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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from the last day of this Session of Parliament deemed and remain utterly repealed void and of none effect to all intents and purposes Any thing in the said several Acts or any of them contained or any other matter or cause to the contrary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
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
Periam Justices of Assize by vertue of their Commission of Oyer and Terminer For the Certificate here mentioned which is to be sent into the Kings Bench is required only of the Justices of Assize and Justices of Peace And of Oyer and Terminer But Justices of Oyer and Terminer upon Indictments taken before them may proceed to hear and determine as Manwood and Periam did in that Case as well for the first as second Offence Savile 46. 47. C. 99. For which first Offence in extolling the Bishop of Romes Authority it seems the Justices of Assize who have a Commission of Oyer and Terminer have their election either as Justices of Assize to inquire only and then they must certifie the Presentment or Indictment into the Kings Bench or to inquire hear and determine as they are Justices of Oyer and Terminer and then they are not bound to certifie For Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer are not within the meaning of this Branch of the Statute as was held in that Case of Slade and Bodye By what hath been said it appears that the question there put by Ayloffe scil how they could proceed upon such an Indictmen not certified into the Kings Bench within forty days was grounded upon a double mistake 1. That Justices of Oyer and Terminer were bound to certifie into the Kings Bench all Indictments for extolling the Authority of the Bishop of Rome taken before them 2. That Indictments for the second Offence were within the meaning of this Branch of the Statute For he speaks there of the second Indictment which was for High Treason Every Presentment Presentment what By Presentment here is to be understood not only that which is properly so called which the Jurors find and present to the Court without any former Indictment delivered them but also an Indictment which is drawn and ingrossed in form of Law and delivered to the Jurors to be inquired of which Indictment the Justices here named have power to take by force of the word inquire and is included within the word Presentment being a species of it For every Indictment found by the Jurors is a Presentment and the Record saith Juratores praesentant c. when they find an Indictment But every Presentment is not an Indictment Co. 2. Inst. 739. And as well the one as the other touching the Offences aforesaid must be certified into the Kings Bench. If the Term be then open First day of the Term. The Essoin day is the first day of the Term properly so called and on that day the Term is open At the first day of full Term. That is Quarto die post Full Term. which is the usual day of appearance and the first day of every Term in common reputation For the Essoin day is the first day of the Term only to some particular intents and 't is not full Term till quarto die post Savile 124. Co. 193. Matthew vers Harcourt So that if the Forty days expire on the day before the Essoin day the Presentment need not be certified until quarto die post Presentments when to be certified which is the day of appearance but if they expire on the Essoin day or afterwards and before the quarto die post the Justices here named must not stay till the quarto die post but are bound to certifie by the last day of the Forty days under the penalty here limited for the Term was then open Stat. Sect. 4. Who shall take the Oath set forth A● 1 E. 1. And moreover be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That as well all manner of Persons expressed and appointed in and by the Act made in the first year of the Quéens Majesties Reign that now is intituled an Act restoring to the Crown the antient Iurisdiction over the estate Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing all Forraign Powers repugnant to the same to take the Oath expressed and set forth in the same As all other Persons which have taken or shall take Orders commonly called Ordines Sacros or Ecclesiastical Orders have béen or shall be promoted preferred or admitted to any Degreé of Learning in any Vniversity within this Realm or Dominions to the same belonging And all Schoolmasters and publick and private Teachers of Children as also all manner of Person and Persons that have taken or hereafter shall take any Degreé of Learning in or at the Common Laws of this Realm as well utter Barristers as Benchers Readers Ancients in any House or Houses of Court and all principal Treasurers and such as be of the grand Company of every Inn of Chancery and all Attorneys Prothonotaries and Philizers towards the Laws of this Realm and all manner of Sheriffs Escheators and Feodaries and all other Person and Persons which have taken or shall take upon him or them or have béen or shall be admitted to any Ministry or Office in at or belonging to the Common Law or any other Law or Laws of to or for the Execution of them or any of them used or allowed or at any time hereafter to be used or allowed within this Realm or any of the Dominions or Countries belonging or which hereafter shall happen to belong to the Crown or Dignity of the same and all other Officers or Ministers of or towards any Court whatsoever and every of them shall take and pronounce a Corporal Oath upon the Evangelists before he or they shall be admitted allowed or suffered to take upon him or them to use exercise supply or occupy any such Vocation Office Degrée Ministry Room or Service as is aforesaid and that in the open Court whereunto he doth or shall serve or belong And if he or they do not or shall not serve or belong to any Ordinary or open Court then he or they shall take and pronounce the Oath aforesaid in an open place before a convenient Assembly to witness the same and before such Person or Persons as have or shall have Authority by common use or otherwise to admit or call any such Person or Persons as is aforesaid to any such Vocation Office Ministry Room or Service or else before such Person or Persons as by the Queéns Highness her Heirs or Successors by Commission under the Great Seal of England shall be named or assigned to accept and take the same according to the tenor effect and form of the same Oath Verbatim which is and as it is already set forth to be taken in the aforesaid Act made in the First year of the Queéns Majesties Reign Admitted to any Ministry or Office What Officers are to take the Oath of Supremacy All persons who are preferred to any such Ministry or Office whether of the gift of the King or of a Subject are bound to take this Oath and not only such as are preferred by the King as 't is restrained in the late Additions to Dalton Cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 9. Belonging to the Common Law
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.
one as conceals his true Name or Quality or cannot give a good Accompt what he is For so it must be reasonably intended and not of all Travellers through the Country as Wingate tit Crowne numb 106. mistakes for it appears by the other qualifications here enumerated that the intent of the Act is that it shall be offered by the Bishop or two Justices to such only of whom there is any just cause of suspition Stat. Sect. 11. Refusal of the Oath And be it further Enacted That if any such person or persons other than Noblemen or Noblewomen shall refuse to answer upon Oath to such Bishop or Iustices of Peace examining him or her as aforesaid or to take the said Oath so duly tendred unto him or her by such Bishop or two such Iustices of Peace out of Sessions that then the said Bishop or Iustices of Peace shall and may commit the same person to the common Goal there to remain without Bail or Mainprize until the next Assizes or General or Quarter Sessions to be holden for the said Shire Division Limit or Liberty where the said Oath shall be again in the said open Assizes or Sessions required of such person by the said Iustices of Assize or Iustices of Peace then and there present or the greater number of them And if the said person or persons or any other person whatsoever other then Noblemen or Noblewomen of the age of Eightéen years or above shall refuse to take the said Oath being tendred unto him or her by the Iustices of Assize and Goal delivery in their open Assizes or the Iustices of Peace or the greater part of them in their said general Quarter Sessions every person so refusing shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of Praemunire Praemunire made in the sixtéenth year of the Reign of King Richard the Second except Women Covert Women Covert who upon refusal of the said Oath shall be by the said Iustices of Assize in their open Assize or Iustices of Peace in their General or Quarter Sessions for the said Offence committed only to the common Goal there to remain without Bail or Mainprize till they will take the said Oath There to remain without Bail or Mainprize Sureties cannot be taken The Bishop or two Justices cannot take Sureties of him who refuses the Oath for his appearance at the Assizes or Sessions as Wingate tit Crowne numb 107. mistakes but must commit him immediately to Goal nor can any other Court or Justices Bail him in this Case Vntil the next Assizes or General or Quarter Sessions This being in the Disjunctive Commitment till Assizes or Sessions the Bishop or two Justices have their election to commit the party refusing the Oath either until the next Assizes or until the next Sessions as they shall think fit For some may be more aptly committed until the next Assizes and some until the next Sessions Co. 12. 131 132. What Sessions is here meant Sessions Stat. 23 Eliz. 1 Vide Stat. 23 Eliz. cap. 1. Sect. 7. And if the said person or persons or any other person whatsoever c shall refuse These words any other person whatsoever are exclusive of the said person or persons who are committed for refusal For 't is here in the disjunctive To whom the Oath may be tendred so that it seems that if any person whatsoever of the age of eighteen years or above and under the degree of a Nobleman or Noblewoman be at the Assizes or general Quarter Sessions of the Peace whether voluntarily or brought in upon Process on an Indictment of Recusancy or for any other matter and be there tendred this Oath and refuse to take it although it were never tendred to him before yet upon his refusal there he incurs a Praemunire And in this respect this Statute is more extensive then that of 7 Jac. cap. 6. Stat. 7 Jac. 6. where there must be a Prior tender and refusal of this Oath otherwise a refusal of it at the Assizes or Sessions doth not make a Praemunire by that Act. Vide Co. 12. 131. Shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire If a man be committed by the Bishop or two Justices of Peace for refusal of this Oath and the tender and refusal be expressed in the Mittimus the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions are bound to take notice of this tender and refusal and after they have there made the party a second tender of the Oath and he refuses it Indictments of Praemunire upon this Statute by which he incurs a Praemunire the Indictment against him to convict and attaint him of a Praemunire must contain all the special matter viz. that he stood Convicted or Indicted of Recusancy or that he had not received the Sacrament twice within the year next before or that passing through the Country and unknown being examined upon Oath he confessed or denied not c. as the Case is and that the Oath was tendred to him by the Bishop or two Justices of Peace Quorum unus c. and he refused it and that it was again tendred to him in open Court and he again refused it For in this Case the Mittimus Mittimus is the ground upon which he must be proceeded against at the Assizes or Sessions But if the first tender and refusal be not expressed in the Mittimus or Warrant of commitment there although there was a tender and refusal of the Oath before the Bishop or two Justices yet the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace in their Sessions can take no notice of it But they must there tender him the Oath without reference to any Prior tender which they may do by force of the said general words any other person whatsoever and if he refuse it he incurs a Praemunire And in this Case the Indictment may be short and general scil that he was tendred the Oath in open Court and refused it c. And so it must be in all Cases where in truth there was never any Prior tender and refusal Co. 12. 131 132. Stat. 7 Jac. 6. Justices of Peace Vide the Statute of 7. Jac. cap. 6. whereby the power of the Justices of Peace is in some particular Cases inlarged in reference to this Oath Stat. Sect 12. The Oath of Allegiance The form of which Oath hereafter followeth I A. B. do truly and sincerely acknowledge profess testifie and declare in my Conscience before God and the World That our Sovereign Lord King James is Lawful and Rightful King of this Realm and of all other his Majesties Dominions and Countries and that the Pope neither of himself nor by any Authority of the Church or See of Rome or by any other means with any other hath any Power or Authority to depose the King or to dispose any of his Majesties Kingdoms or Dominions or to Authorize any Foreign Prince to
invade or annoy him or his Countries or to discharge any of his Subjects of their Allegiance and Obedience to his Majesty or to give licence or leave to any of them to bear Arms raise Tumult or to offer any Violence or hurt to his Majesties Royal Person State or Government or to any of his Majesties Subjects within his Majesties Dominions Also I do swear from my Heart that notwithstanding any Declaration or sentence of Excommunication or deprivation made or granted or to be made or granted by the Pope or his Successors or by any Authority derived or pretended to be derived from him or his See against the said King his Heirs or Successors or any Absolution of the said Subjects from their Obedience I will bear Faith and true Allegiance to his Majesty his Heirs and Successors and him and them will defend to the uttermost of my power against all conspiracies and attempts whatsoever which shall be made against his or their Persons their Crown and Dignity by reason or colour of any such sentence or declaration or otherwise and will do my best indeavour to disclose and make known unto his Majesty his Heirs and Successors all Treasons and Traiterous Conspiracies which I shall know or hear of to be against him or any of them And I do further swear That I do from my Heart abhor detest and abjure as Impious and Heretical this damnable Doctrine and Position That Princes which be Excommunicated or Deprived by the Pope may be Deposed or Murthered by their Subjects or any other whatsoever And I do Believe and in Conscience am Resolved That neither the Pope nor any Person whatsoever hath Power to absolve me of this Oath or any part thereof which I acknowledge by good and full Authority to be lawfully Ministred unto me and do renounce all Pardons and Dispensations to the contrary And all these things I do plainly and sincerely acknowledge and swear according to these express words by me spoken and according to the plain and common sense and understanding of the same words without any Equivocation or mental Evasion or secret Reservation whatsoever And I do make this Recognition and Acknowledgment heartily willingly and truly upon the true Faith of a Christian So help me God Vnto which Oath so taken the said person shall subscribe his or her Name or Mark. If a man refuse to take any word of this Oath What is a refusal of the Oath 't is a refusal of the whole Bulstrode 1. 198. Lord Vaux his Case And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid Stat. Sect. 13. No Indictment or other proceedings against a Recusant shall be discharged or reversed for default of form That no Indictment or Indictments had or found or hereafter to be had or found against any person or persons for not repairing to some Church or Chappel or usual place of Common Prayer but absenting him or her self by the space of one month contrary to the Laws and Statutes in that behalf provided or for not receiving the said Sacrament contrary to this present Law nor any Proclamation Vtlawry or other procéeding thereupon shall at any time hereafter be avoided discharged or reversed by reason of any default in form or lack of form or other defect whatsoever other then by direct traverse to the point of not coming to Church or not receiving the said Sacrament whereof such person or persons hath beén or shall be Indicted but the same Indictment shall stand in force and be procéeded upon Any such default of form or other defect whatsoever notwithstanding Vtlawry A term for years sold upon an Outlawry restored A termor for years was outlawed upon an Indictment of Recusancy The Term was sold by the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer and afterwards the Outlawry was reversed The Question was whether upon Reversal of the Outlawry the Recusant should have restitution of his Term again And Periam Justice doubted thereof and observed that the Book of 11 H. 4. 65. which saith that the party outlawed shall upon reversal of the Outlawry have restitution speaks only of Goods seized but not of a term sold before But Anderson Chief Justice and Walmesly Justice held That the Termor in this Case should have his Term again in whose soever hands the Land came and upon whatsoever Consideration and not the money for which the Term was sold For the Outlawry being reversed it is as if there were no Record of it And the Queens Interest was but conditional scil if the Outlawry were good Nor is this like the Case where a Sheriff upon a Fieri facias Fieri facias and venditioni exponas sells a Term For there if the Judgment be reversed the party shall have the money for which the Term was sold but not restitution of the Term it self as was resolved 26 Eliz. Dyer 363. And the reason is because the Sheriff did no more then he was commanded For he was commanded to sell and therefore the Sale shall be good to all intents But in the Case of an Outlawry it is otherwise and there is no such Command which difference between a Fieri facias and Capias utlagatum was agreed in Dr. Drury's Case Co. 8. 143. And in the principal Case here Judgment was given for the Termor according to the Opinion of Anderson and Walmesly Cro. Pasch 34 Eliz. C. B. 278. Eyre versus Woodfine Where the Patron outlawed shall be restored to his presentment A man is seized of an Advowson in gross the Church becomes void and then the Patron is outlawed upon an Indictment of Recusancy whereupon the King presents the Presentee is instituted and inducted and afterwards the Outlawry is reversed In this Case the Patron shall be restored to his presentment So if the Patron of an Advowson in gross hath Judgment in a Quare Impedit and is afterwards outlawed for Recusancy and the King presents and the presentee is instituted and inducted In this Case the Patron shall have a Scire facias to execute the Judgment and shall oust the Presentee of the King And the reason in both these Cases is because upon the Reversal of an Outlawry the party shall be restored to all things which are principal and here the presentment was the principal thing forfeited by the Outlawry and therefore upon reversal the Patron shall be restored to it Vide Moore 269 270. C. 421. Beverleigh versus Cornwall Savile 89. C. 166. the same Case And where not But if the King upon an Outlawry seize a Mannor to which an Advowson is appendant and the Church becomes void whereupon the King presents and the presentee is inducted There 't is otherwise and the Kings presentee shall not be removed upon reversal of the Outlawry For the presentment in that Case is but as an accessary that follows the principal which is the Mannor the profits of which Mannor the King was to have during the Outlawry and consequently the
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
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
Conspiracies That then the said Obligation to be void And that for the due execution of this branch of this present Law Stat. Sect. 17. Who shall take the Obligation and minister the Oath it shall and may be lawfull to and for the Customer and Controller of every Port Haven or Creek or one of them and their or either of their Deputy or Deputies and none other to receive and accept all and every such Bond and Obligation to and for the uses aforesaid and to minister and give the Oath aforesaid according to the true intent of this Statute taking for such Bond six pence and no more and for the said Oath no Fée at all which said Customer and Controller shall Register and Certifie all and every such Bond and Oath so taken into the Court of Exchequer at Westminster once every year upon pain of five pounds for every Bond not so certified Forfeiture for not certifying and twenty shillings for every Oath not so certified Which said Customer and Controller These words Who is bound to certifie who not notwithstanding the Copulative and are not to be taken conjunctively as if every Bond and Oath is to be certified both by the Customer and Controller For if the Customer take the Bond and Oath the Controller is not to be punished for not certifying no more is the Customer if the Controller take them For each of them shall forfeit for his own default and not for the default of the other And it cannot be reasonably presumed that one of them is privy to the doings of the other And therefore these words must be construed disjunctively Customer or Controller that is he of the two who takes the Bond and Oath is to certifie them into the Court of Exchequer or to forfeit c. For where the literal sense will ingender an absurdity or impossibility such a construction must be made as will stand with reason and the intent of the Law-makers And in such Cases a Copulative shall be taken for a disjunctive or a disjunctive for a Copulative vide Plowden 289. Chapman versus Dalton Ib. 363. Lord Zouches Case But if the Deputy Deputy of the Customer or Controller take the Bond or Oath and no Certificate thereof is made the Customer or Controller himself whose Deputy he is shall forfeit for that default although he had no notice from his Deputy of the taking of the said Bond or Oath For he is answerable for all the defaults of his Deputy vide Dyer 7 Eliz. 238 239. where 't was held that the Customer should forfeit the treble value of the Merchandize upon the Statute of 3 H. 6. cap. 3. Stat. 3 H. 6. 3. for his Deputies concealing of the payment of the Customs So a Sheriff shall answer for all Officers under him Co. 4. 33. Mittons Case Crompton Jurisdict tit Court d'Eschequer 110. And so generally shall all other Officers answer for their Deputies Co. 9. 48. Earl of Shrewsburies Case Co. 9. 98. Sir George Reynells Case Termes de la Ley 111. Deputy Brooke forfeiture 27. 39 H. 6. 34. Penalty Five pounds for every Bond. Note in the late Additions to Dalton cap. 81. tit Recusants Sect. 38. this penalty for not certifying the Bond is mistaken and there said to be fifty pounds instead of five pounds Stat. Sect. 18. Provided always That this last mentioned Branch shall not extend to any person or persons which are already gone or shall go beyond the Seas to serve any Forreign Prince State or Potentate before the Tenth day of June next coming for his said going or passing before the said Tenth day of June Stat. Sect. 19. Putting in practice to absolve or withdraw any from his Obedience or to reconcile them to the Pope And further be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid That if any person or persons at any time after the said Tenth day of June shall either upon the Seas or beyond the Seas or in any other place within the Dominions of the Kings Majesty his Heirs or Successors put in practice to absolve perswade or withdraw any of the Subjects of the Kings Majesty or of his Heirs and Successors of this Realm of England from their natural Obedience to his Majesty his Heirs or Successors or to reconcile them to the Pope or Sée of Rome or to move them or any of them to promise Obedience to any pretended Authority to the Sée of Rome or to any other Prince State or Potentate That then every such person their Procurers Counsellors Aiders and Maintainers knowing the same shall be to all intents adjudged Traytors and being thereof lawfully convicted shall have Iudgment suffer and forfeit as in Cases of High Treason And if any such person as aforesaid Being withdrawn or reconciled at any time after the said Tenth day of June shall be either upon the Seas or beyond the Seas or in any other place within the Dominions of the Kings Majesty his Heirs or Successors willingly absolved or withdrawn as aforesaid or willingly reconciled or shall promise Obedience to any such pretended Authority Prince State or Potentate as aforesaid That every such person and persons their Procurers and Counsellers Aiders and Maintainers knowing the same shall be to all intents adjudged Traytors and being thereof lawfully convicted shall have Iudgment suffer and forfeit as in Cases of High Treason Withdraw any of the Subjects of the Kings Majesty Kings Subjects who here meant c. from their natural Obedience By the Kings Subjects are to be understood here natural Subjects only that is such whose Subjection is natural and absolute due by nature and birthright and which begins with their birth And not Aliens although they are Naturalized or made Denizens much less those who are only local Subjects For none but natural Subjects can be said to be withdrawn from their natural Obedience And as the King of England cannot be said to be a natural Lord or King to an Alien born so neither can an Alien be said to be his natural Subject Natural King Natural Subject Natural Prince and natural Subject being correlatives And an Indictment of High Treason Indictment of High Treason against an Alien born who resides here although it shall be contra ligeantiae suae debitum and contra dominum Regem in respect of his local ligeance yet naturalem shall be omitted out of the Indictment And so it was 2 3 Ph. Mar. in the Case of Sherley a Frenchman and 36 Eliz. in the Cases of Stephano Ferrara de Gama and Emanuel Lewes Tinoco two Portugals who conspired with Dr. Lopez against Queen Elizabeth And so as it seems it ought to be for the same reason if the Alien were indenized or naturalized For Naturalization Naturalization it self which is by Act of Parliament and the highest priviledge an Alien is capable of yet cannot create this natural Subjection or Obedience which is not due by any Law
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
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
be granted to a Popish Recusant convict 234. The penalty on a Popish Recusant convict who comes to Court 201 202. Or departs not out of London and ten miles compass 202 203. Tradesmen and dwellers in and about London not excepted at this day 203 204. The penalties on a married woman who is a Popish Recusant convict and conforms not in her Husbands life time 86. 212 213 214. 252 253. Refusal See Abjuration Conformity Oaths Relapse Makes the submission void 119. 145. Where to be certified 145 Relation See Indictments Recusants Release see King Relief See Aide Seminary Relieving of offenders where not punishable 17. 44. Religion see Rome Rent see Recusants Repeal See Statutes Of two branches of 35 Eliz. 1. 191. Of a branch of 35 Eliz. 2. 205. Replication see Plea Resignation see King Reversal see Vtlawry Review see King Reviver see Statutes Reward See Discovery Recusants Rites see Ceremonies Rome Pope Popish Religion c. See Books Bulls Great Exactions by the See of Rome 1. Maintaining or Extolling the Bishop or See of Romes Authority where a Praemunire and where Treason 34. 41 42. What is a maintaining or extolling within 5 Eliz. 1. 34. 42. Withdrawing the Kings Subjects from the Religion Established to the Romish Religion or being so withdrawn is High Treason 57 58. 184 185 186. Reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome what meant 187. Reconciling or being reconciled to the Pope or See of Rome is High Treason 49 50. 57 58. 184 185 186. A person so reconciled and submitting afterwards 186. What reconciliation to Rome is not within 13 Eliz. 2. 50. Sacrament See Baptism Informations Offices The penalty on the Popish Recusant who after Conformity receives not the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yearly 157 158. Where a married woman may be punished for not receiving the said Sacrament during her Marriage and where not 195. 212 213. 252. Persons to be restored in Blood or to be naturalized must receive the said Sacrament and when 240. What other persons are to receive it 211 212. 215. 263 264. 266. Saving See Power Péers Pensions Schisme see Heresie Schoolmaster The penalty for keeping or being a Schoolmaster contrary to 23 Eliz. 1. or 1 Jac. 4. 64. 155. By whom a Schoolmaster is to be licenced 64 65. 155. What may be taken for such Licence 65. Conformity or allowance by the Bishop or Ordinary either of them sufficient 64. What a Schoolmaster must do by Stat. 14. Car. 2. 64 65. An Usher is within the word Schoolmaster 64. Scire facias see Informations Scotland See Alien Laws Seas See Councel Kin. Seminary The penalties for suffering Women or Children to go beyond Seas without Licence and on such as go or send them 94. 155. 223 224. 226. Seizure See Advowson Commission King Office Where a Recusants Lands may be seized or the seizure continued after his death and where not 100. 102. 104. 106 107. 109 110 111 112. 150 151 152 153. 168 169. 170 171. Where his Goods may be seized and where not 100 102. 105. 168. 172. Seminary Popish Colledge c. Iesuite Popish Priest c. See Conformity Discovery Iustices of Peace It s High Treason for a Jesuit Seminary Priest c. to be within this Realm 90. Not necessary to shew in what particular place he was born 90. Nor where ordained 90. Relieving or maintaining such is Felony at this day 90 91. The penalty for not discovering a Jesuit or Popish Priest 96. Or for not giving Information of such discovery 96. A person suspected to be a Jesuit or Seminary Priest examined and refusing to answer 140. To whom examinable 140. By what questions he is bound by 35 Eliz. 2. to answer 141. Submission by a Jesuit Popish Priest c. 94 95. He must continue in Obedience to the Laws 95. They which are in Seminaries c. shall return upon Proclamation made in that behalf 91 92. If they return and submit not 't is High Treason 92. They ought not to come into any other of the late Queens Dominions before they have submitted here 92. Where the benefit of submission was lost if the party submitting came within ten miles of the Court 98. The penalty for sending Children to a Popish Colledge Seminary or Family beyond the Seas 153. 257 258. And on such who go thither 153 154. 257 258. Or relieve any there or any Popish Colledge Seminary c. 93 94. 257 258. Sentence see Deprivation Service See Trial. Divine Service see Recusants Where serving or going to serve a forraign Prince c. without first taking the Oath of Allegiance and entring into Bond is Felony 181 182. see Oaths What kind of service is meant 182. The form of such Bond 183. It must be Domino Regi 182. Who shall take it 183. 198. Who shall certifie it and the penalty for not certifying 183 184. Where a man may keep a Recusant in his Service and where not and the penalty 191 192 193. Sessions See Iustices of Peace At what Sessions a Recusant may be indicted 67. General Quarter Sessions and General or Quarter Sessions what Sessions meant 67. Sheriff See Excommengement Sheriffs shall take the Oath of Supremacy 38. Sheriff of the County where the Kings Bench is 40. Where a Recusant proclaimed ought to render his body to the Sheriff 107. 162 163. Where a Popish Recusant may travel above five miles if required to tender his body to the Sheriff 142. The Sheriff is to pay him who discovers certain offenders 201. Statutes See Baron Feme Ieofailes Informations Notice Recital Repeal Reviver of several Statutes of H. 8. and E. 6. 2 3 4. Stat. 5 Eliz. 1. when and where to be published 43. The Statutes of 23 Eliz. 1. 29 Eliz. 6. 35 Eliz. 1. and 7 Jac. 6. against Recusants are all affirmative Laws and do not abrogate one the other 120 121. 162 163. 253. Who are within the Act of 35 Eliz. 1. of Conventicles and who not 114. Rules in construction of poenal Statutes 21 22. 64. 221. Where they shall not be construed by Equity 199. 221. 229. Where they may be construed by the intent of the makers besides or beyond the letter 21. 229. What is given by an Act of Parliament shall not be devested by a subsequent Act without express words 23● Where a later Act of Parliament shall be guided by a former 85. A private clause in a general Act of Parliament 230. The difference between a Statute discontinued and revived and a Statute never discontinued 125 126. All men are bound to take notice of an Act of Parliament 23. Statutes of West 2. c. 1. De donis conditionalibus 46. 152 153. West 2. c. 5. of Advowsons 13. 2 E. 3. c. 3. of Armour 97. 25 E. 3. c. 22. of Provisors of Abbeys 46. 25 E. 3. of Provisors of Benefices 229. 50 E. 3. c. 6. of Fraudulent deeds 87. 16 R. 2. c. 5. of Praemunire 6. 46. 152. 2 H. 5. c. 3. of Jurors 136
137. 3 H. 6. c. 3. of the Kings Customs 70. 184. 23 H. 6. c. 10. of Sheriffs 86. 3 H. 7. c. 4. of Fraudulent deeds 87. 3 H. 7. c. 7. of the Kings Customs 70. 4 H. 7. c. 20. of Actions popular 79. 21 H. 8. c. 13. of Pluralities and Non-residence 22 23. 82. 85. 233. 247. 23 H. 8. c. 4. of Brewers 82 85. 24 H. 8. c. 8. of Obligations to the Kings use 182. 25 H. 8. c. 19. of Delegates 7. 26 H. 8. c. 1. of the Kings Supremacy revived 2. 26 H. 8. c. 13. of Treason 152. 27 H. 8. c. 10. of Jointures 213 214. 215. 221 222. 32 H. 8. c. 1. of Wills 171. 32 H. 8. c. 30. of Jeofailes 73. 33 H. 8. c. 9. of unlawful Games 83. 33 H. 8. c. 39. of Debts to the King 150. 152 153. 182. 35 H. 8. c. 2. of Trial of Treasons 92. 188. 35 H 8. c. 3. of the Kings Supremacy revived 2. 35 H. 8. c. 17. of Woods 83. 37 H. 8. c. 9. of Usury 73. 1 E. 6. c. 7. of Discontinuance of Suits 81. 2 3 E. 6. c. 2. of Soldiers 188. 2 3 E. 6. c. 13. of Tythes 13. 5 E. 6. c. 1. for Uniformity of Common Prayer revived 19 20. 5 E. 6. c. 4. of drawing weapons in the Church 53. 5 E. 6. c. 7. of buying Wools 77. 5 E. 6. c. 11. of Treason 152. 5 E. 6. c. 14. of Forestallers Ingrossers and Regrators 83. 7 E. 6. c. 5. of selling Wines 83 85. 1 Mar. c. 2. of Repeal repealed in part 19. 1 2 Ph. Mar. c. 8. restoring the Popes usurped Authority repealed except touching Praemunire 1. 2. 15. 1 2 Ph. Mar. c. 10. of Trial of Treasons 92. 4 5 Ph. Mar. c. 5. of Woollen Cloaths 82. 5 Eliz. c. 4. of Trades and Apprentices 83. 5 Eliz. c. 9. of Perjury 67. 126. 5 Eliz. c. 14. of Forgery 258. 13 El. c. 5. of Fraudulent deeds 87. 13 Eliz. c. 12. of Reading the Articles 22 23. 233. 18 Eliz. c. 5. of Informers 76. 78. 82. 85. 18 Eliz. c. 14. of Jeofailes 73. 29 Eliz. c. 5. of Suits on Poenal Laws 75. 31 Eliz. c. 5. of Informers 60. 73 74. 121. 160. 31 Eliz. c. 6. of Simony 229. 31 El. c. 10. of Suits on poenal Laws 75. 35 Eliz. c. 6. of Buildings 131. 35 El. c. 14. of General Pardon 108. 43 Eliz. c. 2. of the Poor 118. 1 Jac. c. 11. of having two Wives living 188. 1 Jac. c. 27. for Preservation of Game 249. 7 Jac. c. 11. for Preservation of Game 249. 21 Jac. c. 4. of Informers 83 84 85. 21 Jac. c. 13. of Jeofailes 73. 14 Car. 2. of Uniformity 21. 64 65. Subjection Subject See Natural King Obedience Kings Subjects who 185. Subject of this Realm who intended 189 190. Local Subject who 189. Natural Subject who 185. 190. Natural Subjection is not local 186. 190. Where a man born out of the Kings Dominions yet may be his natural Subject 186. Submission see Conformity Successors see King Suit see Recusants Sunday An Information may be exhibited on a Sunday 78. Superstition Superstitious things brought into the Realm see Agnus Dei. Supremacy See King Oath of Supremacy Sureties Where to be taken 60. 181 182. Where not to be required or taken 82. 175. Where Popish Recusants convict cannot be Sureties 64. Suspition See Seminary A bare suspition is not sufficient Justification 247 248. Suspition not traversable but the cause of it 248. By whom to be tried and determined 248. Tail see Forfeiture Tenant by Courtesie Where a man is disabled to be Tenant by the Courtesie 220. Tender see Oaths Tenement Quid 255. Terme When the Term is open 37. When full Term 37. Test see Transubstantiation Testament see Probate Time See Discovery The several times limited for prosecution 13 14 15. 29 30. 65. 73 74 75. 121 122. 160. 189. No time limited in case of Treason 65. Tythes see Plea Town-Clerk see Recusants Tradesmen see Recusants Transubstantiation Who shall take and subscribe the Test or Declaration against Transubstantiation and the penalty if they neglect so to do 265 266. Treason See Alien Time Trial. Vniversity High Treason 13. 36. 42. 45. 50. 57 58. 90. 92. 184 185 186. Forfeiture for High Treason 152. Where the refusal of the Oath of Supremacy upon the second tender is not Treason 45. Indicting a man for High Treason where actionable 58. Trées Trees cut down not seizable for Recusancy 168 169. Trial. See Péers Where he that refuses the Oath of Supremacy shall be tried 41. Where an offender shall be tried in the County where he is imprisoned 188. Serving or going to serve a forraign Prince c. contrary to 3 Jac. 4. in what County it shall be tried 194. Where the Trial shall be in the County where part of the offence happened 194. Treason done in Ireland may be tried in England 92 93. Where Treason committed out of the Realm cannot be tried upon the Statute of 35 H. 8. 2. 188. Suspition shall be tried by the Justices 248. The Ecclesiastical Court cannot try the limits or bounds of Parishes 28. Offence where not triable 139 140. Trust Lease to a Recusant in Trust whether seizable for Recusancy 169. Whether a convicted Recusant be incapable of a Trust 169. Whether Lands conveyed in trust for a convicted Recusant may be seized 169. Value Clear yearly value 136. Where Lands and Goods shall be valued together and where not 136 137. Verdict See Covin Informations Vniversity See Advowson Covin Where the University of Cambridge or Oxford shall present or nominate to an Ecclesiastical living c. whereof a Popish Recusant convict is Patron and where not 227 228 229 230 231 232. What is thereby given them 229 230. Whom they may Present or Nominate and whom not 227. 233. Chancellor and Schollers where a good description of the University 229. They shall not Present unless the Recusant remained convict at the time of the Avoidance 230. Not necessary that he remain convict when they bring their Quare Impedit 230. What acts of the Recusant shall bar the University from presenting c. 230 231 232. Whether his being attainted of Treason Felony or Praemunire shall bar them 232 233. Void see Informations Vsher see Schoolmaster Vtlawry See Conformity A Term sold upon Utlawry shall be restored upon Reversal 179 180. Where upon Reversal of an Utlawry the Patron shall be restored to his Presentment and where not 180. Imprisonment by Covin shall not avoid an Utlawry 256. Wast See Guardian Recusants Warrant see Iustices of Peace Wast Where security must be given not to commit Wast in the Recusants Lands 173. Will see Probate Witness Where no Indictment or Arraignment without sufficient proof 16 17. 47 The Witnesses to be produced face to face at the parties Arraignment 17. A Popish Recusant convict is disabled to be a Witness 216. Women See Baron Feme Seas FINIS WHereas since the Expiration of the late Act for Printing many Persons do unjustly take liberty to Print the Copies of other Men to their great Damage and least we should be censured to be guilty of the like illegal and unjust Practise These are to satisfie all Persons Booksellers and others That the Statutes concerning RecusantS Printed in this Book were not done without the leave of the Proprietors first obtained and satisfaction to them given for the same John Wright Ric. Chiswell ERRATA Preface read concern Instead of Goal and Goal delivery read Gaol and Gaol delivery PAge 6. l. 4. r. C. p. 14. l. 20. r. Put. p. 19. l. 5. r. Whereas p 22. l. 41. r. Statutes p. 23. l. 30. r. until alter p. 24. l. 35. r. tent p. 25. l. 39. r. this p. 26. l. 7. r. him l. 34. r. 41. p. 30. l. 7. r. Assize p. 31. l. 30. r. Leppingwells p. 37. l. 37. r. the full l. 41. r. c. 193. p. 38. Margent r. Eliz. p. 41. l. 15. r. disallowed p. 60. l. 27. r. Plaintiff Qui tam c. p. 61. l. 10. r. or for p. 62. l. 28. r. two hundred and twenty pounds p. 67. l. 17. r. here given p. 69. l. 29. r. C. 138. p. 76. l. 24. r. Co. 11.65 p. 81. r. cap. 1. l. 36. r. Information c. p. 83. l. 35. r. before cited p. 85. l. 16. r. Keymer p. 86. l. 19. r. Manwood p. 87. Margent r. Sect. 12. p. 89. l. 3. r. disobedient p. 90. Margent r. Sect. 3. p. 99. Margent r. Sect. 1. p. 100. Margent r. 23 Eliz. l. 38. r. Reports p. 103. l. 32. r. 20 l. p. 104. l. 5. r. without Proclamation p. 107. l. 9. r. and that p. 125. r. Stat. 35 Eliz. p. 127. l. 3. r. places p. 130. l. 6. r. conclusion p. 131. Margent r. Sect. 3. p. 153. Margent r. Sect. 5. p. 160. l. 5. r. afterwards p. 172. l. 30. r. Sect. 20. p. 175. l. 20. dele Bishop or l. 24. r. that case p. 178. l. 17. r. in my Conscience p. 183. l. 31. r. are p. 184. l. 38. r. of p. 188. l. 19. r. of Trial. p. 190. l. 4. r. on p. 196. l. 12. r. other person p. 207. l. 34. r. on such l. 35. r. talis p. 208. l. 4. r. this recital p. 222. Margent r. Sect. 16. p. 223. l. 33. r. of disability p. 229. l. 43. r. Provisors p. 260. r. 261. In the Table title Seminary r. By whom examinable and To what questions