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

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from the last day of this Session of Parliament deemed and remain utterly repealed void and of none effect to all intents and purposes Any thing in the said several Acts or any of them contained or any other matter or cause to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 4. The abolishing of Forreign Authority And to the intent that all usurped and Forreign Power and Authority Spiritual and Temporal may for ever be clearly extinguished and never to be used or obeyed within this Realm or any other your Majesties Dominions or Countries may it please your Highness That it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no Forreign Prince Person Prelate State or Potentate Spiritual or Temporal shall at any time after the last day of this Session of Parliament use enjoy or exercise any manner of Power Iurisdiction Superiority Authority Preheminence or Priviledge Spiritual or Ecclesiastical within this Realm or within any other your Majesties Dominions or Countries that now be or hereafter shall be but from thenceforth the same shall be clearly abolished out of this Realm and all other your Highnesses Dominions for ever Any Statute Ordinance Custom Constitutions or any other matter or cause whatsoever to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding By the abrogating the Jurisdiction of any Forreign Prelate Archbishop of Canterburies concurrent Jurisdiction abrogated all Jurisdiction derived from such Forreigner is abrogated likewise And therefore the concurrent Jurisdiction which the Archbishop of Canterbury is supposed to have in the inferiour Diocesses ought not now to be exercised by him but is utterly taken away by this Act For he had it not as Archbishop but as Legatus natus to the Pope and if continued to be exercised is a meer Usurpation Hobart 17. Dr. James's Case And that also it may likewise please your Highness Stat. Sect. 5. Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction annexed to the Crown that it may be established and enacted by the Authority aforesaid that such Iurisdictions Priviledges Superiorities and Preheminences Spiritual and Ecclesiastical as by any Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Power or Authority hath heretofore béen or may lawfully be exercised or used for the Visitation of the Ecclesiastical State and Persons and for Reformation Order and Correction of the same And of all manner of Errors Heresies Schisms Abuses Offences Contempts and Enormities shall for ever by Authority of this present Parliament be united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm Sir Edward Coke 4. Inst 325. calls this an Act of Restitution of the ancient Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical which always belonged of Right to the Crown of England That is a restitution of the exercise of it For in truth this Statute is not introductory of a new Law The Kings ancient Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical but declaratory of the old and annexes not any Jurisdiction to the Crown but that which was or of right ought to be by the ancient Laws of this Realm parcel of the Kings Jurisdiction By which Laws the King as supream Head hath full and intire Power in all causes Ecclesiastical as well as Temporal For the Ecclesiastical Laws are the Kings Laws as well as the Temporal And the Judges of either of those Laws derive their Authority from him alone Co. 5.8 9. Cawdries Case where are several instances of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction exercised by the Kings of this Realm in several Ages Moore 755. b. 1043. The King is Persona mixta And in this respect the King is said to be Persona mixta and Persona mixta unita cum Sacerdotibus for that he hath both Ecclesiastical and Temporal Jurisdiction 10 H. 7.18 Co. 2.44 Bishop of Winchesters Case Coke 13.17 Case of Modus Decimandi Vid. Co. lib. 6. Praefac ' And supream Ordinary The King is the supream Ordinary and by the ancient Laws of this Realm may without any Act of Parliament make Ordinances and Institutions for the Government of the Clergy and may deprive them if they obey not Moore 755. C. 1043. Cro. Trin. 2. Jac. 37. And if there be a controversie between Spiritual Persons concerning their Jurisdiction the King is Arbitrator and 't is a right of his Crown to distribute to them and to declare their Bounds Hobart 17. Dr. James's Case Laws to be administred distinctly And yet although these Jurisdictions Ecclesiastical and Temporal are both in the King they are not to be confounded For although both Laws are the Kings Laws yet they are to be administred distinctly so that he who hath Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction derived from the King ought not to usurp upon the temporal Law And the Ecclesiastical Judge who meddles in Temporal Causes or Suits and draws the Interest or Cause of the Subject which ought to be determined by the Common Law ad aliud examen viz. to be decided by the Ecclesiastical Law offends contra Coronam dignitatem Regiam In confounding those Jurisdictions of the King which ought to be kept separate and distinct Prohibition And in such Cases not only a Prohibition lies but the Ecclesiastical Judge if the Cause originally belongs to the Common Law Pramunire and not to the Ecclesiastical Court incurs a Praemunire for depriving the Subject of the benefit of the Common Law which is his Birthright Co. 12.37 38 39 40. Co. 3. Inst 120. And therefore it was Resolved That if a man be excommunicated in the Bishops Court for a matter which belongs to the determination of the Common Law 't is no less than a Praemunire Praemunire And that by force of the word elsewhere in the Statute of 16 R. 2. cap. 5. Stat. 16 R. 2. 5. If any man pursue in the Court of Rome or elsewhere c. 5 E. 4.6 The King may do what the Pope might by the Canon Law By this and the former Clause which restores to the King the Title and Exercise of the Power of Supream Head of the Church of England and annexes to the Crown all Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction heretofore exercised by any Forreigner The King as supream Head may do whatever the Pope might formerly do within this Realm by the Canon Law And upon this ground it was resolved Trin. 39 Eliz. in Hollingworths Case in the Kings-Bench That notwithstanding the Statute of 25 H. 8. cap. 19. Stat. 25 H. 8. 19 which makes the sentence of the Delegates definitive and saith that no further Appeal shall be had yet the King after such definitive Sentence may grant a Commission of Review Commission ad revidendum For that after a definitive Sentence the Pope as supream Head by the Canon Law used to grant a Commission ad revidendum Co. 4. Inst 341. Upon this ground it was likewise resolved in the Case of Grendon versus the Bishop of Lincoln al' That the King with the consent of the Patron and without the Bishop may make an Appropriation Appropriation And in such Case the King doth it Authoritate sua regia
their Iurisdictions and Authority and to punish the same by admonition excommunication sequestration or deprivation and other censures and process in like form as heretofore hath béen used in like Cases by the Quéens Ecclesiastical Laws Provided always and be it enacted None shall be punished twice for the same Offence That whatsoever persons offending in the premisses shall for their offences first receive punishment of the Ordinary having a Testimonial thereof under the said Ordinaries Seal shall not for the same Offence eftsoons be convicted before the Iustices And likewise receiving for the said first Offence punishment by the Iustices shall not for the same Offence eftsoons receive punishment of the Ordinary Any thing contained in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding This Clause being in the affirmative doth not abrogate the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction not abrogated which was in the Ecclesiastical Judge before the making of the Statute for that no Negative words are here added as that he should proceed no otherwise or in no other manner or form than this Statute directs And therefore if any Parson Vicar c. deprave or observe not the Book of Common Prayer although this Act inflicts only the forfeiture of a years value and six months Imprisonment for the first Offence yet the Ecclesiastical Judge may for the first Offence deprive him notwithstanding this Act as he might have done if no form of punishment had been here appointed And the said Book being enjoined by Authority the Offence of depraving or non-observing it is punishable by the Ecclesiastical Judge according to the Ecclsiastical Law without the further aid of any Temporal Law then the commanding it to be observed Co. 5.5 6. Cawdries Case And in such Case the Sentence of Deprivation given by the Ecclesiastical Judge though it exceed the punishment inflicted by the Temporal Law is not to be questioned by the Temporal Judges but they ought to give Faith and Credit to it For cuilibet in sua arte perito est credendum Cawdries Case fol. 7. Co. 4.29 Bunting and Heppingwells Case Provided always and be it enacted Stat. Sect. 13. Ornaments of the Church and Ministers That such Ornaments of the Church and of the Ministers thereof shall be retained and be in use as was in this Church of England by Authority of Parliament in the second year of the Reign of King Edward the Sixth until other Order shall be therein taken by the Authority of the Quéens Majesty with the advice of her Commissioners appointed and authorized under the Great Seal of England for Causes Ecclesiastical or of the Metropolitan of this Realm And also That if there shall happen any Contempt or Irreverence to be used in the Ceremonies or Rites of the Church by the mis-using of the Orders appointed in this Book the Queéns Majesty may by the like advice of the said Commissioners or Metropolitan ordain and publish such further Ceremonies or Rites as may be most for the advancement of Gods Glory the Edifying of his Church and the due Reverence of Christs holy Mysteries and Sacraments All Laws and Ordinances made for other Service shall be void And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all Laws Statutes and Ordinances wherein or whereby any other Service Administration of Sacraments or Common Prayer is limited established or set forth to be vsed within this Realm or any other the Queéns Dominions or Countries shall from henceforth be utterly void and of none effect Stat. v Eliz. cap. i. An Act for the Assurance of the Queens Majesties Royal Power over all States and Subjects within her Dominions FOR preservation of the Queéns most Excellent Highness her Heirs and Successors Stat. and the Dignity of Sect. 1 the Imperial Crown of this Realm of England And for the avoiding both such hurts perils dishonors and inconveniencies as have before time befallen as well to the Quéens Majesties noble Progenitors Kings of this Realm as for the whole Estate thereof by means of the Iurisdiction and Power of the Sée of Rome unjustly Claimed and Vsurped within this Realm and the Dominions thereof and also of the dangers by the fauters of the said usurped Power at this time grown to marvelous outrage and licentious boldness and now requiring more sharp restraint and correction of Laws than hitherto in the time of the Queéns Majesties most mild and merciful Reign have béen had used or established Be it therefore Enacted Ordained and Established Stat. by the Quéen our Soveraign Lady and the Lords Spiritual and Sect. 2 Temporal The Penalty for maintaining the Authority of the Bishop or See of Rome and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same That if any Person or Persons dwelling inhabiting or resiant within this Realm or within any other the Quéens Dominions Seigniories or Countries or in the Marches of the same or elsewhere within or under her Obeysance and Power of what Estate Dignity Preheminence Order or Condition soever he or they be after the first day of April which shall be in the year of our Lord God One thousand five hundred sixty thrée shall by Writing Typhering Printing Preaching or Teaching Déed or Act advisedly and wittingly hold or stand with to extol set forth maintain or defend the Authority Iurisdiction or Power of the Bishop of Rome or of his Sée heretofore claimed used or usurped within this Realm or in any Dominion or Country being of within or under the Queéns Power or Obeisance or by any Spéech open Déed or Act advisedly and wittingly attribute any such manner of Iurisdiction Authority or Preheminence to the said Sée of Rome or to any Bishop of the same Sée for the time being within this Realm or in any the Quéens Dominions or Countries that then every such Person or Persons so doing or offending their Abbettors Procurers and Counsellors and also their aiders assistants and comforters upon purpose and to the intent to set forth further and extol the said usurped Power Authority or Iurisdiction of any of the said Bishop or Bishops of Rome and every of them being thereof lawfully Indicted or Presented within one year next after any such Offences by him or them Committed and being lawfully Convicted or Attainted at any time after according to the Laws of this Realm for every such Default and Offence shall incur into the dangers penalties pains and forfeitures Ordained and Provided by the Statute of Provision and Praemunire made in the Sixtéenth year of the Reign of King Richard the Second Hold or stand with c. or attribute The Printers of any Book which attributes to the Pope or See of Rome any such Authority or Jurisdiction within this Realm Printing bringing in offering and delivering of Books c. and the utterers thereof in most Cases are within the danger of this Law and if any man bring over such Books Written beyond the Seas knowing the
be understood of such an Estate as he may lawfully forfeit And the general words of the Statute of Praemunire Stat. 16 R. 2. 5. W. 2. 1. 16 R. 2. c. 5. scil Lands and Tenements shall not take away the force of the Statute de donis Conditionaelibus Co. 1. Inst 130. 391. Co. 11. 63. Godbolt 308. Lord Sheffeild and Ratcliffe And the person attainted in a Praemunire is disabled to be a Witness in any Cause Co. 1. Inst 6. or to Sue For Attainder in a Praemunire is a good plea in disability of the Plaintiff A person attainted in a Praemunire was out of the Kings Protection Sc. 25 E. 3. 22. according to Littleton 41. By the Statute of 25 E. 3. cap. 22. which saith That a man attainted in a Praemunire shall be out of the Kings Protection and it may be done with him as with the Kings Enemy It seemeth that any man might have lawfully slain such a person as was held 24 H. 8. Bro. Coron 196. Vide Bulstrode 2. 299. Sir Anthony Mildmay's Case And this Sir Edward Coke Co. 7. 14. Calvins Case Co. 12. 38. seemeth to allow for Law before this Statute of 5 Eliz. and positively affirms it to have been Law in his 1 Inst 130. and yet in the same Case of Calvin he saith that in that Statute of 25 E. 3. is intended only a legal Protection according to Littleton 41. and so likewise he expounds it in his 3d Inst. 126. But yet that the party attainted was still under that Protection which the Law of Nature giveth to the King which he explains to be such a Protection as a person attainted of Felony or Treason is under notwithstanding his Attainder so that if any man had killed him without Warrant he should have been punished by Law as a manslayer And this sort of Protection by the Law of Nature saith he is indelebilis immutabilis which the Parliament could not take away But yet under favour if a man attainted in a Praemunire were before this Act of 5 Eliz. under that indeleble and immutable Protection of the King given by the Law of Nature then the Opinion held in Brooke and allowed by himself was not Law But if that Opinion in Brooke were Law and any man might before this Statute have killed a man attainted in a Praemunire and that by force of the Statute of 25 E. 3. it follows that the Protection which the Law of Nature giveth is not indelebilis or immutabilis but that an Act of Parliament might in a particular Case take it away But there is now no further need of this Question in the Case of a Praemunire For if this Protection by the Law of Nature were taken away by 25 E. 3. it is now restored by this Statute and no man can lawfully slay a person attainted in a Praemunire no more than he can without Warrant a man attainted of Felony or Treason Provided always Stat. Sect. 15. Upon what proof only any person may be indicted and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no person or persons shall hereafter be Indicted for assisting aiding maintaining comforting or abetting of any person or persons for any the said Offences in extolling setting forth or defending of the usurped Power and Authority of the Bishop of Rome unless he or they be thereof lawfully accused by such good and sufficient testimony or proof as by the Iury by whom he shall so be Indicted shall be thought good lawful and sufficient to prove him or them guilty of the said Offences Stat. xiii Eliz. cap. ii An Act against the bringing in and putting in Execution of Bulls Writings or Instruments and other Superstitious things from the See of Rome Stat. Sect. 1. A rehearsal of the Stat. of 5 El. 1. touching the abolishing of the Authority of the Bishop and See of Rome WHere in the Parliament holden at Westminster in the fifth year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lady the Quéens Majesty that now is by one Act and Statute then and there made Intituled An Act for the Assurance of the Queens Majesties Royal Power over all States and Subjects within her Highness Dominions it is among other things very well ordained and provided for the abolishing of the usurped Power and Iurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome and of the See of Rome heretofore unlawfully claimed and usurped within this Realm and other the Dominions to the Quéens Majestie belonging That no person or persons shall hold or stand with to set forth maintain defend or extol the same usurped Power or attribute any manner of Iurisdiction Authority or Preheminence to the same to be had or used within this Realm or any the said Dominions upon pain to incur the danger penalties and forfeitures ordained and provided by the Statute of Provision and Praemunire made in the sixteenth year of the Reign of King Richard the second as by the same Act more at large it doth and may appear And yet nevertheless divers seditious and very evil disposed people without respect of their Duty to Almighty God or of the Faith and Allegiance which they ought to bear and have to our said Sovereign Lady the Quern and without all fear and regard had to the said good Law and Statute or the pains therein limited but minding as it should seem very seditiously and unnaturally not only to bring this Realm and the Imperial Crown thereof being in very deed of it self most free into the thraldom and subjection of that Forreign usurped and unlawful Iurisdiction Preheminence and Authority claimed by the said See of Rome but also to estrange and alienate the minds and hearts of sundry her Majesties Subjects from their dutiful obedience and to raise and stir Sedition and Rebellion within this Realm to the disturbance of the most happy peace thereof have lately procured and obtained to themselves from the said Bishop of Rome The effect of Bulls brought from Rome and his said Sée divers Bulls and Writings the effect whereof hath been and is to absolve and reconcile all those that will be contented to forsake their due obedience to our most gracious Sovereign Lady the Queens Majesty and to yield and subject themselves to the said fained unlawful and usurped Authority and by colour of the said Bulls and Writings the said wicked persons very secretly and most seditiously in such parts of this Realm where the people for want of good instruction are most weak simple and ignorant and thereby farthest from the good understanding of their Duties towards God and the Quéens Majesty have by their lewd and subtile practises and perswasion so far forth wrought that sundry simple and ignorant persons have been contented to be reconciled to the said usurped Authority of the See of Rome and to take absolution at the hands of the said naughty and subtile practicers whereby hath grown great dissobedience and boldness in many not only to withdraw and absent themselves from all
had never béen had nor made Any thing herein contained to the contrary thereof notwithstanding Stat. xxiii Eliz. cap. i. An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience WHere sithence the Statute made in the thirteénth year of the Reign of the Queén our Soveraign Lady Entituled Stat. Sect. 1. An Act against the bringing in and putting in Execution of Bulls Writings and Instruments and other Superstitious things from the See of Rome divers evil affected persons have practised contrary to the meaning of the said Statute by other means than by Bulls or Instruments Written or Printed to withdraw divers the Queéns Majesties Subjects from their natural Obedience to her Majesty and to obey the said usurped Authority of Rome and in respect of the same to perswade great numbers to withdraw their due Obedience to her Majesties Laws established for the due Service of Almighty God For Reformation whereof Stat. Sect. 2. Treason to withdraw any from the Religion Established to the Romish Religion and to declare the true meaning of the said Law Be it declared and enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That all persons whatsoever which have or shall have or shall pretend to have power or shall by any ways or means put in practice to absolve perswade or withdraw any of the Queéns Majesties Subjects or any within her Highnesses Realms and Dominions from their natural Obedience to her Majesty or to withdraw them for that intent from the Religion now by her Highnesses Authority established within her Highnesses Dominions to the Romish Religion or to move them or any of them to promise any Obedience to any pretended Authority of the Seé of Rome or of any other Prince State or Potentate to be had or used within her Dominions or shall do any overt act to that intent or purpose and every of them shall be to all intents adjudged to be Traytors And being thereof lawfully convicted shall have Iudgment suffer and forfeit as in case of High Treason And if any person shall after the end of this Session of Parliament by any means be willingly absolved or withdrawn as aforesaid or willingly be reconciled It shall be Treason to be reconciled or withdrawn to the Romish Religion or shall promise any Obedience to any such pretended Authority Prince State or Potentate as is aforesaid that then every such person their Procurers and Counsellors thereunto being thereof lawfully convicted shall be taken tried and judged and shall suffer and forfeit as in Cases of High Treason Perswade or withdraw It was held in Lovett and Faulkners Case Mich. 12. Jac. B. R. That if a man were Indicted for endeavouring and practising voluntarie felonice proditorie to perswade and withdraw any of the Kings Subjects from his Obedience unto the Romish Religion and was afterwards debito modo acquietatus yet an Action upon the Case in nature of a Conspiracy would not lye against the party who procured him to be Indicted Cro. Mich. 12. Jac. 357 358. Rolls 1. 209. C. 49. Bulstrode 2. 271. and the main reason given was That forasmuch as every man is bound to discover Treason and 't is dangerous to conceal any thing which may tend to Treason therefore the procuring one to be Indicted concerning it was no Cause of Action And in that Case Coke Chief Justice said That such an Action was never before that time brought But later Resolutions have been to the contrary of this Opinion Action lies for indicting a man of High Treason And 't is held for Law at this day That if a man procures another to be Indicted of High Treason an Action upon the Case in nature of Conspiracy lies against him that procures it as well as if it were for Felony The first leading Case of this nature which was resolved upon any solemn argument or debate was that of Smith versus Cranshaw or Crashaw and others where it was adjudged upon great deliberation by all the Four Judges of the Court of Kings Bench Hill 1. Car. 1. That an Action in nature of a Conspiracy doth well lye in such Case and that not only in Case of Acquittal upon Trial but upon the exhibiting a Bill of Indictment for High Treason to the Court or Jury if the Jury bring in Ignoramus although in this last Case a Writ of Conspiracy lyeth not And Lovett and Faulkners Case was denied to be Law Addition to Bendloes 152. Latch 79 80. Jones 93 94 95. And Justice Dodderidge who concurred in Opinion with the other Judges in the Case of Lovett and Faulkner changed his Opinion in that of Smith and Cranshaw and held that the Action was maintainable Bulstrode 2. 271 272. so that whosoever of meer malice without probable cause causes any person to be Indicted upon this Statute Stat. 3. Jac. 4. or that of 3 Jac. cap. 4. for endeavouring or practising so to perswade or withdraw any Subject or prefers a Bill to the Court or Jury for that purpose is liable to an Action of the Case for so doing if the party be acquitted or the Jury bring in Ignoramus as in other Cases of Felony Any of the Queens Majesties Subjects Queens Subjects Stat. 3 Jac. 4. What is meant by the Queens Subjects Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 19. And be it likewise Enacted and declared Stat. Sect. 3. The penalty of aiders maintainers and concealers That all and every person and persons that shall wittingly be aiders or maintainers of such persons so offending as is above expressed or of any of them knowing the same or which shall conceal any offence aforesaid and shall not within twenty days at the furthest after such persons knowledge of such offence disclose the same to some Iustice of Peace or other higher Officer shall be taken tried and judged and shall suffer and forfeit as Offenders in misprision of Treason These words And shall not within twenty days Aiders or maintainers punishable though discoverers c. disclose the same have no reference to those who are aiders or maintainers of the Offender but only to those who have barely a knowledge of the Offence without aiding or maintaining the party And therefore if such as are aiders or maintainers of the person offending discover the offence within twenty days yet such discovery shall not free them from the guilt of misprision of Treason as Wingate mistakes in his Abridgment of this Clause tit Crown numb 42. but if they once aid or maintain the party knowing him to be an Offender they are guilty whether they disclose or conceal the offence and shall have no benefit of the twenty days And be it likewise Enacted Stat. Sect. 4. The forfeiture for saying or hearing of Mass That every person which shall say or sing Mass being thereof lawfully convicted shall forfeit the sum of Two hundred Marks and be commited to Prison in the next Goal there to remain by the space of
outlawed upon the said Indictment and it was Resolved 36 Eliz. by the whole Court of Exchequer that this was a fraudulent Conveyance within the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 5. Stat. 13 Eliz. 5 which was made for the Relief of the Queen and other persons as well as Creditors But as this Case is related in Twines Case Co. 3. 82. 'T is observable that although it was debated whether the Queen should avoid this Conveyance by force of the Statute of 50 E. 3. 50 E. 3. 6. cap. 6. or that of 3 H. 7. cap. 4. 3 H. 7. 4. or that of 13 Eliz. before mentioned yet there is no mention made of this branch of 23 Eliz. for 't is clear that the Queen could not avoid such a fraudulent Conveyance by force of this Statute unless Judgment had been first given against the Recusant or he had been convicted And Pauncefoot was neither convicted or adjudged to be a Recusant but the Queens interest accrued to her by means of the Outlawry only Provided alway Stat. Sect. 12. Tryal of a Peer by his Peers That if any Peér of this Realm shall happen to be Indicted of any Offence made Treason or misprision of Treason by this Act he shall have his Trial by his Péers as in other like Cases is accustomed Indictment of Peers by whom Although a Peer shall be tried per pares yet he is to be Indicted by an Inquest under the Degree of Nobility And may be Indicted before Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer or in the Kings-Bench if the Offence be committed in the County where the Kings-Bench is Co. 2. Inst 49. Stat. Sect. 13. Ecclesiastical Censures Provided also That neither this Act nor any thing therein contained shall extend to take away or abridge the Authority or Iurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Censures for any cause or matter But that the Archbishops and Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Iudges may do and proceed as before the making of this Act they lawfully did or might have done Any thing in this Act to the Contrary notwithstanding Stat. xxvii Eliz. cap. ii An Act against Jesuits Seminary Priests and such other like dissobedient persons WHereas divers persons called or professed Iesuits Stat. Sect 1. The Causes why Jesuits and Priests do come into this Realm Seminary Priests and other Priests which have been and from time to time are made in the parts beyond the Seas by or according to the Order and Rites of the Romish Church have of late years comen and béen sent and dayly do come and are sent into this Realm of England and other the Queéns Majesties Dominions of purpose as it hath appeared as well by sundry of their own examinations and confessions as by divers other manifest means and proofs not only to withdraw her Highness Subjects from their due obedience to her Majesty but also to stir up and move Sedition Rebellion and open Hostility within the same her Highness Realms and Dominions to the great indangering of the safety of her most Royal Person and to the utter ruine desolation and overthrow of the whole Realm if the same be not the sooner by some good means foreséen and prevented For reformation whereof be it Ordained All Jesuits and Priests shall depart out of this Realm Established and Enacted by the Queens most Excellent Majesty and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same Parliament That all and every Iesuits Seminary Priests and other Priests whatsoever made or Ordained out of the Realm of England or other her Highnesse Dominions or within any of her Majesties Realms or Dominions by any Authority Power or Iurisdiction derived challenged or pretended from the See of Rome since the Feast of the Nativity of St. John Baptist in the first year of her Highness Reign shall within forty days next after the end of this present Session of Parliament depart out of this Realm of England and out of all other her Highness Realms and Dominions if the wind weather and passage shall serve for the same or else so soon after the end of the said forty days as the Wind Weather and passage shall so serve Stat. Sect. 2. No Jesuits or Priests shall come into or remain in this Realm And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That it shall not be lawful to or for any Iesuit Seminary Priest or other such Priest Deacon or Religious or Ecclesiastical person whatsoever being born within this Realm or any other her Highnesse Dominions and heretofore since the said Feast of the Nativity of St. John Baptist in the first year of her Majesties Reign made ordained or professed or hereafter to be made ordained or professed by any Authority or Iurisdiction derived challenged or pretended from the Sée of Rome by or of what name title or degrée soever the same shall be called or known to come into be or remain in any part of this Realm or any other her Highnesse Dominions after the end of the same forty days other then in such special Cases and upon such special occasions only and for such time only as is expressed in this Act And if he do that then every such Offence shall be taken and adjudged to be High Treason and every person so offending shall for his Offence be adjudged a Traytor and shall suffer lose and forfeit as in Case of High Treason A Priest born within this Realm Being born within this Realm c. And this must be comprised in the Indictment but it need not be shewn in what particular place he was born but generally Quod J. S. natus infra hoc regnum Angliae c. Popham 94. Southwells Case A Priest Ordained c. Made ordained or professed And so it must be alledged in the Indictment that he was made a Jesuit or Priest c. by Authority challenged or pretended from the See of Rome but it need not be shewn where he was made a Jesuit or Priest c. whether beyond Sea or within the Realm for wheresoever it was it is within this Law if he were made so by the pretended Authority of the See of Rome Popham 94. Southwells Case Stat. Sect. 6. Receiving or relieving a Jesuit or Priest shall be felony And every person which after the end of the same forty days and after such time of departure as is before limited and appointed shall wittingly and willingly receive relieve comfort aid or maintain any such Iesuit Seminary Priest or other Priest Deacon or Religious or Ecclesiastical person as is aforesaid being at liberty or out of hold knowing him to be a Iesuit Seminary Priest or other such Priest Deacon or Religious or Ecclesiastical person as is aforesaid shall also for offence be adjudged a Felon without benefit of Clergy and suffer death lose and forfeit as in Case of one attainted of Felony In the late Additions to
the Reign of our most gracious Soveraign Lady the Quéens Majesty Entituled An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience Be it Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That every Feoffment Gift Grant Conveyance Alienation Estate Lease Incumbrance and Limitation of use of or out of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments whatsoever had or made at any time since the beginning of the Quéens Majesties Reign or at any time hereafter to be had or made by any person which hath not repaired or shall not repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer but hath forborn or shall forbear the same contrary to the tenor of the said Statute and which is or shall be revocable at the pleasure of such offender or in any wise directly or indirectly meant or intended to or for the behoof relief or maintenance or at the disposition of any such offender or wherewith or whereby or in consideration whereof such Offender or his Family shall be maintained relieved or kept shall be déemed and taken to be utterly frustrate and void as against the Queéns Majesty for or concerning the levying and paying of such sums of money as any such person by the Laws or Statutes of this Realm already made ought to pay or forfeit for not coming or repairing to any Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer or for saying hearing or being at any Mass and shall also be seized and had to and for her Majesties use and behoof as hereafter in this Act is mentioned Any pretence colour faigned consideration or expressing of any use to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 2. Conviction of Recusancy shall be certified into the Exchequer And further be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That every Conviction heretofore recorded for any Offence before-mentioned not already estreated or certified into the Quéens Majesties Court of Exchequer shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall be remaining be estreated and certified into the Queéns Majesties Court of Exchequer before the end of Easter Term next coming in such convenient certainty for the time and other circumstances as the Court of Exchequer may thereupon award out Process for seizure of the Lands and Goods of every such Offender as hath not paid their said forfeitures according to the Laws and Statutes in such Case provided In what Courts Conviction of Recusancy shall be And that every Conviction hereafter for any offence before mentioned shall be in the Court commonly called the Kings Bench or at the Assizes or general Goal delivery and not elsewhere and shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall remain be estreated and certified into the said Court of Exchequer before the end of the Term next ensuing after every such Conviction in such convenient certainty as is aforementioned Sir Edward Coke in Dr. Fosters Case lib. 11. 61. saith That by this Clause as hath been well observed the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 33 Eliz. 1 In what Courts the Informer Qui tam c. may sue is altered in a material point viz. That whereas by 23. the Informer might sue the Recusant for the penalty in any Court of Record he is now by this Statute of 29. restrained from suing in the Common Pleas or Exchequer But this is utterly denied to be Law as the constant practice and experience ever since the making of this Statute sufficiently testifies And the Lord Chief Justice Hobart in his Report of Pie and Lovells Case saith That that Observation was made as he takes it by Sir Edward Coke himself But however this passage or observation as he calls it came to be inserted by Sir Edward Coke into his Report Sergeant Rolles in his Report of that Case of Dr. Foster lib. 1. 93. C. 41. brings him in speaking in another Language and more consonant to Law viz. That the Conviction here mentioned is intended of Convictions upon Indictments only and that no other sort of Convictions or proceedings upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. are mentioned or intended throughout this whole Act of 29. And if so then the Informer is not concerned in this Act nor restrained thereby as to the Courts wherein he is to sue but that he may sue still in the Common Pleas or Exchequer And so was it resolved in point in that Case of Pie and Lovell Hobart 204 205. where the Opinion of Sir Edward Coke reported by Rolles touching what sort of Conviction is meant here is confirmed and allowed for Law this Statute being made only for the benefit of the Queen in her Suits by Indictment and that other Opinion in the 11 Report exploded And the true reason is there given why those negative words and not elsewhere were added here viz. not to exclude the Informer out of the Common Pleas or Exchequer but to restrain Justices of Peace from proceeding to convict any person upon Indictments for Recusancy or for saying hearing or being at Mass which they were enabled to do by 23 Eliz. but again disenabled by those negative words in this Act and the hearing and determining of those offences committed only to the Justices of the Kings Bench Assizes and general Goal delivery But for Informations by a common Informer they were never intended here and the Justices of Assize and Goal delivery cannot hold Plea of such Informations as was resolved by the Judges Mich. 4 Car. 1. Jones 193. And yet this Statute did not wholly abrogate the power of the Justices of Peace Justices of P. may take Indictments for some offences against 23 El. 1 or of any other Justices to whom Authority was given by the Statute of 23 Eliz. in relation to the Offences of Recusancy or of saying or hearing Mass but that they might after this Statute of 29. take Indictments notwithstanding the negative words here For this Statute restrains them only from proceeding to Conviction but not from taking Indictments as was held in Edward Plowdens Case cited in Dr. Fosters Case Co. 11. 63. And now by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. And hear and determine the offence of not coming to Church Stat. 3 Jac. 4. The power of Justices of Peace to hear and determine the Offence of not coming to Church is again restored to them Vide that Statute Sect. 5. And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 3. At what time the money forfeited for not going to the Church shall be paid That every such Offender in not repairing to Divine Service but forbearing the same contrary to the said Estatute as hath beén heretofore convicted for such Offence and hath not made submission and béen conformable according to the true meaning of the said Statute shall without any other Indictment or Conviction pay into the Receipt of the said Exchequer all such sums of money as according to the Rate of twenty pounds for every month sithence the same
mentioned in this Act but that the heir of every such Offender by force of this Act shall and may after the death of every Offender have and enjoy the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of such Offender as if this Act had not beén made Every Abjuration Abjuration as well as that for Felony is an Exile or Banishment and if perpetual and by Authority of Parliament amounts to a civil death and therefore the Wife of a Man banished or abjured forever might sue or be sued without her Husband Suit as was ruled in the Case of the Lady Maltravers 10 E. 3. and of the Lady Belknap 1 H. 4. 1. 2 H. 4. 7. And if a man be perpetually banished by Authority of Parliament unless is be for Felony or by force of this Act his Wife shall be endowed living the Husband And if he had been perpetually banished or abjured for Felony the Wife should have had her joynture Jointure presently although not her Dower Dower as was resolved in Weylands Case 19 E. 1. and the reason is because though the Husband be naturally living yet he is civilly and in the Eye of the Law as a dead man But yet these Cases are to be understood of a Banishment or abjuration forever and not of a Relegation or Exile for a time For in such Case neither could the Wife sue or be sued without her Husband nor could she have her Dower or Joynture during the natural life of her Husband Co. 1. Inst 132. 133. Co. 2. Inst 47. Bulstrode 3. 188. Rolles 1. 400. C. 27. Wilmores Case Moore 851. C. 1159. Wilmots Case But if a man be abjured by force of this Act What dower is here saved the Wife shall not have her Dower or Joynture during the natural life of her Husband although he be abjured forever but she is in worse Case then the Wife of a person perpetually banished was at the Common Law For this Act by express words gives his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments to the Queen during his life which is to be understood of his natural life And the saving here of the Wives Dower is not intended of the Dower which she might claim at Common Law presently upon the abjuration of her Husband nor shall make void the former words of the Act by which all his Lands are given to the Queen during his natural life but is only the usual Provision made in Acts of Parliament which create any new Felony for the saving of the Dower of the Wife after the death of the Husband So that the meaning of this Branch is that if the Husband refuse to abjure or abjure and refuse to depart according to this Act or return without lieence yet the Wife shall be endowed and the heir inherit his Lands after he is naturally dead And this Act to continue no longer than to the end of the next Session of Parliament Stat. Sect. 12. Note this Act being at first but temporary This Act at first but temporary was afterwards discontinued Hutton 61. 62. but is since revived by the Statute of 3 Car. 1. c. 4. and is in full force at this day And in such Case it hath been questioned if a Statute be discontinued and afterwards revived how an Indictment thereupon shall conclude whether contra formam Statuti or Statutorum Where if a Statute be discontinued and revived it shall be contra formam Statuti and where contra formam Statutorum For if a Statute be temporary and afterwards continued for a longer time or made perpetual and never discontinued there without doubt it shall be contra formam Statuti but it hath been held by some that where it was once discontinued and then revived there it is as if there were two several and distinct Statutes and the Indictment shall conclude contra formam Statutorum Palmers Case 9 Eliz. But others have held the contrary and that there is not any difference in the Case of a Statute at first temporary and afterwards before any discontinuance continued for a longer time or made perpetual and a Statute discontinued and then revived but that it shall in both Cases be held but as one Statute and the conclusion shall be contra formam Statuti and not Statutorum unless where the Act of Reviver makes any addition to the former Act or increaseth the penalty or forfeiture For then there is no doubt but they are two distinct Acts of Parliament And according to this later opinion hath the practice been in Informations upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 9. of Perjury Stat. 5 Eliz. 9 which determined 14 Eliz. and was revived 29 Eliz. And yet all Informations thereupon conclude Contra formam Statuti And so as it seems ought all Indictments upon this Statute of 35. notwithstanding its discontinuance and reviver Vide Owen 135. Wests Case Stat. xxxv Eliz. cap. ii An Act for the restraining of Popish Recusants to some certain place of abode FOr the better discovering and avoiding of such Traiterous and most dangerous Conspiracies and Attempts as are daily devised and practiced against our most gracious Soveraign Lady the Queéns Majesty Stat. Sect. 1. and the happy estate of this Common-weal by sundry wicked and seditious persons who terming themselves Catholicks and being indéed spies and intelligencers not only for her Majesties forreign Enemies but also for Rebellious and Traiterous Subjects born within her Highness Realms and Dominions and hiding their most detestable and divellish purposes under a false pretext of Religion and Conscience do secretly wander and shift from place to place within this Realm to corrupt and seduce her Majesties Subjects and to stir them to Sedition and Rebellion Be it Ordained and Enacted by our Soveraign Lady the Quéens Majesty and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal A Popish Recusant convicted and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same That every person above the age of sixtéen years born within any of the Quéens Majesties Realms and Dominions or made Denizen being a Popish Recusant and before the end of this Session of Parliament convicted for not repairing to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer to hear Divine Service there but forbearing the same contrary to the tenor of the Laws and Statutes heretofore made and provided in that behalf and having any certain place of dwelling and abode within this Realm shall within forty days next after the end of this Session of Parliament if they be within this Realm and not restrained or stayed either by Imprisonment or by her Majesties Commandment or by order or direction of some six or more of the Privy Council or by such sickness and infirmity of body as they shall not be able to Travel without imminent danger of Life and in such Cases of absence out of the Realm restraint or stay then within 20 days next after they shall return into the Realm and be
but forbear the same contrary to the tenor of a Statute made in the first year of the Reign of the said late Quéen for Vniformity of Common Prayer and being thereof lawfully convicted should forfeit to the said Quéen for every month after the end of the said Session of Parliament which he or she should so forbear twenty pounds of lawful English money as in and by the said Act of Parliament more at large appeareth And whereas afterward by another Act of Parliament of the said Quéen It was further Enacted by the Authority of the said Parliament amongst other things how and when the said payments of the said 20 l. should be made and that if default should be made in any part of any payment of the said twenty pounds contrary to the form in the said last specified Statute limited that then and so often the said Quéen should and might by Process out of her Highness Exchequer take seize and enjoy all the Goods and two parts as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms of such Offender as of all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid by the true meaning of the said Act of Parliament leaving the third part only of the same Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms to and for the maintenance and relief of the same Offender his Wife Children and Family as in and by the last specified Statute more at large also may appear Now forasmuch as the said penalty of twenty pounds monthly is a greater burden unto men of small living then unto such as are of better ability and do refuse to come unto Divine Service as aforesaid who rather then they will have two parts of their Lands to be seized will be ready always to pay the said twenty pounds according to the limitation of the said Statutes and yet retain the residue of their livings and Inheritance in their own hands being of great yearly value which they do for the most part imploy as experience hath taught to the maintenance of Superstition and Popish Religion and to the relief of Iesuits Seminaries Popish Priests and other dangerous persons to the State Therefore to the intent that hereafter the penalty for not repairing to Divine Service might be inflicted in better proportion upon men of great ability Be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament The King may refuse 20 l. a month and take two parts of a Recusants Lands That the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall from and after the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel next coming after the end of this Session of Parliament have full power and liberty to refuse the penalty of twenty pounds a month though it be tendred ready to be paid according to the Law and thereupon to seize and take to his own use and the uses intents and purposes hereafter limited two parts in threé to be divided as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms that at the time of such seizure shall be or afterward shall come to any the said Offenders in not coming to Church or any other to his or her use or in trust for him or her or at his or her disposition or whereby or wherewith or in consideration whereof such Offender or his Family or any of them shall be relieved maintained or kept as of all other Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in any wise or at any time liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid and the same to retain to his own and other uses intents and purposes hereafter in this Act appointed till every such Offender shall conform him or her self respectively as aforesaid in lieu and full recompence of the twenty pounds monthly that during his such seizure and retainer shall incur any thing in the said Statutes or any of them or any other Statute to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding saving to our Soveraign Lord the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors and all and every person and persons Saving the Right of others bodies politick and corporate their Heirs and Successors other then the said Offender his or her Heirs and all claiming to his or their use or in trust for him or them or at his or their will or disposition all and all manner of Leases Rents Conditions and other Rights and Titles whatsoever had made and done bona fide and without fraud and covin before such seizure Though it be tendred or ready to be paid By this Branch of the Act a new advantage is given to the King against the Recusant For whereas by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. the convicted Recusant had his Election to pay the King twenty pounds per month and so prevent the seizure of the two third parts of his Lands now by this Statute that Election is taken away Election taken from the Recusant and given to the King and the choice is given to the King whether he will accept of the twenty pounds per month or refuse it and seize two third parts of the Recusants Lands in lieu thereof and if the King chooses the Lands the tender of the twenty pounds per month at the Exchequer will not save the seizure but the King shall enjoy the Lands notwithstanding Jones 24 25. Standen versus University of Oxford Hereditaments An Advowson is an Hereditament Hereditament Advowson and passes by that word 18 Eliz. Dyer 351. and is devisable by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 1. of Wills as an Hereditament and if it be an Advowson in gross yet it may be seized by the King by force of this Act as part of his two parts of the Recusants Hereditaments Jones 23 24. Standen versus University of Oxford For 't is a thing valuable and shall be Assets and is extendable for the Kings Debt and upon a Writ of right of an Advowson there shall be a Recovery in value scil for every mark twelve pence Fitzh Recovery in value 9. 11. Hobart 304. London versus the Chapter of Southwell Co. 1. Inst 374. Britton 185. In the late Additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 23. 't is said That the King may refuse the twenty pounds per month and take to two parts of the Recusants Lands and all the Goods c. And an Advowson is without that Clause and the said Case of Standen and the University of Oxon is there cited for Authority But this is a mistake as to the Clause it self and as to the point in Law and the Authority brought for it For in truth there is no such Clause in this Statute nor in any other that the King upon refusal of the twenty pounds per month should take the Recusants Goods For the seizure of the Goods is given where the Offender fails of payment of the twenty pounds per month Where a Recusants Goods cannot be seized but not
THis Book having been left with me I have perused divers parts of it as my leisure would permit and finding it judiciously Written and the design of it being very Useful and Seasonable I do recommend it to the Publick 14 June 1680. Fra. North. THE LAWS OF Q. ELIZABETH K. JAMES and K. CHARLES the First CONCERNING Iesuites Seminary Priests Recusants c. And concerning the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance EXPLAINED BY Divers Judgments and Resolutions OF THE REVEREND JUDGES Together with other Observations upon the same Laws TO Which is added the Statute XXV CAR. II. cap. 2. for preventing dangers which may happen from POPISH RECUSANTS And an Alphabetical Table to the whole By William Cawley of the Inner Temple Esq LONDON Printed for John Wright and Richard Chiswell at the Crown on Ludgate-Hill and the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard MDCLXXX TO THE READER THe principal scope and intent of the poenal Statutes here presented to thy view is To assert the Kings Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction To abolish the exercise of that which is forreign and was usurped and to forbid the entrance of such into the Realm who would restore that which is abolished To prevent the Reconciliation of the Kings Subjects to the Church of Rome and their Education in the Religion there professed and taught To oblige them by Oaths held one of the most strict and sacred tyes among men to that Obedience which they owe their Prince To take away from seditious and dangerous persons the power of doing hurt To procure a general Conformity to the Religion established and to inflict capital and other punishments on the infringers of these Laws 'T is no part of my design to sharpen this two edged Sword but only to take off some of its rust that by the brightness it may be the better discerned and avoided And to give some light such as my own obscurity will afford what are the just measures to be taken in reference to the Laws here treated of The Judgments and Resolutions of the Reverend Judges upon the several branches of these Statutes and of others likewise here occasionally mentioned as far as they relate to the subject in hand which lye scattered in the printed Books are here collected and placed under proper heads And this is the only thing the Statutes themselves excepted for which I durst recommend the Book to thy perusal Besides which there are several other Authorities cited in the Cases which arise upon these poenal Laws And here and there where the path is untrodden I have adventured to add some observations of my own Wherein I am sensible enough how great a hazard I run But my Apology shall be that they are offered only as probable Opinions and so I would be understood which where Authorities fail can have no other Basis to fix themselves on then the Rules of Law aptly applied by the strength of Reason And if in any of them the Reason offered shall by the learned be thought too weak or the Rule of Law misapplied I shall not insist upon the misfortunes of others who have made Essays of the like nature as a just excuse for mine but support my self with this hope that such will be most ready to pardon me who are the best able to censure me and that where I find the one I shall not fail of the other As for the mistakes which I have noted in those who have written more or less upon these Statutes I presume what I have done cannot be taken amiss seeing my aim is no other then theirs was to represent things truly as they are though we may sometimes miss the mark And I was the rather induced to rectifie them for that I found divers of them con-concern the Justices of Peace whose leisure or inclinations may not always serve them to peruse the Statutes at large and who by trusting to those shorter Tracts or Abridgments they have by them may be misled in the execution of their Office There is only one thing more which is to give thee notice that where I cite Wingate 't is intended of his Abridgment of the Statutes a work laborious enough but not always complying with the sense of the Statute Abridged and therefore here in several places corrected W. C. Stat. I Eliz. cap. I. An Act restoring to the Crown the ancient Jurisdiction over the Estate Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing all Forreign Powers repugnant to the same MOst humbly beseech your most excellent Majesty Stat. Sect. 1. your faithful and obedient Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this your present Parliament assembled that where in the time of the Reign of your most dear Father of worthy memory K. Henry the Eighth divers good Laws and Statutes were made and established as well for the utter extinguishment and putting away of all usurped and Forreign Powers and Authorities out of this your Realm and other your Highnesses Dominions and Countries as also for the restoring and uniting to the Imperial Crown of this Realm the ancient Iurisdictions Authorities Superiorities and Preheminences to the same of right belonging and appertaining by reason whereof We your most humble and obedient Subjects Great Exactions were taken by Forreign Power before the 25th year of K. H. 8. of the Inhabitants of this Realm from the five and twentieth year of the Reign of your said dear Father were continually kept in good Order and were disburthened of divers great and intolerable charges and exactions before that time unlawfully taken and exacted by such Forreign Power and Authority as before that was usurped until such time as all the said good Laws and Statutes by one Act of Parliament made in the first and second years of the Reigns of the late K. Philip and Q. Mary your Highnesses Sister entituled An Act repealing all Statutes Articles and Provisions made against the See Apostolick of Rome since the twentieth year of K. Henry the Eighth and also for the Establishment of all Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Possessions and Hereditaments conveyed to the Laity were all clearly repealed and made void as by the same Act of Repeal more at large doth and may appear By reason of which Act of Repeal your said humble Subjects were eftsoons brought under an usurped Forreign Power and Authority and yet do remain in that bondage to the intolerable charges of your loving Subjects if some redress by Authority of this your High Court of Parliament with the assent of your Highness be not had and provided Stat. Sect. 2. May it therefore please your Highness for the repressing of the said usurped Forreign Power and the restoring of the Rights Iurisdictions and Preheminences appertaining to the Imperial Crown of this your Realm that it may be enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That the said Act made in the said first and second years of the Reigns of the said late K. Philip and Q. Mary A repeal of the Stat. of
the 1 2 Ph. M. 8. and all and every Branches Clauses and Articles therein contained other than such Branches and Sentences as hereafter shall be excepted may from the last day of this Session of Parliament by Authority of this present Parliament be repealed and shall from thenceforth be utterly void and of none effect The Statute of 1. and 2. Ph. Mar. here mentioned repealed The King declared supream Head Stat. 1 2. Ph. Mar. 8. 26 H. 8. 1. 35 H. 8. 3. the Statutes of 26 H. 8. cap. 1. and 35 H. 8. cap. 3. By both which King Henry the Eighth his Heirs and Successors were declared supream Head of the Church of England And by the repeal of that of 1. and 2. Ph. Mar. those other of 26 and 35 H. 8. were revived and are again in force Co. 4. Inst 325. Vide Sect. 5. Stat. Sect. 3. A reviver of several Stat. And that also for the reviving of divers of the said good Laws and Statutes made in the time of your said dear Father it may also please your Highness That one Act and Statute made in the three and twentieth year of the Reign of the said late King Henry the Eighth entituled An Act that no person shall be cited out of the Diocess where he or she dwelleth except in certain Cases And one other Act made in the Four and Twentieth year of the Reign of the said late King entituled An Act that Appeals in such cases as hath been used to be pursued to the See of Rome shall not be from henceforth had ne used but within this Realm And one other Act made the five and twentieth year of the said late King concerning restraint of payment of Annates and First-fruits of Archbishopricks and Bishopricks to the See of Rome And one other Act in the said five and twentieth year entituled An Act concerning the submission of the Clergy to the Kings Majesty And also one Act made in the five and twentieth year entituled An Act restraining the payment of Annates or First-fruits to the Bishop of Rome and of the Electing and Consecrating of Archbishops and Bishops within this Realm And one other Act made in the said five and twentieth year entituled An Act concerning the Exoneration of the Kings Subjects from Exactions and Impositions heretofore paid to the See of Rome and for having Licences and Dispensations within this Realm without suing further for the same And one other Act made in the six and twentieth year of the said late King entituled An Act for Nomination and Consecration of Suffragans within this Realm And also one other Act made in the eight and twentieth year of the Reign of the said late King entituled An Act for the Release of such as have obtained pretended Licences and Dispensations from the See of Rome And all and every Branches Words and Sentences in the said several Acts and Statutes contained The Sentences and Branches in the aforesaid Statutes shall extend to the Queen by Authority of this present Parliament from and at all times after the last day of this Session of Parliament shall be revived and shall stand and be in full force and strength to all intents constructions and purposes And that the Branches Sentences and Words of the said several Acts and every of them from thenceforth shall and may be judged déemed and taken to extend to your Highness your Heirs and Successors as fully and largely as ever the same Acts or any of them did extend to the said late King Henry the Eighth your Highnesses Father And that it may also please your Highness that it may be enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That so much of one Act or Statute made in the two and thirtieth year of the Reign of your said dear Father King Henry the Eighth entituled An Act concerning Precontracts of Marriages and touching degrees of Consanguinity as in the time of the late King Edward the sixth your Highnesses most dear Brother by one other Act or Statute was not repealed And also one Act made in the seven and thirtieth year of the Reign of the said late King Henry the Eighth entituled An Act that Doctors of the Civil Law being married may exercise Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction And all and every Branches and Articles in the said two Acts last mentioned and not repealed in the time of the said late King Edward the sixth may from henceforth likewise stand and be revived and remain in their full force and strength to all intents and purposes Any thing contained in the said Act of repeal before mentioned or any other matter or cause to the contrary notwithstanding What Stat. repealed by the Stat. of 1 2 P. M. 8. shall continue repealed And that it may also please your Highness that it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all other Laws and Statutes and the Branches and Clauses of any Act or Statute repealed and made void by the said Act of Repeal made in the time of the said late King Philip and Quéen Mary and not in this present Act specially mentioned and revived shall stand remain and be repealed and void in such like manner and form as they were before the making of this Act any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding A reviver of the Stat. of 1 Ed. 6. 1. And that it may also please your Highness That it may be enacted by the Authority aforesaid that one Act and Statute made in the first year of the Reign of the late King Edward the sixth your Majesties most dear Brother entituled An Act against such persons as shall unreverently speak against the Sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ commonly called the Sacrament of the Altar and for the receiving thereof under both kinds and all and every Branches Clauses and Sentences therein contained shall and may likewise from the last day of this Session of Parliament be revived and from thenceforth shall and may stand remain and be in full force strength and effect to all intents constructions and purposes in such like manner and form as the same was at any time in the first year of the Reign of the said late King Edward the Sixth any Law Statute or other matter to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding A repeal of the Statute of 1 2 P. M. 6. and several other Statutes And that also it may please your Highness That it may be further established and enacted by the Authority aforesaid that one Act and Statute made in the first and second years of the late King Philip and Queen Mary entituled An Act for the reviving of three Statutes made for the punishment of Heresies and also the said three Statutes mentioned in the said Act and by the same Act revived And all and every Branches Articles Clauses and Sentences contained in the said several Acts and Statutes and every of them shall be
suprema Ecclesiastica qua fungitur for so are the words in the Charter there Plowden 497 498 500. Vide Co. 5. 10. Cawdries Case Co. 11. 10 11. Pridle and Nappers Case And where the King is Patron an Appropriation may be made by him alone Addition to Popham 145. And as he is supream Head and supream Ordinary a Resignation Resignation made to him of a Deanry is as good as if it were made to the Bishop Dyer 12 13 Eliz. 293. Pollard and Walronds Case Plowden 498. Palmer 493. Hayward and Fulchers Case And that your Highness your Heirs and Successors Stat. Sect. 6. The Queen may assign Commissioners to exercise Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Kings or Queens of this Realm shall have full Power and Authority by vertue of this Act by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England to assign name and authorize when and as often as your Highness your Heirs or Successors shall think meet and convenient And for such and so long time as shall please your Highness your Heirs or Successors such person or persons being natural born Subjects to your Highness your Heirs or Successors as your Majesty your Heirs or Successors shall think meet to exercise use occupy and execute under your Highness your Heirs and Successors all manner of Iurisdictions Priviledges and Preheminencies in any wise touching or concerning any Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction within these your Realms of England and Ireland or any other your Highnesses Dominions and Countries And to visit reform redress order correct and amend all such Errors Heresies Schisms Abuses Offences Contempts and Enormities whatsoever which by any manner of Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Power Authority or Iurisdiction can or may lawfully be reformed ordered redressed corrected restrained or amended to the pleasure of Almighty God the increase of Virtue and the conservation of the Peace and Vnity of this Realm And that such person or persons so to be named assigned authorized and appointed by your Highness your Heirs or Successors after the said Letters Patents to him or them made and delivered as is aforesaid shall have full Power and Authority by virtue of this Act and of the said Letters Patents under your Highness your Heirs or Successors to exercise use and execute all the premisses according to the tenor and effect of the said Letters Patents Any matter or cause to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding High Commission Court The Jurisdiction and Authority here by given to the late Court commonly called the High Commission Court are now taken away by Act of Parliament but the Power here given the Queen to constitute such Commissioners was no more than she had before by ancient Prerogative and the Laws of England For thereby she might have made such an Ecclesiastical Commission if this Act of 1 Eliz. had never been made Co. 5.8 9. Cawdries Case Cro. Trin. 2. Jac. 37. Stat. Who are compellable to take the Oath Ecclesiastical Persons and Officers Judge Justice Mayor Temporal Officer He that hath the Queens Fee And for the better observation and maintenance of this Act may it please your Highness That it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every Archbishop Bishop and all and every other Ecclesiastical person and other Ecclesiastical Officer and Minister of what Estate Dignity Preheminence or Degree soever he or they be or shall be and all and every temporal Iudge Iustice Mayor and other Lay or Temporal Officer and Minister and every other person having your Highnesses Fees or Wages within this Realm or any your Highnesses Dominions shall make take and receive a corporal Oath upon the Evangelist before such person or persons as shall please your Highness your Heirs or Successors under the Great Seal of England to assign and name to accept and to take the same according to the tenor and effect hereafter following that is to say I A. B. do utterly testifie and declare in my Conscience The Oath for the Queens Supremacy That the Queens Highness is the only Supream Governour of this Realm and of all other Her Highness Dominions and Countries as well in all Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Things or Causes as Temporal And that no Forreign Prince Person Prelate State or Potentate hath or ought to have any Jurisdiction Power Superiority Preheminence or Authority Ecclesiastical or Spiritual within this Realm And therefore I do utterly renounce and forsake all Forreign Jurisdictions Powers Superiorities and Authorities and do promise that from henceforth I shall bear Faith and true Allegiance to the Queens Highness her Heirs and lawful Successors and to my Power shall assist and defend all Jurisdictions Priviledges Preheminences and Authorities granted or belonging to the Queens Highness her Heirs and Successors or united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm So help me God and by the Contents of this Book And that it may also be Enacted The penalty for refusing the Oath That if any such Archbishop Bishop or other Ecclesiastical Officer or Minister or any of the said Temporal Iudges Iusticiaries or other Lay-Officer or Minister shall peremptorily or obstinately refuse to take or receive the said Oath That then he so refusing shall forfeit and lose only during his life all and every Ecclesiastical and Spiritual Promotion Benefice and Office and every Temporal and Lay-Promotion and Office which he hath solely at the time of such refusal made And that the whole Title Interest and Incumdency in every such Promotion Benefice and other Office as against such person only so refusing during his life shall clearly cease and be void as though the party so refusing were dead And that also all and every such person and persons so refusing to take the said Oath shall immediately after such refusal be from thenceforth during his life disabled to retain or exercise any Office or other Promotion which he at the time of such refusal hath joyntly or in Common with any other person or persons And that all and every person and persons that at any time hereafter shall be preferred promoted or collated to any Archbishoprick or Bishoprick or to any other Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Benefice Promotion Dignity or Office or Ministry or that shall be by your Highness your Heirs or Successors preferred or promoted to any Temporal or Lay-Office Ministry or Service within this Realm or in any your Highness Dominions before he or they shall take upon him or them to receive use exercise supply or occupy any such Archbishoprick Bishoprick Promotion Dignity Office Ministry or Service shall likewise make take and receive the said Corporal Oath before mentioned upon the Evangelist before such persons as have or shall have Authority to admit any such person to any such Office Ministry or Service or else before such person or persons as by your Highness your Heirs or Successors by Commission under the Great Seal of England shall be named assigned or appointed to minister the
said Oath And that it may likewise be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any such person or persons as at any time hereafter shall be promoted preferred or collated to any such Promotion Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Benefice Office or Ministry or that by your Highness your Heirs or Successors shall be promoted or preferred to any Temporal or Lay Office Ministry or Service shall and do peremptorily and obstinately refuse to take the same Oath so to him to be offered that then he or they so refusing shall presently be judged disabled in the Law to receive take or have the same Promotion Spiritual or Ecclesiastical or the same Temporal Office Ministry or Service within this Realm or any other your Highnesse Dominions to all intents constructions and purposes He that sues Livery or 〈…〉 And that it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid that all and every person and persons Temporal suing Livery or Oustre le maine out of the hands of your Highness your Heirs or Successors before his or their Livery or Oustre le maine sued forth and allowed He that doth homage to the Queen He that shall be received into the Queens service and every Temporal person or persons doing any homage to your Highness your Heirs or Successors or that shall be received into Service with your Highness your Heirs or Successors shall make take and receive the said Corporal Oath before mentioned before the Lord Chancellor of England or the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being or before such person or persons as by your Highness your Heirs or Successors shall be named and appointed to accept or receive the same And that also all and every person and persons taking Orders He that taketh Orders He that taketh Degrees in any University and all and every other person and persons which shall be promoted or preferred to any Degree of Learning in any Vniversity within this your Realm or Dominions before he shall receive or take any such Orders or be preferred to any such Degree of Learning shall make take and receive the said Oath by this Act set forth and declared as is aforesaid before his or their Ordinary Commissary Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor or their sufficient Deputies in the said Vniversity Provided always He that having an Estate of Inheritance in a temporal Office first refuseth and then taketh the Oath and that it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person having any Estate of Inheritance in any Temporal Office or Offices shall hereafter obstinately and peremptorily refuse to accept and take the said Oath as is aforesaid and after at any time during his life shall willingly require to take and receive the said Oath and so do take and accept the same Oath before any person or persons that shall have lawful Authority to minister the same that then every such person immediately after he hath so received the same Oath shall be vested judged and deemed in like estate and possession of the said Office as he was before the said refusal and shall and may use and exercise the said Office in such manner and form as he should or might have done before such refusal Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding And for the more sure Observation of this Act Stat. Sect. 8. The penalty of the maintenance of Forreign Authority and the utter Extinguishment of all Forreign and usurped Power and Authority may it please your Highness that it may further be enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person or persons dwelling or inhabiting within this your Realm or in any other your Highnesses Realms or Dominions of what Estate Dignity or Degree whatsoever he or they be after the end of 30 days next after the determination of this Session of this present Parliament shall by Writing Printing Teaching Preaching express words deed or act advisedly maliciously and directly affirm hold stand with set forth maintain or defend the Authority Preheminence Power or Iurisdiction Spiritual or Ecclesiastical of any Forreign Prince Prelate Person State or Potentate whatsoever heretofore claimed used or usurped within this Realm or any Dominion or Country being within or under the Power Dominion or Obeysance of your Highness or shall advisedly maliciously and directly put in ure or execute any thing for the extolling advancement setting forth maintenance or defence of any such pretended or usurped Iurisdiction Power Preheminence or Authority or any part thereof that then every such person and persons so doing and offending their abettors aiders procurers and Counsellors being thereof lawfully convicted and attainted according to the true order and course of the Common Laws of this Realm for his or their first offence shall forfeit and lose unto your Highness your Heirs and Successors all his and their Goods and Chattels as well real as personal The forfeiture for the first Offence And if any person so convicted or attainted shall not have or be worth of his proper Goods and Chattels to the value of twenty pounds at the time of his Conviction or Attainder That then every such person so convicted and attainted over and besides the forfeiture of all his said Goods and Chattels shall have and suffer Imprisonment by the space of one whole year without Bail or Mainprise And that also all and every the Benefices Prebends and other Ecclesiastical Promotions and Dignities whatsoever of every spiritual person so offending and being attainted shall immediately after such Attainder be utterly void to all intents and purposes as though the Incumbent thereof were dead And that the Patron and Donor of every such Benefice Prebend spiritual Promotion and Dignity shall and may lawfully present unto the same or give the same in such manner and form as if the said Incumbent were dead The forfeiture for the second Offence And if any such Offender or Offenders after such Conviction or Attainder do eftsoons commit or do the said Offences or any of them in manner and form aforesaid and be thereof duly convicted and attainted as is aforesaid That then every such Offender and Offenders shall for the same second Offence incur into the dangers penalties and forfeitures ordained and provided by the Statute of Provision and Praemunire made in the sixteenth year of the Reign of King Richard the second The forfeiture for the third Offence And if any such Offender or Offenders at any time after the said second Conviction and Attainder do the third time commit and do the said Offences or any of them in manner and form aforesaid and be thereof duly convicted and attainted as is aforesaid That then every such Offence or Offences shall be deemed and adjudged High Treason and that the Offender or Offenders therein being thereof lawfully convicted and attainted according to the Laws of this Realm shall suffer pains of death and other penalties forfeitures and losses as in
Act of Repeal made in the said first and second years of the Reigns of the said late King Philip and Quéen Mary as doth in any wise touch or concern any matter or cause of Praemunire or that doth make or ordain any matter or cause to be within the Case of Praemunire but that the same for so much only as toucheth or concerneth any Case or matter of Praemunire shall stand and remain in such force and effect as the same was before the making of this Act Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Provided also and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid Offences committed against Statutes revived That this Act or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend or be prejudicial to any person or persons for any Offence or Offences committed or done or hereafter to be committed or done contrary to the tenour and effect of any Act or Statute now revived by this Act before the end of thirty days next after the end of the Session of this present Parliament Any thing in this Act contained or any other matter or cause to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 11. Trial of Peers And if it happen that any Peér of this Realm shall fortune to be indicted of and for any Offence that is revived or made Praemunire or Treason by this Act that then he so being indicted shall have his Trial by his Péers in such like manner and form as in other Cases of Treason hath been used Provision for Trial of Peers The provision made in this and other Acts of Parliament for the Trial of a Peer by his Peers in case of Treason where he was to be tried according to the course of the Common Law is Ex abundanti and he should have such Trial if no such Proviso were inserted the like in the Case of Felony Stamford Pl. Coron 153. Stat. Sect. 12. No matter of Religion c. made by this Parliament shall be adjudged Error Heresie or Schism Provided always and be it enacted as is aforesaid That no manner of Order Act or Determination for any matter of Religion or cause Ecclesiastical had or made by the Authority of this present Parliament shall be accepted deémed interpreted or adjudged at any time hereafter to be any Error Heresie Schism or schismatical Opinion Any Order Decreé Sentence Constitution or Law whatsoever the same be to the contrary notwithstanding What things the Commissiners may adjudge to be Heresie Provided always and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid That such person or persons to whom your Highness your Heirs or Successors shall hereafter by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England give Authority to have or execute any Iurisdiction Power or Authority Spiritual or to visit reform order or correct any Errors Heresies Schisms Abuses or Enormities by virtue of this Act shall not in any wise have Authority or Power to Order determine or adjudge any matter or cause to be Heresie but only such as heretofore have been determined ordered or adjudged to be Heresie by the Authority of the Canonical Scriptures The Scripture Four general Counsels or by the first four general Counsels or any of them or by any other general Counsel wherein the same was declared Heresie by the express and plain words of the said Canonical Scriptures or such as hereafter shall be ordered judged or determined to be Heresie by the high Court of Parliament of this Realm with the assent of the Clergy in their Convocation Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding None shall be indicted or arraigned but by Witnesses And be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no person or persons shall be hereafter indicted or arraigned for any of the Offences made ordained revived or adjudged by this Act unless there be two sufficient Witnesses or more to testifie and declare the said Offences whereof he shall be indicted or arraigned And that the said Witnesses or so many of them as shall be living and within this Realm at the time of Arraignment of such person so indicted shall be brought forth in person face to face before the party so arraigned and there shall testifie and declare what they can say against the party so arraigned if he require the same Provided also A Proviso for them that give relief to Offenders and be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person or persons shall hereafter happen to give any relief aid or comfort or in any wise be aiding helping or comforting to the person or persons of any that shall hereafter happen to be an Offender in any matter or case of Praemunire or Treason revived or made by this Act that then such relief aid or comfort given shall not be judged or taken to be any Offence unless there be two sufficient Witnesses at the least that can and will openly testifie and declare that the person or persons that so give such relief aid or comfort had notice and knowledge of such Offence committed and done by the said Offender at the time of such relief aid or comfort so to him given or ministred Any thing in this Act contained or any other matter or cause to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding And where one pretenced sentence hath heretofore béen given in the Consistory in Pauls before certain Iudges De Legate by the Authority Legantine of the late Cardinal Poole by reason of a Forreign usurped Power and Authority against Richard Chetwood Esq and Agnes his Wife Chetwoods Appeal to the Court of Rome by the name of Agnes Woodhull at the suit of Charles Tyrrel Gent. in a Cause of Matrimony solemnized betweén the said Richard and Agnes as by the same pretended Sentence more plainly doth appear from which Sentence the said Richard and Agnes have appealed to the Court of Rome which Appeal doth there remain and yet is not determined May it therefore please your Highness that it may be enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if Sentence in the said Appeal shall happen to be given at the said Court of Rome for and in the behalf of the said Richard and Agnes for the reversing of the said pretenced Sentence before the end of threéscore days next after the end of this Session of this present Parliament that then the same shall be judged and taken to be good and effectual in the Law and shall and may be used pleaded and allowed in any Court or Place within this Realm Any thing in this Act or in any other Act or Statute contained to the contrary notwithstanding And if no Sentence shall be given at the Court of Rome in the said Appeal for the reversing of the said pretenced Sentence before the end of the said thréescore days that then it shall and may be lawful for the said Richard and Agnes and either of them at any time hereafter to
commence take sue and prosecute their said Appeal from the said pretenced Sentence and for the reversing of the said pretenced Sentence within this Realm in such like manner and form as was used to be pursued or might have béen pursued within this Realm at any time since the xxiv year of the Reign of the said late King Henry the Eighth upon Sentences given in the Court or Courts of any Archbishop within this Realm And that such Appeal as so hereafter shall be taken or pursued by the said Richard Chetwood and Agnes or either of them and the Sentence that herein or thereupon shall hereafter be given shall be judged to be good and effectual in the Law to all intents and purposes any Law Custom Vsage Canon Constitution or any other matter or cause to the contrary notwithstanding An Appeal between Richard Harcourt and Anthony Fydell Provided also and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid That where there is the like Appeal now depending in the said Court of Rome betweén one Richard Harcourt Merchant of the Staple and Elizabeth Harcourt otherwise called Elizabeth Robins of the one party and Anthony Fydell Merchant Stranger on the other party that the said Robert Elizabeth and Anthony and every of them shall and may for the prosecuting and trying of their said Appeal have and enjoy the like remedy benefit and advantage in like manner and form as the said Richard and Agnes or any of them hath may or ought to have and enjoy this Act or any thing therein contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Stat. i Eliz. cap. ii An Act for the Vniformity of Common Prayer and Service in the Church and the Administration of the Sacraments WHere at the death of our late Soveraign Lord King Edward the Sixth Stat. Sect. 1. there remained one uniform Order of Common Service and Prayer and of the Administration of Sacraments Rites and Ceremonies in the Church of England which was set forth in one Book Intituled The Book of Common Prayer and Administration of Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies in the Church of England Authorized by Act of Parliament holden in the Fifth and Sixth years of our said late Sovereign Lord King Edward the Sixth Intituled An Act for the Vniformity of Common Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments the which was repealed and taken away by Act of Parliament in the First year of the Reign of our late Sovereign Lady Quéen Mary to the great decay of the due honour of God and discomfort to the Professors of the Truth of Christ's Religion Be it therefore Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That the said Estatute of Repeal A repeal of the Statute of 1 M. 2. And the Book of Common Prayer shall be in force and every thing therein contained only concerning the said Book and the Service Administration of the Sacraments Rites and Ceremonies contained or appointed in or by the said Book shall be void and of none effect from and after the Feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist next coming And that the said Book with the Order of Service and of the Administration of Sacraments Rites and Ceremonies with the alteration and additions therein added and appointed by this Estatute shall stand and be from and after the said Feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist in full force and effect according to the tenor and effect of this Estatute Any thing in the aforesaid Estatute of Repeal to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 2. The Book of Common Prayer shall be used And further Be it Enacted by the Queens Highness with the assent of the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same That all and singular Ministers in any Cathedral or Parish Church or other place within this Realm of England Wales and the Marches of the same or other the Quéens Dominions shall from and after the Feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist next coming be bounden to say and use the Mattens Evensong Celebration of the Lords Supper and Administration of each of the Sacraments and all the Common and open Prayer The alteration of the Book set forth 5 6 Ed. 6. in such Order and Form as is mentioned in the said Book so Authorized by Parliament in the said Fifth and Sixth years of the Reign of King Edward the Sixth with one alteration or addition of certain Lessons to be used on every Sunday in the year and the Form of the Letany altered and corrected and two sentences only added in the delivery of the Sacrament to the Communicants and none other or otherwise The forfeiture of those which use any other Service then the Book of Common Prayer And that if any manner of Parson Vicar or other whatsoever Minister that ought or should sing or say Common Prayer mentioned in the said Book or Minister the Sacraments from and after the Feast of the Nativity of Saint John Baptist next coming refuse to use the said Common Prayers or to Administer the Sacraments in such Cathedral or Parish Church or other places as he should use to Minister the same in such Order and Form as they be mentioned and set forth in the said Book or shall wilfully or obstinately standing in the same use any other Rite Ceremony Order Form or Manner of celebrating the Lords Supper openly or privily or Mattens Evensong Administration of the Sacraments or other open Prayers then is mentioned and set forth in the said Book open Prayer in and throughout this Act is meant that Prayer which is for others to come unto or hear either in common Churches The Penalty for depraving the Book of Common Prayer or private Chappels or Oratories commonly called the Service of the Church or shall Preach Declare or Speak any thing in the Derogation or Depraving of the said Book or any thing therein contained or of any part thereof and shall be thereof lawfully convicted according to the Laws of this Realm by Verdict of twelve Men or by his own Confession or by the notorious Evidence of the Fact shall loose and forfeit to the Queens Highness her Heirs and Successors for his first offence the profit of all his Spiritual Benefices or Promotions coming or arising in one whole year next after his conviction And also that the person so convicted shall for the same Offence suffer Imprisonment for the space of Six months without Bail or Mainprize That ought or should sing or say Common Prayer c. What Minister is here meant Although the first part of this Clause viz. All and singular Ministers in any Cathedral or Parish Church or other place seems to intend a local Minister only and not one who is neither Parson Vicar or Stipendiary Chaplain yet the next words If any Parson Vicar or other Minister that ought to say Common Prayer or minister the Sacraments c. clearly comprehend all lawful
singular persons which shall offend within any their Iurisdictions or Diocess after the said Feast of the Nativity of St. John Baptist next coming against this Act and Statute Any other Law Statute Priviledge Liberty or Provision heretofore made had or suffered to the contrary notwithstanding Not necessary to go to the Parish Church The Ordinary or Ecclesiastical Judge cannot legally punish any man for not coming to the Church of that Parish where he inhabits if he goes to any other although he shews not any reasonable Lett. For it shall be a good Plea for the party to say that that is not his Parish Church but that he had used to frequent another Church and did resort thereunto And if the Ecclesiastical Court will not receive this plea the party shall have a Prohibition Prohibition For the Spiritual Court hath no power to judge what shall be said to be a mans Parish Church And so it was resolved by the whole Court of Kings-Bench Trin. 9. Jac. Bulstrode 1. 159. Nor can the Spiritual Court try the limits or bounds of Parishes but they shall be tried by the Common Law Co. 13. 17. Stat. Sect. 10. What Justices may punish these Offences And it is ordained and enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every Iustices of Oyer and Determiner or Iustices of Assize shall have full Power and Authority in every of their open and general Sessions to enquire hear and determine all and all manner of Offences that shall be committed or done contrary to any Article contained in this present Act within the limits of the Commission to them directed and to make process for the execution of the same as they may do against any person being indicted before them of Trespass or lawfully convicted thereof Provided always and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid A Bishop may joyn with the Justices to enquire of Offenders That all and every Archbishop and Bishop shall or may at all time and times at his liberty and pleasure joyn and associate himself by vertue of this Act to the said Iustices of Oyer and Determiner or to the said Iustices of Assize at every of the said open and general Sessions to be holden in any place within his Diocess for and to the enquiry hearing and determining of the Offences aforesaid Provided also and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid At whose charges the Book of Common Prayer shall be gotten That the Books concerning the said Services shall at the Costs and Charges of the Parishioners of every Parish and Cathedral Church be attained and gotten before the said Feast of the Nativity of St. John Baptist next following and that all such Parishes and Cathedral Churches or other places where the said Books shall be attained and gotten before the said Feast of the Nativity of St. John Baptist shall within thrée weeks next after the said Books so attained and gotten use the said Service and put the same in ure according to this Act. And be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid Within what time the Offenders shall be impeached That no person or persons shall be at any time hereafter Impeached or otherwise molested of or for any the Offences above-mentioned hereafter to be committed or done contrary to this Act unless he or they so offending be thereof Indicted at the next general Sessions to be holden before any such Iustices of Oyer and Determiner or Iustices of Assize next after any Offence committed or done contrary to the tenour of this Act. Provided always Trial of Peers and be it ordained and enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and singular Lords of the Parliament for the third Offence above-mentioned shall be tried by their Peers Provided also Stat. Sect. 11. Chief Officers of Cities and Boroughs shall enquire of Offenders and be it ordained and enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Mayor of London and all other Mayors Bayliffs and other head Officers of all and singular Cities Boroughs and Towns Corporate within this Realm Wales and the Marches of the same to the which Iustices of Assize do not commonly repair shall have full Power and Authority by virtue of this Act to enquire hear and determine the Offences aforesaid and every of them yearly within fifteen days after the Feast of Easter and St. Michael the Archangel in like manner and form as Iustices of Assize and Oyer and Determiner may do These words In like manner and form appoint in what manner the Offences shall be enquired of Mayors and Head Officers of Corporations heard and determined by Mayors and Head Officers of Corporations c. by Indictment for so much enquire imports and Trial and Verdict of twelve men or such other Legal proceedings upon the said Indictment as are used by the Justices of Oyer and Determiner and Assizes in their general Sessions For the Mayor or Head Officer is not left by this Act to his own Arbitrary Will or Discretion in the hearing and determining the Offence but must proceed according to the rules and forms of Law in the Conviction of the Offender And the Statute saith To which Justices of Assize do not commonly repair So that the Mayor or Head Officer of such places were only intended in the lieu and room of Justices of Assize and are therefore to proceed by the same Rules as they do in the Counties at large Within what time to proceed But these words extend not to the point of time limited for Indicting such Offender nor are Mayors and Head Officers tied to their next Sessions as the Justices of Oyer and Determiner and of Assize are as Wingate tit Service and Sacraments numb 26. mistakes the meaning of the Statute For in like manner and form is intended in such respects only where 't is not otherwise provided for by the Statute But 't is expresly provided here that Mayors and Head Officers of Corporations shall enquire of these Offences only twice in the year viz. within fifteen days after Easter and Michaelmas and not at their next general Sessions unless it happen to be the Sessions after one of those two Feasts To whom the Bishop cannot associate himself Nor can the Archbishop or Bishop associate himself in this Case to any Mayor or Head Officer of a Corporation as Wingate tit Service and Sacraments number 25. mistakes Stat. Sect. 12. The Ordinaries Jurisdiction in these Cases Provided always and be it ordained and enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and singular Archbishops and Bishops and every of their Chancellors Commissaries Archdeacons and other Ordinaries having any peculiar Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction shall have full Power and Authority by virtue of this Act as well to enquire in their Visitation Synods and elsewhere within their Iurisdiction at any other time and place to take Accusations and Informations of all and every the things above-mentioned done committed or perpetrated within the limits of
Common Law preferred or other Law or Laws used or allowed within this Realm c. This takes in so much of the Canon and Civil Law as is allowed here But the Common Law as the peculiar Law of this Kingdom is here preferred and particularly mentioned and not the Canon Law as is erroneously said in the late Additions to Dalton Cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 11. As have or shall have Authority by Common use c. Who are to administer the Oath The Statute saith not That those who belong not to any Court shall take the Oath before those who are authorized by Common use to give it as Wingate tit Crown numb 20. mistakes the meaning of this Clause For this being then a new Oath devised by the makers of the Act of 1 Eliz. no person could have Authority by Common use to administer it And the Act plainly enough speaks of those who have Authority by Common use to admit the party to the Office and not Authority by Common use to give the Oath And also Stat. Sect. 5. The Bishop may tender the Oath to any Spiritual person Be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That every Archbishop and Bishop within this Realm and Dominions of the same shall have full Power and Authority by virtue of this Act to tender or minister the Oath aforesaid to every or any Spiritual or Ecclesiastical person within their proper Diocess as well in Places and Iurisdictions exempt as elsewhere If a man be Indicted for refusing this Oath before him who is reputed to be Bishop of the Diocess Bishop or not Bishop and he plead to the Indictment Non culp he may upon that issue give in Evidence Quod non fuit Episcopus tempore oblationis Sacramenti Dyer 6 7 Eliz. 234. Bonners Case Stat. Sect. 6. The Lord Chancellor may direct Commissions to take the Oath of any person And be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Lord Chancellor or Kéeper of the Great Seal of England for the time being shall and may at all times hereafter by vertue of this Act without further Warrant make and direct Commission or Commissions under the Great Seal of England to any person or persons giving them or some of them thereby Authority to tender and minister the Oath aforesaid to such person or persons as by the aforesaid Commission or Commissions the said Commissioners shall be authorized to tender the same Oath unto The penalty for the first refusal of the Oath And be it also further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That if any person or persons appointed or compellable by this Act or by the said Act made in the said first year to take the said Oath Or if any person or persons to whom the said Oath by any such Commission or Commissions shall be limited and appointed to be tendred as is aforesaid do or shall at the time of the said Oath so tendred refuse to take or pronounce the said Oath in manner and form aforesaid that then the party so refusing and being thereof lawfully Indicted or presented within one year next after any such refusal and convicted or attainted at any time after according to the Laws of this Realm shall suffer and incur the dangers penalties pains and forfeitures ordained and provided by the Statute of Provision and Praemunire aforesaid made in the 16th year of the Reign of King Richard the second Stat. Sect. 7. Certificate of Refusal into the Kings-Bench And furthermore be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every such person and persons having Authority to tender the Oath aforesaid shall within forty days next after such refusal or refusals of the said Oath if the Term be then open and if not then at the first day of the full Term next following the said forty days make true Certificate under his or their Seal or Seals of the names places and degrees of the person or persons so refusing the same Oath before the Quéen her Heirs or Successors in her or their Court commonly called the Kings-Bench upon pain that every of the said persons having such Authority to tender the said Oath making default of such Certificate shall for every such default forfeit 100 l. to the Queens Highness her Heirs or Successors And that the Sheriff of the County where the said Court commonly called the Kings-Bench shall for the time be holden shall or may by vertue of this Act impannel a Iury of the same County to enquire of and upon every such refusal and refusals Indictment of the Offender Which Iury shall or may upon every such Certificate and other Evidence to them in that behalf to be given by vertue of this Act proceed to Indict the person and persons so offending in such sort and degree to all intents and purposes as the same Iury may do of any Offence or Offences against the Queens Majesties Peace perpetrated committed or done within the same County of and for the which the same Iury is so Impannelled Terme When the Term Term. is open and which is the first day of full Term Vide supra Sect. 3. Make true Certificate c. in the Kings-Bench Certificate of refusal by whom brought in not material It is not necessary that it be mentioned of Record in the Kings-Bench how or by whom the Certificate was brought in thither And in Bonners Case where the Bishop of Winchester certified the refusal of this Oath And exception was taken that the Certificate was entred to be brought into Court per A. B. Cancellarium dicti Episcopi but not per mandatum Episcopi the exception was dissallowed for that reason Dyer 6. 7. Eliz. 234. Impannel a Iury of the same County to inquire A Jury of the County where the Kings-Bench is And a Jury of the County where the Kings-Bench is can do no more in this Case then inquire that is Indict the party refusing the Oath unless where the refusal is in the same County Horne Bishop of Winchester tendred this Oath in Surrey parcel of his Diocess to Bonner then late Bishop of London By what Jury the Offender shall be Tryed who refused to take it and this was certified by the Bishop of Winchester into the Kings-Bench then sitting at Westminster in the County of Middlesex where Bonner was Indicted by a Jury of that County according to this Act the Question was by what County he should be Tryed whether by a Jury of Middlesex where the Indictment was taken or by a Jury of Surrey where the offence was committed And it was resolved that he should be Tryed by a Jury of Surrey for this Statute extendeth to the Indictment only and leaveth the Trial to the Common Law which appoints it to be where the Offence is committed for regularly by the Common Law debet quis juri subjacere ubi deliquit Dyer 6. 7. Eliz. 234. Co. 3.
Heir or Successor as was adjudged in the Case of an Annuity granted to Sir Thomas Wroth during his life Plowden 457. Provided always Stat. Sect. 8. Trial of a Peer If it happen at any time hereafter any Péer of this Realm to be Indicted of any Offence made Treason Felony or Praemunire by this Act That he shall have his Trial by his Péers as in other Cases of Treason Felony or Praemunire is accustomed Provided nevertheless and it is declared by authority aforesaid That if any such Iesuit Seminary Priest or other Priest abovesaid shall fortune to be so weak or infirm of Body that he or they may not pass out of the Realm by the time herein limited without eminent danger of life and this understood as well by the Corporal Oath of the party as by other good means unto the Bishop of the Diocess and two Iustices of Peace of the same County where such person or persons do dwell or abide That then and upon good and sufficient Bond of the person or persons with Sureties of the sum of Two hundred pounds at the least with condition that he or they shall be of good behavior towards our Sovereign Lady the Queén and all her liege people Then he or they so licensed and doing as is aforesaid shall and may remain and be still within this Realm without any loss or danger to fall on him or them by this Act for so long time as by the same Bishop and Iustices shall be limited and appointed so as the same time of aboad exceed not the space of six months at the most And that no person or persons shall sustain any loss or incur any danger by this Act for the receiving or maintaining of any such person or persons so licensed as is aforesaid for and during such time only as such person or persons shall be so licensed to tarry within this Realm Any thing contained in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding Stat. Sect. 9. One knowing a Jesuit or Priest to remain in the Realm must discover it to a Justice of Peace or higher Officer And be it also further Enacted by Authority aforesaid That every person or persons being Subject of this Realm which after the said forty days shall know and understand that any such Iesuit Seminary Priest or other Priest abovesaid shall abide stay tarry or be within this Realm or other the Queéns Dominions and Countries contrary to the true meaning of this Act and shall not discover the same unto some Iustice of Peace or other higher Officer within twelve days next after his said knowledge but willingly conceal his knowledge therein that every such Offender shall make Fine and be imprisoned at the Quéens pleasure And that if such Iustice of Peace or other such Officer to whom such matter shall be so discovered do not within Eight and twenty days then next following give Information thereof to some of the Quéens Privy Councel or to the President or Vice-president of the Quéens Councel established in the North or in the Marches of Wales for the time being That then he or they so offending shall for every such Offence forfeit the sum of two hundred marks And be it likewise Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That such of the Privy Councel President or Vice-president to whom such Informations shall be made shall thereupon deliver a note in writing subscribed with his own Hand to the party by whom he shall receive such Information testifying that such Information was made unto him Being Subject of this Realm And not any person as Wingate tit Crowne numb 59. mistakes What is meant by a Subject of this Realm Subject of this Realm who Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. Sect. 23. Vnto some Iustice of Peace or other higher Officer Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 8. At the Quéens pleasure Fine and imprisonment at the Queens pleasure In this Case the Offender must be proceeded against according to the course of Law for he cannot be fined or imprisoned at the Kings pleasure by force of this Statute before he be Indicted Convicted and Judgment given against him And so were the proceedings against Sir Thomas Figet for going armed contrary to the Statute of 2 E. 3. Stat. 2 E. 3. 3 cap. 3. For the Book 24 E. 3. 33. saith that he was arraigned c. And if in this Case the Offender be committed to prison in order to his Trial and conviction yet before Judgment or at least before conviction he may be let to mainprize and the Fine shall be imposed by the Justices before whom he is convicted Justiciarii per eorum discretionem assessent finem non Dominus Rex per se in Camera sua nec aliter coram se nisi per Justiciarios suos haec est voluntas Regis viz. per Justiciarios suos legem suam unum est dicere 2 R. 3. 11. vide Co. 4. Inst. 71. 179. Note Sir Robert Brook in abridging the forementioned Case of Sir Thomas Figet saith that he was committed to the Prison of the Marshalsey and could not be mainprized until the King had signified his pleasure but omits the principal matter worthy of observation viz. That he was first arraigned c. Bro. Contempts 6. And be it also Enacted That all such Oaths Stat. Sect. 10. All Oaths Bonds and submissions to be certified into the Chancery Bonds and Submissions as shall be made by force of this Act as aforesaid shall be certified into the Chancery by such parties before whom the same shall be made within thrée months after such submission upon pain to forfeit and lose for every such Offence One hundred pounds of lawful English money the said forfeiture to be to the Quéen her Heirs and Successors None submitting himself shall come within ten miles of the Queen And that if any person so submitttng himself as aforesaid do at any time within the space of Ten years after such submission made come within Ten miles of such place where her Majesty shall ve without especial Licence from her Majesty in that behalf to be obtained in writing under her Hand that then and from thenceforth such person shall take no benefit of his said submission but that the same submission shall be void as if the same had never béen Stat. xxix Eliz. cap. vi An Act for the more speedy and due Execution of certain Branches of the Statute made in the 23 d. year of the Queens Majesties Reign Entituled An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience FOr avoiding of all Frauds and Delays heretofore practised Stat. Sect. 3. Certain assurances made by Recusants shall be void against the Queen or hereafter to be put in ure to the hindrance of the due and spéedy Execution of the Statute made in the Session of Parliament holden by Prorogation at Westminster the sixtéenth day of January in the thrée and twentieth year of
as aforesaid after notice thereof to him or them given by the Ordinary of the Diocess any Iustice of Assizes of the Circuit or any Iustice of Peace of the County or the Minister Curate or Churchwardens of the Parish where such person shall then be or by any of them shall forfeir to the Queéns Majesty for every person so relieved maintained retained or kept after such notice as aforesaid ten pounds for every month that he or they shall so relieve maintain retain or kéep any such person so offending What sort of Recusants may be reliev'd or kept Rep. 3 Jac. 4. Provided nevertheless That this Act shall not in any wise extend to punish or impeach any person or persons for relieving maintaining or kéeping his or their Wife Father Mother Child or Children Wards Brother or Sister or his Wives Father or Mother not having any certain place of habitation of their own or the Husbands or Wives of any of them or for relieving maintaining or keéping any such person as shall be committed by Authority to the custody of any by whom they shall be so relieved maintained or kept Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding Repeal Stat. 3 Jac. 4. This Branch is repealed by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. Quod vide infra Sect. 24. Stat. Sect. 8. The Queens Remedy to recover forfeitures c. And for the more spéedy levying and recovering for and by the Quéens Majesty of all and singular the pains duties forfeitures and payments which at any time hereafter shall accrue grow or be payable by virtue of this Act or of the Statute made in the threé and twentieth year of her Majesties Reign concerning Recusants Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every the said pains duties forfeitures and payments shall and may be recovered and levied to her Majesties use by Action of Debt Bill Plaint Information or otherwise in any of the Courts commonly called the Kings Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer in such sort and in all respects as by the ordinary course of the Common Laws of this Realm any other Debt due by any such person in any other Case should or may be recovered or levied wherein no essoign protection or wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed A new remedy given to the Queen Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 All and every the said pains duties forfeitures and payments These words are not to be understood simpliciter or exclusive as if the forfeitures upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. could be recovered no other way then what is prescribed here But only they give the Queen a new remedy for the recovery of them which she had not before and take not away the Remedy given by 23 Eliz. upon Indictment 29 Eliz. 6. nor that by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. upon Indictment and Proclamation nor the Informers popular Suit given him by 23. For all these three are affirmative Laws and do not abrogate one the other The former Laws not abrogated but may well stand together And the meaning of them taken together is That if the Informer recover the forfeiture upon that of 23. he shall have his part thereof But if the Offender were Indicted at the Queens Suit and Judgment had against him upon 23. or if he were convicted upon Proclamation and default upon 29. The Queen should have the whole penalty excluding the Informer for he shall not be punished again for the same offence at the Suit of the Informer But if the offender were neither Indicted nor Sued by the Informer Qui tam c. the Queen should have another Remedy to recover the intire forfeiture by Action of Debt c. upon this Statute and the Informer shall have no part thereof So that the Remedies given by these three Statutes are Cumulative and not Privative and there is no Repugnancy or disagreement between them but they have a dependance on each other The informer not aided here But as this Statute doth not abrogate any of the former Laws touching Recusancy nor takes away the Informers popular Suit so it adds nothing as to the Informer nor gives him any more speedy remedy for the recovery of the forfeiture but leaves him in the same condition as he was in before to take his remedy upon 23. Co. 11. 61 62. Rolles 1. 90 91 93. c. 41. Dr. Fosters Case Cro. Pasch 16 Jac. 481. Bridgman 121. 122. Parker vesus Webb To her Majesties use A more speedy remedy here given Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Before this Statute the Queen had no other way to recover the intire penalty for Recusancy or any other offence within the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. but by Indictment only but by this Statute a more speedy remedy was given her by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information Vide the Cases before cited Shall and may be recovered The King by the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 5. 31 Eliz. 5. Within what time the King must sue is restrained in this Case to three years after the offence committed within which time he must pursue the remedy here given him for the recovery of the forfeiture but it seems that he is not restrained to two years for where the forfeiture is limited to the King and him that will sue there the Informer hath one year and the King the next two years if the Informer doth not sue within the first year of the three and the restraint in 31. of the King to 2 years next after the Offence committed where the forfeiture is limited to the King extends not to this Case For although the King is enabled by this Statute to sue for the intire forfeiture yet the intire forfeiture was not originally limited to the King only for the Informer may sue upon 23 Eliz. as well as the King may upon this Act. And where the Informer may sue it was not the meaning of 31 Eliz. to limit the King to two years after the offence committed but he may stay if he please till the Informers year is expired and then the Statute gives him two years afterwards to sue for the penalty Where the King is limited to a year and a day where not Much less is the King limited to sue upon this Statute within a year and a day and what is said in Dr. Fosters Case Co. 11. 65. viz. that for any forfeiture before the year and day neither the King nor the Informer hath any remedy for that that time is limited in certain by 23 Eliz. is a clear mistake of the meaning of that Statute of 23. touching the year and day for the limitation there of a year and a day extends only to the Kings Suits by Indictment and not to the popular Suit given by 23. much less to the Action of Debt c. given to the King by this Statute See more of this matter supra in the Statute of 23 Eliz.
Curate of every Parish where such Submission and Declaration of Conformity shall hereafter be so made by any such Offender as aforesaid Stat. Sect. 14. The Minister shall enter the Submission into a Book shall presently enter the same into a Book to be kept in every Parish for that purpose and within ten days then next following shall certifie the same in writing to the Bishop of the same Diocess Provided nevertheless Stat. Sect. 15. A Recusant submitting and falling into Relapse That if any such Offender after such Submission made as is aforesaid shall afterward fall into Relapse or eftsoons become a Recusant in not repairing to Church to hear Divine Service but shall forbear the same contrary to the Laws and Statutes in that behalf made and provided That then every such Offender shall lose all such benefit as he or she might otherwise by virtue of this Act have or enjoy by reason of their said Submission And shall thereupon stand and remain in such plight condition and degrée to all intents as though such Submission had never beén made Such Relapse with the Indictment thereof Relapse where to be certified is to be certified into the Court of Exchequer as was done by the Justices of the Kings Bench in the Case of Francis Holt. Pasch 9 Jac. Bulstrode 1. 133. Stat. Sect. 16. Married Women bound by this Act saving in the Case of Abjuration Provided always and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every Woman married or hereafter to be married shall be bound by all and every Article branch and matter contained in this Statute other then the Branch and Article of Abjuration before mentioned And that no such Woman married or to be married during marriage shall be in any wise forced or compelled to abjure or be abjured by virtue of this Act Any thing therein contained to the contrary thereof notwithstanding Stat. i Jac. cap. iv An Act for the due execution of the Statutes against Jesuits Seminary Priests Recusants c. FOr the better and more due execution of the Statutes heretofore made aswell against Iesuits Stat. Sect. 1. All Statutes made against Jesuits Priests and Recusants shall be put in Execution Seminary Priests and other such like Priests as also against all manner of Recusants Be it Ordained and Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That all and every the Statutes heretofore made in the Reign of the late Quéen of famous memory Elizabeth as well against Iesuits Seminary Priests and other Priests Deacons Religious and Ecclesiastical persons whatsoever made ordained or professed or to be made ordained or professed by any Authority or Iurisdiction derived challenged or pretended from the Sée of Rome as those which do in any wise concern the withdrawing of the Kings Subjects from their due obedience and the Religion now professed and the taking of the Oath of obedience unto the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors together with all those made in the said late Quéens time against any manner of Recusants shall be put in due and exact execution Oath of Obedience By the Oath of Obedience Oath of Obedience Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. is here meant the Oath of Supremacy in the Stat. of 1 Eliz. cap. 1. which see there Sect. 7. and by that name it is here called afterwards Sect. 3. Provided nevertheless Stat. Sect. 2. A Recusant conforming himself shall be discharged and be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That if any that is or shall be a Recusant shall submit or reform him or her self and become obedient to the Laws and Ordinances of the Church of England and repair to the Church and continue there during the time of the Divine Service and Sermons according to the true meaning of the Statutes in that behalf in the said late Quéens time made and provided That then every such person for and during such time as he or she shall so continue in such conformity and obedience shall from thenceforth be freed and discharged of and from any the penalties and losses which the same person might otherwise sustain and bear in respect or by reason of such persons Recusancy According to the true meaning of the Statutes in that behalf It hath been doubted whether these words do refer only to the manner of the Recusants conformity or to the time likewise when it is to be done as well as to the manner For if they refer to the time then the Recusant is still bound notwithstanding this Statute to conform before Judgment according to the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 or his conformity afterwards shall not discharge him of the penalty But the better opinion is that by these words according to the true meaning of the Statutes is to be intended only that the Recusant must conform in such manner as is there appointed but as to the time the general words here have inlarged the time limited by 23 Eliz. If the Recusant conforms after Judgment 't is sufficient For this Statute is made in further favor of the Recusant So that now if he conforms after Judgment 't is time enough and he shall be discharged of all penalties in respect of his Recusancy And if an Information tam pro Domino Rege quam pro seipso be brought upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. against the Recusant and after Judgment had against him thereupon he conforms he shall be discharged of the Judgment but first his Conformity must appear of Record otherwise the Court cannot take notice of it and as for that his remedies against the King and the Informer must be several His remedies against the King and informer Audita Quaerela Plea for against the Informer he must bring his Audita Quaerela and against the King he must plead his conformity which he may do in this Case after Judgment for that no Audita Quaerela lies against the King 11 H. 7. 10. and if he should not be admitted to plead he would be without any legal Remedy to discharge himself of the forfeiture and Judgment as to the Kings part whose execution will not be hindred by the Audita Quaerela against the Informer But if the Defendant neglect to put in his Plea and Execution issues for the King and he be taken in Execution he comes too late to plead his Conformity and hath then no other way left to relieve himself as to the Kings part but by his Petition Petition to the King to pardon the Debt Bulstrode 2. 324 325. Dr. Fosters Case Rolles 1. 95. C. 41. the same Case Vide Savile 23. C. 56. Tirringhams Case Stat. Sect. 3. And if any Recusant shall hereafter die his heir being no Recusant that in every such Case every such heir shall be freed and discharged of all and singular the penalties charges and incumbrances happening upon him or her In what Cases a Recusants heir shall be
she should not be doubly punished both that way and at the Suit of the Informer And for the same reason it was urged that this Information would not lye against the Husband and Wife for after the Husbands death she would be liable to pay into the Exchequer all the arrears after the rate of Twenty pounds per month from the time of her Conviction and her goods and two parts of her Lands might be then seized for non-payment thereof And if the Husband and Wife should in the mean time at the Suit of the Informer pay Twenty pounds per month for part of the same time for which the Wife was liable to pay after the Husbands death this would be a double punishment for one and the same offence and it was further said that it was usual where the Wife was Indicted and Convicted for Recusancy Seizure of the Wives Lands and Leases to seize by Exchequer Process the Lands and Leases which the Husband had in her right and one Woods Case was cited to this purpose which proves that a Feme Covert is within the meaning of the Act and therefore after she is once Convicted upon Indictment shall be no more subject to the Informers popular Suit then a Feme sole Cro. Pasch 16 Jac. 481.482 But this last point is much to be questioned for the Lands and Leases of the Wife are the Husbands during the Coverture and 't is a general rule that his Goods or Lands cannot be seized for the forfeiture or penalty where the Wife only is Indicted and Convicted of the Offence See more of this matter antea Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz 1 Sect. 9. A Recusant is Indicted for absenting himself from Church for 12 months and afterwards is Convicted upon that Indictment Where an Informer may sue after Conviction upon Indictment Quaere whether nevertheless the Informer Qui tam c. may not sue him for his absence for the months intervening between the time laid in the Indictment and the time of his Conviction For these words here viz. after such Conviction seem to relate to the proximum antecedens every month and to imply that the penalty here appropriated to the King is only the penalty due for the months which incur after such Conviction upon Indictment at the Kings Suit but not to hinder the Informer after Conviction from suing for the months incurred before Conviction Except in such Cases where the King shall c. refuse the same The King may seize two parts presently after Conviction If a man be Indicted and Convicted of Recusancy the King is not bound to stay till the next Easter or Michaelmas Term to see whether the Recusant will tender twenty pounds for every month contained in the Indictment and incurred after such Conviction for the King having his Election whether he will accept thereof or seize two parts of the Recusants Lands A Commission for seizure of the Lands may issue out presently if the King will wave the twenty pounds per month For he may take his Election as soon as he will after Conviction By Jones Justice in the Case of Standen and the University of Oxford Jones 24. Stat. Sect. 7. Every Conviction shall be certified into the Exchequer And that every Conviction recorded for any Offence before-mentioned shall from the Iustices before whom the Record of such Conviction shall be remaining be certified into the Kings Majesties Court of Exchequer before the end of the Term following such Conviction in such convenient certainty for the time and other circumstances as the Court of Exchequer may thereupon award out Process for the seizure of the Lands and Goods of every such Offender as the Cause shall require And if default shall be made in any part of any payment aforesaid contrary to the form herein before limited that then and so often the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall and may by process out of the said Exchequer take seize and enjoy all the Goods and two parts as well of all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms of such Offender as of all other the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seizure or to the penalties aforesaid by the true meaning of this Act leaving the third part only of the same Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms to and for the maintenance and relief of the same Offender his Wife Children and Family Timber Trees All the Goods A Recusant convicted is Tenant for Life the Remainder to a Stranger in Fee He in the Remainder with the Recusants assent cuts down Timber Trees and sells them In this Case the King can be no ways intitled to the Trees Bulstrode 1.133 Vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Aswell of all the Lands c. Leases and Farms of such Offender Lease in trust for another Elizabeth Bowes was convicted of Recusancy and she standing so Convicted a Lease was made to her in trust which she conveyed over according to the trust The question was whether the King might seize this Lease And the reason given in Lane 39. why the King should have the Term is because the Recusant after she was Convicted was not capable of any trust and therefore the Conveyance made by her was as if it had been voluntary without relation to the Trust Tamen quaere by what Law a Recusant meerly for the matter of Recusancy is incapable of any Trust although Convicted All other the Lands c. liable to such seizure Copyhold Lands Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. or to the penalties aforesaid Whether Copyholds be liable to such seizure vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Lands are conveyed to A. in trust for B. a convicted Recusant Lands in trust for a Recusant Quaere whether the King may seize such Lands for the Recusants non-payment of the twenty pounds per month for if he make his Election and accepts of two thirds in lieu of the twenty pounds per month there is no question but such Lands are liable to seizure For the words of the subsequent Clause are That the King may seize two parts of all Lands that shall come to any other person to the use of or in Trust for such Recusant But in this Clause which relates to the seizure of two parts for non-payment the words seem to be more restrictive Vide Lane 105. 106. Halseys Case And whereas by an Act made in the Session of Parliament holden by Prorogation at Westminster in the thrée and twentieth year of the Reign of the late Queén Elizabeth entituled Stat. Sect. 8. The Stat. of 23 Eliz. 1. touching a Recusants monthly forfeiture An Act to retain the Subjects of the said late Quéen in their due Obedience It was amongst other things Enacted by Authority of the said Parliament That every person above the age of sixtéen years which should not repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer
Peace is sole Judge whether the excuse Excuse the party makes for his absence be sufficient and sufficiently proved And the same cannot be brought into question elsewhere by the party To levy twelve pence for every such default So that this Forfeiture of twelve pence may be levied weekly For it is due for every absence as soon as the Sunday is ended and hath no relation to the forfeiture of twenty pounds per month given by the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Recusants may forfeit the twelve pence and twenty pounds both But the Offender may be punished both by this Act for his weekly absence and by 23 Eliz. for his monthly absence By Coke Chief Justice B. R. Rolles 1. 94. Dr. Fosters Case And because in one Act of Parliament begun and holden at Westminster in the five and thirtieth year of the late Quéen Eliz. Stat. Sect. 24. A Repeal of two branches of the Statute of 35 Eliz. 1. Intituled An Act to retain the Quéens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience there are two branches contained the first beginning thus And for that every person having House and Family is in duty bounden to have especial regard of the good government and ordering of the same and so forth to the next Clause beginning thus Provided nevertheless That this Act shall not in any wise extend to punish or impeach any persons for relieving c. ending with these words Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding Which said two Branches or Clauses are found defective Be it therefore Enacted That the said two Branches or Clauses of the said Act and no more shall be by Authority of this present Parliament utterly repealed and made void Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. Stat. 35 Eliz. 1 And in lieu thereof Be it Enacted Stat. Sect. 25. Maintaining or keeping a Recusant in his house that every person and persons which after one month next after the end of this present Session of Parliament shall willingly maintain retain relieve kéep or harbour in his or their House any Servant Sojourner or Stranger who shall not go to or repair to some Church or Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer to hear Divine Service but shall forbear the same by the space of one month together not having a reasonable Excuse contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm shall forfeit ten pounds for every month that he she or they shall so relieve maintain retain keép or harbour any such Servant Sojourner or Estranger in his or their House so forbearing as aforesaid And that every person Retaining a Recusant in his Service fee or livery which shall within the time aforesaid retain or kéep in his her or their service fée or livery any person or persons which shall not go to or repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer to hear Divine Service but shall forbear the same by the space of one month together shall forfeit for every month he she or they shall so retain kéep or continue in his or their service fée or livery any such person or persons so forbearing as aforesaid knowing the same ten pounds the same penalties to be recovered and employed in manner and form hereafter following Willingly c. kéep or harbour Master where not punishable A man freely and of his own accord takes an Apprentice or Covenant Servant for a certain time not knowing him or her to be a Recusant and such Apprentice or Servant forbears to come to Church It seems that the Master shall forfeit nothing although he keeps them in his House For he doth no more then what the Law will compel him to during the time agreed on and limited for such Apprentiship or Service and this cannot be said to be done willingly for 't is not in his choice to discharge them until the time is expired Where punishable But if the Master before he took such Apprentice or other Servant knew him or her to be a Recusant or after their forbearance to come to Church retains them for a longer time then was at first agreed on this is a keeping or harbouring them willingly and he shall be liable to this penalty In his her or their service Fée or Livery This extends to all Servants whatsoever although they dwell not in the Masters House nor are his menial Servants for if they are retained in his Service Fee or Livery as Bailiff Steward or in any other capacity and forbear to come to Church the Master shall be punished for their absence Penalty Ten pounds Note in the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 27. The penalty upon this Branch of the Act is mistaken and said to be in some Cases Twenty pounds per month and in other Cases One hundred pounds per month The contrary whereof is evident Stat. Sect. 26. The Father Mother Ward and Person committed by Authority Provided nevertheless That this Act shall not in any wise extend to punish or impeach any person or persons for maintaining retaining relieving keeping or harbouring his her or their Father or Mother wanting without fraud or Covin other habitation or sufficient maintenance or the Ward of any such person or any person that shall be committed by Authority to the custody of any by whom they shall be so relieved maintained or kept Any thing in this Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding Child where punishable Wanting without fraud or Covin other habitation or sufficient maintenance A Father or Mother hath no setled habitation but yet hath sufficient maintenance The Child receives such parent into his House who forbears to come to Church in this Case the Child shall forfeit Ten pounds per month For although the Parent had no habitation yet this is not a wanting habitation within the meaning of this Act seeing he wanted not sufficient means to procure one Where not But if the Parent hath an habitation yet if he want sufficient maintenance to keep him in that habitation although he refuse to come to Church the Child shall forfeit nothing for receiving him into his House for the words here are in the disjunctive and if the Parent wants either other habitation in the sense of the Act or sufficient maintenance the Child may receive him That shall be committed by Authority to the custody c. Master where not punishable The former Case of an Apprentice was put only of such an one whom the Master takes of his own accord but if it be a Parish Child bound by the Churchwardens and Overseers with the assent of the Justices of Peace if the Master be duly required to take him such Apprentice as it seems is committed to the Masters custody within the meaning of this Proviso for he is punishable if he refuse him and if he were a Recusant or forbear to come to Church yet the Master
shall forfeit nothing for keeping or harbouring him A Sergeant at Arms Pursevant Messenger Sergeant at Arms Pursevant Gaoler c. who keeps his Prisoner in his House or a Gaoler if he keeps his Prisoner in his own House which is no part of the Prison shall not forfeit any thing by force of this Act although he suffers him to go abroad in the day time at his pleasure and he forbears to come to Church For that such Prisoner was committed by Authority to his custody And be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That upon any lawful Writ Warrant or Process Stat. Sect. 27. Breaking a House to take a Recusant Excommunicate awarded to any Sheriff or other Officer for the taking or apprehending of any Popish Recusant standing Excommunicated for such Recusancy it shall be lawful for such Sheriff or other Officer Authorized in that behalf if need be to break open any House wherein such person Excommunicate shall be or to raise the power of the County for the apprehending of such person and the better Execution of such Warrant Writ or Process Standing Excommunicated This extends to an actual Excommunication only For although by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. Stat. 3 Jac. 5. Excommunication A Popish Recusant after conviction shall be disabled as an Excommunicated person yet to other intents he shall not be reputed as a person standing Excommunicated Vide that Statute Sect. 12. For such Recusancy For Recusancy So that if a Popish Recusant stand Excommunicated for any other Cause then for Recusancy this Branch of the Statute doth not affect him And be it further Enacted Stat. Sect. 28. That all and every offence to be committed or done against this present Act shall and may be enquired of In what Courts the Offences shall be heard and determined heard and determined before the Iustices of the Kings Bench Iustices of Assize and Gaol delivery in their several Assizes and Gaol deliveries And all offences other then Treason shall be enquired heard and determined before the Iustices of Peace in their General or Quarter Sessions to be holden within the Shire Division Limit or Liberty wherein such offence shall happen General or Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1. Trial where part of the offence happened General or Quarter Sessions What Sessions are here meant Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. Wherein such offence shall happen If a man serves or goes to serve a Forreign Prince State or Potentate without first taking the Oath of Allegiance or if of that Quality entring into Bond although part of the offence was done out of the Realm yet for that other part thereof viz. his going or passing over the Seas was done in the Realm he shall be tried in the County where that part of the offence happened that is where the Haven or Port is from whence he went or passed over For a Statute is to be so expounded ut verba accipiuntur cum effectu Co. 3. Inst. 80. Provided always and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 29. Attainder of Felony no forfeit of Dower or corruption of Blood That any Attainder of Felony made Felony by this Act as is aforesaid shall not in any wise extend to take away the Dower of the Wife of any such person attainted or be any bar for recovery of the same nor shall make or work any corruption of Blood or disherison of any the heir or heirs of any such person or persons so attainted This Act or any thing therein contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding The Plea to an Action brought for doing any thing by force of this Statute And be it further Enacted That if any Action or Actions shall at any time hereafter be commenced or brought against any person or persons doing committing or commanding any Act or Thing for or concerning the Execution of this present Statute or any Article or Clause therein contained That then every Defendant in such Action and Actions may plead the general Issue and be received to maintain the same by any Evidence that shall prove his doings and proceedings warrantable by this Law The Authority of the Ecclesiastical Court reserved Provided always That neither this Act nor any thing therein contained shall extend to take away or abridge the Authority or Iurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Censures for any Canse or Matter but that the Commissioners of his Majesty his heirs and Successors in Causes Ecclesiastical for the time being and the Archbishops Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Iudges may do and procéed as before the making of this Act they lawfully did or might have done Any thing in this Act to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Provided always and be it Enacted Stat. Sect. 30. No forfeiture for the Wives offence That no person shall be charged or chargeable with any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act which shall happen for his Wives offence in not receiving the said Sacrament during her Marriage nor that any Woman shall be charged or chargeable with any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act for any such Offence of not receiving which shall happen during her Marriage With any penalty or forfeiture by force of this Act. Feme Covert not receiving the Sacrament But yet a Married Woman may be punished by force of any other Act for not receiving the Sacrament during her Marriage Co. 11.64 Doctor Fosters Case And therefore if she be a Popish Recusant convict and receive not the Sacrament within the year next before her Husbands death she shall forfeit the profits of two thirds of her Jointure and Dower and be further disabled as the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. appoints Stat. 3 Jac. 5. And unless she receive the Sacrament after Conviction she cannot be Plaintiff with her Husband in any Action but is disabled by that Statute And if she receives it not within three months after her Conviction she may be imprisoned by force of the Statute of 7 Jac. 6. unless the Husband pay to the King as is there appointed 7 Jac. 6. For any such offence of not receiving Feme Covert punishable Wingate in abridging this Clause tit Crowne numb 125. quite mistakes the meaning of it For a married Woman is not exempted from all penalties by force of this Act but only from the penalty for not receiving the Sacrament during her marriage And there is no question but she may be imprisoned if she refuses the Oath of Allegiance and an Indictment of High Treason lies against her upon this Statute if she be absolved or withdrawn from her obedience to his Majesty or be reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome or promise obedience to the said See c. Provided also and be it Enacted by Authority of this Parliament Stat. Sect. 31. Who may take the Oath of a Nobleman or Woman That in
him who is in another County For the coercive Authority of a Justice of Peace Justice of Peace limited to his County cannot exceed his limits or bounds as is held in Plowden 37. in the Case of the Sheriffs of London And therefore in the Case of the Lord Say it was resolved that if a Justice of Peace of the County where the Felony was committed pursue a Felon into another County and take him there the Felon must be imprisoned in the County where he is taken and the Justice of Peace who pursued him hath no power to carry him to the Goal of the County where he did the Felony for he is a Prisoner in the County where he was taken and there the Justice of Peace hath no more to do then an ordinary person 13 E. 4. 8. Bro. Freshsuite 3. so that as it seems in this Case the party who keeps such Arms cannot be imprisoned by this Act But this likewise is Casus Omissus and not here provided for And yet nevertheless be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 25. A Popish Recusant shall maintain his Armor That notwithstanding the taking away of such Armor Gunpowder and Munition the said Popish Recusant shall and may be charged with the maintaining of the same and with the buying providing and maintaining of Horse and other Armor and Munition in such sort as other his Majesties Subjects from time to time shall be appointed and commanded according to their several Abilities and Qualities and that the said Armor and Munition at the Charge of such Popish Recusant for them and as their own provision of Armor and Munition shall be shewed at every Muster shew or use of Armor to be had or made within the said County Provided always That neither this Act Stat. Sect. 26. Ecclesiastical Censures nor any thing therein contained shall extend to take away or abridge the Authority or Iurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Censures for any cause or matter but that the Commissioners of his Majesty his Heirs and Successors in Causes Ecclesiastical for the time being Archbishops Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Iudges may do and procéed as before the making of this Act they lawfully did or might have done Any thing in this Act to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Stat. vii Jac. cap. ii An Act that all such as are to be Naturalized or restored in Blood shall first receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and the Oath of Allegiance and the Oath of Supremacy What they shall be bound unto who shall be Naturalized or restored in Blood FOrasmuch as the Naturalizing of Strangers and restoring to Blood persons Attainted have béen ever reputed matters of méer grace and favour which are not fit to be bestowed upon any others then such as are of the Religion now established in this Realm Be it therefore Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled that no person or persons of what Quality Condition or Place whatsoever being of the age of Eightéen years or above shall be Naturalized or restored in Blood unless the said person or persons have received the Sacrament of the Lords Supper within one month before any Bill exhibited for that purpose and also shall take the Oath of Supremacy and the Oath of Allegiance in the Parliament House before his or her Bill be twice Read And for the better effecting of the premises Be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Lord Chancellor of England or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being if the Bill begin in the Vpper House and the Speaker of the Commons House of Parliament for the time being if the Bill begin there shall have Authority at all times during the Session of Parliament to minister such Oath and Oaths and to such person and persons as by the true intent of this Statute is to be ministred This Act to take place from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament Stat. vii Jac. cap. vi An Act for Administring the Oath of Allegiance and Reformation of married Women Recusants WHereas by a Statute made in the Third year of your Majesties Reign intituled Stat. Sect. 1. an Act for the better discovering and repressing of Popish Recusants the form of an Oath to be ministred and given to certain persons in the same Act mentioned is limited and prescribed tending only to the Declaration of such Duty as every true and well affected Subject not only by bond of Allegiance but also by the commandment of Almighty God ought to bear to your Majesty your Heirs and Successors which Oath such as are infected with Popish superstition do oppugne with many false and unsound Arguments the just defence whereof your Majesty hath heretofore undertaken and worthily performed to the great contentment of all your loving Subjects notwithstanding the gainsayings of contentious Adversaries And to shew how greatly your Loyal Subjects do approve the said Oath they prostrate themselves at your Majesties Féet beséeching your Majesty that the same Oath may be administred to all your Subjects To which end we do with all humbleness beseech your Highness that it may be Enacted Every person above the age of 18 years herein intended shall take the Oath of Allegiance and before whom And be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That all and every person and persons as well Ecclesiastical as Temporal of what Estate Dignity Preheminence Sex Quality or Degrée soever he she or they be or shall be above the age of Eightéen years being in this Act mentioned and intended shall make take and receive a Corporal Oath upon the Evangelists according to the tenor and effect of the said Oath set forth in the forementioned Statute before such person or persons as hereafter in this Act is expressed That is to say All and every Archbishop and Bishop Archbishops and Bishops that now is or hereafter shall be before the Lord Chancellor or Lord Kéeper of the Great Seal for the time being Ecclesiastical Judges and Officers And all and every Ecclesiastical Iudge Officer and Minister of what Estate Dignity Preheminence or Degree soever he or they be or shall be before the Archbishop of the Province or Bishop or other Ordinary of the Diocess for the time being wherein such Ecclesiastical Iudge Officer or Minister ought to exercise his said Office Place or Function A Baron or Baroness or above that Degree Privy Counsellors Presidents And all and every person and persons of or above the Degree of a Baron of Parliament or Baroness of this your Highness Realm of England and all of your Highness Privy Counsel residing in London or Westminster or within thirty miles thereof and the Presidents of Wales and the North Parts before any four of your Highness Privy Counsel whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Lord Privy Seal
to any person or capable of any Legacy or Deéd of Gift or to bear any Office within the Realm and shall lose and forfeit all his Goods and Chattels and shall forfeit all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Rents Annuities Offices and Estates of Fréehold for and during his natural Life Stat. Sect. 2. He that conforms shall not incur the penalties aforesaid Provided always That no person sent or conveyed as aforesaid that shall within Six months after his Return into this Realm conform himself unto the present Religion established in this Church of England and receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Statutes made concerning conformity in other Cases required from Popish Recusants shall incur any the penalties aforesaid Within Six months after his return And not within Six weeks as Wingate tit Crowne numb 157. erroneously Stat. Sect. 3. What Justices shall hear and determine these offences And it is Enacted That all and every of the offences against this Statute may be inquired heard and determined before the Iustices of the Kings Bench or Iustices of Assize or Goal delivery or of Oyer and Terminer of such Counties where the Offenders did last dwell or abide or whence they departed out of this Kingdom or where they were taken Or of Oyer and Terminer Justices of Peace Justices of Peace here excluded cannot take an Indictment upon this Statute for no inferior Court shall take Authority by any Statute unless it be specially named Savile 135. C. 212. Agard and Candish And although Justices of Peace have in their Commission an express Clause ad audiendum terminandum and by that are Justices of Oyer and Terminer yet forasmuch as there is a Commission of Oyer and Terminer known distinctly by that name and the Commission of Peace is known distinctly by another name they shall not be included under the general words of Justices of Oyer and Terminer as was adjudged Hill 30 Eliz. B. R. in the Case of Richard Smith who was Indicted at the Sessions of the Peace in the County of Oxon upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 14. Stat. 5 Eliz. 14 of forging Deeds which impowers the Justices of Oyer and Terminer to inquire of hear and determine that offence and yet the Indictment before the Justices of Peace was quashed as taken coram non Judice Co. 9.118 Co. 3. Inst. 103. Cro. Eliz. 87. vide Cro. Mich. 39 40 Eliz. 601. Wilsons Case Ibid. Mich. 41 42 Eliz. 697. Hunts Case Or where they were taken Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 4. 3 Jac. 4. Sect. 21. Provided also That if any person or Child Stat. Sect. 4. In what Case the offenders Lands shall be restored again so passing or sent or now being beyond the Seas shall after his return into this Realm conform himself to the present Religion established in this Church of England and receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Statutes made for or concerning conformity in other Cases required from Popish Recusants for and during such time as he or she shall so continue in such conformity and obedience occording to the true intent and meaning of the said Laws and Statutes shall have his or her Lands restored to them again Addendum Stat. xxv Car. ii c. ii An Act for Preventing Dangers which may happen from Popish Recusants FOR preventing Dangers which may happen from Popish Recusants and quieting the minds of His Majesties good Subjects Be it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same That all and every person or persons as well Péers as Commoners that shall bear any Office or Offices Civil or Military or shall receive any Pay Salary Fée or Wages by reason of any Patent or Grant from His Majesty or shall have Command or Place of Trust from or under His Majesty or from any of His Majesties Predecessors or by His or their Authority or by Authority derived from Him or them within the Realm of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in His Majesties Navy or in the several Islands of Jersey and Guernsey or shall be of the Houshold or in the Service or Imployment of His Majesty or of his Royal Highness the Duke of York who shall inhabit reside or be within the City of London or Westminster or within Thirty miles distant from the same on the first day of Easter Term that shall be in the year of our Lord One thousand six hundred seventy threé or at any time during the said Term all and every the said person and persons shall personally appear before the end of the said Term or of Trinity Term next following in His Majesties high Court of Chancery or in His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and there in publick and open Court between the hours of Nine of the Clock and Twelve in the Forenoon take the several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance which Oath of Allegiance is contained in the Statute made in the third Year of King James by Law established and during the time of the taking thereof by the said person and persons all Pleas and Procéedings in the said respective Courts shall cease And that all and every of the said respective persons and Officers not having taken the said Oaths in the said respective Courts aforesaid shall on or before the First day of August One thousand six hundred seventy thrée at the Quarter Sessions for that County or place where he or they shall be inhabit or reside on the Twentieth day of May take the said Oaths in open Court betwéen the said hours of Nine and Twelve of the Clock in the Forenoon And the said respective Officers aforesaid shall also receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Vsage of the Church of England at or before the First day of August in the year of our Lord One thousand six hundred and seventy thrée in some Parish Church upon some Lords day commonly called Sunday immediately after Divine Service and Sermon And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every person or persons that shall be admitted entred placed or taken into any Office or Offices Civil or Military or shall receive any Pay Salary Fée or Wages by reason of any Patent or Grant of his Majesty or shall have Command or Place of Trust from or under his Majesty his Heirs or Successors or by his or their Authority or by Authority derived from him or them within this Realm of England Dominion of Wales or Town of Berwick upon Tweed or in his Majesties Navy or in the several Islands of Jersey and Gernsey or that shall be admitted into any Service or Imployment in his Majesties or Royal Highnesses Houshold or Family after the First day of Easter Term aforesaid and shall inhabit be
Contents thereof or secretly deliver out such Books to others he knowing the Contents thereof unless in this last Case he be a Trader in them and deliver them out upon that Account without any act or attribution by conference or allowance he is an Offender within this Act by the words Hold and stand with to maintain c. and so is the receiver likewise if he afterwards Reads and Confers upon any such Book with any other person and in his Conference by any Words or Speeches allows the Book to be good or conveys it secretly to his Friend to the intent he should Read it and be perswaded to be of that Opinion or if a man hear of the Contents of such Book by the report of others and doth by any overt Speech commend or affirm it to be good In all these Cases the Person so doing especially he that reads it and then allows of it is an Offender within this Act and shall for the first Offence incur a Praemunire and for the second be Guilty of high Treason So likewise if any Book to that effect be made and Written within the Realm and sent over Seas as if it were made out of the Realm and be afterwards Bought Read or Conference be had thereupon ut supra such Offences are within the danger of this Law Dyer 11 El. 281. 282. vide Co. l. 6. Praefat ' Vpon purpose and to the intent The intent material A. was Indicted upon this Statute and that of 13 Eliz. cap. 2. of a Praemunire for aiding one B. knowing him to be a principal maintainer of the Authority and Jurisdiction of the Bishop and See of Rome contra formam Statut ' praedict ' and the Indictment was certified into the Kings Bench And it was held by the greater part of the Justices that the Indictment was insufficient for want of those words Vpon purpose and to the intent to set forth and extol the Authority c. And contra formam Statut ' will not supply that defect Trin. 20 Eliz. Dyer 363. Note in the Report of this Case the Statute of 1 Eliz. is mistaken for this of 5 Eliz. there being no mention of the intent in that of Primo Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. The intent is a hidden thing and lies in the Heart and therefore there must be some overt Act or Speech which declares the intent for the intent it self is not traversable What traversable but that by which it is made manifest as was adjudged in Boothes Case Co. 5. 77. And it is also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. That as well Iustices of Assize in their Circuits as Iustices of Peace within Sect. 3 the limits of their Commission and Authorities What Justices may inquire of and certifie the Offences aforesaid or two of every such Iustices of Peace at the least whereof one to be of the Quorum shall have full Power and Authority by vertue of this Act in their Quarter or open Sessions to inquire of all Offences Contempts and Transgressions perpetrated committed or done contrary to the true meaning of the Premises in like manner and form as they may of other Offences against the Quéens Peace and shall certifie every Presentment before them or any of them had or made concerning the same or any part thereof before the Queén her Heirs and Successors in her or their Court commonly called the Kings Bench within forty days next after any such Presentment had or made if the Term be then open and if not at the first day of the full Term next following the said forty days upon pain that every of the Iustices of Assize or Iustices of the Peace The Penalty for default of Certificate of the said Offences before whom such Presentment shall be made making default of such Certificate contrary to this Statute to lose and forfeit for every such default One hundred pounds to the Quéens Highness her Heirs and Successors And it is Enacted by the Authority aforesaid The Justices of the Kings Bench may hear and determine the Offences aforesaid That the Iustices of the Kings Bench as well upon every such Certificate as by enquiry before themselves within the limits of their Authorities shall have full Power and Authority to hear order and determine every such Offence done or committed contrary to the true meaning of this present Act according to the Laws of this Realm in such like manner and form to all intents and purposes as if the Person or Persons against whom any Presentment shall be had upon this Estatute had beén Presented upon any matter of offence expressed in the said Estatute made in the said Sixteenth year of King Richard the Second All Offences c. contrary to the true meaning of the Premises That is the Offences in holding or standing with to extol c. the Jurisdiction of the See or Bishop of Rome or attributing such Jurisdiction c. or Procuring Counselling c. which is here for the first Offence made a Praemunire For these are the only Premises in the Act and this Clause extends not to the Oath of Supremacy or any Offence in refusing of it much less to all Offences against this Act as 't is mistaken in the late Additions to Dalton cap. 140. tit High Treason Sect. 11. Nor doth it seem to be the intent of the Statute to give the Justices of Peace any Power to inquire of any Offence made High Treason thereby The Power of Justices of Peace herein For the Power here given to the Justices of Peace is only to inquire of Offences contrary to the true meaning of the Premises and the Premises extend only to those Offences made a Praemunire And this clearly appears by the subsequent words viz. That the Presentment thereof shall be certified into the Kings Bench who shall hear and determine every such Offence as if the Offender had been Presented upon any matter in the Statute of 16 R. 2. Now that cannot be intended of High Treason And of Justices of Assize The like may be said of Justices of Assize for as they are meerly Justices of Assize they cannot by force of this Act inquire of either the first or second Offence in refusing the Oath of Supremacy nor of the second Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority only for the first Offence of this last kind they may inquire and take Indictments thereof and certifie them into the Kings Bench but then by their Commission of Oyer and Terminer they may not only inquire of the first or second Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority or refusing the Oath of Supremacy but may hear and determine them And accordingly were Slade and Bodye Indicted Arraigned and Tried in the County of Southampton of a Praemunire for the first Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority upon which they were Attainted and afterwards of Treason for the second Offence before Sir Roger Manwood and Justice
Inst 34. Which Iury shall or may c. proceed to Indict Who to Indict him So that the Jury is to Indict and not the Sheriff as is mistaken in the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 11. And for stronger defence and maintenance of this Act Stat. Sect. 8. It shall be Treason the second time to maintain the Authority of the Bishop or See of Rome it is further Ordained Enacted and Established by the Authority aforesaid That if any such Offender or Offenders as is aforesaid of the first part or Branch of this Estatute that is to say by Writing Cyphering Printing Preaching or Teaching Deed or Act Advisedly and Wittingly hold or stand with to extol set forth maintain or defend the Authority Iurisdiction or Power of the Bishop of Rome or of his See heretofore claimed used or usurped within this Realm or in any Dominion or Country being of within or under the Queens Power or Obeysance or by any Speech open Deed or Act Advisedly and Wittingly attribute any such manner of Iurisdiction Authority or Preheminence to the said See of Rome or to any Bishop of the same See for the time being within this Realm or in any the Queens Dominions or Countries or be to any such Offender or offenders Abetting Procuring or Counselling or Aiding Assisting or Comforting upon purpose and to the intent to set forth further and extol the said usurped Power Authority or Iurisdiction After such Conviction and Attainder as is aforesaid do eftsoons commit or do the said Offences or any of them in manner and form aforesaid and be thereof duly convicted and attainted as is aforesaid Or to refuse the Oath And also that if any the persons abovenamed and appointed by this Act to take the Oath aforesaid do after the space of thrée months next after the first tender thereof the second time refuse to take and pronounce or do not take or pronounce the same in form aforesaid to be tendred that then every such Offender or Offenders for the same second Offence and Offences shall forfeit lose and suffer such like and the same pains forfeitures Iudgment and Execution as is used in Cases of High Treason What is an advised or witting maintenance Advisedly and wittingly Slade and Body were condemned in a Praemunire upon this Statute before Justices of Oyer and Terminer for extolling the Authority of the Bishop of Rome and remained in Prison for the space of two years and afterwards were brought to the Assizes and demanded whether they were still of the same Opinion To which they answered that they were and one of them said that if they had a thousand Lives they would lose them all in this Case upon which they were Indicted and Arraigned and Convicted upon this second Branch of the Statute for High Treason And it was Resolved by the greater part of the Justices that the words should be taken to be spoken Advisedly and Wittingly and were within the meaning of this second Branch Savile 46. 47. C. 99. Tender and refusal For tender and refusal Vide Stat. 7. Jac. cap. 6. Sect. 4. 5. postea Stat. Sect. 9. Provided always That this Act nor any thing therein contained nor any Attainder to be had by force and vertue of this Act shall not extend to make any corruption of Blood the disheriting of any Heir forfeiture of Dower No corruption of Blood disheriting of Heir or forfeiture of Dower for any Attainder by this Act nor to the prejudice of the Right or Title of any person or persons other then the Right or Title of the Offender or Offenders during his her or their natural Lives only And that it shall and maybe lawful to every person and persons to whom the Right or Interest of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments after the death of any such Offender or Offenders should or might have appertained if no such Attainder had been to enter into the same without any Ouster le maine to be sued in such sort as he or they might have done if this Act had never been had ne made Provided also That the Oath expressed in the said Act How the Oath expressed An. 1. Eliz. 1. shall be expounded made in the said first year shall be taken and expounded in such form as is set forth in an Admonition annexed to the Queens Majesties Injunctions published in the first year of her Majesties Reign That is to say to confess and acknowledge in her Majesty her Heirs and Successors none other Authority then that was challenged and lately used by the Noble King Henry the Eighth and King Edward the Sixth as in the said admonition more plainly may appear And be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid In what Courts and places this Act shall be published That this Act shall be openly Read and Published and Declared at every Quarter Sessions by the Clerk of the Peace and at every Leet and Law-day by the Steward of the Court and once in every Term in the open Hall of every House and Houses of Court and Chancery at the times and by the persons thereunto to be limited and appointed by the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being And be it further Enacted Stat. Sect. 10. Every Knight Citizen and Burgess of the Parliament shall take the said Oath That every person which hereafter shall be Elected or appointed a Knight Citizen or Burgess or Baron for any of the five Ports for any Parliament or Parliaments hereafter to be holden shall from henceforth before he shall enter into the Parliament House or have any Voice there openly receive and pronounce the said Oath before the Lord Steward for the time being or his Deputy or Deputies for that time to be appointed And that he which shall enter into the Parliament House without taking the said Oath shall be deemed no Knight Citizen Burgess nor Baron for that Parliament nor shall have any Voice but shall be to all intents constructions and purposes as if he had never been Returned nor Elected Knight Citizen Burgess or Baron for that Parliament and shall suffer such pains and penalties as if he had presumed to sit in the same without Election Return or Authority The Kings dispensation void The King cannot dispence with any Member of the Commons House from taking this Oath For the reason given by the late Lord Chief Justice Vaughan in the Case of Thomas and Sorrell touching the Oath of Allegiance holds here viz. Because by this Statute he is persona inhabilis until he hath taken it Vaughan 355. Stat. Sect. 11. Where no temporal person of or above the degree of a Baron shall be compelled to take the said Oath Provided alway That forasmuch as the Quéens Majesty is otherwise sufficiently assured of the Faith and Loyalty of the Temporal Lords of her High Court of Parliament Therefore this Act nor any thing therein contained shall
not extend to compell any Temporal person of or above the degrée of a Baron of this Realm to take or pronounce the Oath abovesaid nor to incur any penalty limited by this Act for not taking or refusing the same Any thing in this Act to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Where he ought to take it This Act. Although by this Act no Temporal person of or above the degree of a Baron is compellable to take this Oath yet if he be made a Justice of Peace he ought to take it by force of the Statute of 1 Eliz. cap. 1. Jones 152 153. Earl of Lincolns Case Stat. 1 Eliz. 1. A Bishop must take it Temporal Person By these words and the Preamble Forasmuch as c. Archbishops and Bishops although their possessions be Temporalties are excluded out of this Proviso and therefore are to take the Oath For every person who is of the degree of a Baron is not excused as Wingate tit Crown numb 29. mistakes but only the Temporal Lords of Parliament Stat. Sect. 12. Charitable giving Alms to Offenders shall be no cause of forfeiture Provided and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That charitable giving of reasonable Alms to any of the Offender or Offenders above specified without fraud or covin shall not be taken or interpreted to be any such abettment procuring counselling aiding assisting or comforting as thereby the giver of such Alms shall incur any pain penalty or forfeiture appointed in this Act. Peers offending shall be tried by their Peers Provided also and be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That if any Peér of this Realm shall hereafter offend contrary to this Act or any Branch or Article thereof that in that and all such Case and Cases they shall be tried by their Péers in such manner and form as in other Cases of Treasons they have used to be tried and by none other means Provided also further and be it Enacted Stat. Sect. 13. Who only shall be compelled to take the Oath upon the second tender That no person shall be compelled by vertue of this Act to take the Oath above-mentioned at or upon the second time of offering the same according to the form appointed by this Statute except the same person hath beén is or shall be an Ecclesiastical person that had hath or shall have in the time of one of the Riegns of the Queéns Majesties most Noble Father Brother or Sister or in the time of the Reign of the Queéns Majesty her Heirs or Successors Charge Cure or Office in the Church Or such person or persons as had hath or hereafter shall have any Office or Ministry in any Ecclesiastical Court of this Realm under any Archbishop or Bishop in any the times or Reigns aforesaid Or such person or persons as shall wilfully refuse to observe the Orders and Rites for Divine Service that be authorized to be used and observed in the Church of England after that he or they shall be publickly by the Ordinary or some of his Officers for Ecclesiastical Causes admonished to kéep and observe the same Or such as shall openly and advisedly deprave by words writings or any other open fact any of the Rites and Ceremonies at any time used and authorized to be used in the Church of England Or that shall say or hear the private Mass prohibited by the Laws of this Realm and that all such persons shall be compellable to take the Oath upon the second tender or offer of the same and incur the Penalties for not taking of the said Oath and none other Charge Cure or Office in the Church What Clergy-men are punishable upon the second tender and refusal So that every Clergy-man or Person in Orders is not within the danger of this Law upon the second tender and refusal of the Oath as Wing tit Crown n. 30. mistakes For every Priest or Minister is Clericus Dyer 3 Eliz. 203. and yet shall not incur the penalty of High Treason upon the second refusal unless he be a local Minister or have some Charge Cure or Office in the Church By the Ordinary Ordinary what Ordinary in the Common Law is properly taken for the Bishop of the Diocess but yet usually in the Common Law and in Statutes for every Commissary or Official of the Bishop or other Judge that hath Ordinary Jurisdiction within his limits in Causes Ecclesiastical Stat. W. 2. cap. 19. Stat. 31 E. 3. cap. 11. Termes de la Ley 212. Ordinary 8 H. 6. 3. Co. 1. Inst 344. Or hear the private Mass Hearing Mass If a man once in his life time heareth private Mass it seems he is within this qualification and incurs High Treason upon the second refusal of the Oath and not only if he used to hear it as Wingate tit Crown numb 30. misrecites the Statute Stat. Sect. 14. It shall not be lawful to slay any one attainted in a Praemunire And forasmuch as it is doubtful whether by the Laws of this Realm there be any punishment for such as kill or slay any person or persons attainted in or upon a Praemunire Be it therefore Enacted by Authority aforesaid That it shall not be lawful to any person or persons to slay or kill any person or persons in any manner attainted or hereafter to be attainted of in or upon any Praemunire by pretence reason or authority of any Iudgment given or hereafter to be given in or upon the same or by pretence reason or force of any word or words thing or things contained or specified in any Statute or Law of Provision and Praemunire or in any of them Any Law or Statute or Opinion or Exposition of any Law or Statute to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Punishments inflicted by former Laws Saving always the due execution of all and every person and persons attainted or to be attainted for any Offence whereupon Iudgment of death now is or ought to be or hereafter may lawfully be given by reason of this Statute or otherwise And saving always all and every such pains of death or other hurt or punishment as heretofore might without danger of Law be done upon any person or persons that shall send or bring into this Realm or any other the Queéns Dominions or within the same shall execute any Summons Sentence Excommunication or other Process against any person or persons from the Bishop of Rome for the time being or by or from the See of Rome or the Authority or Iurisdiction of the same See The Judgment in a Praemunire The Judgment in a Praemunire is to be out of the Kings Protection his Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels to be forfeited to the King and that his body shall remain in Prison at the Kings pleasure Co. 1. Inst 129 130. Co. 3. Inst. 218. Rastal Entr. 466. Judgment But his entailed Lands he shall forfeit only during his Life For this Forfeiture must
Divine Service now most Godly set forth and used within this Realm but also have thought themselves dischorged of and from all Obedience Duty and Allegiance to her Majesty whereby most wicked and unnatural Rebellion hath ensued and to the further danger of this Realm is hereafter very like to be renewed if the ungodly and wicked attempts in that behalf be not by severity of Laws restrained and bridled For remedy and redress whereof Stat. Sect. 2. Putting in ure any Bull of Absolution or reconciliation from the Bishop of Rome and to prevent the great mischiefs and inconveniencies that thereby may ensue Be it Enacted by the Queens most Excellent Majesty with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same That if any person or persons after the first day of July next coming shall use or put in ure in any place within this Realm or in any the Queens Dominions any such Bull Writing or Instrument Written or Printed of Absolution or Reconciliation at any time heretofore obtained and gotten or at any time hereafter to be obtained and gotten from the said Bishop of Rome or any his Successors or from any other person or persons Authorized or claiming Authority by or from the said Bishop of Rome his Predecessors or Successors or See of Rome Or if any person or persons after the said first day of July Absolving or reconciling of any person and being absolved or reconciled shall take upon him or them by colour of any such Bull Writing Instrument or Authority to absolve or reconcile any person or persons or to grant or promise to any person or persons within this Realm or any other the Queens Majesties Dominions any such absolution or reconciliation by any Speéch Preaching Teaching Writing or any other open Déed Or if any person or persons within this Realm or any of the Quéens Dominions after the said first day of July shall willingly receive and take any such absolution or reconciliation Getting of any Bull from Rome containing any matter whatsoever or publishing or putting in ure the same Or else if any person or persons have obtained or gotten since the last day of the Parliament holden in the first year of the Queens Majesties Reign or after the said first day of July shall obtain or get from the said Bishop of Rome or any his Successors or See of Rome any manner of Bull Writing or Instrument Written or Printed containing any thing matter or cause whatsoever or shall Publish or by any ways or means put in ure any such Bull Writing or Instrument That then all and every such act and acts offence and offences shall be deemed and adjudged by the Authority of this Act to be High Treason and the Offender and Offenders therein their Procurors Abettors and Counsellors to the Fact and committing of the said offence or offences shall be deemed and adjudged High Traitors to the Queen and the Realm and being thereof lawfully Indicted and Attainted according to the course of the Laws of this Realm shall suffer pains of Death and also loose and forfeit all their Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods and Chattels as in Cases of High Treason by the Laws of this Realm ought to be lost and forfeited The Popes Bull. Bull. The Popes Bulls in Latin called Bullae are so called Quod Bullis plumbeis obsignentur and in them consilium voluntas Papae continentur Vide Termes de la Ley 43. Bull. Absolution and Reconciliation Absolution or Reconciliation A man absolves or reconciles or is absolved or reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome without any Bull Writing or Instrument to that purpose This Case seems not to be within the meaning of this Statute For there must be some Bull Writing or Instrument to Authorize such Absolution or Reconciliation or the person who gives or receives it is not punishable by this Act Stat. 23 Eliz. 1. 3 Jac. 4. although he may be by 23 Eliz. cap. 1. and 3 Jac. cap. 4. Stat. Sect. 3. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all and every aiders comforters or maintainers of any the said Offender or Offenders after the committing of any the said Acts or Offences to the intent to set forth uphold or allow the doing or execution of the said usurped Power Aiders Comforters and Maintainers of Offenders after the Offence Iurisdiction or Authority touching or concerning the premises or any part thereof shall incur the pains and penalties contained in the Statute of Praemunire made in the sixteénth year of the Reign of King Richard the second To the intent Vide supra Stat. 5 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 2. Intent Stat. 5 Eliz 1. postea Sect. 6. Provided always Stat. Sect. 4. Concealing or not disclosing of a Bull or reconciliation offered and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person or persons to whom any such Absolution Reconciliation Bull Writing or Instrument as is aforesaid shall after the said first day of July be offered moved or perswaded to be used put in ure or executed shall conceal the same offer motion or perswasion and not disclose and signifie the same by writing or otherwise within six weéks than next following to some of the Queéns Majesties Privy Counsel or else to the President or Vice-president of the Queéns Majesties Counsel established in the North parts or in the Marches of Wales for the time being that then the same person or persons so concealing and not disclosing or not signifying the said offer motion or perswasion shall incur the loss danger penalty and forfeiture of Misprision of High Treason Note Concealers of the Offence All concealers of this Offence are not within the danger of this Law as Wingate misrecites the Clause tit Crown numb 35. And therefore if a man be present at such offer motion or perswasion and conceal it he shall not incur Misprision of Treason unless he be the party to whom any such Bull c. or Absolution c. was offered And that no person or persons shall at any time hereafter be impeached molested Stat. Sect. 5. or troubled in or for misprision of Treason for any Offence or Offences made Treason by this Act other than such as by this Act are before declared to be in Case of Misprision of High Treason And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 6. Bringing into the Realm or using of Agnus Dei Pictures Crosses c. That if any person or persons shall at any time after the said first day of July bring into this Realm of England or any the Dominions of the same any token or tokens thing or things called or named by the name of Agnus Dei or any Crosses Pictures Beads or such like vain and superstitious things from the Bishop or Sée of Rome or from any person or
aforesaid Stat. Sect. 5. Sending relief to any Jesuit Priest or other person abiding in a Seminary If any person under her Maiesties Subjection or obedience shall at any time after the end of the said forty days by way of Exchange or by any other shift way or means whatsoever wittingly and willingly either directly or indirectly convey deliver or send or cause or procure to be conveyed or delivered to be sent over the Seas or out of this Realm or out of any other her Majesties Dominions or Territories into any Forreign parts or shall otherwise wittingly and willingly yield give or contribute any money or other relief to or for any Iesuit Seminary Priest or such other Priest Deacon or Religious or Ecclesiastical person as is aforesaid or to or for the maintenance or relief of any Colledge of Iesuits or Seminary already erected or ordained or hereafter to be erected or ordained in any the parts beyond the Seas or out of this Realm in any forreign parts or of any person then being of or in any the same Colledges or Seminaries and not returned into this Realm with submission as in this Act is expressed and tontinuing in the same Realm That then every such person so offending for the same offence shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of Praemunire made in the sixteenth year of the Reign of King Richard the Second Convey Deliver Conveying or delivering relief to a Jesuite c. So that he who is barely a Messenger or Instrument to convey or deliver such money or other relief is within the danger of this Law as well as the sender or giver Then being of or in the same Colledges or Seminaries To what persons this extends to what not This Clause extends not to every person brought up in such Colledge or Seminary as Wingate tit Crowne n. 54. mistakes For if such person afterwards quits his Colledge or Seminary and hath no longer any relation thereunto but abides elsewhere beyond the Seas he who gives or conveys relief or maintenance to him is not within this branch of the Statute because the person relieved or maintained is not then of or in any Colledge or Seminary And yet perhaps this may be an offence within the Statute of 3 Car. 1. Stat. 3 Car. 1. 2 cap. 2. quod vide postea Stat. Sect. 6. None shall send his Child or other beyond the Seas without licence And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That it shall not be lawful for any person of or under her Highness obedience at any time after the said forty days during her Majesties life which God long preserve to send his or her Child other person being under his or her Government into any the parts beyond the Seas out of her Highness obedience without the special Licence of her Majesty or of four of her Highness Privy Councel under their hands in that behalf first had or obtained except Merchants for such only as they or any of them shall send over the Seas only for or about his her or their Trade of Merchandize or to serve as Mariners and not otherwise upon pain to forfeit and lose for every such their offence the sum of One hundred pounds Where the Offences committed against this Act shall be inquired of and determined And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That every offence to be committed or done against the tenor of this Act shall and may be enquired of heard and determined as well in the Court commonly called the Kings-Bench in the County where the same Court shall for the time be as also in any other County within this Realm or any other her Highness Dominions where the offence is or shall be committed or where the Offendor shall be apprehended and taken Transporting of Jesuits Priests c. Provided also and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That it shall and may be lawful for and to every Owner and Master of any Ship Bark or Boat at any time within the said forty days or other time before limited for their departure to Transport into any the parts beyond the Seas any such Iesuit Seminary Priest or other such Priest aforesaid so as the same Iesuit Seminary Priest or other Priest aforesaid so to be Transported do deliver unto the Mayor or other Chief Officer of the Town Port or Place where he shall be taken in to be transported his Name and in what Place he received such Order and how long he hath remained in this Realm or in any other her Highness Dominions being under her Obedience Stat. Sect. 7. A Jesuit or Priest submitting himself taking the oath and obeying the Laws Provided also That this Act or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend to any such Iesuit Seminary Priest or other such Priest Deacon or Religious or Ecclesiastical person as is before mentioned as shall at any time within the said forty days or within threé days after that he shall hereafter come into this Realm or any other her Highness Dominions submit himself to some Archbishop or Bishop of this Realm or to some Iustice of Peace within the County where he shall arrive or Land and do thereupon truly and sincerely before the same Archbishop Bishop or such Iustice of Peace take the said Oath set forth in Anno primo and by writing under his hand confess and acknowledge and from thenceforth continue his due obedience unto her Highness Laws Statutes and Ordinances made and provided or to be made or provided in Causes of Religion Continue his due Obedience The person submitting must continue his obedience The taking of the Oath by such Jesuit Priest or other Ecclesiastical person and his acknowledgment of his due obedience doth not exempt him from the danger of this Law as Wingate mistakes tit Crowne numb 57. but he must continue his due obedience to the Laws made in Cases of Religion And this seems to be clearly the meaning of the makers of this Law so that if afterwards he shew his disobedience to any of those Laws by forbearing to come to Church c. he may be indicted as a Traitor for coming into the Realm as if he had never made any such submission and acknowledgment Vnto her Highness Laws That is Where King or Queen includes successors the Laws of her and her Successors and not only those which were made in her own time but such likewise as should be made afterwards For in Acts of Parliament King or Queen if a Sovereign includes Successors unless there be express words of restraint to that individual person Plowden 176. Hill versus Grange Co. 6. 27. Cases de Soldiers Co. 12. 109. Co. 1. Inst 9. 2. Inst 742. 3. Inst 6. 4. Inst. 352. And so it is of the Kings Grants if in his politick capacity for there his Successor shall be charged though the Grant mention neither
the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding This Branch seems not to extend to all forfeitures for Recusancy For the power here given the Lord Treasurer To what cases of Conviction this Clause extends and to what not c. is only in relation to those forfeitures which are by this Act appointed to be paid into the Receipt of the Exchequer which are the forfeitures due to the Queen by Conviction upon Indictment for this Act meddles with no other so that if the twenty pounds per month be recovered in a popular Suit by the Informer Qui tam c. one third part thereof ought still to be paid to the Poor of the Parish only according to 23 Eliz. cap. 1. notwithstanding this Act. Provided always That this Act Stat. Sect. 9. Assurances made bona fide not to be impeached or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend or be construed to make void or impeach any Grant or Lease heretofore to be made bona fide without fraud or covin whereupon any yearly Rent or payment is reserved or payable or any Grant or Lease hereafter to be made bona fide without fraud or covin whereupon the accustomed yearly Rent or more shall be reserved or any other Conveyance Assurance or Assignment whatsoever heretofore made bona fide upon good consideration and without fraud or covin which is not or shall not be revokable at the pleasure of such Offender otherwise then to give benefit and title to her Majesty her Heirs and Successors to have perceive and enjoy such Rents and Payments during the continuance of such Lease or Grant according to the true meaning of this Act. Seizure of Lands whereof the Offender hath but an Estate for life or in his Wives right And provided also That this Act or any thing therein contained shall not in any wise extend or be construed to continue any seizure of any Lands or Tenements of such Offender in her Majesties hands or in the hands of her Heirs or Successors after the said Offenders death which Lands or Tenements he shall have or be seized of only for term of his life or in the Right of his Wife Any thing in this Act to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding Stat. xxxv Eliz. cap. i. An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience FOR preventing and avoiding of such great inconveniencies and perils as might happen and grow by the wicked and dangerous practices of seditious Sectaries and disloyal persons Stat. Sect. 1. The penalty of a Recusant perswading others to impugne the Queens Ecclesiastical power Be it Enacted by the Queéns most Excellent Majesty and by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same That if any person or persons above the age of sixteen years which shall obstinately refuse to repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer to hear Divine Service established by her Majesties Laws and Statutes in that behalf made and shall forbear to do the same by the space of a month next after without any lawful cause shall at any time after forty days next after the end of this Session of Parliament by Printing Writing or express words or speéches advisedly or purposely practise or go about to move or perswade any of her Majesties Subjects or any other within her Highness Realms or Dominions to deny withstand and impugne her Majesties Power and Authority in cases Ecclesiastical united and annexed to the Imperial Crown of this Realm or to that end or purpose shall advisedly and maliciously move or perswade any other person whatsoever to forbear or abstain from coming to Church to hear Divine Service Or to forbear coming to Church or to receive the Communion according to her Majesties Laws and Statutes aforesaid or to come to or to be present at any unlawful Assemblies Conventicles or Meétings under colour or pretence of any exercise of Religion Or to be present at unlawful Conventicles contrary to her Majesties said Laws and Statutes Or if any person or persons which shall obstinately refuse to repair to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer and shall forbear by the space of a month to hear Divine Service as is aforesaid shall after the said forty days either of him or themselves or by the motion perswasion inticement or allurement of any other willingly joyn in or be present at any such Assemblies Conventicles or Méetings under colour or pretence of any such exercise of Religion contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm as is aforesaid That then every such person so offending as aforesaid and being thereof lawfully convicted shall be committed to Prison there to remain without Bail or Mainprize until they shall conform and yield themselves to come to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer and hear Divine Service according to her Majesties Laws and Statutes aforesaid and to make such open submission and Declaration of their said Conformity as hereafter in this Act is declared and appointed Which shall obstinately refuse to repair c. shall c. by Printing c. Wingate in abridging of this Statute tit Crowne numb 70. saith that if any person above sixteen years of age obstinately refuses to come to Church for a month or impugnes the Queens Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical he shall be committed to Prison which is a great mistake for no man shall be punished by this Act for either of those Causes only The not coming to Church being only a precedent Qualification required in the person whom the Act makes liable to the penalties thereof for the other offences therein mentioned Who may be an offender within this Act and who not And therefore if a man never comes to Church yet he is no offender within this Act unless he advisedly or purposely move or perswade another to deny or impugne the Kings Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical or to that end or purpose advisedly and maliciously move or perswade some other to forbear to come to Church or receive the Communion or to be present at Conventicles c. or he himself be present at such Conventicles c. And on the other hand if a man move or perswade any other to deny or impugne the Kings Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical or to forbear to come to Church or receive the Communion or to be present at Conventicles c. or if he himself be present at any Conventicles c. yet he is no Offender within this Act if he goes to Church once within the compass of a month so that the party must both forbear to come to Church and be guilty of some other of the offences here enumerated or he is not punishable by this Act And as for the denying or impugning the Kings Authority in Causes Ecclesiastical it s no offence within this Statute unless the party moves or
perswades others so to do and not then neither unless he hath been absent from Church by the space of a month Where this Act extends to Popish Recusants Vnder colour or pretence of any exercise of Religion Although this Act is commonly called the Act against Sectaries as distinguished from those of the Romish profession yet in truth it extends to all Recusants whatsoever as well Popish as other except in the point of abjuration For the Popish service is performed under colour or pretence of exercise of Religion and the Assembly or Meeting of Popish Recusants under such colour or pretence is an Assembly or Meeting contrary to the Laws and Statutes And they as well as others may be Indicted upon this Statute if they forbear to come to Church for the space of a moneth and be present at any part of the Popish service or move or perswade ut supra And may be imprisoned without Bail until they conform and make submission as by this Act is appointed But they cannot be required to abjure unless they offend against the Statute of 35 Eliz. cap. 2. Stat. 35 Eliz. 2 A Popish Recusant is likewise subject to the Action of Debt c. given to the Queen by this Statute Being thereof lawfully convicted That is What conviction sufficient convicted both of his absence from Church and of that other Offence which makes him punishable by this Act viz. going to Conventicles or moving or perswading c. for his absence from Church for a month must be laid down precisely in the Indictment for without that the other is no Offence within this Act as hath been said And 't is not necessary that the party be convicted of such absence upon any Prior Indictment for although there was never any former conviction of him for Recusancy yet if he offend against this Act in any of the other particulars he may be convicted both of that Offence and of his absence upon one and the same Indictment And so was the Indictment in the Case of Lee and others who were Indicted upon this Statute at the Sessions of the Peace in Essex for absenting themselves for a month from Church and resorting to Conventicles To which they pleaded not guilty and the Indictment was removed into the Kings-Bench to be tried there Cro. Mich. 16 Car. 593. Trial. Provided always Stat. Sect. 2. An Offender not conforming himself abjure shall the Realm and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any such person or persons which shall offend against this Act as aforesaid shall not within thrée months next after they shall be convicted for their said Offence conform themselves to the obedience of the Laws and Statutes of this Realm in coming to the Church to hear Divine Service and in making such publick Confession and Submission as hereafter in this Act is appointed and expressed being thereunto required by the Bishop of the Diocess or any Iustice of the Peace of the County where the same person shall happen to be or by the Minister or Curate of the Parish That in every such Case every such Offender being thereunto warned or required by any Iustice of the Peace of the same County where such Offenders shall then be shall upon his and their Corporal Oath before the Iustices of the Peace in the open Quarter Sessions of the same County or at the Assizes and Goal delivery of the same County before the Iustices of the same Assizes and Goal delivery abjure this Realm of England and all other the Queéns Majesties Dominions forever unless her Majesty shall licence the party to return And thereupon shall depart out of this Realm at such Haven or Port and within such time as shall in that behalf be assigned and appointed by the said Iustices before whom such abjuration shall be made unless the same Offender be letted or stayed by such lawful and reasonable means or causes as by the Common Laws of this Realm are permitted and allowed in Cases of abjuration for felony And in such cases of let or stay then within such reasonable and convenient time after as the Common Law requireth in Case of abjuration for Felony as is aforesaid And that the Iustices of Peace before whom any such abjuration shall happen to be made as is aforesaid shall cause the same presently to be entred of Record before them and shall certifie the same to the Iustices of Assizes and Goal delivery of the County at the next Assizes of Goal delivery to be holden in the same County In what case the offender is not bound to abjure Being thereunto required by the Bishop c. or any Iustice of the Peace c. But put the Case that the Offender is convicted and the Three months next after his Conviction elapse before he is required by the Bishop or any Justice of Peace or the Minister or Curate of the Parish to conform and make the submission here appointed and afterwards he is required by one of them so to do It seems in this Case such request comes too late for he ought to conform and submit within the three months if he be required but if he be not required he is not bound to abjure for omitting it although he shall remain in prison till he conforms and submits But if within the three months he be required to conform and submit and refuse there is no question but he may be at any time afterwards warned or required to abjure Abjuration Abjure this Realm of England c. Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 6. Stat. Sect. 3. The punishment for refusing to abjure not departing or returning without Licence And if any such Offender which by the tenor and intent of this Act is to be abjured as is aforesaid shall refuse to make Abjuration as is aforesaid or after such Abjuration made shall not go to such Haven and within such time as is before appointed and from thence depart out of this Realm according to this present Act or after such his departure shall return or come again into any her Majesties Realms or Dominions without her Majesties special Licence in that behalf first had and obtained That then in every such Case the person so offending shall be adjudged a Felon and shall suffer as in Case of Felony without benefit of Clergy Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 7. Stat. 35 Eli● ● And furthermore be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament Stat. S●ct 4. An Offender shall be discharged upon his open submission That if any person or persons that shall at any time hereafter offend against this Act shall before he or they be so warned or required to make Abjuration according to the tenor of this Act repair to some Parish Church on some Sunday or other Festival day and then and there hear Divine Service And at Service time before the Sermon or reading of the Gospel make
person which shall be so suspected shall refuse to answer directly and truly whether he be a Iesuit or a Seminary or Massing Priest as is aforesaid every such person so refusing to answer shall for his Disobedience and Contempt in that behalf be committed to Prison by such as shall examine him as is aforesaid and thereupon shall remain and continue in Prison without Bail or Mainprize until he shall make direct and true answer to the said Questions whereupon he shall be so examined Cause of suspicion Suspected Although the party be no Jesuit Seminary or Massing Priest yet if there be cause to suspect him and he refuse to answer whether he be so or no such suspicion and refusal is ground enough for his Commitment Having lawful Authority in that behalf This Clause seems to refer to the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 2. Stat. 27 Eliz. 2. which appoints that the discovery of a Popish Priest or Jesuit shall be made to some Justice of Peace or higher Officer who is to give Information thereof to some of the Privy Council c. under the penalty of two hundred marks Who shall examine a Jesuit c. which Statute of 27. though it do not in express terms say that the Justice of Peace or other higher Officer shall examine the Priest or Jesuit so discovered yet inasmuch as it gives him power to take Cognizance of the matter it seems implicitely to impower him to inform himself of the truth whether the party be a Priest or Jesuit or not as well by examination of the party as otherwise that he may be the better enabled to give Information thereof to some of the Privy Council c. And one Justice of Peace having by 27. lawful Authority to examine him he hath Authority likewise by this Statute of 35. to commit him And commit him if he be suspected to be a Priest or Jesuit and refuses to answer whether he be such or no. As for Mr. Shephards Opinion in his Sure Guide cap. 14. Sect. 5. that there must be two Justices of Peace to Commit a man by force of this Statute who is suspected to be a Jesuit or Priest till he answers directly I see no ground at all for it Answer to the said Questions That is To what point he may be examined whether he be a Jesuit Seminary or Massing Priest for he is not bound to answer to any other question nor can be committed by force of this Act for his Refusal Provided nevertheless Stat. Sect. 9. Licence to travel above five miles Alt. 3 Jac. 5. and be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any of the persons which are hereby limited and appointed to continue and abide within five miles of their usual dwelling place or of such place where they were born or where their Father and Mother shall be dwelling as is aforesaid shall have necessary occasion or business to go and Travel out of the compass of the said five miles That then and in every such Case upon Licence in that behalf to be gotten under the hands of two of the Iustices of Peace of the same County with the privity and assent in writing of the Bishop of the Diocess or of the Lieutenant or of any Deputy Lieutenant of the same County under their hands it shall and may be lawful for every such person to go and Travel about such their necessary business and for such time only for their travelling attending and returning as shall be comprised in the same Licence Any thing before in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding This Clause is repealed Repeal Stat. 3 Jac. 5. and a new form of Licence appointed by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. which see there Sect. 8. Provided also Stat. Sect. 10. Persons urged by Process or commanded to appear That if any such person so restrained as is aforesaid shall be urged by Process without fraud or covin or be bounden without fraud or covin to make appearance in any her Majesties Courts or shall be sent for commanded or required by any thrée or more of her Majesties Privy Council or by any four or more of any Commissioners to be in that behalf nominated and assigned by her Majesty to make appearance before her Majesties said Counsel or Commissioners That in every such Case every such person so bounden urged commanded or required to make such appearance shall not incur any pain forfeiture or loss for travelling to make appearance accordingly nor for his abode concerning the same nor for convenient time for his return back again upon the same Vrged by Process If a Popish Recusant restrained by this Act be summoned by Warrant of a Justice of Peace to appear before him the Recusant ought not to travel to such Justice out of his compass of 5 miles For although a Justice of Peace his Warrant be the Kings Process Wha● Process is here meant yet it is not intended here For these words urged by Process are restrained by the subsequent words to such Process as requires the Recusants appearance in some one of the Kings Courts and extend not to all Cases of Summons and Process as Wingate tit Crown numb 83. mistakes But if in the Case aforesaid the Warrant be to Arrest the Recusant and by force thereof he be carried by the Constable c. out of the compass of five miles there he is excused and shall forfeit nothing for that it was done by compulsion And yet if there be any Covin between the Recusant and the Justice of Peace or Officer it may be otherwise The Kings Courts In any her Majesties Courts All Courts wherein the proceedings are directed by the Kings Laws are the Kings Courts and therefore a Court Leet Court Leet though of an inferiour nature and kept in the Lords name yet is the Kings Court Co. 5. 39. Cawdries Case Hetley 18. Ecclesiastical Court If a Popish Recusant restrained by this Act be cited into the Ecclesiastical Court he may by force of this Proviso Travel out of the compass of five miles to appear there for all Ecclesiastical Courts are the Kings Courts and the Laws by which they proceed there are the Kings Laws Vide Cawdries Case supra Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 5. Sect. 7. Stat. Sect. 11. Persons which are to yield their bodies to the Sheriff And be it further provided and enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any such person or persons so restrained as is aforesaid shall be bound or ought to yield and render their bodies to the Sheriff of the County where they shall happen to be upon Proclamation in that behalf without fraud or covin to be made That then in every such Case every such person which shall be so bounden or ought to yield and render their body as aforesaid shall not incur any pain forfeiture or loss for Travelling for that intent and purpose only without any fraud
or covin nor for convenient time taken for their return back again upon the same This extends to all Cases in general where the Popish Recusant ought to render his body to the Sheriff upon Proclamation Proclamation and is not restrained to a Proclamation upon an Indictment for Recusancy And therefore if a Popish Recusant confined by this Act had been proclaimed upon the Statute of Marlebridge in a Plea de Custodia as a Deforceor he might lawfully have gone out of the compass of five miles The like he may do at this day upon any other Proclamation commanding him to render his body to the Sheriff Vide Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 5. Sect. 7. And furthermore be it Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament Stat. Sect 12. An Offender upon open submission shall be discharged That if any person or persons that shall at any time hereafter offend against this Act shall before he or they shall be thereof convicted come to some Parish Church on some Sunday or other Festival day and then and there hear Divine Service And at Service time before the Sermon or reading of the Gospel make publick and open Submission and Declaration of his and their Conformity to her Majesties Laws and Statutes as hereafter in this Act is declared and appointed That then the same Offender shall thereupon be clearly discharged of and from all and every pains and forfeitures inflicted or imposed by this Act for any of the said Offences in this Act contained Before he or they shall be thereof convicted Where submission will save abjuration A Popish Recusant confined by this Act whose Estate is under value is apprehended for offending against this Act and before the expiration of three months next after his apprehension is convicted of such Offence and then before the said three months expire conforms and makes such Submission and Declaration as is here and in the former branch appointed In this Case although he comes too late after Conviction to save the forfeiture of his Lands and Goods yet he shall not be compelled to abjure For the affirmative words here that upon such Conformity Submission and Declaration before Conviction he shall be discharged of all pains and forfeitures do not carry in them the force of a negative viz. That if it be after Conviction he shall not be discharged of any of them And by the former branch of the Statute he is not compellable to abjure if at any time within three months next after his apprehension he conforms confesses and submits as is there appointed To some Parish Church It must be in some Parish Church It seems clear that no Submission Confession or Declaration can discharge the Popish Recusant who is an Offender within this Act from any pain or forfeiture thereby inflicted unless it be performed in some Parish Church For there is a great difference between the penning of this Statute and that branch of 35 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 35 Eliz 1. where 't is said That the Offender shall be committed to Prison until he come to some Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer and hear Divine Service and make such open Submission and Declaration of his Conformity as in the Act is appointed For there there is an express designation of the place where such Submission and Declaration shall be viz. in any Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer whither the Offender comes and this shall free him from his Imprisonment Vide that Statute Sect. 4. supra But here where 't is said in the former part of this Act That he shall abjure unless he comes usually to Church and make such Confession and Submission as is therein afterwards appointed and expressed His coming usually to Church cannot be applied to his Confession and Submission for that is to be made but once and not usually and therefore there being there no place appointed where this Confession and Submission shall be made we must necessarily have recourse to this later branch of the Act where a place is appointed viz. some Parish Church so that the coming usually to Church without this formal Submission and Confession or Declaration in some Parish Church frees not the Offender here in any Case from abjuration although the coming to any Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer and hearing Divine Service and making open Submission and Declaration there shall free an Offender within the Statute of 35 Eliz. cap. 1. from Imprisonment Parish Church What is a Parish Church Vide Stat. 35 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 4. supra Two several Submissions Submission If a Popish Recusant Indicted upon this Statute makes his Submission and brings with him into the Court of Kings Bench a Testimonial thereof it s the course of that Court to cause him there to make his Submission again upon his knees which the Clerk of the Crown reads to him And so was it done in the Case of one Thoroughgood Pasch 2. Car. 1. But Justice Jones said there was no Statute to compell him to this second Submission And Thoroughgood complained that he was not therein dealt with according to Law Latch 16. Stat. Sect. 13. The same Submission to be as hereafter followeth that is to say The form of the Submission I A. B. do humbly confess and acknowledge that I have grievously offended God in contemning her Majesties godly and lawful Government and Authority by absenting my self from Church and from hearing Divine Service contrary to the Godly Laws and Statutes of this Realm and I am heartily sorry for the same and do acknowledge and testifie in my Conscience that the Bishop or See of Rome hath not nor ought to have any Power or Authority over her Majesty or within any her Majesties Realms or Dominions And I do promise and protest without any dissimulation or any colour or means of any Dispensation That from henceforth I will from time to time obey and perform her Majesties Laws and Statutes in repairing to the Church and hearing Divine Service and do my uttermost endeavour to maintain and defend the same Over her Majesty or within any her Majesties Realms or Dominions What Authority of the Pope is to be renounced And not over her Majesty within any her Dominions as Wingate tit Crown numb 85. grosly misrecites this Submission For that denies only the Popes or See of Romes Authority over her Majesty but not any other Authority which they might claim over her Subjects And 't is clear by the disjunctive or which Wingate omits that both these Authorities are intended to be denied by this Submission Or any colour or means of any Dispensation Dispensation These words which are a very material part of the Submission are likewise omitted by Wingate Her Majesties Laws and Statutes The Queens Laws Stat. 27 Eliz. 2. What is meant by her Majesties Laws Vide Stat. 27 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 7. And that every Minister or
charged in what not in respect or by reason of his or her Ancestors Recusancy And if at the decease of any such Recusant his heir shall happen to be a Recusant and after shall become conformable and obedient to the Laws and Ordinances of the Church of England and repair to the Church and continue there during the time of the Divine Service and Sermons according to the intent and true meaning of the said Statutes and Ordinances in that behalf made as is aforesaid and also shall take the Oath of Supremacy in such sort as that Oath is expressed in one Act of Parliament made in the first year of the Reign of our late Sovereign Lady Quéen Elizabeth before the Archbishop or Bishop of the Diocess that in every such Case every such heir shall be freed and discharged of all and singular the penalties charges and incumbrances happening upon him or her in respect or by reason of any of his or her Ancestors Recusancy Provided always and be it Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That if the heir of any Recusant shall happen to be within the age of sixtéen years at the time of the decease of his or her Ancestor and shall after his or her said age of sixteen years become or be a Recusant that in every such Case any such heir shall not be freéd or discharged of all or any of the penalties charges and incumbrances happening upon him or her in respect or by reason of any of his or her Ancestors Recusancy until he or she shall submit or reform him or her self and become obedient to the Laws and Ordinances of the Church of England and repair to the Church and continue there during the time of the Divine Service and Sermons according to the intent and true meaning of the said Statutes and Ordinances in that behalf as is aforesaid and shall take the said Oath of Supremacy in manner and form afore expressed and yet nevertheless from and after such submission and Oath had and taken every such heir shall be fréed and discharged of all and singular the penalties charges and incumbrances happening upon him or her in respect or by reason of any of his or her Ancestors Recusancy If any Recusant shall hereafter die That is Convicted Recusant a Recusant either Convicted upon Proclamation and Default or Convicted by Verdict Confession c. and adjudged For in both those cases if the Recusant die the discharge of the heir depends upon his Conformity Of all and singular the penalties Judgment against Tenant in Tail charges and incumbrances If Judgment be had at the Kings Suit against a Recusant Tenant in Tail for Recusancy this is a charge and incumbrance within this Statute of which the heir in Tail shall not be discharged unless he conforms but must satisfie all the arrears incurred in the life time of his Ancestor For it being a Debt to the King upon a Judgment the intailed Lands are liable thereto by the Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 39. Stat. 33 H. 8. 39 But these two Clauses discharge the arrears of the Twenty pounds per month incurred in the Recusants life time upon the conformity of the heir in such Cases only where the two parts of the Recusants Lands were not seized before his death Seisure in the Recusants life time for if they are seized in his life time and continue so till his death neither his Fee-simple Lands nor his Intailed Lands if a Judgment were had against him for his Recusancy at the Kings Suit shall be discharged upon the heirs conformity without payment of the arrears for which Vide postea Sect. 4. Stat. Sect. 4. The two parts of a Recusants Lands shall go towards satisfaction of the Twenty pounds per month And be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That where any seizure shall be had of the two parts of any Lands Tenements Hereditaments Leases or Farmes for the not payment of the Twenty pounds due and payable for each month according to the Statute in that Case lately made and provided That in every such Case every such two parts shall according to the extent thereof go towards the satisfaction and payment of the Twenty pounds due and payable for each month and unpaid by any such Recusant and that the third part thereof shall not be extended or seized by the Kings Majesty his Heirs or Successors for not-payment of the said Twenty pounds payable for each month forfeited or lost by any such Recusant And after his death shall remain in the Kings hands until the arrears be satisfied And where any such seizure shall be had of the two parts of the Lands Tenements Hereditaments Leases or Farmes of any such Recusant as is aforesaid and such Recusant shall die the debt or duty by reason of his Recusancy not paid satisfied or discharged that in every such Case the same two parts shall continue in his Majesties possession until the residue or remainder of the said debt or duty be thereby or otherwise paid satisfied or discharged And that his Majesty his Heirs or Successors shall not seize or extend any third part descending to any such heirs or any part thereof either by reason of the Recusancy of his or her Ancestors or the Recusancy of any such heir What seizure is here meant Where any seizure shall be had That is a seizure upon either a Judgment against the Recusant by Indictment on the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 29 Eliz 6 or on Indictment and Conviction by Proclamation and default of appearance according to the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. For the seizure of two parts of the Recusants Lands was given the King by 29. upon default of payment of the Twenty pounds per month in either of those Cases as hath been said for which see that Statute Sect. 4. Go towards the satisfaction and payment of the Twenty pounds Stat. 29 Eliz 6 altered Hereby a principal branch of the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. is altered For whereas by 29. the Queen might for non-payment of the forfeiture have seized two parts of a convicted Recusants Lands nomine poenae and as a gage or penalty until the Twenty pounds per month had been paid and yet the profits should not have gone towards the satisfaction of the said Twenty pounds per month This Statute was made for the ease and benefit of the Recusant in that point The two parts satisfactory of the penalty so that now if two parts of his Lands be seized for default of payment of the forfeiture the profits received to the Kings use shall go towards satisfaction thereof and when the forfeiture is paid out of the profits the Recusant shall have his Land again unless in such Case where the King by force of the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 4. Stat. 3 Jac. 4. makes his Election and seizes two parts in
lieu of the Twenty pounds per month And therefore the Resolution or Judgment said to be given in the Case of one Gray Anno 1. or 2. Jac. and cited in Beckets Case 8 Jac. Lane 93. and by Sergeant Bridgman in his Argument of Parker and Webbs Case 16 Jac. Rolles 2. 25. and applied thereunto viz. That if a Recusant convicted fails of the payment of the Twenty pounds per month the King shall have his Lands as a gage or penalty and the profits shall not go towards satisfaction thereof However it were true as the Law stood upon 29 Eliz. and before the making of this Act of 1 Jac. yet 't is not Law at this day nor could be applicable to either of those Cases of Becket or Parker and Webb which came to be debated long after this Act was made and the Law of 29 Eliz. altered in that point Vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 7. Where any such seizure shall be had c. This Relative such takes in both the seizures beforementioned viz. a seizure upon Indictment and Judgment thereupon by force of the Statute of 23 Eliz. and a seizure upon Conviction on Proclamation and default according to the Statute of 29 Eliz. And What seizure is here meant Stat. 23 Eliz 1 29 Eliz. ● as in both those Cases the Recusant who fails of the payment of the Twenty pounds per month shall have the benefit to discount the profits received by the King so the King shall in the like Cases of seizure retain the two parts in his hands after the Recusants death until the residue of the Debt or Duty due and payable to the King be satisfied Where this extends not to Intailed Lands Two parts of the Lands c. of any such Recusant This Clause extends not to Intailed Lands unless where there is a Judgment for the King against the Ancestor for his Recusancy And therefore if the Recusant convicted upon Proclamation and default be Tenant in Tail and two parts of his Lands be seized in his Life time for non-payment of the Twenty pounds per month and he die the arrears not being satisfied to the King yet the heir in Tail shall have the Land out of the Kings hands without payment of the arrears For that such Conviction is in the nature of a Verdict only Conviction upon Proclamation no Judgment and not of a Judgment as was held in Doctor Fosters Case Rolles 1.94 C. 41. And where a Statute gives to the King a seizure or forfeiture of Lands it shall not be intended of Lands in Tail unless it be expresly so appointed by the Statute or by force of some other Statute cooperating therewith In which Case the Intailed Lands may be charged by general words in the Statute which gives the forteiture or seizure An instance whereof we have in the Case of a Recusant Tenant in Tail Indicted Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Convicted and Adjudged upon 23 Eliz. 1. for his Intailed Lands shall remain after his death in the Kings possession until the arrears be satisfied 29 Eliz. 6 33 H. 8. 39 and that by force of 29 Eliz. c. 6. and this Statute cooperating with the Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 39. which charges the Lands of the heir in Tail with debts due to the King upon a Judgment had against the Ancestor Praemunire Stat. 16 R. 2. 5 But otherwise 't is in the Case of a Praemunire upon the Statute of 16 R. 2. cap. 5. which saith the Lands and Tenements of the Offender shall be forfeit to the King for there his Intailed Lands shall be forfeit during his life only And the reason is for that general words in an Act of Parliament unless aided by some other Act of Parliament shall never take away the force of the Statute de donis conditionalibus Co. 1. Inst. 130. 391. Co. 11.63 Godbolt 308. Lord Sheffeild and Ratcliffe Treason Stat. 26 H. 8. 13 5 E. 6. 11 And therefore in the Statutes of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. and 5 E. 6. cap. 11. which make Intailed Lands forfeitable for Treason the word inheritance was added any Estate of Inheritance which expresly denotes Lands in Fee Tail as well as Feesimple Now there being neither in this Act or that of 29 Eliz. any express appointment that the two parts of all Lands seized in the Recusants life time wherein he had any Estate of Inheritance shall after his death continue in the Kings possession nor no other Statute which charges the heir in Tail with the forfeiture due to the King upon Conviction by Proclamation and Default the general words here that his Lands Tenements c. shall continue in the Kings possession shall not inforce a construction in prejudice of the Heir in Tail who claims by the Statute de donis conditionalibus but where there is no Judgment the Recusants Fee simple Lands shall after his death satisfie the intent of these Statutes And so was the Law in reference to intailed Lands upon the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap. 6. which speaks of the full satisfaction of Arrearages in Case of the death of the Recusant Arrears where to be paid by the Heir in Tail where not And the Arrears were to have been paid by the Heir in Tail only in such Case where there was a Judgment obtained by the King against the Ancestor for his Recusancy but not where the Ancestor Tenant in Tail was convicted only upon Proclamation and default for in this last Case the Heir in Tail was not bound by the Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 39. because 't is not a Debt by Judgment as that Statute requires Moore 523. C. 691. And thus the Opinion of the two Chief Justices Trin. 43 Eliz. is to be understood for they held That if intailed Lands had been seized for non-payment of the 20 l. per month and the Tenant in Tail had died the issue in Tail should not have had the Land out of the Queens hands before the Debt were satisfied but should have been charged with the said Debt Cro. Eliz. 846. At the end of which Case is added a Dubitatur But yet the Opinion there held stands good if it be intended only of a Conviction of the Ancestor by Judgment upon Trial or Confession and not of a Conviction upon Proclamation and default And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament Stat. Sect. 2. None shall go or send any other to a Seminary c. That all and every person and persons under the Kings Obedience which at any time after the end of this Session of Parliament shall pass or go or shall send or cause to be sent any Child or any other person under their or any of their Government into any the parts beyond the Seas out of the Kings Obedience to the intent to enter into or be resident in any Colledge Seminary or House of Iesuits Priests or any other Popish Order
Profession or Calling whatsoever or repair in or to any the same to be instructed perswaded or strengthned in the Popish Religion or in any sort to profess the same every such person so sending or causing to be sent any Child or other person beyond the Seas to any such purpose or intent shall for every such Offence forfeit to his Maiesty his Heirs and Successors the sum of one hundred pounds and every such person so passing or being sent beyond the Seas to any such intent and purpose as is aforesaid shall by Authority of this present Act as in respect of him or her self only and not to or in respect of any of his Heirs or Posterity be disabled and made uncapable to inherit purchase take have or enjoy any Mannors Lands Tenements Annuities Profits Commodities Hereditaments Goods Chattels Debts Duties Legacies or Sums of money within this Realm of England or any other his Majesties Dominions And that all and singular Estates Terms and other Interests whatsoever hereafter to be made suffered or done to or for the use or behoof of any such person or persons or upon any trust or confidence mediately or immediately to or for the benefit or relief of any such person or persons shall be utterly void and of none effect to all intents constructions and purposes Publick Colledges c. only here intended To any Colledge c. This Act extends only to publick Houses or Colledges but not to such as are bred beyond the Seas in any private Popish Family And therefore the Statute of 3 Car. 1. cap. 2. Stat. 3 Car. 1. 2. was made to supply that defect Stat. Sect. 6. They who are in Seminaries c. shall return And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person born within this Realm or any the Kings Majesties Dominions be at this present in any Colledge Seminary House or place in any parts beyond the Seas to the end to be instructed or strengthned in the Popish Religion which shall not make return into this Realm or some of his Majesties Dominions within one year next coming after the end of this Session of Parliament and submit himself as is aforesaid shall be in respect of himself only and not to or in respect of any of his Heirs or Posterity utterly disabled and uncapable to inherit have or enjoy any Mannors Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods Chattels Debts or other things aforesaid within this Realm or any other his Majesties Dominions Stat. Sect. 7. Remedy for such as return into the Realm and become conformable Provided always That if any such person or Child so passing sent sending or now being beyond the Seas as aforesaid to such intent as is before mentioned shall after become Conformable and Obedient unto the Laws and Ordinances of the Church of England and shall repair to the Church and there remain and be as is aforesaid and continue in such Conformity according to the true intent and meaning of the said Statutes and Ordinances That in every such Case every such person and Child for and during such time as he or she shall continue in such Conformity and Obedience shall be fréed and discharged of all and every such disability and incapacity as is before mentioned And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That no Woman Stat. Sect. 8. No Woman or Child shall pass over the Seas without Licence except c. nor any Child under the age of one and twenty years except Sailers or Ship-boys or the Apprentice or Factor of some Merchant in Trade of Merchandize shall be permitted to pass over the Seas except the same shall be by Licence of the King his Heirs or Successors or of some six or more of the Kings Privy Council thereunto first had under their hands upon pain that the Officers of the Port that shall willingly or negligently suffer any such to pass The forfeiture of the Officer of the Port. Owner of the Ship or shall not enter the names of such Passengers licensed shall forfeit his Office and all his Goods and Chattels And upon pain that the Owner of any Ship or Vessel that shall wittingly or willingly carry any such over the Seas without Licence as is aforesaid shall forfeit his Ship or Vessel and all the Tackle and every Master or Marriner Master and Marriners of or in any such Ship or Vessel offending as aforesaid shall forfeit all their Goods and suffer Imprisonment by the space of twelve months without Bail or Mainprize And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 9. The forfeiture for being or keeping a Schoolmaster contrary to this Act. That no person after the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel next shall kéep any School or be a Schoolmaster out of any of the Vniversities or Colledges of this Realm except it be in some publick or frée Grammar School or in some such Noblemans or Noblewomans or Gentlemans or Gentlewomans House as are not Recusants or where the same Schoolmaster shall be specially licensed thereunto by the Archbishop Bishop or Guardian of the Spiritualties of that Diocess upon pain that as well the Schoolmaster as also the party that shall retain or maintain any such Schoolmaster contrary to the true intent and meaning of this Act shall forfeit each of them for every day so wittingly offending forty shillings Note All Grammar Schools are not here excepted Grammar Schools Gentlemens Houses but only publick or free Grammar Schools nor yet all Gentlemens Houses but only of such as are not Recusants in both which respects this Statute is defectively recited in the late Additions to Dalton cap. 87. tit Schoolmaster Sect. 1. Stat. Sect. 10. The forfeitures how to be recovered The one half of all the penalties and sums of money before-mentioned to be forfeited to be to the King his Heirs and Successors the other to him or them that shall or will sue for the same in any the Courts of Record in Westminster by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in which no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed Stat. iii Jac. cap. iv An Act for the better discovering and repressing of Popish Recusants FOrasmuch as it is found by daily experience that many his Majesties Subjects Stat. Sect. 1. that adhere in their hearts to the Popish Religion by the infection drawn from thence and by the wicked and devillish Counsel of Iesuites Seminaries and other like persons dangerous to the Church and State Some Popishly affected do repair to the Church are so far perverted in the point of their Loyalties and due Allegiance unto the Kings Majesty and the Crown of England as they are ready to entertain and execute any treasonable conspiracies and practices as evidently appears by that more then barbarous and horrible attempt to have blown up with Gunpowder the King Queén Prince Lords and Commons in the House of
the Exchequer in the Case of Sir Edward Lenthal Cro. Hill 12 Jac. 365. Shall for every such offence lose and forfeit Thréescore pounds Receiving the Sacrament and neglecting it afterwards If a Popish Recusant once receive the Sacrament after his Conformity and afterwards neglect so to do within the time prescribed by this Act and is guilty of such neglect for two years together although he was never convicted for the first year yet an Information lies against him and he shall forfeit Threescore pounds for the second year For he is liable to pay so much for every offence that is for every year wherein he neglects to receive the Sacrament after he hath once received it The Informer may sue for any year and the Informer is at his liberty for which offence or year he will inform whether for the first second c. And the reason of this is because here are no steps or gradations to increase the penalty for the second or third offence but the penalty is equal and a like in this Case for every offence It is observable that the Popish Recusant who after his conformity receives the Sacrament and afterwards neglects so to do for the space of one or more years is in worse Condition then he who conforms and receives it not at all For in this last Case he shall forfeit but Twenty pounds for the first and Forty pounds for the second year But if he once receive the Sacrament and afterwards neglect it for the space of two years he shall forfeit for each of those years Threescore pounds To him that will sue for the same An Information upon this Branch of the Statute must be brought by an Informer Qui tam c. within a year after the offence or neglect Within what time he must sue or he can take no advantage thereof For such an Information is within the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 5. Stat. 31 Eliz. 5 Cro. Hill 12 Jac. 366. Vide Statute 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 9. Before whom a Common Informer cannot sue Or before Iustices of Assize c. Note that notwithstanding these words an Information on this Statute by an Informer Qui tam c. for not receiving the Sacrament cannot be brought before Justices of Assize or Goal delivery or Justices of Peace For no Common Informer can sue for the King and himself before any of those Justices but must sue in one of the Courts of Record at Westminster as was resolved Mich. 4. Car. 1. Jones 193. Vide Stat. 23. Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Sect. 9. Stat. Sect. 3. Presenting the monthly absence from Church of a Recusant And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That the Churchwardens and Constables of every Town Parish or Chappel for the time being or some one of them or if there be none such then the chief Constables of the Hundred where such Town Parish or Chappel is or shall be or one of them as well in places exempt as not exempt shall once in every year present the monthly absence from Church of all and all manner of Popish Recusants within such Towns and Parishes and shall present the names of every of the Children of the said Recusants being of the age of nine years and upwards abiding with their said Parents and as near as they can the age of every of the said Children A Recusants Children and Servants as also the names of the Servants of such Recusants at the general or Quarter Sessions of that Shire limit division or liberty Of all and all manner of Popish Recusants Whose monthly absence from Church must be presented and whose not As this Act is penned it seems that the Churchwardens and Constables are not bound thereby to present the monthly absence from Church of any of the Children or Servants of a Popish Recusant although such Children or Servants be Recusants unless they are Popish Recusants And that 't is sufficient to satisfie the Statute to present their names without taking any notice of their absence from Church But if they be Popish Recusants they fall within the general words of the Act and their monthly absence ought to be presented as well as that of their Parents or Masters Wingate in his Abridgment of this Statute tit Crown numb 100. hath clearly mistaken the meaning thereof in this particular for he tells us that the monthly absence of all the Children and Servants of a Popish Recusant ought to be presented At the general or Quarter Sessions General or Quarter Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 What is meant by those words vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 4. The presentments recorded That all such presentments shall be accepted entred and recorded in the said Sessions by the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk for the time being or his Deputy without any Fée to be had asked or taken for the same And in default of such presentment to be made the said Churchwardens Constables or High Constables respectively shall for every such default forfeit twenty shillings And in default of such accepting entring and recording without Feé as aforesaid the said Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk shall for every such Offence forfeit and lose forty shillings And that upon every Presentment of such monthly absence as aforesaid The reward of the Church-wardens and Constables whereupon such party so presented shall after happen to be Indicted and Convicted not being for the same absence before presented Then the said Churchwardens Constables or High Constables respectively so making such Presentments shall have a reward of forty shillings to be levied out of the Recusants Goods and Estate in such manner and form as by the more part of the said Iustices shall be by Warrant under their Hands and Seals then and there ordered and appointed Stat. S●ct 5. What Justices shall hear and determin these Offences And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery at their Assizes and the said Iustices of Peace at their said Sessions shall have Power and Authority by virtue of this Act to enquire hear and determine of all Recusants and Offences as well for not receiving the Sacrament aforesaid according to the true meaning of this Law as for not repairing to Church according to the meaning of former Laws in such manner and form as the said Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery do or may now do by former Laws in the Case of Recusancy for not repairing to Church And also shall have power at their Assizes and Goal delivery and at the Sessions in which any Indictment against any person either for not repairing to Church according to former Laws or not receiving the said Sacrament according to this Law The effect of the Proclamation shall be taken to make Proclamation By
where the King discharges him of that payment by refusing it so that where the King refuses the twenty pounds per month the Recusants Goods cannot be seized but only two parts of his Lands The Law likewise is mistaken For if the King refuses the twenty pounds per month he may seize an Advowson as part of his two parts as hath been said so that an Advowson is within this Clause An Advowson is within this Clause and not without it And the Case of Standen and the University of Oxon is quite contrary to that Opinion in the late Additions to Dalton For Justice Jones held strongly that an Advowson was within this Clause And Hobart Chief Justice and Justice Winch declared themselves to be of the same mind and Justice Hutton denied not that an Advowson was within it only held that the force of it as to an Advowson in gross was taken away by the Statute of 3 Jac. cap. 5. Stat. 3 Jac. 5. University which gives the Presentation to the University But the three other Justices were against him and held That where the King had seized it as part of his two parts and the Incumbent died The King should present and not the University See of this matter more at large Stat. 3 Jac. car 5. Sect. 19. If the King seize by Inquisition two parts of a Mannor belonging to a Recusant Convict to which an Advowson is Appendant Two parts of an Advowson Appendant seized by seizure of two parts of the Mannor by such seizure two parts of the Advowson are likewise seized by consequence although it be not named in the Inquisition as was resolved in the Case of the Chancellor c. of Cambridge and Walgrave Hobart 126 127. Moore 872. C. 1214. The King shall present alone And there although the King hath Title but to two parts of the Advowson yet he shall present alone by his Prerogative as was resolved in that Case and so he should have done where there were three Coparceners of an Advowson two of full age and one under age and in Ward to the King the King only should by his Prerogative have presented during the Wardship 47 E. 3. 14. 38 H. 6. 9. But yet His two parts shall not pass from him by general words although two parts of an Advowson shall pass to the King by the word Hereditaments and the seizure of the Mannor shall draw with it the seizure of the Advowson yet the Kings two parts of the Advowson shall not pass from him by such general words And therefore if the King seizes two parts of a Mannor belonging to a Recusant Convict to which an Advowson is Appendant and grants over his two parts of the Mannor to a Subject with all Hereditaments Appurtenances c. yet two parts of the Advowson will not pass unless specially named or the grant be adeo plene integre in tam amplis modo forma prout c. the Recusant had the Mannor Hobart 126 127. Moore 872. C. 1214. All other Lands c. liable to such seizure or to the Penalties aforesaid Whether Copyhold Lands Copyhold Lands are seizable by force of these words Vide Stat. 29 Eliz. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Stat. 29 Eliz. 6. In lieu and full Recompence of the twenty pounds monthly So that if the King make his Election to seize the two parts the Recusant is no longer liable to pay the twenty pounds per month The twenty pounds per month discharged but the two parts of his Lands shall go in lieu and full Recompence thereof Jones 24. Standen versus University of Oxon. Provided always Stat. Sect. 9. A Recusants Mansion house shall be reserved to him and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall not take into his two parts but leave to such Offender his chief Mansion House as part of his third part and shall not Demise Lease or put over the said two parts nor any part thereof to any Recusant nor to or for the use of any Recusant The Kings two parts shall not be demised to a Recusant And that whosoever shall take the same in Lease or otherwise of his Majesty his Heirs and Successors shall give such security not to commit nor suffer wast to be committed in or upon any the said premises as by the Court of Exchequer shall be allowed sufficient His chief Mansion House Mansion House Mansion house is in Law most commonly taken for the chief Messuage or habitation of the Lord of a Mannor or the Mannor House where he most remains or continues Termes de la Ley 199. Mansion But it is to be taken here in a larger sence for any other House which is the Recusants chief dwelling House And for the better Tryal how his Majesties Subjects stand affected in point of their Loyalty and due Obedience Stat. Sect. 10. Who are compellable to take the Oath Be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament it shall be lawful to and for any Bishop in his Diocess or any two Iustices of Peace whereof one of them to be of the Quorum within the limits of their Iurisdiction out of the Sessions to require any person of the age of Eightéen years or above being or which shall be Convict or Indicted of or for any Recusancy other then Noblemen or Noblewomen for not repairing to Divine Service according to the Laws of this Realm or which shall not have received the said Sacrament twice within the year then next past Noblemen and Noblewomen excepted or any person passing in or through the County Shire or Liberty and unknown except as is last before excepted that being examined by them upon Oath shall confess or not deny himself or her self to be a Recusant or shall confess or not deny that he or she had not received the said Sacrament twice within the year then last past to take the Oath hereafter following upon the holy Evangelist Certificate of the name and place of abode of him which taketh the Oath Which said Bishop or two Iustices of the Peace shall certifie in writing subscribed with his or their Hands at the next General or Quarter Sessions for that Shire Limit Division or Liberty within which the said Oath shall be so taken the Christen Name Surname and place of aboad of every person which shall so take the said Oath which Certificate shall be there recorded by the Clerk of the Peace or Town-Clerk and kept amongst the Records of the said Sessions Where this Oath cannot be tendred Passing in or through the County Shire or Liberty and unknown These words passing and unknown being in the Conjunctive it seems that the Bishop or two Justices ought not to examine upon Oath or tender this Oath to any Passenger or Traveller quatenus such unless he be unknown viz. such an
or Constitution of man Naturalization being but a fiction in Law which confers the priviledges of a natural Subject but cannot make him a natural Subject who was none before For then he would have two natural Princes one where he was born and the other where Naturalized Vaughan 279 280. 283. Craw versus Ramsey Co. 7. 5 6 7. 25. Calvins Case Dyer 3 4 Ph. Mar. 145. Hobart 171. Curteenes Case so that to absolve perswade withdraw or reconcile an Alien born whose Subjection to the King began not with his birth or for any such to be absolved perswaded withdrawn or reconciled seems not to be Treason within this Act. But this Subjection is not to be understood locally Subjection not to be understood locally or in respect of the place of a mans Birth but in respect of the Prince to whom Subjection is due at the time of his Birth And therefore if a Scot or Irishman be absolved or reconciled in England although the Offence be committed in another Kingdom then that where his Subjection begun yet being born a Subject to the King of England its Treason in the absolver or person reconciling and in him that is absolved or reconciled Nor is it necessary in all Cases that the party be born in the Kings Dominions but that he may be a natural Subject notwithstanding and consequently within this Act as in the Case of an Embassador vide Co. 7. 18. Calvins Case Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Sect. 2. Stat. Sect. 20. A reconciled person taking the Oath Provided nevertheless That the last mentioned Clause of this Branch or any thing therein contained shall not extend or be taken to extend to any person or persons whatsoever which shall hereafter be reconciled to the Pope or Sée of Rome as aforesaid for and touching the point of so being reconciled only that shall return into this Realm and thereupon within six days next after such return before the Bishop of the Diocess or two Iustices of Peace joyntly or severally of the County where he shall arrive submit himself to his Majesty and his Laws and take the Oath set forth by Act in the first year of the Reign of the late Quéen Elizabeth commonly called the Oath of Supremacy as also the Oath before set down in this present Act which said Oaths the said Bishop and Iustices respectively shall have Power and Authority by this present Act to minister to such persons as aforesaid And the said Oaths so taken the said Bishop and Iustices before whom such Oaths shall be so taken respectively shall certifie at the next General or Quarter Sessions of the Peace to be holden within the said Shire Limit Division or Liberty wherein such person as aforesaid shall submit himself and take the said Oaths as aforesaid upon pain of every one neglecting to certifie the same as aforesaid the sum of Forty pounds Submission in case of Treason Which shall hereafter be reconciled In the late Additions to Dalton cap. 140. tit High Treason Sect. 12. is intimated that this Clause which provides in Case of Submission extends to no Cases of Treason or Misprision of Treason for there in reciting this part of the Statute the Cases of Treason and Misprision of Treason are excepted which is a great mistake For the Submission here spoken of is only in the Case of a declared Treason scil being reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome For and touching the point of so being reconciled only In the latter part of the former Section there are three several sorts of Offences made Treason Reconciled to the Pope c. what meant thereby 1. To be willingly absolved or withdrawn from a mans natural Obedience 2. To be willingly reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome 3. To promise Obedience to any pretended Authority of that See or to any other Prince State or Potentate but in this Clause only the second of these Offences is remitted in Case of Submission viz. the being reconciled to the Pope or Sée of Rome By which I conceive to be meant the forsaking of the Religion established by Law and embracing that which is professed and maintained by the Pope and See of Rome And in that sense those words are commonly taken at this day And that this is the meaning of those words appears by the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 1. which makes it Treason to absolve or withdraw the Subjects from their natural Obedience or to withdraw them from the Religion Established to the Romish Religion or to move them to promise Obedience to the See of Rome or any other Prince c. to answer which follows in that Act three other sorts of Treason viz. to be absolved or withdrawn or to be reconciled or to promise such Obedience so that the Offence of being reconciled answers to the Offence of withdrawing the Subjects from the Religion Established to the Romish Religion which explains what is meant by such Reconciliation viz. the being so withdrawn from the one Religion to the other But by this Clause if a person be thus reconciled that is change his Religion and become a Papist yet if he be capacitated to submit as is required by this Act and submit accordingly and take the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance such Offence of being reconciled shall not be Treason But as for being absolved or withdrawn from his natural Obedience Offences not within this Proviso or promising Obedience to the pretended Authority of the See of Rome or any other Prince State or Potentate besides his natural King such Submission and taking the Oaths shall not absolve him from that guilt but he shall have Judgment and suffer for the same as in Case of High Treason notwithstanding such Submission c. Dalton V. cap. 89. tit High Treason is therefore clearly mistaken in extending the benefit of this Submission c. generally to all who have been willingly absolved withdrawn or reconciled or have promised such Obedience Submit himself to his Majesty and his Laws The Kings Laws Stat. 27 Eliz. 2 What Laws are here meant vide Stat. 27 Eliz. cap. 2. Sect. 7. Stat. Sect. 21. Where the Trial shall be And be it further Enacted That all and every person and persons that shall offend contrary to this present branch of this Statute shall be Indicted tried and proceéded against by and before the Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery of that County for the time being or before the Iustices of the Court of Kings Bench and be there procéeded against according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm against Traitors as if the said Offence had béen committed in the same County where such person or persons shall be so taken Any Law Custom or Statute to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding In what County The Offender may be proceeded against by force of this Act in any County where he shall be imprisoned for
all causes where any Bishop or Iustices of the Peace may by force of this Act require and take of any Subject the Oath above mentioned That the Lords of the Privy Counsel for the time being or any six of them whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer or the principal Secretary for the time being to be one shall have full Power and Authority by force of this Act at any time or times to require and take the said Oaths before mentioned of any Nobleman or Noblewoman then being above the age of Eighteén years And if any such Nobleman or Noblewoman other then Women married shall refuse to take such Oath or Oaths that in every such Case such Nobleman and Noblewoman shall incur the pain and danger of a Praemunire Where any Bishop or Iustices of the Peace The Justices of Peace Justices of Peace have a twofold power given them by this Act in reference to the Oath of Allegiance 1. Out of Sessions and so any two Justices of Peace quorum unus c. may tender the Oath to any person eighteen years old or above other then Noblemen or Noblewomen 2. In their general or Quarter Sessions and there they may tender the Oath to any such person who hath before refused it or to any person whatsoever of or above that age other then Noblemen or Noblewomen Now whether the six Privy Counsellors Six Privy Counsellors here mentioned may require this Oath of Noblemen and Noblewomen in all Cases where the Justices of Peace may require the same of any Subject either in or out of Sessions or only in such Cases where they may require it out of Sessions seems to be a Question For if the power here given to the six Privy Counsellors be the same with that of the Justices of Peace in their Sessions they may by force of this Act tender it to any Nobleman or unmarried Noblewoman whatsoever above eighteen years old For the Justices of Peace in their Sessions may tender it there to any other person whatsover But if it be meant of the power given the Justices of Peace out of Sessions then the six Privy Counsellors can tender it by force of this Act to such Noblemen or unmarried Noblewomen only who stand Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy for not coming to Church or who have not received the Sacrament twice within the year next before or who passing through the Country unknown shall upon examination confess or not deny their Recusancy or that they have not so received the Sacrament To whom they may tender this Oath For the solving of which doubt it is to be considered 1. That the Bishop and not the Justices of Assize are here joyned with the Justices of Peace And these words where any Bishop or Iustices of Peace seem to bear this Construction viz. where any Bishop or Justices of Peace either the one or the other indifferently may require the Oath and that can be intended only of the power given out of Sessions For in Sessions the Bishop hath nothing to do But had the Justices of Assize been here added scilicet in all Causes where the Bishop Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace may require this Oath it had been clear that the Power here given the six Privy Counsellors was as extensive as that which is given the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions and they might have required the Oath of any Nobleman or unmarried Noblewoman whatsoever of competent age so if the Justices of Peace only had been here named it had been clearly intended of the Justices of Peace in either Capacity either in or out of Sessions But Bishop seems here to be a restrictive word and to give the Privy Counsellors no more power in respect of the Nobility then the Bishop had in reference to any other Subject 2. These words in all causes where c. seem to be restrictive likewise and exclusive of some Causes But the Power of the Justices of Peace in Sessions extends to all Causes and Persons under the Degree of Nobility whatsoever which therefore cannot be here intended but only some particular Causes ejusdem generis which can be no other then the Causes before mentioned wherein the Bishop or two Justices out of Sessions may deal viz. where the party was before Convicted or Indicted or had not received the Sacrament or passed unknown and confessed c. And yet as 't is reported in Bulstrode 1. 197. the Case of the Lord Vaux Pasch 10. Car. 1. is to the contrary For 't is said there he was committed to the Fleet by the Privy Council for refusing this Oath and afterwards Indicted in the Kings Bench of a Praemunire for such his refusal he being then of the age of eighteen years and above And the said Oath being lawfully tendred c. All which was certified to the Court by divers of the Privy Council upon which Indictment he was attainted and no word in the Indictment of his standing Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy or not having received the Sacrament c. and yet the Indictment was grounded upon this Statute and not upon that of 7 Jac. 6. For by that Statute of 7 Jac. he could not have been Indicted of a Praemunire for the first refusal but must have been Committed until the next Assizes or Sessions and if he had there refused it the second time he might have been Indicted of a Praemunire and not otherwise But whether this Indictment were according to Law or only passed sub silentio Quaere Note by the Statute of 7 Jac. cap. 6. any Privy Counsellor Stat. 7 Jac. 6. or the Bishop of the Diocess may now require this Oath of any Baron or Baronesse of or above the age of eighteen years in all Cases And in some Cases three Privy Counsellors Quorum unus c. may require it of persons above the said Degree vide the Statute A Noblewoman by Marriage Noblewoman A Noblewoman who was such by Marriage only becomes a Widow and takes to her second Husband a person under the Degree of Nobility By this her second Marriage she hath lost her Nobility And if she again becomes a Widow the Oath shall not be tendred her by Privy Counsellors But the Bishop or two Justices of Peace quorum unus c. may by force of this Act require her to take it and upon her refusal may proceed against her as is above directed in the Case of a common person see more of this matter Stat. 7 Jac. cap. 6. Sect. 4. Age. Then being above the age of Eightéen years In this Case that day Eighteen years on which the party was born must be wholly elapsed for before this Oath cannot be tendred although the hour of his birth be elapsed For the Law rejects all Fractions and Divisions of a day for the incertainty Fractions of a day rejected which is always the Mother of Contention Co. 5.1 Claytons Case
Vide Rolles abridg tit Temps 521. Counsel and Trial by Peers Praemunire In the aforesaid Case of the Lord Vaux who was Indicted of a Praemunire for refusing this Oath the Court of Kings Bench denied him Counsel or Trial by his Peers And it was there held that the Trial of a Nobleman by his Peers is at Common Law in four Cases only viz. Treason Felony Misprision of Treason and Misprision of Felony but not to be allowed in the Case of a Praemunire for that in effect it is no more then a Contempt Bulstrode 1. 197 198 199. Stat. Sect. 32. Who shall take the Oath in the Cinque Ports Provided also and be it Enacted by Authority of this Parliament That where any person or persons shall go or pass out of the Cinque Ports or any Member thereof to any parts beyond the Seas to serve any Forreign Prince State or Potentate that in every such Case the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports for the time being or any person by him in that behalf appointed or to be appointed shall have full Power and Authority by virtue hereof to take the Bond and minister the Oath to such Passengers as is above mentioned If the Warden of the Cinque Ports Warden of the Cinque Ports do take such Bond and minister such Oath and do not certifie them into the Exchequer this seems to be Casus omissus and not provided for by the Act For he shall not be liable to the penalty inflicted on the Customer and Controller For that although it be within the same mischief there are no express words here to reach him And penal Statutes shall not be taken or construed by Equity Lee 77. Bishop of Chichester versus Freeland Rolles 2. 420. Jones versus Lord Sheffeild Ratcliffe Yelverton 22. Brode versus Owen Plowden 17. Fogassa's Case Et 86. Partridges Case Co. 1. Inst. 238. Keilwey 96. Stat. iii Jac. cap. v. An Act to prevent and avoid dangers which may grow by Popish Recusants Stat. Sect. 1. WHereas divers Iesuits Seminaries and Popish Priests dayly do withdraw many of his Majesties Subjects from the true Service of Almighty God and the Religion established within this Realm to the Romish Religion and from their Loyal Obedience to his Majesty and have of late secretly perswaded divers Recusants and Papists and encouraged and emboldened them to commit most damnable Treasons tending to the overthrow of Gods true Religion the destruction of his Majesty and his Royal Issue and the overthrow of the whole State and Commonwealth if God of his goodness and mercy had not within few hours before the intended time of the execution thereof revealed and disclosed the same wherefore to discover and prevent such secret damnable conspiracies and Treasons as hereafter may be put in ure by such evil disposed persons if remedy be not therefore provided Stat. Sect. 2. The reward of him which discovereth a Popish Priest or Mass Be it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same That such person as shall first discover to any Iustice of Peace any Recusant or other person which shall entertain or relieve any Iesuite Seminary or Popish Priest or shall discover any Mass to have beén said and the persons that were present at such Mass and the Priest that said the same or any of them within threé days next after the offence committed and that by reason of such discovery any of the said Offenders be taken and Convicted or Attainted That then the person which hath made such discovery shall not only be fréed from the danger and penalty of any Law for such offence if he be an Offender therein but also shall have the third part of the forfeiture of all such sums of Money Goods Chattels and Debts which shall be forfeited by such offence so as the same total forfeiture exceéd not the sum of One hundred and fifty pounds and if it excéed the sum of One hundred and fifty pounds the said person so discovering the said offence shall have the sum of Fifty pounds only for every such discovery And such person so discovering the same after conviction of the offender shall have a Certificate from the Iudges or Iustices of Peace before whom such Conviction shall happen to be directed to the Sheriff or other Officer of the same County Limit or Place that shall seize the Goods or levy the said forfeiture commanding the said Sheriff or other Officer to pay the same accordingly to him that so discovered the same out of the monies to be levyed by vertue of the said forfeitures which Warrant and payment shall be effectual in the Law for that purpose and a sufficient discharge in that behalf for the Sheriff or other Officer upon his Accompt Within threé days next after the Offence committed Discovery within what time So that if three days next after the Offence committed elapse before the discovery is made the discoverer shall have no benefit by this Act. And therefore if the person discovering had no notice of the Offence till the three days expire although he discovers it presently upon such notice given him yet he comes too late much less shall he have three days after notice as Wingate tit Crowne numb 128. mistakes the meaning of this Clause Commanding the said Sheriff or other Officer to pay the same In the late additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Who is to pay the discoverer Sect. 57. 't is said that the Sheriff is to grant his Warrant for the payment of the discoverer but that is a misrecital of the Statute for the Sheriff himself is to pay him And whereas the repair of such evil affected persons to the Court or to the City of London may be very dangerous to his Majesties person and may give them more liberty to méet Stat. Sect. 3. A Popish Recusant shall not come to Court consult and plot their Treasons and practices against the State then if they should be restrained and confined unto their private Houses in the Country For remedy hereof Be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That no Popish Recusant Convicted or to be Convicted shall come into the Court or House where the Kings Majesty or his Heir apparent to the Crown of England shall be unless he be commanded so to do by the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors or by Warrant in writing from the Lords and others of the most Honourable Privy Council of the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors or any of them upon pain to forfeit for every time so offending one hundred pounds the one moiety to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors the other moiety to him that will discover and sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any one of his Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoign protection or wager
a farther distance although they inhabited in that which was within London or ten miles for three months next before that Session of Parliament yet if they were not Tradesmen at the time of making of this Act they should have had no benefit by this Proviso but ought within ten days after such Indictment or Conviction for Recusancy to have removed out of the compass of ten miles Stat. Sect. 7. And whereas by a Statute made at Westminster in the Five and thirtieth year of the Reign of Queén Elizabeth Intituled An Act for the restraining of Popish Recusants to some certain place of abode it was amongst other things Ordained and Enacted That every Popish Recusant then or after Convicted for not repairing to Church Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer A Recusant confined having any certain place of dwelling and abode within this Realm should within the time limited by the said Statute repair to their place of usual dwelling and abode or not having any certain place of dwelling or abode within this Realm should likewise within the time limited by the said Statute repair to the place where such person was born or where the Father or Mother of such person should be dwelling and not at any time remove or pass above five miles from thence under the pains in the said Statute limited and provided Which Statute by reason of sundry Licences given unto such Recusants under colour of a Proviso in the said Statute contained hath not wrought that good effect in the Commonwealth as was hoped Be it therefore Enacted Ordained by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same That the said Statute made in the said Five and thirtieth year of the said Quéen Elizabeth for and concerning the confining of the said Recusants under the pains and penalties therein contained shall by this Act and by the Authority of the same be confirmed and be hereafter put in due execution according to the tenour true intent and meaning of the said Statute in that behalf made Repeal of a Proviso in 35 Eliz. 2. And that the said Proviso in the said Statute contained giving power to grant Licence or Licences unto the said Recusants to go and Travel from or out of the compass of the said five miles shall be from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament utterly repealed and void Any thing in the said Statute to the contrary notwithstanding Then or after Convicted Vide Sect. 8. infra Giving power to grant Licence or Licences unto the said Recusants The Proviso in the Statute of 35 Eliz. cap. 2. here repealed is only that which there impowers the Justices of Peace For that is the only Proviso which gives power to grant Licences And the cause here alledged for the Repeal is the giving of sundry Licences to Recusants under colour of a Proviso in 35. which can be construed only of those which were to be given by the Justices of Peace and not of the other Licences given by 35. in several other cases so that the Proviso's there permitting the Popish Recusant to Travel in case of Process or commandment by Privy Counsellors or the Queens Commissioners or Proclamation to render his body to the Sheriff remain still in force and unrepealed and the Recusant may take the benefit thereof at this day Stat. Sect. 8. Provided nevertheless and be it further Enacted by this present Parliament and by the Authority of the same That it shall and may be lawful for the Kings most excellent Majesty his Heirs and Successors or for thrée or more of his Majesties most Honourable Privy Council or for threé or more of the Privy Council of his Heirs or Successors in writing under the hands of the said Privy Counsellors Licence to a Popish Recusant confined to give Licence to every such Recusant to go and Travel out of the compass of the said five miles for such time as in the said Licence shall be contained for their travelling attending and returning and without any other Cause to be expressed within the said Licence And if any of the persons which are so confined by virtue of the said Statute as is aforesaid shall have necessary occasion or business to go and Travel out of the compass of the said five miles That then and in every such Case upon Licence in writing in that behalf to be gotten under the Hands and Seals of four of the Iustices of Peace of the same County Limit Division or place next adjoyning to the place of abode of such Recusant with the privity and assent in writing of the Bishop of the Diocess The effect of a Licence to be granted by four Justices of Peace or of the Lieutenant or of any Deputy Lieutenant of the same County residing within the said County or Liberty under their Hands and Seals In every of which Licence or Licences in writing so to be had and made shall be specified and contained both the particular cause of the said Licence and the time how long the said party licensed shall be absent in travelling attending and returning It shall and may thereupon be lawful for every such person so licenced to go and Travel about such their necessary business and for such time only for their travelling attending and returning as shall be comprized in the said Licence the said party so licenced first taking his corporal Oath before the said Four Iustices of the Peace or any of them who shall have Authority by virtue of this Act to minister the same that he hath truly informed them of the Cause of his Iourney and that he shall not make any causless stays And that all and every Licence hereafter to be made in this behalf contrary to the tenor effect and true meaning of this Statute shall be utterly void frustrate and of none effect Any thing in the said former Act or in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding And every person so confined which shall depart or go above five miles from the place whereunto he is or shall be confined not having such Licence and not having taken such Oath as aforesaid shall incur the pain and penalty and forfeit as a Recusant Convicted and passing or going above five miles from the said place whereunto he is or shall be confined by the said Statute of tricesimo quinto Elizabethae should do For the Kings most Excellent Majesty c. or for thrée or more of his Majesties most Honorable Privy Councel c. to give Licence to every such Recusant What recusants may be Licensed to travel above five miles By such Recusant is intended here such Recusant as is confined by the Statute of 35 Eliz. 2. and not only such as was mentioned in the foregoing Clause of recital For that recital is imperfect in that it mentions only the Popish Recusant Convicted Stat. 35 Eliz. 2 Imperfect recital here whereas 35 Eliz. speaks as well of the Popish
assent in one Writing that the assent of the Deputy Lieutenant was contained in the Licence granted by the four Justices of Peace and was not separate and distinct by it self Cro. Jac. supra but to this the Court made no answer And it seems that such an Assent is well enough though in the same Writing with the Licence if it be expressed that the four Justices do Licence and the Deputy Lieutenant doth assent and such Writing be under the Hands and Seals of all five Residing within the said County or Liberty Residence in the County These words seem to refer as well to the Bishop and Lieutenant as to the Deputy Lieutenant so that if a Bishops Diocess extends into divers Counties and he resides in one of them His assent can be good only for the Popish Recusants of that County where he resides and not for those of any other part of his Diocess so if a Lieutenant reside out of the County whereof he is Lieutenant his assent to such Licence is void And that these words residing within the said County or Liberty cannot be restrained to the Deputy Lieutenant only appears by those next beforegoing viz. of the same County which clearly relate to the Lieutenant as well as to the Deputy Lieutenant and by consequence so must the word immediately subsequent viz. Residing And as to the Bishop the inconvenience is the same as in the Case of the Lieutenant For by their remoteness they are disabled to judge of the condition and behaviour of the Recusant to be Licenced and of the circumstances wherein he stands and whether such Licence may be granted to him without hazard of the publick safety which seems to be the reason of this restriction to the County or Liberty where the party who is to assent resides and holds as well in the Case of the Bishop or Lieutenant as of any Deputy Lieutenant residing out of the County Particular cause of the Licence The particular cause of the said Licence In Maxfields Case B. R. another exception to the Licence granted by the four Justices was that it was said to be granted for certain urgent Causes but no particular Cause for the Recusants travel was expressed in the Licence Cro. Jac. supra And this seems to be a good exception for the inserting into the Licence that the Popish Recusant hath urgent or necessary occasion or business answers only the former part of this Proviso which gives the four Justices power to Licence him if he hath necessary occasion or business to travel out of the compass of five miles but withal it ought to be mentioned in the Licence particularly what that occasion or business is which is the cause of the Licence for so this Act here expresly appoints And therefore that form of a Licence for the Recusant to Travel which Dalton V. cap. 124. tit Licences hath set down wherein no other Cause is mentioned but urgent and necessary business seems too short and general and is not to be relied on which defect the Author of the late Additions to Dalton would have done well to have rectified Oath of Allegiance First taking his Corporal Oath In Mansfields Case Moore 836. C. 1127. There is another Oath mentioned for the Popish Recusant to take before he can be Licensed to Travel and that is the Oath of Allegiance prescribed by the Stat. of 3 Jac. cap. 4. Stat. 3 Jac. 4. For it s there said That in an Information brought against the Recusant for Travelling out of the compass of five miles the Defendant pleaded a Licence from four Justices of Peace and his Plea was disallowed because among other things he did not shew that before the Licence he had taken the Oath of Allegiance yet Quaere of this and by what Law the omitting to take that Oath makes the Licence void But I rather think it to be a mistake and that such an exception might be moved but the Plea not disallowed for that reason One Justice may give the Recusant his Oath Before the said four Iustices of the Peace or any of them Mr. Sheapard thinks that no less then two of the four Justices of Peace can minister this Oath to the Recusant Sure guide cap. 14. Sect. 5. But I take it to be clear that any one of the four Justices may minister the Oath in this Case And there is a great difference between any Justices for that denotes the plural number as in the subsequent Clause about Armor where any Justices may imprison the Offender that is any two Justices or more and any of the Justices as here which denotes the singular number and the following words who shall have Authority by vertue of this Act to minister the same may be well enough applied to any one Justice of Peace That he hath truly informed them of the cause of his Iourney Averment that the cause is true If an Information be brought against a Popish Recusant for travelling out of his compass of five miles and he plead a a Licence from four Justices of Peace it seems necessary that he aver in his Plea that the Cause contained in his Licence was true and real Vide Moore 836. C. 1127. And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 9. A Recusant disabled to execute certain Offices and Functions That no Recusant convict shall at any time after the end of this Session of Parliament practise the Common Law of this Realm as a Chancellor Clerk Attorney or Solicitor in the same nor shall practise the Civil Law as Advocate or Proctor nor practise Physick nor exercise or use the Trade or Art of an Apothecary nor shall be Iudge Minister Clerk or Steward of or in any Court or kéep any Court nor shall be Register or Town Clerk or other Minister or Officer in any Court nor shall bear any Office or Charge as Captain Lieutenant Corporal Sergeant Ancient-bearer or other Office in Camp Troup Band or Company of Souldiers nor shall be Captain Master Governor or bear any Office or Charge of or in any Ship Castle or Fortress of the Kings Majesties his Heirs and Successors but be utterly dissabled for the same and every person offending herein shall also forfeit for every such offence One hundred pounds the one moity whereof shall be to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors and the other moiety to him that will sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of the Kings Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed And be it also Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 10. No Popish Recusant shall be a publick Officer That no Popish Recusant convict nor any having a Wife being a Popish Recusant convict shall at any time after the end of this Session of Parliament or any Popish Recusant hereafter to be convict or having a Wife which hereafter shall
which the King hath already done or in respect of what the Recusant after his conviction hath omitted to do And therefore if a man be convicted of recusancy upon a popular Suit or an Action of Debt at the Kings Suit alone in which Cases the penalty of Twenty pounds per month is not appropriated to the King for the time to come and he pays the penalty recovered or if he be Convicted upon Indictment and after such Conviction duly pays the Twenty pounds per month into the Exchequer and the King makes no Election to take the two third parts of his Estate in lieu thereof such Recusant may by this Proviso in either of those Cases Sue or Prosecute for any of his Lands Tenements Leases Rents Annuities or Hereditaments whatsoever notwithstanding his Conviction For when the penalty recovered is satisfied or the forfeiture appropriated to the King is duly paid into the Exchequer his Lands c. are not to be seized by force of any Law for Recusancy unless the King make his Election to have the two parts And until that Election they cannot in the sense of this Proviso be said to be Lands to be seized or taken into the Kings hands for that the King cannot have the two parts and the Twenty pounds per month both But if the King make no such Election and the Twenty pounds per month be duly paid into the Exchequer the Recusant is to hold and enjoy all his Lands Tenements c. as if he had never been convicted And during that time there can be no distinction made between the two parts and the Recusant's third part so that in this Case the Recusant must either be enabled to Sue and Prosecute for all his Lands c. or none and to think the latter of these were to render this Proviso nugatory and vain But when once the King hath seized the two thirds for recusancy either by way of Election or for nonpayment of the penalty then the Recusant is enabled to Sue only for the other third part whether in the hands of the King or of a common person Stat. Sect. 14. And for that Popish Recusants are not usually Married nor their Children Christned nor themselves Buried according to the Law of the Church of England but the same are done superstitiously by Popish Persons in secret whereby the days of their Marriages Births and Burials cannot be certainly known Stat. Sect. 15. Marriages of Popish Recusants Be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament That every man being or which shall be a Popish Recusant convicted and who shall be hereafter Married otherwise then in some open Church or Chappel and otherwise then according to the Orders of the Church of England by a Minister lawfully Authorized shall be utterly disabled and excluded to have any Estate of Fréehold into any the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of his Wife as Tenant by the Courtesie of England And that every Woman being or which shall be a Popish Recusant convicted and who shall be hereafter Married in other form then as aforesaid shall be utterly excluded and disabled not only to claim any Dower of the Inheritance of her Husband whereof she may be endowable or any Iointure of the Lands and Hereditaments of her Husband or any of his Ancestors but also of her Widows Estate and Frank-bank in any Customary Lands whereof her Husband died seized and likewise be disabled and excluded to have or enjoy any part or portion of the goods of her said Husband by vertue of any custom of any County City or Place where the same shall lie or be And if any such man shall be Married with any Woman contrary to the intent and true meaning of this Act which Woman hath or shall have no Lands Tenements or Hereditaments whereof he may be intituled to be Tenant by the Curtesie Then such man so Marrying as aforesaid shall forfeit and lose One hundred pounds the one half thereof to be to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors and the other moiety to such person or persons as shall Sue for the same by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of the Kings Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed Where the Husband is no offender Every man being or which shall be a Popish Recusant Convicted A Man who is no Popish Recusant Convicted marries a Woman who is a Popish Recusant Convicted in other form then is here appointed He shall not forfeit any thing or be disabled by this Act. By a Minister lawfully Authorized Minister lawfully Authorized In an Information upon this Statute for being married otherwise then is here appointed it is sufficient for the Defendant to say that he was married c. by a Minister lawfully Authorized without shewing in particular how or where or when but if a Traverse come of the other side then the Defendant is in his Rejoynder to shew the time and place Vide Bulstrode 2. 50. 52. Creswich against Rookesby Every Woman being or which shall be a Popish Recusant Convicted A Woman who is no Popish Recusant Convicted Where the Wife is no offender marries a Man who is a Popish Recusant Convicted in other form than is here appointed she shall not be disabled by this Branch of the Act For the forfeiture or disability extends only to the Popish Recusant Convicted and as in the Case before recited the Woman only shall be disabled so in this Case the Man only shall forfeit or be disabled Or any Ioynture of the Lands and Hereditaments of her Husband or any of his Ancestors Joynture A Feme who is a Popish Recusant Convicted and married otherwise then is appointed by this Act is not therefore disabled to have any sort of Joynture as Wingate tit Crowne n. 136. mistakes but only such Joynture as is of the Lands or Hereditaments of her Husband or some of his Ancestors and therefore if in consideration of some service done or for some other consideration and for the advancement of A. in marriage Lands are setled upon his intended Wife for her Joynture by some person besides A. who is not any of the Ancestors of A. such Joynture is not within this Act nor shall the Wife although a Popish Recusant Convicted and married otherwise c. be disabled by any strained construction of this Law to enjoy the Lands after her Husbands death For a penal Law shall be taken strictly and not by equity or intendment especially where the intent of the Lawmakers doth not appear to the contrary and the Case such as doth but rarely happen And 't is a good Rule in the construction of Statute Laws which the late Lord Chief Justice Vaughan hath laid down in his Argument of Bole and Hortons Case Mich. 25. Car. 2. viz. when the words of a Law extend not to an inconvenience rarely happening and do to those which often
as the person so sent or gone beyond the Seas shall conform him or her self and take the aforesaid Oath and receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper And after such Oath taken and conforming of himself and receiving the Sacrament of the Supper of the Lord he or they which have so received the profits of the said Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods and Chattels or any of them shall make account of the profits so received and in reasonable time make payment thereof and restore the value of the said Goods to such person as shall so conform him or her self as aforesaid And of him that sendeth them And that all such persons as shall send the said Child or Children over Seas without Licence as aforesaid unless the said Child or Children be Merchants or their Apprentices or Factors Marriners or Soldiers shall forfeit one hundred pounds to be divided had and recovered in thrée equal parts whereof the one third part shall be to the King his Heirs and Successors the other third part to such as shall sue for the same and the other third part to the Poor of such Parish where such Offender doth inhabit or remain by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any the Kings Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed Next of kin who The next of his or her kin It hath been a great Question formerly whether the Mother can be said to be of kin to the Child and it hath been held in the negative as well by the Common Lawyers as Civilians as appears by the Case in 5 E. 6. called the Duke of Suffolks Case and that of Browne and Shelton Bro. tit Administr ' 47. But the Law is now held to be otherwise viz. That the Mother shall be taken to be of kin to the Child and that in a nearer degree then is the Brother or Sister And that she shall be preferred in the Case of an Administration upon the Statute of 21 H. 8. cap. 5. and of Guardianship by the Statute of Marlebridge where a man dies seized of Lands holden in Socage Which later Opinion agreeth with that of Littleton in his tenures fo 1. where he saith That the Parent is nearer of blood to the Child then the Uncle vide Co. 1. Inst 88. And in Ratcliffes Case Co. 3.40 the Duke of Suffolks Case is denied to be Law So that if any Child be sent or go beyond the Seas contrary to this Act his Mother shall be preferred before his Brother or Sister and as next of kin may have and enjoy his Lands c. unless she be a Popish Recusant For next of kin And who not or next of blood shall not be accounted here by course of descent but as in the Case of a purchase where a Remainder is limited to the next of blood or kin And therefore if a man hath issue three Sons A. B. and C. and dieth A. and B. have issue each of them a Son and die The Son of B. goeth beyond the Seas contrary to this Act In this Case C. the youngest Uncle shall by force of this Act have and enjoy the Lands of the Offender until his Conformity and not the Son of A. the elder Uncle For that C. hath in him jus propinquitatis as being the Uncle and so nearer of kin then the Cousin german And yet the Son of A. is heir at Law jure representationis as being the Son of the eldest Brother Vide Co. 1. Inst 10. Palmer 304 305. Periman versus Pierce Shall have and enjoy the said Lands c. What is forfeited It was held by Montague and Hobart Chief Justices Pasch 15 Jac. in Tredway's Case That if a person goes beyond the Seas contrary to this Act yet the State of the Land is not forfeited nor setled in the next of kin but vests in the heir himself who is the Offender For the Statute saith not that he shall not take by descent but only that he shall take no benefit by descent and that therefore this Statute differs from those of 5 R. 2. of consenting to Ravishment Stat. 5 R. 2. 11 H. 7. Sale by the heir and 11 H. 7. of discontinuances by Women And Hobart said That if the Heir beyond Sea bargain and sell the Land descended to him he shall prevent the next of kin if he hath not entred And if he hath entred the Land shall be taken from him Quaere of this for Tanfeild Chief Baron seemed to be of a contrary Opinion in the main point and held that the State of the Land is setled by this Act in the next of kin Ley 59. Note in the Report of this Case of Tredway it s said to be the meaning of this Act that the profits of the Land should be received by the next of kin during the Offenders Non-conformity But these words have and enjoy seem to imply some what more and that the next of kin shall have the Land it self All such persons as shall send the said Child or Children c. Here Wingate tit Crown numb 139. mistakes the person who shall forfeit the hundred pounds Forfeiture of 100 l. applying it to the Child who goes beyond Sea and not to the person who sends him Stat. Sect. 19. The forfeiture of those already gone beyond the Seas And for that many Subjects of this Realm being neither Merchants nor their Factors nor Apprentices Soldiers nor Marriners are of late gone beyond the Seas without Licence and are not as yet returned Be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That if any of the said persons so gone beyond the Seas without Licence which are not yet returned shall not within six months next after their return into this Realm then being of the age of Eighteén years or more take the Oath above specified before some Iustice of Peace of the County Liberty or Limit where such person shall inhabit or remain that then every such Offender shall take no benefit by any gift conveyance descent devise or otherwise of or to any Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods or Chattels until he or they being of the said age of Eightéen years or above take the said Oath and that likewise in the mean time the next of kin to the person so offending which shall be no Popish Recusant shall have and enjoy the said Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods and Chattels so given conveyed descended or devised until such time as the person so offending shall conform himself and take the aforesaid Oath and receive the said Sacrament of the Lords Supper And after such conforming taking of the said Oath and receiving of the said Sacrament he or they that shall have so received the profits of the said Lands Tenements Hereditaments Goods and Chattels shall make account of the profits so received and in reasonable time make payment thereof and of the value of such Goods and Chattels to
such person as shall so conform him or her self as aforesaid Stat. Sect. 20. A Popish Recusant shall not Present to a Benefice nor grant the next avoidance c. And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That every person or persons that is or shall be a Popish Recusant Convict during the time that he shall be or remain a Recusant shall from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament be utterly disabled to present to any Benefice with cure or without cure Prebend or any other Ecclesiastical living or to collate or nominate to any Freé-school Hospital or Donative whatsoever and from the beginning of this present Session of Parliament shall likewise be disabled to grant any avoidance to any Benefice Prebend or other Ecclesiastical living And that the Chancellor and Schollers of the Vniversity of Oxford so often as any of them shall be void shall have the Presentation Nomination Collation and Donation of and to every such Benefice Prebend or Ecclesiastical Living School Hospital and Donative set lying and being in the Counties of Oxford Kent Middlesex Sussex Surrey Hampshire Berkshire Buckinghamshire Gloucestershire Worcestershire Staffordshire Warwickshire Wiltshire Somersetshire Devonshire Cornwall Dorsetshire Herefordshire Northamptonshire Pembrokeshire Carmarthenshire Brecknockshire Monmouthshire Cardiganshire Montgomeryshire the City of London and in every City and Town being a County of it self The Chancellor and Schollers of Oxford and Cambridge shall Present to a Popish Recusants Benefice c. lying and being within any of the Limits or Precincts of any of the Counties aforesaid or in or within any of them as shall happen to be void during such time as the Patron thereof shall be and remain a Recusant Convict as aforesaid And that the Chancellor and Schollers of the Vniversity of Cambridge shall have the Presentation Nomination Collation and Donation of and to every such Benefice Prebend or Ecclesiastical Living School Hospital and Donative set lying and being in the Counties of Essex Hartfordshire Bedfordshire Cambridgeshire Huntingtonshire Suffolk Norfolk Lincolnshire Rutlandshire Leicestershire Darbyshire Nottinghamshire Shropshire Cheshire Lancashire Yorkshire the County of Durham Northumberland Cumberland Westmerland Radnorshire Denbighshire Flintshire Carnarvonshire Angleseyshire Merionethshire Glamorganshire and in every City and Town being a County of it self lying within any of the Limits or Precincts of any of the Counties last before mentioned or in or within any of them as shall happen to be void during such time as the Patron thereof shall be and remain a Recusant Convict as aforesaid Provided None shall be presented who hath another Benefice with cure of Souls That neither of the said Chancellors and Schollers of either the said Vniversities shall present or nominate to any Benefice with Cure Prebend or other Ecclesiastical living any such person as shall then have any other Benefice with cure of Souls And if any such Presentation or Nomination shall be had or made of any such person so beneficed the said Presentation or Nomination shall be utterly void Any thing in this Act to the contrary notwithstanding Grant of the next avoidance where void From and after the end of this present Session of Parliament A man seized of an Advowson grants the next avoidance and then becomes a Popish Recusant Convict The grant of the next Avoidance is void and the University shall Present For the foregoing words during his Recusancy do not import the time when his disability shall begin but when it shall end viz. when he remains no longer a Recusant But when once he becomes a Popish Recusant Convict his disability shall have relation Relation to all the time going before scil from the end of that Session of Parliament wherein this Act was made Co. 10. 55 56. Case of the Chancellor c. of the University of Oxford Jones 20. Standen al' versus University d' Oxon Whitton Retrospects And such retrospects are usual in Acts of Parliament For which see the Cases cited in Co. 10. supra Recusancy by Covin And yet if after the Grant of the next Avoidance the Patron or Grantor becomes a Popish Recusant convict by Covin and to the intent to make void such his Grant this shall not defeat the interest of the Grantee but he may present when the Church becomes void notwithstanding such Conviction Jones 20. Averment Verdict But then the Covin must be averred by the Grantee and found by the Jury to be to that particular intent as in the Case herein after mentioned where the Recusant grants away the Advowson by Covin which vide postea A Recusant disabled to nominate Be utterly disabled to Present to any Benefice c. A man hath the right of nomination to a Benefice which is presentative and another hath the right of Presentation If he who hath the right of Nomination become a Popish Recusant Convict I conceive he is disabled by this Act to nominate For although only the word Present be here used as to a Benefice or Ecclesiastical living presentative yet this shall extend as well to Nomination For the intent of the Act is to prevent a Recusant from appointing who shall be Incumbent and the Case of Nomination is in equal mischief with that of Presentation And if the Recusant should not be disabled to Nominate as well as to Present the intent of the Act would be eluded For he that hath the right of Nomination is in effect the Patron and he that Presents at the Nomination of another is but as a Messenger between him and the Ordinary 14 H. 4. 11. And if he who is to Present Presents any other then the person nominated to him or doth not Present the person nominated he who nominates may bring a Quare Impedit against him And he who hath the Nomination must joyntly with him who hath the Presentation confirm the Lease of the Incumbent Moore 49. C. 147. Fitz. n. b. 33. 'T is true the general Rule is Penal Statues how expounded that penal Statutes shall not be taken by Equity from whence may be inferred that this Statute only disabling a Recusant to present to a Benefice presentative shall not be extended to disable him to nominate although it be within the same mischief but that Rule hath some exceptions and where the intent of the makers of the Law plainly appeares by other words in the same Statute a penal Statute shall be expounded largely and according to that intent beyond the Letter as in the Case of Simony upon the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 6. Stat. 31 Eliz. 6. Hobart 75. Now in the subsequent Clause touching the University the nomination as well as presentation is given to them and consequently the Recusant was intended to be disabled in the one Case as well as the other Besides the words disabled to present may be aptly enough expounded disabled to nominate Presentment in whom For the presentment is truly
meét to be Executors or Administrators to any person or persons whatsoever nor to have the Education of their own Children much less of the Children of any other of the Kings Subjects nor to have the marriage of them Be it therefore Enacted by the Authority aforesaid A Recusant shall not be Executor or Administrator That such Recusants convicted or which shall be convicted at the time of the death of any Testator or at the time of the granting of any Administration shall be disabled to be Executor or Administrator by force of any Testament hereafter to be made or Letters of Administration hereafter to be granted Or Guardian nor shall have the custody of any Child as Guardian in Chivalry Guardian in Socage or Guardian in nurture of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments being Fréehold or Copyhold but shall be adjudged disabled to have any such Wardship or Custody of any such Child or of their Lands Tenements or Hereditaments being Fréehold or Copyhold as aforesaid Who shall have the Wardship And that for the better Education and Preservation of the said Children and of their Estates the next of the kin to such Child or Children to whom the said Lands Tenements or Hereditaments of such Child or Children cannot lawfully descend who shall usually resort to some Church or Chappel and there hear Divine Service and receive the holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper thrice in the year next before according to the Laws of this Realm shall have the Custody and Education of the same Child and of his said Lands and Tenements being holden in Knights Service until the full age of the said Ward of one and twenty years And of his said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments being holden in Socage as a Guardian in Socage And of the said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments holden by Copy of Court Roll of any Mannor so long as the Custom of the said Mannor shall permit and allow the same and in every of the said Cases shall yield an Accompt of the profits thereof to the said Ward as the Case shall require And that if at any time hereafter any of the Wards of the Kings Majesty or of any other shall be granted or sold to any Popish Recusant Convict such Grant or Sale shall be utterly void and of none effect Convicted at the time of the death of any Testator or at the time of the granting of any Administration Granting of Administration These words are to be construed reddendo singula singulis viz. That the Recusant shall be disabled to be Executor if he be convicted at the time of the death of the Testator or to be Administrator if he be Convicted at the time of the granting of Letters of Administration For so these words at the time of the granting of any Administration are here to be understood And therefore if a man makes his Will and therein appoints a Recusant Convict to be his Executor Executor where not disabled and before the Testators death the Conviction is removed by Reversal of the Judgment or avoided or discharged for some defect in the Indictment Proclamation or other proceedings and then the Testator dies In such Case the Recusant is not by this Act disabled to be Executor For although the naming of an Executor is in Law a granting of Administration And if a man by his last Will grants the Administration of his Goods and Chattels to J. S. without more saying thereby J. S. is made his Executor Dyer 290. So that the naming of an Executor and the granting of Administration seem to be the same thing yet this is not a granting of Administration within the meaning of this Act Administration here relating only to an Administrator and not to an Executor besides the naming of an Executor amounts not to a compleat grant of Administration until the Testators death For then and not before the Will becomes in force And if the party stands not then convicted he is not disabled Much less shall he be disabled to be Executor who is not convicted at the time of the Testators death although he be convicted at the time of the Probate of the Will For if these words granting of Administration should relate to an Executor as well as to an Administrator which in truth they do not yet the power given to the Executor by the Ordinary or Ecclesiastical Judge upon the probate of the Will cannot be called a granting but only a committing of Administration Committing of Administration What the Ordinary grants to an Executor according to the Will of the deceased And in such Case all that the Ordinary or Ecclesiastical Judge can grant are Letters testifying what the Testator hath already given to the Executor and a Power or Authority to execute the Will As Guardian in Chivalry Although the Recusant seized in Chivalry and Convicted could not have been Guardian yet if he had granted the Seigniory Seigniory granted over to one who was no Recusant the Grantee should have been Guardian notwithstanding this Act for the mischief here intended to be prevented was removed when the Seigniory was granted to another who was no Recusant By Jones Justice C. B. Hill 20. Jac. Jones 19. So if the King had seized Seized by the King the Recusants Seigniory as part of his two parts the King should have had the Wardship and not the next of kin for the same reason Jones 21. Stat. Sect. 22. Popish Books And be it further Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That no person or persons shall bring from beyond the Seas nor shall Print sell or buy any Popish Primmers Ladies Psalters Manuels Rosaries Popish Catechisms Missals Breviaries Portalls Legends and Lives of Saints containing superstitious matter Printed or Written in any Language whatsoever nor any other superstitious Books Printed or Written in the English Tongue upon pain of forfeiture of Forty shillings for every such Book one third part thereof to be to the Kings Majesty his Heirs and Successors one other third part to him that will sue for the same and the other third part to the Poor of the Parish where such Book or Books shall be found to be recovered by Action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any of the Kings Majesties Courts of Record wherein no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law shall be admitted or allowed and the said Books to be burned Stat. Sect. 23. Popish Reliques and Books And that it shall be lawfull for any two Iustices of Peace within the Limits of their Iurisdiction or Authority and to all Mayors Bailiffs and Chief Officers of Cities and Towns Corporate in their Liberties from time to time to search the Houses and Lodgings of every Popish Recusant Convict or of every person whose Wife is or shall be a Popish Recusant Convict for Popish Books and Reliques of Popery And that if any Altar Pix Beads Pictures or such like Popish Reliques or any Popish Book
Colledges that now are or hereafter shall be received into the same being under the Degrée of a Baron before the President Master Provost Warden or other head or chief Governour of that Colledge Hall or House whereinto he shall be received and in the open Hall And all Doctors of Physick Doctors and Practisers of Physick and all other who practise Physick that now are or hereafter shall be admitted into the Colledge of Physitians in London before the President of the same Colledge for the time being And all Aldermen Sheriffs or Vnder-Officers whatsoever of the Cities and Towns Corporate Aldermen Sheriffs Under-Officers and Freemen of Cities and Towns Corporate and all such as hereafter shall be made Fréemen of the said City or Town Corporate before the Mayor Bailiffs or other Chief Officer of the said City or Town in the open Hall And to the intent that due execution may be had of the premisses without delay When the said persons shall take the said Oath It is further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That all the persons beforenamed who have any certain time limited or expressed when to take the aforesaid Oath shall at the time therein prescribed take the same and the rest within six months next after the end of this present Session of Parliament And be it further Enacted by Authority of this present Parliament Stat. Sect. 4. Who may tender the said Oath and to whom That it shall and may be lawful to and for any one of the Privy Council of your Highness or of your Heirs and Successors and to and for every Bishop within his Diocess to require any Baron or Baroness of the age of Eightéen years or above to take the said Oath and to and for any two Iustices of Peace within any County City or Town Corporate whereof one to be of the Quorum to require any person or persons of the age of Eightéen years or above under the Degrée of a Baron or Baroness to take the said Oath And if any person or persons of or above the said age and degrée now stand or hereafter any time shall stand and be Presented Indicted or Convicted for not coming to Church or not receiving the Holy Communion or Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm before the Ordinary or other having lawful power to take such Presentment or Indictment Then thrée of the Privy Council of your Highness your Heirs and Successors whereof the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Lord Privy Seal or Principal Secretary to be one upon knowledge thereof shall require such person or persons to take the said Oath And if any other person or persons whatsoever of and above the said age and under the said degrée now stand or at any time hereafter shall stand and be Presented Indicted or Convicted for not coming to Church or receiving the Holy Communion or Sacrament of the Lords Supper according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm before the Ordinary or any other having lawful power to take such Presentment or Indictment Or if the Minister Petty Constable and Church-wardens or any two of them shall at any time hereafter complain to any Iustice of Peace near adjoyning to the place where any person complained of shall dwell and the said Iustice shall find cause of suspition That then any one Iustice of Peace within whose Commission or Power such person or persons shall at any time hereafter be or to whom complaint shall be made as aforesaid shall upon notice thereof require such person or persons to take the said Oath For any two Iustices of Peace within any County City or Town Corporate c. The two Justices of Peace may require this Oath of any person that shall happen to be within their Jurisdiction although his habitation be in another County or Liberty For the Oath of Allegiance sequitur personam non locum This Oath sequitur personam non locum Bulstrode 2. 155. The King against Griffith al' To require any person or persons This is an enlargement of the power given to two Justices of Peace Power of Justices of Peace enlarged by 3 Jac. cap. 4. For thereby they could have required the Oath but only in some particular Cases vide that Statute Sect. 10. But by this Statute they may require it of any person whatsoever of competent age and under the degree of a Baron or Baroness Warrant to bring the party The Justices of Peace in this Case or the Justice of Peace in the following Case may make his or their special Warrant to the Constable to bring the party before the said Justice or Justices to take the Oath For the Statute by giving them power to require the Oath doth implicitely authorize them to make such a Warrant Quando lex aliquid alicui concedit conceditur id sine quo res ipsa esse non potest And it is against the Office of the Justices of Peace and the Authority hereby given them to go and seek the party Co. 12. 130. But the Constable cannot by virtue of such Warrant break the House Breaking the House where the party is For he is no Offender before he refuse the Oath or commit some Contempt to the King Ibid. And if any person or persons of or above the said age and degreée That is of the said age and above the said Degree of a Baron Persons above the degree of a Baron or Baroness For so the words must be taken viz. conjunctively and not of such who are of the degree of a Baron or Baroness and no more For the precedent words appointed that the Oath may be tendred to such by any Privy Counsellor or the Bishop of the Diocess in all cases although they were never Convicted Indicted or Presented But to such Noblemen or Noblewomen as are above that degree it cannot be tendred by virtue of this Act unless they have been before Convicted Indicted or Presented for not coming to Church or not receiving the Sacrament And in those Cases no less then three Privy Counsellors Quorum unus c. can tender it Co. 12. 130 131. And if any other person or persons whatsoever c. under the said Degreé A Baroness or any Woman above that Degree Noblewoman by Marriage who is not Noble by birth but only by Marriage becomes a Widow and takes a second Husband under the Degree of Nobility and is Convicted Indicted or Presented of Recusancy or complained of by the Minister c. to a Justice of Peace who finds cause of suspition The Justice of Peace may require her to take this Oath although she were once Noble For by her second Marriage she hath lost her Nobility and name of Dignity together with the priviledges of her Nobility Quando mulier Nobilis nupserit ignobili desinit esse Nobilis which is to be understood of Nobility acquired by Marriage For that which was gotten by