Selected quad for the lemma: country_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
country_n great_a king_n title_n 1,392 5 6.9622 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A10218 De pace Regis et regni viz. A treatise declaring vvhich be the great and generall offences of the realme, and the chiefe impediments of the peace of the King and kingdome, as menaces, assaults, batteries, treasons, homicides, and felonies ... and by whome, and what meanes the sayd offences, and the offendors therein are to bee restrained, repressed, or punished. ... Collected out of the reports of the common lawes of this realme, and of the statutes in force, and out of the painfull workes of the reuerend iudges Sir Anthonie Fitzharbert, Sir Robert Brooke, Sir William Stanford, Sir Iames Dyer, Sir Edward Coke, Knights, and other learned writers of our lawes, by Ferdinando Pulton of Lincolnes Inne, Esquier. Pulton, Ferdinando, 1536-1618.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538.; England and Wales. Public General Acts. Selections. 1609 (1609) STC 20495; ESTC S116053 719,079 571

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

for commencing a wrong full suit for the law doth intend those suites to be pursued for vexation trouble and likewise in some other cases the def is amerced for the wrongfull detaining of that which is not his owne and for inforcing the plaintife by suit in law to séeke recouer his owne But as in all cases the vnlawfull maintainor of suits is in fault so is he in euery such case punishable For though the case of the plaintife or def which he vndertaketh to maintaine be iust and lawfull in him who prosecuteth or defendeth the suit whose the cause is yet in the maintainor it is vnlawfull for it is not his owne suit neither is it pursued or defended for the recouery or protection of that which he pretendeth to be due to himself and so in a sort he maketh complaint where he hath no wrong or maketh defence where none séeke to hurt him whereby opposing himselfe against others who do not contend with him he laboureth to disturbe the ordinary course of iustice and therewith to blemish the peace of the Realme for as it appeareth partly by the statute of Anno 1. Ed. 3. Sta. 1. E. 3. 14 and specially by the preamble of the statute of Anno 32. H. 8. St. 32. H. 8. 9 Nothing conserueth the people in more peace good concord then the due administration of iustice and the indifferent triall of titles and issues according to the Lawes of this Realme which being hindered letted by Maintenance Embracery Champertie Subornation of witnesses sinister labour and buying of titles there will of necessitie insue thereof great periurie vnquietnesse oppressions troubles wrongs and disheritances 2 And because this Maintenance is as an euill Trée hauing growne out of it many corrupt branches therefore the wisdome of the Realme hath frō time to time prouided seuerall statutes as it were sharpe hatchets to loppe or shred those boughes when they did spring and shoot out As King Ed. 3. Maintenance by men of authority perceiuing that his Counsellors Magistrates and Officers in his house certaine great men of the Realme by sending of Letters Messengers giuing of Liueries by other means did sollicite matters and maintaine quarrels and tooke parts in the Countrey St. 1. E. 3. 14 20. Ed. 3. 3. by a statute made Anno 1. of his raigne and another Anno 20. of his raigne did ordaine That common right should be done to all persons as well poore as rich and that none of his said Officers nor any Noblemen nor any other great or small should take vpon him to maintaine quarrels or to take parts to the let or disturbance of the common law Nor that any should take in hand or meddle with quarrels or questions but their owne And because there was no speciall punishment ordained by the said statute of Anno 1. Ed. 3. for those who should transgresse that Law therfore King R. 2. by a statute made in the first yeare of his raigne established St. 1. R. 2. 4. That if the kings Counsellors or great Officers should take vpon them to sustaine any quarrell by Maintenance in the Countrey or elsewhere he so offending should indure that paine which should be inflicted by the King himselfe by the aduice of the Lords of his Realme and other inferior officers and seruants of the Kings in the Exchequer and other Courts and his meniall seruants shall loose their offices and seruices and be imprisoned be ransomed at the kings pleasure euery of them according to his degrée estate and desert and all other persons of the Realme of what estate soeuer they be shal be imprisoned and ransomed as the other aforesaid St. 33. Ed. 1. 3 The statute intituled Definitio de conspiratoribus made Anno 33. E. 1. Maintenance by cōbination doth decypher another sort of Maintainors which there be called conspirators in this sort St. 1. R. 2. 7. viz. Conspirators be they that bind themselues by oath couenant or other alliance that euery of them shall helpe and sustaine the other falsely maliciously to indite or falsely to moue or maintaine pleas and also such as cause children within age to appeale men of felony whereby they are imprisoned sore grieued and such as retaine mē in the country with liueries or fées to maintaine their malicious enterprises and this extendeth aswell to the takers as to the giuers and stewards and bailifes of great lords Maintenance by noblemens officers which by their seigniorie office or power vndertake to vphold or maintaine quarrels pleas or debates that concerne other parties then such as touch the estate of their lords or themselues 4 There is also another kind of Maintenance which is called Champerty Maintenance by champerty and the offendors therin be called Champertors whom the foresaid statute of Anno 33. St. 33. Ed. 1. E. 1. doth define in this maner Who be champertors viz. Champertors be they that moue pleas and suits or cause to be moued either by their owne procurement or by others sue them at their proper costs for to haue part of the land in variance or part of the gaines which Champertors were accounted great maintainors of suits and professed enemies to peace whereupon it was ordained by the statute of West 1. St. 3. E. 1. 25. That no Officer of the Kings by themselues nor by other shall maintaine pleas suits or matters hanging in the Kings Court for Lands Tenements or other things for to haue part or profit thereof by couenant made betwéene them and he that doth shall be punished at the kings pleasure and after by the statute of Westm 2. St. 13. E. 1. 48 the same was expressed more at large by the which it was enacted That the Chauncellor Treasurer Iustices nor none of the Kings Councell no Clarke of the Chauncerie nor of the Exchequer nor of any Iustice or other Officer nor none of the Kings house Clarke nor Lay shall receiue any Church land nor tenement by gift in fée nor to farme nor for purchase nor otherwise so long as the thing is in plea in the Kings Court or before any of his Officers nor shall take reward therefore and hee that doth contrary to this Act eyther himselfe or by any other or make any bargaine shall bee punished at the Kings pleasure as well he that doth purchase as he that doth giue And because other Officers were not bound by the foresaid Statutes as well as the Kings and to the intent some certaine and more sharpe penaltie might bee imposed vpon the transgressor of the said statutes then before time had béene prouided Therefore by a statute made Anno 28. E. 1. St. 28. Ed. 1. 11. intituled Articuli super Chartas it was ordained That no Officer nor any other for to obtaine part of the thing in plea shall maintaine any matter that is in suit Nor none vpon such couenant shall giue vp his
alwaies leuied of the buyers of such books contrarie to this statute For that it was then thought expedient that Printers and sellers of printed bookes should as well be restrained from the oppression of others by making excessiue prices in sale or binding of their bookes as it was by the said statute prouided that they should not be oppressed by others Therefore by the before rehearsed statute of Anno 25. H. 8. it was further established St. 25. H. 8. 15. That if any Printers or sellers of printed bookes inhabiting within this Realme do at any time in such wise inhance or increase the prices of any such printed books in sale or binding at too high and vnreasonable prices in such wise as complaint thereof be made to the King or vnto the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer or any of the chiefe Iustices of the one Bench or of the other Then the same Lords or two of any of them shall haue authoritie to enquire thereof as well by the othes of twelue honest and discréete persons as otherwise by due examinations by their discretions and after the same inhauncing and increasing of the prices of the said bookes and binding shal be so found by the said twelue men or otherwise by the examination of the saide Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer and Iustices or two of them Then the same Lords or two of them at the least shall haue power to redresse such inhancing of the prices of printed bookes from time to time by their discretions and to limite the prices as well of the bookes as for the binding of them And ouer that the offender or offenders being conuict by examination of the saide Lordes or two of them or otherwise shall forfeit for euery booke by them solde whereof the price shall be enhaunced for the booke and binding thereof thrée shillings foure pence to the King and party grieued that will complaine vpon the same in manner and forme aforesaid St. 5. Ri. 2. 2. 14 It appeareth by the preamble of the statute of An̄ 5. R. 2. that the carying of gold or siluer in money vessell plate or iewells foorth of the Realme was then accounted a great mischiefe oppression and destruction of this land which the policie of this State hath before and since by seueral Statutes endeuoured to restraine As appeareth by the statutes of An̄ 9. Ed 3. Anno 5. Oppression by transporting of gold and siluer R. 2. Anno 2. H. 4. Anno 2. H. 6. Anno 17. Ed. 4. Anno 4. H. 7. and Anno 19. St. 9. Ed. 3. 1 St. 5 R. 2. 2 H. 7. Whereupon by the saide statute of An̄ 9. Ed. 3. Anno 5. R. 2. it was established That whosoeuer doth send or carrie out of the Realme of England any gold or siluer in mony bullion plate or vessell without the Kings licence St. 2. H. 4 5. sauing for his reasonable expences Anno 2. H. 4. shall forfeit the valew of the summe carried foorth And he which is vpon his passage in any shippe or vessell for to goe out of any port hauen or créeke shall immediatly confesse and declare after warning vnto him giuen by the Kings searcher what gold or siluer in coine or masse he hath with him for his expences or else that mony so concealed shall be also forfeited to the King But by the statute of Anno 2. St. 2. H. 6. 6. H. 6. Raunsoms for fines of English prisoners taken beyond the Sea and the mony that souldiers shall carrie with them for their reasonable costs be excepted so that the same be not done without the Kings licence And also by the same statute is excepted mony for things bought in Scotland to be brought to the parts adioyning And by the saide Statute of Anno 19. H. 7. it was ordained That no person shall carry or conuey nor cause to be carried out of this Realme St. 19. H. 7. 5 any bullion plate or coine of golde or siluer into Ireland aboue the summe of vj. s̄ viij d nor conuey any such bullion into any ship or boate vpon paine of forfeiture of the same and of imprisonment and fine at the Kings pleasure 15 Because there is no mine of copper mettall within this realme Oppression by transporting copper brasse c. where sufficient copper may be gotten for the vse of the King and his people and for that seuerall other mettalls be mixed therewith of which diuers vessells and instruments be made And therefore the transporting thereof beyond the sea was found by experience to be a great hinderance and oppression to the workers thereof and also to all those that should haue the vse and occupation of the same which were in effect all sorts of housekeepers wherefore for the restraint of the transportation of the same first one statute was made Anno 21. St. 21. H. 8. 10. St. 33. H. 8. 7 St. 2. E. 6. 37 H. 8. And after another Anno 33. H. 8. And lastly a third Anno 2. Ed. 6. By which two last Statutes it was enacted That no persons shall carry or conuey or ship to the intent to carry or conuey any brasse copper latten bel mettall pan mettall or shroffe mettall whether it be cléere or mixed tinne and lead onely excepted into any part beyond the sea or into any outward dominion vpon paine to forfeit the double value thereof and x. l. for euery thousand weight of the same mettall so carried or shipped to the intent to be caried to the King and him that will sue for the same in any of the Kings courts by A.B.P. or I. wherein no W.E.P. c. 16 For that a great nūber of persons occupying the trade faculty of pewterers within this Realme were decayed and oppressed in estate by reason that much ware made of tinne was brought out of other countries into this Realme and because strangers did learne the occupation of Pewterers in this Realme Oppression of pewterers and then did depart the Realme and taught it to the people of forraine Nations and for that sometime Englishmen borne would trauaile into other countries and teach the same to forrainers for the restraint wherof by a Statute made Anno 25. H. 8. it was ordained St. 25. H. 8. 9 St. 33. H. 8. 4 That no person inhabiting within this Realme shall buy or take by exchange for other wares any wares made out of this Realme of tinne or mixt with tinne as platters dishes sawcers pots basons ewers flaggons goblets saltsellers spoones or any other wares made of tin or pewter whatsoeuer it be vpon paine of forfeiture of the same wares in whose hands soeuer it may be found or taken to the vse of the King and the finders thereof and also lawfull currant mony of this Realme to the valew thereof And further that no stranger borne out of this Realme shall vse the said craft of Pewterers nor worke any manner of vessell or other ware aforesaid to be
but if it be during the day light though the sunne be set the countrie shal be charged therewith for whosoeuer doth trauel during the day light is in the guard and protection of the lawe and if any doe iourney by night he doth it at his owne perill St. 13. E. 1. 4 3 For the more suretie of the countrie and spéedier defecting of offendors warding of walled towns by the said Statute of Winchester it was enacted That in great townes beeing walled the gates shal be shut from the sunne setting vntill the sunne rising and no man shall lodge in the Suburbs or any place out of the town frō nine of the clocke vntil day vnlesse his Host will answer for him And the bailifs of townes euery weeke or at the least euery fifteenth day shall mak enquirie of all persons beeing lodged in the Suburbes or in forraine places of the townes and if they find any that hath receiued any suspitious persons not kéeping the Kings peace the baylifs shall execute right and iustice therein St. 13. E. 1●4 4 And by the said statute of Winchester it was moreouer ordained That in all townes watch shall be kept as in times past it hath beene vsed That is to say When the night watch shall begin and end from the feast of the Ascension vntill Michaelmas in euery citie sixe men shall watch at euery gate in euery Borough twelue men in euery town sixe or foure according to the number of the inhabitants of the towne and they shall watch the towne at night from the sunne setting to the sunne rising And if any stranger doe passe by them he shall be arrested vntill the morning and if no suspition be found he shall goe quit and if they find cause of suspition they shall forthwith deliuer him to the Shirife and the Shirife shall receiue him without hurt vntill he be acquited in due manner And if he will not obey the arrest Resisting of arrest they shall leuie Huy and Cry vpon him and such as kéepe the Towne shall follow with Huy and Cry with all the Towne and Townes néere and from Towne to Towne vntill he be taken and deliuered to the Shirife as is beforesaid and for the arrestments of such strangers none shall be punished And by the Statute of Anno 5. H. 4. St. 5. H. 4. 3 Iustices of Peace haue power to make inquisition in their Sessions from time to time and to punish them which be found in default after the tenour of the foresaid statute of Winchester Enlarging of high waies 5 And for the more spéedie apprehension of felons and that they may haue the lesse meanes to escape when they haue robbed or otherwise offended St. 13. E. 1. 5. by the said statute of Winchester it is further established That the highwaies leading from one Market towne to another shal be enlarged there where any wood hedges or ditches be so that there shal be no ditch wood or bush where he that doth lewdly may escape within two hundred foot of the high way on the one side and two hundred foot on the other but this Statute extendeth not to Ashes or great Trees And if any robberies be done by default of breaking downe ditches vnderwood and bushes the Lord shall answer therefore and if it be a murder the Lord shal be punished at the Kings pleasure And if the Lord be not able to cut downe the vnderwood the Countrie shall helpe him And within the kings demesne woods in forrests and without the waies shal be enlarged as before is said And if any Parke be neere vnto the high way the Lord thereof shall diminish it by the space of two hundred foot from the high way or els make such a wall ditch or hedge that offendors cannot goe forward or backeward to any hurt 6 Because it is very hard and extreame to many persons for that by the foresaid Statutes of 13. Ed. 1. 28. E. 3. 11. they do remaine charged with the penalties therein contained notwithstanding their vnabilitie to satisfie the same and though they do as much as in reason might be required in pursuing such malefactors offendors whereby both large scope of negligence is giuen to the inhabitants resiants in other hundreds counties not to prosecute the huy crie made followed brought vnto them by reason they are not chargeable for any portion of the goods robbed nor with any dammages in that behalfe giuen also great incouragement imboldening is likewise giuen to the offendors to commit daily more felonies and robberies seeing it is in a maner impossible for the inhabitants and resiants of the said hundred and franchise wherein the robberie is committed to apprehend them without the ayde of other hundreds and counties adioyning And for that also the partie robbed hauing remedie by the foresaid statutes for the recouering of his goods robbed and dammages against the Hundred wherein the robberie was committed is many times negligent and carelesse in prosecuting and pursuing the saide malefactors and offendors The Hundred charged wher fresh sute shall cease For the qualifying of all which extreamities by a statute made Anno 27. Eliz. St. 27. El. 13 it was ordained That the inhabitants and resiants of euery or any such Hundred with the franchises within the precinct thereof wherein negligence fault or defect of pursute and fresh sute after huy and crie made shall happen to be shall answer and satisfie the one moitie or halfe of all and euery summe and summes of money and dammages as shall by force and vertue of the saide Statutes viz. of 13. Ed. 1. and 28. Ed. 3. or either of them be recouered or had against or of the same Hundred with the franchises therein in which any robberie or felonie shall at any time heereafter be committed or done And the same moitie shall and may at any time héereafter be recouered by action of debt bill plaint or information in any of the Quéenes Courts of Record at Westminster by and in the name of the Clerke of the Peace for the time being of The Clerke of the Peace shall prosecute the sute or in euery such Countie within this Realme where any such robberie and recouerie by the party or parties robbed shal be without naming the Christian name or the surname of the saide Clerke of the Peace Which moitie so recouered shall be to the only vse and behoofe of the inhabitants of the said Hundred where any such robberie or felonie shall be committed or done St. 27. El. 13 7 If any Clerke of the Peace of or in any Countie within this Realme shall at any time héereafter commence or preferre any such sute action or information and shall after the same so sued commenced or preferred The Clerke of the Peace doth die or is remooued happen to die or to be remooued out of his office before recouerie and execution had yet no such
any person before made béeing by force of the foresaid statute of 11. H. 4. in shirifes and bailifes of Franchises seuerall great extortions and oppressions were done in diuers Counties of this Realme by subtilty and vntrue demeanor of shirifes and their ministers to many persons by making and returning at euery Sessions holden within the said Counties for the body of the shire names of such persons as for the singular gaine of the said shirifes and bailifes would be wilfully forsworne by the sinister labour of the said shirifes and their ministers By reason whereof by their couin and falsehood many true and substantiall persons were diuers times wrongfully indicted of Murthers Felonies and other misbehauiours to the vtter losse of their liues goods and lands and sometime also by the labor of the said shirifs great Felonies and Murthers were concealed and not presented by the said persons partially returned by the same shirifs or their ministers to the intent to compell the offendors to make fines and giue rewards to the said Shirifes and their ministers For the preuention of which enormities by a stat made Anno 3. H. 8. it was established St. 3. H. 8. 12 That all panels to be returned which bée not at the suit of any party Panels for indictments reformed by the Iustices that shall be made and put in by euery shirife and their ministers before any I. of Gaole deliuery or I. of Peace whereof one to be of the Quorum in their open Sessions to inquire for the king shal be reformed by putting to and taking out of the names of the persons which so be impanelled by euery shirife and their ministers by the discretion of the same Iustices before whom such panels shall be returned And the same Iustice and Iustices shall commaund euery shirife and their ministers in his absence to put other persons in the same panels by their discretions And the same panels so reformed by the said Iustices be good and lawfull And if any shirife or any of their ministers at any time do not returne the same panels so reformed then euery such shirife or minister so offending for euery such offence shall forfeit xx l. the one halfe to the king and the other to him or them that will sue for the same by action of Debt at the common law or Bill c. wherin no W.E. or P. shal be allowed and the kings pardon shall be no barre against the party or parties that shall sue the same 9 It is to be thought that by force of the statutes before rehearsed sufficient honest and indifferent Iurors were returned by the shirifes of Counties or that the Panels by them returned were reformed by the Iustices so that if any defect were committed in Indictments or in concealing of offences or offendors then the same was in the Iury which were charged for the body of the Shire to make inquirie for the searching forth of the truth whereof and for the punishment of the said offendors according to their demerites by a statute made Anno 3. H. 7. it was ordained St. 3. H. 7. 1 That the Iustices of peace of euery Shire of this Realme for the time being may doe to take by their discretion an enquest Enquest to inquire of concealments whereof euery man shall haue Landes and Tenements to the yearely value of forty shillings at the least to inquire of the concealements of other Enquests taken before them and before other of such matters and offences as are to bée inquired and presented before Iustices of Peace whereof complaint shall be made by Bill or Bils as well within Franchise as without and if any such concealement be found of any Enquest had or made within the yeare after the same concealement euery person of the same Enquest shall bée amerced for the same concealements by the discretion of the same Iustices of Peace the said amerciaments to bée assessed in plene Sessions 10 For as much as seuerall persons vpon great grounds of vehement suspitions as well of high Treasons petit Treasons and misprision of Treason as of Murthers were many times sent for from diuers Shires and places of this Realme and other the Kings Dominions to the Kings great charges to be examined before the Kings Councell vpon their offences to the intent that conuiction or declaration of such persons should spéedily ensue as the merits of their cases should require And albeit that after great trauaile taken in the examination of such persons it appeared to the said Councell by confession witnesse or vehement suspect that such persons were rather guilty of such offences whereof they were examined then otherwise yet neuerthelesse such offendors so examined by the course of the common Lawes of this Realme must be indicted within the Shires or places where they committed their offences and also tried by the inhabitants and fréeholders of such Shires and places although by their confessions or by sufficient witnes their offences were certainely knowne to the Kings Councell By reason whereof besides the trauaile of the Kings Counsell the King was often put to great charges in remaunding such persons to the countries where they offended there to bée indicted and tried of their offences And sometimes the inhabitants and fréeholders of the Shires or places where such offences were done were compelled to appeare out of their shires or places for such causes to their great charges for the triall or declaration of such offences And sometime by occasion of the charges for remaunding such offendors to be indicted and tryed by the course of the common Law such offendors did lye still in prison and were forgotten whereby many times by the helpe of their confederats they escaped vnpunished to the great courage and euill example of euill doers For the reformation whereof by a statute made Anno 33. H. 8. it was enacted St. 33. H. 8. 23. That if any person or persons being examined before the Kings Councell or thrée of them vpon any manner of Treasons misprision of Treasons or Murthers doe confesse any such offences or that the said Councell or thrée of them vpon such examination shall thinke any person so examined to be vehemently suspected of any Treason misprision of Treason or Murther then in euery such case by the Kings commaundement his Maiesties Commission of Oyer and Terminer vnder his great Seale shal be made by the Chancellor of England to such persons Indictments and trials where the king will and to such Shires and places as shall bée named and appointed by the Kings Highnesse for the spéedie triall conuiction or deliuerance of such offendors Which Commissioners shall haue authoritie to inquire heare and determine all such Treasons misprisions of Treasons and Murthers within the Shires and places limitted by their Commission by such good and lawfull persons as shal be returned before them by the Shirife or his ministers or any other hauing power to returne Writs and Proces for that
slaine by await assault or malice prepensed the charter shal be disalowed and further therein shal be done as the Law requireth which saide stat was after confirmed by the statute of Anno 16. R. 2. St. 16. R. 2. 6 1. Ed. 3. 24 And therefore whereas if a man before this Statute had counterfeited the Kings great or priuy Seale and the King had pardoned him all felonies homicides robberies and other trespasses by the common Lawe his pardon should haue béene allowed and he discharged which sithence would not be allowed vnlesse the treason were specified in the charter of pardon 6 For that many common and notorious Théeues indited of seuerall felonies murders and rapes in diuers countries and vpon the same as well before the Kings Iustices as before the King himselfe being arraigned of the same felonies for the sauing of their liues did in times past become approuers to the intent that in the meane time by Brocage and great gifts bestowed vpon certaine persons they might purchase and obtaine their charters of pardon and then after their deliuerance became more notorious Théeues than they were before for the redresse whereof and to the intent to punish him with discredit and forfeture who pursueth such a charter there was a statute made Anno 5. H. 4. St. 5. H. 4. 2 which doth ordaine Sute for an Approuers pardon That if any man or woman doe desire or pursue or cause to be requested or pursued for any charter of pardon for any felon arraigned of felonie murder or rape which for the safegard of his life doth become an approuer then the name of him or her which pursueth such charter shal be put in the same charter making mention that the same charter is graunted at his request and instance And if he to whom the charter is granted after his deliueraunce becommeth a felon the same person who pursued for his charter shall forfeit a hundred pounds to be leuied to the Kings vse Pardon of the felonie but not of the attainder 7 If a man be attainted of felonie 9. Ed. 4. 28. 11. H. 4. 15 46. Fi. Cor. 124 S. Abiuration 15 and the King doth pardon him all feloni●s this is not sufficiēt neither wil it auaile him because in the charter there is no pardon of the attainder As one abiured the Realme for the death of a man and returned againe without the Kings licence and beeing brought to the barre he pleaded the kings pardon and because it made no mention of his a●iuca●ion which was his attainder it was disalowed If the King do by Act of parliament grant a generall pardon of all felonies except burglarie Co. l. 6. 13 and an offendor is attainted of burglary he shal haue no benefit of this pardon for the offence of burglarie doth remaine notwithstanding the attainder thereof 〈…〉 8 If a man commit felonie and is attainted thereof 8. H. 4. 22. Co. li. 6. 13 if the King do pardon him the attainder and the execution this will not auaile him because the felonie doth yet remaine vnpardoned 22. Ed. 4. 7 28 29 H. 8. Dyer f. 34 9 If the king doe pardon two thrée A ioynt pardō to two or thrée or moe men all felonies by them or any of them committed this will not auaile them because felonie is alwaies seuerall though the sequell of the Charter be seuerall yet it shall not make that which in the beginning of the Charter was ioynt to bee seuerall But it is otherwise if the beginning of the Charter had beene seuerall the sequell ioynt 3. H. 7. 15 10 If the King graunt to a man Grant to be quit of escapes of felons that he shal be quit of the escape of prisoners out of his prison beeing there for felonie or Treason yet this will not discharge him of voluntarie escape but onely of negligent escape for voluntarie escape is felonie and the King cannot licence a man to commit felonie but he ought to restraine him of the doing thereof 11. H. 4. 41. 11 Euery prisoner shall take aduantage of a generall pardon graunted by Act of Parliament A generall pardon by Parliament without pleading of it And the court shall giue him the aduantage thereof though he doth waiue and refuse the benefit of the same Act but that is to be intended where the act is general without any exception For if there be any persons excepted in the same pardon grāted by Act of Parliament 8. E. 4. 7 Pl. com 401 then he ought to plead that he is not any of those which is excepted and that he was not adherent to E. and so must plead to euery point and thing excepted in the said Act of Parliament to the intent to prooue himselfe enabled to enioy the benefit of the said pardon vnlesse in the said Act of Parliament there be mention made that euery person may take aduantage of it without pleading of it And if he that doth plead that pardon be of the same name that any of those is which is excepted in the pardon hee then must in pleading declare the same and shew that he is another man and not he which is excepted in the pardon or otherwise he shall come too late to plead it after And if he plead it before the Iustices in the countrey where the Kings atturney is not present the Iustices shall cause proclamation to be made that if any will speake for the King let him come forth c. 12 The partie whom it doth concerne ought not onely to plead the Kings pardon granted vnto him by his Charter without Parliament but hee must also shew it vnder Seale The Kings pardon must be shēwed vnder seale for that the custodie thereof belongeth onely to him and to none other And therefore though he will say that he was at another time arraigned of the same felonie at the Kings suit in such a countie where he pleaded the said Charter H. 11. H. 4. 41. and that was allowed which allowance is of Record yet that is no good plea without shewing the Charter But the court of fauour will respite the partie that pleadeth it to bring in the Charter at the day assigned 13 When a man doth plead the Kings pardon of any homicide robberie A writ of allowance of the Kings pardon felonie or other trespasse he ought also to bring with him a writ of allowance testifying that he hath found suretie according to the Statute of an̄ 10. Ed. 3. St. 10. E. 3. 3 which hath established That if the King doe grant to any person any Charter of pardon of any homicide robberie or felonie then he to whom the same is granted shall come within thrée moneths next after the making of the same before the Sherife and Coroners of the Countie where the felonie was done and shall find sixe good and sufficient mainpernors for whom the said sherife and
is depending to giue iudgement for the plaintife then the def may haue an action of Maintenance against him for that the same iudgemēt is a thing wholly belonging to the office of a Iudge and not of a Iuror therfore he doth therin intermeddle with another mans office and another mans cause more than he hath to do or may iustifie and so hath committed vnlawfull maintenance Maintenance in a Iuror 18 If a Iurie be charged to inquire of a matter in issue 17. E. 4. 5. 18. Ed. 4. 4. one Iuror may persuade his cōpanions or any of them to passe for the plaintife or def as he conceiueth the truth of the cause to be or as their euidence doth induce them this is no maintenance but if one of the Iurors will giue or promise money to another of his fellowes to giue his verdit for the pl. or def this is vnlawfull maintenance though he doth wage him to giue his verdit according to truth and right of the cause in issue Maintenance by speaking of words 19 If a man of great authoritie in a country will in the presence of a Iurie 22. H. 6. 5. 13. H. 4. 19. and the standers by at the tryall of an issue say openly that he will spend mony in the cause in question in the behalfe of the pl. or the def or that hee will giue money to labour the Iury or wil speake other great or high words in fauor of one of the parties this is vnlawful maintenāce in him though he do spend no mony in that cause nor doth labor the Iury therin for it may be that whē the Iury do by his words know his meaning they dare not in respect of his authoritie or greatnesse in that coūtie giue their verdit otherwise thā he would haue them None shall sit with the Iust of Assise on the bench And for the preuention of that kind of maintenance by a stat made An. 20. R. 2. it was ordained That no Lord or other of the country great or small St. 20. R. 2. 13. shall sit vpon the bench with the Iust of Assise in their Sessions in any of the Shires of England vpon paine of a great forfeiture to the King neither the Iustices shall suffer the contrarie to bée done Maintenance in comming to the barre with one of the parties And in like sort if a man of great authoritie in the Countie where an Issue is to be tried hauing nothing to doe in that cause doth come to the barre with the plaintife or defendant 22. H. 6. 6. that is one of the parties to an Issue that is then to bée tryed and standeth by him this is an vnlawfull maintenance in him though hée neither doth nor yet speaketh any thing in the matter for his presence and companie with the one partie doth shew to the Iurie his particular affection to the same partie and doth ofttimes induce them to fauour as much as labour and persuasion by words could doe And though the Iurie doe not respect him but giue their verdict for the other partie to that suit according to their euidence and the truth of the cause in question yet he hath done what in him lyeth to the contrarie 21. H. 6. 15. 22. H. 6. 5. 28. H. 6. 7. Dyer fo 95. 20 And so it is if two be in suit and do ioyne in issue Maintenance by giuing of money to labour a Iurie and the Master of one of the parties to that issue or any other will deliuer money of his owne to a stranger to labour the Iurie impanelled to try that issue to giue their verdit for his said seruant or friend this is maintenance vnlawfull in the Master or other though the partie to whom the money was giuen did neuer deliuer it to the Iurie nor did not labour vnto them in such sort as hée was directed or though the Iurie did giue their verdict against his said seruant for when the Master had deliuered the money to the stranger and told him to what purpose he should vse it he had done as much as he could do in that suit to hinder the course of iustice though his direction tooke no successe according to his desire And also it is vnlawfull maintenance if one giue money to a man that is impanelled of a Iurie to giue his verdict on the one side though that partie impanelled doth not appeare or do appeare and is drawne out by challenge or otherwise 22. H. 6. 6. And it is maintenance vnlawfull if one do threaten to kill or beat a Iuror if he do not giue his verdict for the one part to that issue which hee doth name though the same Iuror do otherwise 28. H. 6. 6. 21 If a Iurie do come to a mans house What is maintenance in a witnesse and what not and desire him to informe them of the truth of a matter whereof they do doubt and he doth informe them therof this is iustifiable But if one do come to a Iurie or of himselfe do labour to informe them of the truth of a cause in question this is maintenance vnlawfull and therefore punishable And so it is if the Court be informed by the plaintife or defendant when an issue is to be tryed that there is a man at the bar or in that place who doth know the truth of the matter in issue and doth desire that the same man may be examined by the Court to testifie the truth of that cause in question to the Iurie and the Court doth cause him to be called to testifie his knowledge therein and he at the commaundement of the Court deliuereth that which he doth know in that matter this is maintenance iustifiable But if the same partie will come to the barre of his owne head and testifie for the plaintife or the defendant this is vnlawfull maintenance and hée may be punished therefore 22. H. 6. 6. 22 If one man do labour to indict another by force whereof he is indicted Maintenance by procuring of an indictment in this case hee that is indicted may haue a writ of Maintenance against the procurer of that indictment and yet this is no quarrell but it is a taking of a part St. 1. E. 3. 14. and so prohibited by the stat of anno 1. E. 3. and it is in the nature of an action betwéene the King and the partie indicted and the foresaid statute is generall that it shall not be lawfull to any person great or smal to maintain quarels or to take parts to the let or disturbance of the Common law What is maintenance in a mainpernor 23 If a man be arrested indicted or sued 34. H. 6. 25. 14. H. 6. 6. 18. E. 4. 12. so that he is compelled to become bound with mainpernors for his apparance the mainpernor may come into the Court and sée the apparance of the same partie recorded and iustifie the
raigne that now is which is not or hath not bin the castle or dwelling house of any nobleman or gentleman nor the chiefe mansion house of any manor is and shal be adiudged a house of husbandry for euer and all acres spoken of in this statute shal be adiudged acres according to the Statute or Ordinance de terris mensurandis Which is an acre of land And euery person persons bodies politique and corporat which shall offend in not building erecting repairing continuing or maintaining of houses of husbandry according to the purport true meaning of the said statute The forf for not building a house of husbandry shall for euery house that shal not be erected builded repaired continued or maintained in necessary reparations tenantable according to the intent of the same act by the space of one yéere forf x. l. and so yéerely x. l. vntill the same shal be sufficiētly erected continued repaired c. and for euery acre of land meddow or pasture which shal not be laid vnto or let with such houses of husbandry when the same shal be demised shal forf for euery yéere that he or they shal so offend the summe of x. s̄ as long as often as such acre shall not in those respects be ordered vsed according to the intent of this act of which forf the K. shal haue one part the poore of the parish where the offence was committed the second part and he that will sue in any of the K. courts of record at Westminster the third and if none will sue thē the K. shal haue also that third part But no offendor shall be impeached or sued by vertue of this act Within what time the suit shal be presēted except the suit be brought and commenced by the party for the king himselfe within 2. yeares of the same offence done but where the suit shal be prosecuted for the K. only c. then within 3. yeeres after the offence done Oppression by decay of Tillage 34 By the stat of an 39. El. 2. it was ordained St. 39. El. 2 That all lands and grounds which now are vsed in tillage or for tillage hauing bin tillable lands fields or grounds such as next before the first day of this parliament haue béene by the space of 12. yeres together at the least vsed in tillage or for tillage according to the nature of the soile course of husbandry vsed in that part of the countrey shall not be cōuerted to any shéepe pasture or to the grazing or fatting of cattel by the occupiers or possessors thereof but shall according to the nature of that soile course of husbandry vsed in the part of the country continue to be vsed in tillage and for tillage for corne graine not for wood And if any person body politique or corporat shal offend against the premisses thē the offēdor shal forf for euery acre not restored or not cōtinued as is aforesaid x. s̄ for euery yere that he or they so offēd to be diuided into 3. parts then to be distributed as is aforesaid so that the suit be cōmenced or prosecuted wtin the time or times before mentioned I haue for some special causes herein set down but only the offēces penalties mentioned in the two last specified stat of an 39. El. 1. 2. Wherefore the two last stat bee not set down at large omitting purposely the exceptions reseruations prouisoes and some other matters in the same 35 As Menaces Assaults Batteries Imprisonments Maihems Riots Routs vnlawful assemblies Forgeries Periuries Maintenances Deceits Extortions Oppressions all other the crimes before mentioned haue from one age to another bin noted accused as maladies in the common wealth and adiudged condemned as professed enemies to the peace of the realme and by seuerall lawes statutes diuers penalties haue bin imposed vpō the transgressors thereof in a measure certaine within some limits So the prouidence of our forefathers sounding déeper into the corruptiō of mans nature foreséeing that sometime his cholerike passions turbulent spirit sometime the gall and bitternes of his heart sometime his couetous insatiable affections eftsoons his secret desires deuices of reuenge doe carry him headlong into exorbitant vnusuall designments practises be they neuer so contrary to the Lawes of God of Nature Reason in seueral degrées further thē our said lawmakers did then either fore-thinke feare or by particular words restraine knowing also that the subtiltie of the Serpent and of men of the serpents nature doth excéed the other beasts of the field haue therefore erected established the most honorable Court of Starre-chamber All the former offences punishable in the Star-chāber to the intent that the wisedome of that Court authorized partly by the K. prerogatiue partly by seuerall lawes statutes of the realme might search forth the serpents subtilty and vtterly crush dash the same and séeing the dead letter of each law doth ordaine in most cases but one kind of punishment for one sort of offence the circumspection of the makers of that law were they neuer so wise or experiēced could not foresée all the circumstances which in time might ensue in the maner of transgressing of that law Therfore the lords others of that high Court being now the speaking law representing the persons of the dead lawmakers carefull expositors of their meanings by their graue foresights déep considerations do looke into those offēces which be cōmitted contrary to the same lawes do search into euery quarter corner circumstance therof do pierce through the very bowels intrailes of them and the transgressors thereof as what persons of what estate St. 13. H. 4. 7 St. 2. H. 5. 8 degrée ability function or calling cōmitted the offēce to whom in what manner in what place at what time before whom with what number for what cause the same was done then do inflict punishmēt vpon the transgressors thereof first according to the lawes statutes therfore prouided then do qualifie or aggrauate the same according to the circumstances As it is a Riot punishable by the stat of An. 13. H. 4. Ann. 2. H. 5. if thrée persons or more do assemble together and beat or mayme a man pull downe his house pale or ditch wrongfully c. so if a great number of meane persons of small ability or credit shall assault a péere of the realme or a Knight or Esquire that is Custōs Rotulorum of the shire or a Iustice of peace and Quorum in his country shall strip and whip him shall pull downe his house to the ground shall set him in the stockes or on the pillory shall beat his wife and children kill his cattell and spoyle his corne before his face and shall vse other acts and wordes of infamie and disgrace vnto him and only for
or any of them in their Turnes or Lawdayes And as of other felonies 3. H. 7. 5. 5. E. 6. D. 69 9. H. 4. 1. so I. of peace may inquire of murder Murder because wilfull murder is felony But Iust of peace cannot inquire of treason Treason for neither the before mentioned stat of 18. E. 3. nor the words of their commission do authorise them so to do The Lord of a Mannor Iudge in felonie 13 There be some that haue libertie of Soc and Sac Tol and Them Bracton de Corona cap. 35. 2. R. 3. 10. Infangthéefe and Outfangthéefe these in their own courts may giue iudgement of him who is found within their liberty possessed of any manifest theft as if he be hand hauing and back bearing and that Sathaber viz. he whose the goods be do pursue him Kel fol. 150 for vnlesse he be in possession of the goods though another doth pursue him as a théefe yet that Court Hundred or Wapentake cannot hold plea of such a theft nor make inquirie by the Countrey whether such a man which was not possessed of the goods bee culpable or not Neither shall any wage battell without possession It is called Infangtheefe Infangthéefe where a Theefe is taken possessed of goods stolne within any such Manor or Libertie who is commorant and dwelling within the same libertie and one of the said Lords owne people Outfangthéefe Outfangthéef is a théefe that is a stranger comming from some other place into the Mannor of the Lord who hath such a libertie and is there taken with the manoure And yet he that hath such a libertie cannot fetch one of his owne people who hath committed larcenie out of his libertie and bring him into his libertie and iudge him there according to his libertie for euery person must receiue the punishment of the law where he hath offended the law But he may giue iudgement as well against his own people as against strangers committing larcenie that be taken within his libertie 46. Ed. 3. 15 14. H. 4. 15 And in this libertie of Infangthéefe and Outfangthéefe and in waife and stray and wreck of the sea a man may prescribe but so he cannot do in goods of felons and fugitiues for they do belong to the Crowne and cannot passe without the Kings graunt Fitz. Prescription 65 14 The custome of some countrey is such A felon first executed and then iudged that if one hath committed burglarie or other felonie and he be pursued by huy and cry from towne to town and so taken flying he must be beheaded in the presence of the inhabitants of foure townes and so by the vsage of that countrey he is accounted a felon And this must be recorded in the Coroners roll and after the Coroner must present it before the Iustices and they will adiudge him a felon And so he must be first put to death and after iudged a felon FINIS ❧ The generall Titles of this Booke 1MEnace Assault Batterie Jmprisonment Maiheming 2 Riots Routs vnlawfull and rebellious Assemblies 3 Force and Forcible Entries and Forcible detaining of possessions 4 Forgerie 5 Periurie and Subornation of Witnesse 6 Maintenance Champertie Embracerie 7 Deceit Couin Collusion Fraud 8 Extortion Exaction 9 Oppression 10 Treasons 11 Homicides 12 Felonies by the common Law 13 Felonies by Statute 14 Principall and Accessorie 15 Breaking of Prison and Rescous 16 Escapes of Felons 17 Pursute by Huy and Cry 18 Appeales of Felony 19 Jndictments 20 Mainprise and Bayle 21 Confession of the offence 22 Approuer 23 Sanctuarie and Abiuration 24 Pleading not guilty 25 Triall of the plea of not guilty by Battell 26 Triall by Peeres 27 Triall by the Countrey 28 Challenges 29 Euidence 30 The Verdict 31 Clergie 32 The Kings Pardon 33 Standing mute or answering indirectly 34 Judgement and Execution 35 Forfeitures for Treason or Felony 36 Corruption of Blood 37 Restitution of stolne goods 38 Dammages in an Appeale 39 A Writ of Conspiracie 40 The Coroner and his authority and dutie in Felonies 41 Who shall be Judge in Treason and Felonie ❧ A briefe effect of euery Braunch or Chapter in this Treatise Menace Assault Batterie Imprisonment Maiheming Fol. 1. 1 THe euill fruits of menaces Menacers shal be imprisoned The enormitie of libelling and defaming 2 The differences of Menacing Assault and Batterie 3 The declaration in trespas of menacing A rebuke accounted a Menace or Assault 4 Menacing a seruant wherby he departeth out of seruice 5 Menacing a tenant whereby he departeth from his tenancie Menacing of a Lords Freeholder 6 Menacing which is iustifiable 7 Menacing by going or riding armed 8 Wearing of a priuie coat a Menace 9 Labourers shall weare no weapons to preuent Menaces 10 Assurances made by Menace 11 What is an assault What is a batterie 12 Iustifying of beating in his owne defence Barre in trespas of Assault and Batterie 13 Iustifying of beating in defence of others The mast●rs remedy for beating of his seruant 14 Batterie in defence of his goods Battery in defence of his land lease or way 15 Batterie in resisting of a Iustice of Peace 16 A Schoolemaster beateth his Sholler 17 A Master beateth his Prentice 18 Beating of a man that is franticke 19 Beating of one that will not yeeld to arrest 20 Beating of a seruant departing out of seruice Beating of a Ward 21 Commaundement of Batterie 22 Battery or hurting at some exercise or disport 23 Battery by whipping of a vagabond Punishments by the order of Law 24 Battery for disobeying of a writ or warrant 25 Arresting one in a Church that is doing diuine seruice 26 Disturbing of a Preacher in his Sermon 27 Chiding in a Church or Churchyard Smiting in a church or churchyard Drawing or smiting with a weapon in a Church or c. 28 Drawing of blood within the kings palace 29 Assaulting one which commeth to the Parliament Assaulting the seruant of a Parliament man The liberty of the Clergie at a Conuocation house touching assaults 30 Assaulting a Iudge or Iuror Striking in time or place of iustice 31 Arresting by watchmen 32 Trespas for a battery before Outlawrie 33 A man first indicted for batterie and after sued for the same 34 What imprisonment is Voluntary consent no cause of imprisonment 35 Imprisonment by the commandement of the king or his Iustices c. 36 Imprisonment for notorious and grieuous offences 37 Imprisonment for offences done vi armis 38 Imprisonment for Riots 39 Imprisonment for holding land with force 40 Imprisonment of one that is pursued by huy and cry 41 Imprisonment of him that doth breake the peace Arresting of suspected persons 42 Imprisoning of him that doth attempt to rob 43 Assisting him to arrest that hath a warrant 44 Breaking of a house to arrest in what case lawfull 45 The shirife doth arrest and doth not returne his writ 46 Arresting vpon suspition of felony Causes of suspition of felony