver shall sell his wools out of Halifax or if any buy wools in Halifax to sell the same unwrought in yarn or cloth every such offender shall forfeit the double value of the Wool so sold or uttered whereof the King and Queen is to have the one moyety and the Prosecutor the other And Justices of Peace in Sessions have power to hear and determine these offences XXVI Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 32. None shall export any sheep or wool woolfels mortlings yarn Fullers earth fulling-clay nor carry load or convey the same to be transported upon several penalties as well upon the owners of ships as the persons that shall convey the same See the Act at large XXVII Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 18. None shall export any sheep wool woolfels mortlings shortlings yarn made of wool wool-flocks Fullers earth fulling-clay nor Tobacco-pipe clay XXVIII Justices of Assise Goal-delivery and Justices of the Peace at their Quarter-Sessions may hear and determine offences against the said Act. XXIX Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 19. No Forreign Wool-cards Card-wire or Iron for Wool-cards shall be imported nor used in England or Wales Women Widows Wives and Maids I. Magna Charta 7 9 H. 3. A Widow immediately after her husbands death shall have her marriage and inheritance and shall give nothing for her dower marriage or inheritance which her husband and she held the day of his death II. Also she shall remain in the chief house of her husband forty dayes after his death if the house be not a Castle within which 40 dayes her dower shall be assigned her if it were not assigned her before III. If the house be a Castle and she depart from thence then shall a convenient house be forthwith provided for her where she may conveniently dwell untill her Dower be assigned and in the mean time she shall have reasonable estovers of the common And for her dower shall be assigned unto her the third part of all the land which was her husbands in his life time unless she were before endowed of less at the Church door IV. No widow shall be distrained to marry her self while she will live without a husband Howbeit she shall find surety that she shall not marry without the Kings licence and assent if she hold of the King nor without the assent of the Lord in case she hold of another V. Prerog Regis 4.17 E. 2. The King shall assign dower to the Widows of his tenants in chief albeit the heir be at age if the widows will and such widows before assignment of their dower shall swear that they will not marry themselves without the Kings licence whether the heirs be of full age or not VI. If they marry without licence the King shall seize by way of distress the land they held of him in dower until he be satisfied at his own will so that they shall take nothing of the issues thereof For by such distresses they and their husbands must fine at his will which in the time of H. 3. was estimated one years value of her Dower VII Women that hold any Inheritance of the King in chief of what age soever they be shall likewise swear not to marry without the Kings licence And if they do their lands shall be seized as aforesaid until the King be satisfied at his will VIII Stat. 31 H. 6.9 Where any person or persons take women by force or otherwise by perswasion get them into their possession and when they so have them will not suffer them to go at large until they have bound themselves by obligations or Statute Merchant in great sums of money to them or others for their use and many times compel them to be married against their likings and levy such sums upon their Lands In these cases the obligor shall have a Writ out of the Chancery containing the matter of such evil usage directed to the Sheriff of the County where such offence is committed to make Proclamation in full County and also in the next County-Court after the receit of the Writ that the offender shall appear at a certain day prefixed in the Writ before the Lord Chancellor or otherwise before the Justices of Assize in the County where the offence is done or else before some other person thereunto assigned by the Lord Chancellor At which day if the offender appear the said Chancellor Justices or other person-shall duly examine the parties upon the premises And if it be found that the obligations were so made they shall be void but otherwise they shall stand in force Also if the offender appear not they shall likewise be void as also all the proceedings thereupon IX Here if the Sheriff be remiss in the execution of such a writ he shall forfeit 300 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the party that purchased the same Writ X. Stat. 4 5 P.M. 8. None shall take or convey or cause to be taken or conveyed away any Maid or Woman-child unmarried being within the age of 16 years out of the custody and against the will of the father or mother of such child or of the person to whom the father of such child by his last will or other Act in his life-time hath appointed Governance of such child except such taking shall be by or for such person as without fraud is master or mistriss of such child or her guardian in Soccage or Chivalry in pain of two years imprisonment without bail or else to pay such fine as shall be assessed by the Queens Council in the Star-Chamber XI None shall take away and deflower any such child or against the will of her father if he be living or of her mother having the custody of her if the Father be dead contract matrimony with any such child except by the title of Wardship in pain to suffer five years imprisonment or else to pay such fine as shall be assessed by the said Council in the Star-Chamber XII The said fines shall be divided betwixt the King and Queens Majesties and the party grieved XIII The said Council in the Star-Chamber and Justices of Assize have power to hear and determine these offences XIV If any such child above the age of 12 years and under the age of 16 years do consent to any such contract of Matrimony the next of the Kin to whom her inheritance should come shall enjoy it during her life But after her decease it shall revert to the inheritor other then to him that did so contract Matrimony XV. Provided That this Act shall not be prejudicial to any custome or authority concerning Orphans in London or any other City Borough or Town Worsteds I. Stat. 17 R.