Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n lord_n say_a seal_n 3,083 5 9.0207 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
A53418 Ordines cancellariæ, being orders of the High Court of Chancery, from the first year of King Charles I, to this present Hillary term, 1697 ... to which is added the Rules and orders of the Court of Exchequer. England and Wales. Court of Chancery.; England and Wales. Court of Exchequer. Rules and orders of the Court of Exchequer. 1698 (1698) Wing O415; ESTC R11916 131,267 357

There are 23 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Clerks hereafter be more careful for the filing all Bills Answers and other Pleadings in due time and that no Clerk hereafter presume upon any pretences whatsoever to Copy any Bill Answer or other Pleadings before they be duly filed Bills Answers and Pleadings to be duly filed and no Copies to be taken thereof till they are filed No Record to be carried out of the Office to be filed and that the Client who delivers any Bill Answer or other Pleading to be so copied before the filing thereof shall be adjudged equally faulty as the other Clerk that shall so copy them And that no Clerk shall deliver any Record to be carried forth of the Offices to be copied And it is further ordered That if hereafter any disobedience by any of the Under-Clerks in that Office shall appear it is thereby ordered That the Six Clerks in whose Office the default shall be found shall forthwith present such default to the said Master and if the same be found true such Clerk or Clerks are hereby disabled to sit any more in that Office as an Under-Clerk or keep any Desk there and shall pay the full Damage and Costs that the party grieved whom it may concern shall be at by such default And it is further ordered That this Order be fixed up forthwith in the Office of the Six Clerks that every one may take notice thereof And his Honour doth further charge and command the Six Clerks that they respectively see these Orders from time to time duly observed as they will answer the contrary at their perils William Lenthall Order of the Master of the Rolls Thursday the 29th of June 1654. Concerning Records to be brought into the Chappel of the Rolls FOr as much as it appears to me and also upon several Complaints made to me and diligent enquiry thereupon that many inconveniences arise to the people of this Nation for that you the respective Officers under my charge do neglect to return and bring into the Chappel of the Rolls all Inrolments Inquisitions and Records in your several charges These are therefore to will and require you and every of you and I do hereby order you the several Clerks the Clerk of the Inrolments and the Clerk of the Petty-Bag to bring into the Chappel of the Rolls all such Inrolments Inquisitions and Records as have been usually brought into the Chappel of the Rolls Clerk of the Inrolments and of the Petty-Bag Inquisitions and Records to be brought into the Chappel of the Rolls and are not yet brought and are now in any of your respective Custodies together with the several and respective Callenders thereof fairly written and delivered to my self at or before the first day of August 1654. that thereby such use may be made of them as shall be for the most advantage and ease of the people and the preservation thereof more immediately under my view and if any of the said Officers shall neglect their duty herein such course shall be forthwith taken for their disobedience by sequestration of their several and respective Offices or otherwise as shall appertain to Justice and according to former Presidents in like cases And it is further ordered That this Order or a true Copy thereof be forthwith delivered to every one of the Officers aforesaid whom it may concern And also that this Order be forthwith fairly written and fixed in every Office that no excuse may be made for want of notice William Lenthall Monday the 23th of July 1655. Concerning Ideots and Lunaticks Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered That no Order Affidavit or Certificate touching any Ideot Lunatick or Non Compos Mentis shall be made use of in this Court unless the same be filed with Mr. Shadwell the Clerk of the Custodies Order Affidavit or Certificate touching any Ideot Lunatick Non Compos Mentis to be filed with the Clerk of the Custodies within the space of five days inclusive next after the several and respective dates of such Orders Affidavits or Certificates N. F. C. S. J. L. C. S. Thursday the 9th of October 1656. Order on the behalf of the Masters of Chancery in Ordinary WHereas it appears by several Rules and Orders of this Court made by several Lord Chancellors and Lord Keepers that the Masters of the Chancery Extraordinary have been and are restrained from the exercising or doing any manner of Act as Masters of Chancery within the City of London or five miles compass thereof Masters Extraordinary not to act as Masters in Chancery in London or within five miles thereof and the Clerks and Officers of this Court are prohibited to receive or proceed upon any Acts done by the said Masters Extraordinary within the Compass aforesaid Upon consideration whereof had and upon hearing the Masters of Chancery in Ordinary It is this 9th day of October 1656. ordered by the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners for the custody of the Great Seal of England that the said former Rules and Orders of Court do from henceforth stand revived and continue in force And to the end the same may be the better observed it is further ordered That from and after the 25th day of December next all Masters Extraordinary when they certifie any Answer Affidavit Deed or Recognizanc shall therewith also certifie as well the place where as the time when the same were sworn or acknowledged or in default of such Certificate of the place Masters in Chancery Extraordinary to certifie the time and place of taking any Answer Affidavit Deed or Recognizance or in case the same shall be sworn or acknowledged within London or five miles compass thereof such Affidavit Answer Deed or Recognizance shall not be admitted filed or inrolled without the special License of the Lords Commissioners or Master of the Rolls And that this Order be entred in the Register of this Court and Copies thereof set up and from time to time renewed and preserved for publick view in the Office of the Chief Register Chief Clerk of the Petty-Bag and Clerk of the Inrolments to the end that the said Master Extraordinary and the said Clerks and all Attorneys and other Officers of this Court may take notice and demean themselves accordingly and not otherwise Monday the 16th of February 1656. Of Examination of Witnesses Order of the Court. THe Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners for the Custody of the Great Seal of England taking into their serious Consideration the words of the late Ordinance for regulation touching the Execution of Commissions wherein it declared That after one Commission taken out by the Plaintiff The Plaintiff may take no more Commissions than one to examin Witnesses and not executed the Plaintiff shall be utterly debarred from exaamining any further Witnesses in his Cause Their Lordships are clear of Opinion that notwithstanding the literal sense of the said Regulation the Plaintiff in any Cause depending in this Court may have liberty to examin his Witnesses
their Warrants at or before Trinity Term next ensuing and the Six Clerks do also immediately send into the Chappel of the Rolls all the Decree Rolls of 1656. and before with the Paper Books that are the Warrants for the same there to be carefully laid up preserved and callendred for the service of his Highness and the benefit of the Commonwealth Will. Lenthall Monday the 19th of July 1658. Concerning Records Ordo Curiae WHereas there have been divers Complaints made to his Lordship Vide supra 30 July 76. 27 June 54. for that the Records now remaining in the Inrolment Office are not brought over to the Chappel of the Rolls as formerly have been used to be done Records to be brought into the Chappel of the Rolls and examined his Lordship doth hereby order and require that the Clerk of the Inrolments do bring over into the Chappel of the Rolls all their Inrolments of 1656. and the years before this ensuing Vacation And his Lordship doth order and require the Clerk of the Chappel of the Rolls that when the Inrolments are brought over that they do forthwith lay up the same in Presses appointed for that purpose and do make Calenders and Entries of them that so they may be ready for the service of his Highness and the benefit of the Commonwealth Will. Lenthall Master of the Rolls Sir Nath. Hobart Mr. Escott Saturday the 30th of October 1658. Concerning Bills and Costs Ordo Curiae WHereas upon the motion of Mr. Powell this present day made upon an Affidavit then read in Court Paper Books called the Bills and Costs to be brought into Court whereby it appeared that one Robert Todd doth keep several Paper Books commonly called the Bills and Costs wherein he enters many Bills and Costs without any authority for the same to the great disturbance in proceedings and in danger of the Clients Causes it was therefore prayed that the said Todd may be ordered to bring in the said Books and all Bills entred therein by him and what other publick Books concerning proceedings in Causes he hath or lately had to his Lordship within some short time It is therefore ordered by the Right Honourable the Master of the Rolls that the said Todd do bring in the said Books and all other Books concerning proceedings in Causes in this Court which he had at the time of the making this Order or any time before together with the Bills therein entred to his Lordship upon Thursday next whilst he is sitting in his Court in the Chappel of the Rolls or else to shew good cause to the contrary or in default thereof to stand committed to the Prison of the Fleet. Fryday the 18th of February 1658. Concerning the Six Clerks Order of the Court. VVHereas upon expiration of the late Ordinance for Regulation of the Chancery there did arise several Questions and Differences between those who had been formerly the Six Clerks in Chancery and those persons who had according to the said Ordinance been sworn Attorneys in Chancery upon which differences between them Injunctions to quiet differences between the former Six Clerks and the later till the meeting of a Parliament there was much variety and difference upon Opinion testified by divers Eminent Persons learned in the Law under their Hands and that those differences at length proceeded so far that there arose from thence a great disturbance in the Six Clerks Office and in the proceedings of the Court to the prejudice of the Clients there attending their Causes For prevention whereof and setling the matter for the present till further order and until a Parliament might be sitting who could apply the properest and most effectual remedy thereunto an Order was made bearing date the 4th of March 1657. and afterwards that is to say on Tuesday the 20th of July 1658. An Injunction was granted in pursuance of the said Order and for settlement of the matters aforesaid And whereas now there is a Parliament sitting to which the Parties concerned if they think fit may apply themselves and unto whom the Lords Keepers of the Great Seal of England do conceive it doth most properly belong to determine the matter in question between the said Parties Their Lordships do declare that the said Order and Injunction be from henceforth set aside and determined and that the Parties be left to apply themselves to the Parliament or to take such other course as they shall be advised N. F. C. S. J. L. C. S. B. W. C. S. Lord Keeper Mr. William Lenthall Monday the 16th of May 1659. Touching filing of Bills Order of the Court. VVHereas by reason of the late differences between the Six Clerks and their Under-Clerks Post 86. many disorders and disturbances have risen in the Court of Chancery by not filing of Bills and other Pleadings with the Six Clerks according to the ancient Course and Order of this Court by which means the Clients have been obstructed in their several Suits and the Court abused having granted Injunctions without Bills duly filed for the taking away of which disturbances and for prevention of other inconveniences for the future it is ordered by the Right Honourable William Lenthall Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and Master of the Rolls That all Bills brought unto the Clerk in the Six Clerks Office since the 4th of February Bills to be brought in entred and filed with the Six Clerks according to their several dates Answers Pleadings and Records to be entred and filed 1657. which are not entred and filed with the Six Clerks be forthwith brought unto the Six Clerks to be entred and filed according to their several dates And that all Answers Pleadings and Records whatsoever shall forthwith be likewise entred and filed with the Six Clerk and that no Copies or Certificates shall be delivered out of the Office or used without the Hand of one of the Six Clerks thereunto set or in their absence the Hand of one of their respective Deputies And it is likewise ordered by his Lordship that all Pleadings and other Records whatsoever which the Clerks have in their Houses or Chambers be forthwith brought into the Six Clerks Office there to remain in their custody according to the ancient and usual course of the Court. And that no Records for the future shall by any Clerk or his Servant be carried out of the Office to be copied or otherwise used No Records to be carried out of the Office to be copied unless to a Master of the Court or by Order of the Court. And whereas his Lordship hath been informed that one Robert Todd an Under-Clerk in the Six Clerks Office Antea 80. doth keep Books for entring Bills Attachments Rules and Costs to the great disturbance of the Proceedings in the Office It is ordered by his Lordship that the said Todd shall forthwith bring in all the said Books that are in his custody or have been in his custody since the
ordained and decreed by the Authority aforesaid That if any of the said Under-Clerks for the time being after his or their receit of any of the Fees and sums of Mony aforesaid or after his or their delivery out to his Client or any on his behalf any Writs Commissions Exemplifications or other Process or of any Copies of any Bills Answers or other Pleadings made written or dispatched in the said Office and shall not faithfully and duly account for and pay what belongs to every Six Clerk to whom he is accountable and ought to pay for the same according to the rates and proportions aforesaid without any wilful delay or concealment That in such case every Under-Clerk so offending upon complaint and proof thereof made before the Right Honourable the Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper or Master of the Rolls shall over and besides such remedy as the Six Clerks have legally for the same undergo such punishment as the said Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper or Master of the Rolls for the time being shall judge meet to stand with Justice and the nature of his demerit who will be the more careful to see the said Six Clerks righted therein in respect they do by the reason of the more sure and just payment of the residue of their said Fees abate much of what heretofore they used to receive And it is also ordered ordained and decreed by the Authority aforesaid That from henceforth no Commission Writ or process usually made or dispatched in the said Office shall from henceforth be put to the Seal nor any Copies of any Pleadings Commissions Depositions Certificates or other Records usually dispatched in the said Office No Commission Writ or Process shall be put to the Seal nor any Copies of Pleadings Commissions Depositions Certificates c. to be delivered out of the Office until they be first signed by the Six Clerks c. shall be delivered out of the said Office to any Client until the said Commissions Writs Process and Copies respectively shall be first signed by the Six Clerks to whom the same doth or shall properly belong to his Deputy or in his or their absence by some other of the Six Clerks not towards the Cause And that all Commissions whereby any Depositions are taken and returned which belong to the Six Clerks to receive shall immediately upon the bringing in or return thereof into Court be delivered to the Six Clerk to whom the same doth properly belong or his Deputy to be safely and securely kept till publication be duly passed and not to be from henceforth in any wise kept back or broken open by any of the Under-Clerks or other person till publication thereof shall be passed as aforesaid for which end and purpose each Six Clerk is hereby injoyned to have one or more Deputy or Deputies to be constantly resident and attendant in the said Office The Six Clerk to have one or more Deputies to be constantly attendant in the Office in the absence of the said Six Clerks for signing of Writs Copies and receiving Commissions as aforesaid And it is further ordered and decreed That all Rules whatsoever shall from time to time be duly entred in the Common Book commonly called the House-Book All Rules to be duly entred into the House-Book and notice thereof to be given to the Under-Clerk of the other Side and that upon entring of such Rules notice shall from time to time be given to the Under-Clerk on the other Side that is towards the Cause to the end the Client may not be surprized thereby And that upon the delivery out of any Copy the Clerk who copied and delivered the same shall bring back and deliver the Record to the Six Clerk from whom he received the same to the end the same may be filed and bundled with the rest of the Records in the same Cause and that all Bills Answers Replications Rejoinders and other Proceedings relating to any Suit commenced in this Honourable Court since the first day of Michaelmas Term last and now remaining unfiled in the custody or possession of any Under-Clerk of the said Office shall in some convenient time be produced and filed with such Six Clerk to whom the same shall properly belong and that the Under-Clerks respectively according to the proportions before mentioned shall duly satisfie and pay the Six Clerks respectively the Fees due for the same as aforesaid The Under-Clerk to give to the Six Clerk a Note of the Name and Place of abode of such their Clients who are in arrears for F es And in case such Under-Clerk respectively have received all the due Fees for the same of their Clients respectively and if not then they are to give unto the Six Clerks respectively a Note in writing under his or their Hands of the Name or Names Place or Places of abode of such Client or Clients who are in arrear for any Fees due to them and the quantum of such Fees to the end the Six Clerks respectively may take such course for the recovery thereof as they shall be advised and that for so much the said Under-Clerks shall be discharged and acquitted from every further demand from them concerning the same And lastly it is ordered ordained and decreed That this present Decree shall be inrolled in the Judgment Rolls of this Court to be observed for the future to all intents and purposes according to the Tenour and true Meaning thereof Orlando Bridgman C. S Harb Grimstone M. Rolls Sabbati 31 die Octob ' Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 20. 1668. Touching Under-Clerks Ordo Curiae WHereas on the 18th of June last Supra 18 June 68. a Decree was made for the Regulating of the Office of Six Clerks and for setling of the differences lately arisen between the Six Clerks and the Under-Clerks of the said Office by the Right Honourable Sir Orlando Bridgman Knight and Baronet Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and the Honourable Sir Harbottle Grimstone Baronet Master of the Rolls wherein it is amongst other things decreed That on or before the 1st day of November next ensuing all the present Under-Clerks of the said Office who now are allowed and admitted to practise except such only against whom there is just cause of exception in the judgment of the Honourable the Master of the Rolls should be admitted Clerks of this Court and that as well they the said Under-Clerks so to be admitted as every other person hereafter to be admitted to the place of an Under-Clerk in the said Office should The time for admitting and swearing the Under-Clerks enlarged at or before the time of such his admission and before his and their entrance upon that imployment take the Oath therein particularly expressed Now for as much as the time prefixed by the said Decree is near expired and there be many of the said Under-Clerks who by reason of their remoteness of dwelling or other accidents are not as yet come to
Some Law-Books lately Printed for J. Walthoe CAses in Chancery Folo price 12 s. Daltons Country Justice with large Additions Fol. 14 s. The Practice of all the Courts at Westminster Octavo 5 s. A View of all the Penal Laws concerning Trade to April 1697. 12o. 3 s. The Method of Pleading by Rule and President c. 8o. 5 s. Tryals per Pais 8o. 5 s. The Compleat Sheriff with the Office of a Coroner 8o. 5 s. The Table of Fees of all the Courts at Westminster as they were delivered in Parliament 8o. 1 s. 6 d. The Modern Conveyancer or Conveyancing Improved the Second Edition with Additions 8o. 5 s. The Law of Obligations and Conditions 8o. 5 s. Blunts Law Dictionary Fol. 10 s. All the Pleadings and Arguments upon the Qu● Warrant● against the City of London Fol. 6 s. Ordines Cancellariae BEING ORDERS OF THE HIGH COURT OF CHANCERY FROM THE First Year of King Charles I. To this present Hillary Term 1697. EXAMINED By the ORIGINAL ORDERS To which is added the RULES and ORDERS Of the COURT of EXCHEQUER LONDON Printed by the Assigns of Rich. and Edw. Atkins Esquires for I. Walthoe and are to be sold at his Shop in the Middle-Temple Cloysters 1698. A TABLE OF THE Names of the Orders A. ACcounts 201 Affidavits 15 91 207 Amending Letters Patents 20 Answer 55 121 192 An Act for ascertaining the Fees of the Masters in Chancery 95 Attachments 54 B. BBankrupts 198 Bill 55 80 113 C. CAuses to be set down for hearing 135 196 Clerks of the Inrolment 40 Commissions for examining of Witnesses 11 Commissions 55 132 Contempts 141 Common Rules 54 Costs 80 Contempts 13 137 187 Cursitor 146 D. DDecrees made with the Assistance of the Judges 48 Decrees 56. 142 213 Demurrers 62 117 Depositions 55 73 134 247 Differences between the Six Clerks and Examiners 26 Division of Business of the Six Clerks Office according to the Letters of the Alphabet 36 107 157 Dismissions 55 56 E. EXaminers 3 64 73 Examiner suspended 215 Examination of Witnesses 38 72 125 154 204 Exceptions 123 209 175 234 236 239 Examiners Clerks not to practise as Solicitors 254 F. FEes 44 Fees of Affidavit Office 33 Filing of Affidavits 58 Filing Bills 77 83 86 Filing Exceptions 197 Filing Reports and Certificates 237 H. HEaring Causes 30 210 232 I. IDeots 70 Imposition on Law Proceedings 176 178 Injunctions 55 56 Joint Commissions 56 Inrolments of Patents 101 Interrogatories 216 L. LVnaticks 70 M. MAster 's in Chancery 70 144 Motions 65 Misdemeanors of the Young Clerks 221 240 244 Masters Clerks not to practise as Solicitors 254 N. NObility Answering 63 O. ORders on Petition 217 P. PAper Copies to contain 15 Lines 53 Plague 24 Paupers 151 Pauper Writs 173 Petitions 49 151 Persons committed to the Fleet for imbezling Records 51 Pleadings 55 Pleas 62 117 Priviledge 6 31 Privy Seals 55 Prisoners 61 Priviledge Writs 100 173 Proceeding in hearing Causes 136 Private Order 231 240 Q. QVakers 189 R. REferences 256 References of Insufficient Answers 5 Registers Office 87 88 Register 54 Registring Affidavits 8 Records 60 66 68 78 79 90 194 211 Recognizances 183 Rehearing 208 233 Renewed Writs 173 Regulating the Vnder-Clerks 222 S. SIx Clerks 61 81 205 244 Serjeant at Arms 205 251 Solicitors 205 Solicitor Committed for an Assault 188 Subpoena Office 85 Subpoena's 45 106 115 Subpoena ad audiendum Judicium 1 46 53 Subpoena ad Rejungendum 54 Surrender of one of the Six Clerks to the Master of the Rolls 219 T. TRansferring of Records 42 U. UNder-Clerk allowed Parchment 23 Vnder Clerks 171 244 Vnder-Clerks Fees 161 Vsher of the Court 158 W. WArrants 55 Writs in Forma Pauperis 100 A List of the Lord Chancellors Lord Keepers and Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal of England from the First Year of King Charles the First to the Ninth Year of the Reign of King William the Third SIR Thomas Coventry was made Lord Keeper of the Great Seal Nov. 1. in the First Year of the Reign of King Charles the First 1625. Sir John Finch was made Lord Keeper the 23th of Jan. 13 Car. 1. 1639. Sir Edward Littleton Knight made Lord Keeper the 23th of Jan. 16 Car. 1. 1640. Sir Richard Lane Knight made Lord Keeper the 30th of Aug. 25 Car. 1. 1649. Sir Edward Hide Knight made Lord Chancellor of England the 29th of Jan. 12 Car. 2. 1660. Sir Orlando Bridgman Knight made Lord Keeper the 30th of Aug. 19 Car. 2. 1667. Anthony Lord Ashly Earl of Shaftsbury Constituted Lord Chancellor of England the 17th of Nov. 24 Car. 2. 1672. Sir Henage Finch Knight made Lord Keeper the 19th of Nov. 25 Car. 2. 1673. Sir Francis North Knight made Lord Keeper the 22th of Decemb. 34 Car. 2. 1681. Sir George Jefferies Knight Constituted Lord Chancellor of England the 28th of Septemb. 1 James 2. 1685. Sir John Maynard Sir Anthony Keck and Sir William Rawlinson made Commissioners of the Great Seal in Hillary Vacation the First of King William and Queen Mary 1689. Sir John Summers made Lord Keeper in Hillary Vacation the Fourth of King William and Queen Mary 1692. And Constituted Lord High Chancellor of England the 23th of April the Seventh of King William 1695. ORDO CVRIAE OR ORDERS OF THE Court of Chancery From the First Year of King Charles the I. to Hillary-Term 1698. Veneris 30 die Junii Anno Regni Caroli Regis primo 1625. Concerning Subpoena's Ad audiendum Judicium Ordo Curiae WHEREAS the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper being informed of sundry Abuses Vide postea in the untimely and disorderly setting down of the Causes of Hearing in this Court and the obtaining of Subpoena's Ad audiendum Judicium thereupon whereby ancient Causes were stopt back from hearing and other Causes thrust in to the prejudice of the other Clyents and scandal to the Court the six Clerk towards the said Causes never being made acquainted therewith For reformation whereof the then Lord Keeper did Order and Require That hereafter it should be carefully observed that no Subpoena should be made Ad audiendum Judicium for any Cause of hearing whatsoever before the Clerk that makes the same Writ have a Note under the Hand of the six Clerk that is Attorny and under the Hand of the Register and in their absence under the Hand of their sufficient known Deputies to warrant the same No Subpoena's to be made Ad audiendum judicium before the Clerk that makes the same Writ have a Note under the Hand of the six Clerk and of the Register to warrant the same And if any such Clerk should after presume to offend therein then the said Clerk was to stand committed for his wilful contempt Forasmuch as the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper was this day informed by the said six Clerk that of late the said Order had been neglected in divers Subpoenas Ad audiendum judicium which had been made without any such notice
of this Court and is kept from the Execution of the said Office by one Robert Sheires Esq who detains the Exhibitants Records and Writings belonging to the said Office whereby many of the Suitors of the Court are prejudiced and delayed in their Causes The Right Honourable the Lord Chancellor doth therefore order that the said Mr. Sheires Records to be delivered to a new Register at his peril doth forthwith upon sight hereof this night deliver the said Records and Writings to the said Mr. Strode Ed● Hyde C. S. Sabbati 15 die Novembris Anno Regni Caroli secundi Regis 12. 1660. Concerning Affidavits Ordo Curiae WHereas the Right Honourable the Lord Chancellor of England and Master of the Rolls have upon due consideration had by their Honours of the present State of the Office of Registring Affidavits in this Honourable Court and the necessary use thereof for preventing the imbezelling and falsifying of Affidavits whereby the Court hath been often abused the course of Justice interrupted and the Suitor apparently wronged or unduly prejudiced And notwithstanding Special Orders of the Court heretofore made for that purpose and by directions both publickly and upon private Petitions given for due observation thereof yet the same hath been of late years so much neglected as it is now found necessary for the Honour of the Court Vide supra 23. Jan. 27. the good of the Suitor and the righting of the Officer to give reformation thereunto It is therefore this present day ordered by their Honours That all Affidavits of this Court except those only which belong to the Supplicavit Office shall before the same be executed in Court All Affidavits except those that belong to the Supplicavit Office before they be read in Court shall be first filed and registred in the Affidavit Office and attested by a Copy thereof under the Officers hand or otherwise produced to ground any Order Writs Process or Proceedings of Court thereupon be brought into the said Office of Registring Affidavits and be there filed and registred And that this Order both at the Court at Westminster at the Seals and at the Rolls by the Officers of this Court and all others whom the same doth or may concern be duly observed and kept at the perils of such as in contempt of this Honourable Court shall presume wilfully or negligently to decline or not observe the same Register not to sign any Order granted upon any Affidavit unless the Affidavit be first filed and registred And further it is ordered by their Honours that neither the Register of this Court his Clerks or Deputies shall or do at any time hereafter draw up sign or set his or their hand or hands unto any Order whatsoever granted upon any Affidavit unless the Affidavit be first filed and registred with the Register of the Affidavits and attestation brought and shewed to the said Register of this Court his Clerks or Deputies under the hand of the said Register of the said Affidavits or his Deputy attending in the said Office And it is further ordered by their Honours That no Master of this Court shall accept of or take the Oath of any person to an Affidavit except the same be fair and handsomly writ in one hand without blotting or interlining And in case any Affidavit shall escape the said Masters of this Court and pass so blotted and interlined under their or any of their hands it is further ordered That the Register of the Affidavits or his Deputy shall thereupon refuse the same and that afterwards no use shall be made thereof in any the proceedings of this Court. And it is further ordered by their Honours That all Affidavits taken or henceforth to be taken before any Master of the Court be brought unto the said Register of Affidavits or his Deputy for the time being to be there filed and registred in some due and convenient time To be filed and registred in ●ue and convenient time after the same be sworn unto and before use be made thereof in Court as well to prevent the vexation and trouble of His Majesty's Subjects in coming so often to enquire for such Affidavits before they come into the said Office as also that the parties against whom the Affidavits be made may have time by their Councel to inform the Court of any cause of Exception they may have to alledge against the same and that all the Clerks of the Court and Solicitors of Causes there shall by the end of Hillary Term now next following bring into the said Office all such Original Affidavits as shall remain in their hands and cause the same to be there duly filed and registred at their perils And to the End that none may have any excuse of being ignorant hereof it is lastly ordered That this Order being fairly written shall be set up in Tables and so shall remain in the several Offices of the Register the Six Clerks and of the said Affidavits E. H. C. Har. Grimstone Anno 13 Car. II. Reg. An Act for ascertaining and establishing of the Fees of the Masters of the Chancery in Ordinary WHereas the Office of the Masters in Chancery is of very ancient Institution and of necessary use and continual attendance for the dispatch of the business depending in that Court it appearing by ancient Records that the constitution of that Court was long before the Conquest much of the Duty Pains and Attendance whereof lieth on the said Masters and for that it conduceth much to the Administration of Justice that those who exercise places of Trust should have competent and certain rewards suitable to their pains and labour whereby they may have due maintenance to support the quality of their Places and that it is but fitting and necessary for the Subject to allow a moderate payment where they receive a proportionable advantage a Fee of four pence in times of that Antiquity being as much in value as two shillings now by reason whereof in process of time and the improved rate of all necessaries the present recompence of those ancient Offices is no way competent and proportionable to their pains and attendance which are likewise very much increased without any increase hitherto of what was so anciently allowed as aforesaid And for that it appears in all other Courts at Westminster there is twelve pence taken for every Affidavit and for that it hath been found inconvenient for Suitors to put in Answers or return Commissions in the private Studies of the Masters so that through the difficulty of finding such Answers and Commissions with what Master they were left or through the Masters absence at such time as they were called for it frequently happens the persons conceived to be in contempt are exposed to much trouble and charge thereby and for that it is more proper safe and satisfactory to the Subject in general that Affidavits Answers Recognizances and Acknowledgments of Deeds shall be dispatched in some publick
certain and open place where the persons that do the same may be seen and known rather than in private Studies or Houses for the more proper and solemn dispatch of the aforesaid business and for the better encouragement of the aforesaid Masters in the due discharge of their places be it enacted by the Kings Most Excellent Majesty by and with the advice and consent of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament and by the Authority of the same That from and after the three and twentieth day of October in the present year of our Lord 1661. there shall be one Publick Office kept and no more as near to the Rolls as conveniently may be in which the Masters some or one of them shall constantly attend for the administring of Oaths caption of Deeds and Recognizances and the dispatch of all matters incident to their Office references upon Accounts and insufficient Answers only excepted from the hours of seven of the Clock in the Morning until twelve at Noon and from two in the Afternoon until six at Night and that from henceforth it shall and may be lawful to and for the Masters of the Chancery in Ordinary now being and which hereafter for the time to come shall be to demand and take the several Fees hereafter expressed that is to say For every Affidavit or Oath taken in the Office 12 d. For every Bill of Costs to be taxed by them for the Plaintiffs not putting in his Bill or not proceeding to Reply or for the Defendants not Appearing in due time 2 s. 6 d. For the acknowledgment of every Deed to be enrolled 2 s. For the caption of every Recognizance 2 s. For every Exemplification examined by two of the said Masters to each of the said Masters who shall examine the same for every Skin of Parchment so examined 2 s. For every Report or Certificate to be made in persuance of any Order made upon the hearing of the Cause 1 l. And for every other Certificate or Report of any Order made upon Petition or Motion only 10 s. to be paid by the party that takes out the Report or Certificate 10 s. Any Law Statute or Custom to the contrary hereof in any wise notwithstanding And be it further enacted by the Athority aforesaid That if the said Masters of Chancery or any of them shall hereafter directly or indirectly by any Act Shift Colour or Device have take or receive any Mony Fee Reward Covenant Obligation Promise or any other thing for his Report or Certificate in Writing or otherwise or for any other the matters in the Act expressed other than the respective Fee or Fees in the Act before mentioned that then every such Master being thereof legally convicted shall thenceforth be disabled from the execution of his said Office of Master of the Chancery in Ordinary and also shall forfeit and lose for every such Offence to the party grieved in that behalf so much Mony as he or they shall take contrary to this present Act and moreover shall lose and forfeit 100 l. Sterling whereof one moiety shall be to our Sovereign Lord the King His Heirs and Successors and the other moity to the party grieved in that behalf who shall sue by Action of Debt Bill Plaint Information or otherwise in any of the King's Courts for the recovery of the same in which Action no Essoign Protection or Wager of Law shall be allowed Mercurii 12 die Feb. Anno Regni Caroli II. Reg. 14. 1662. Priviledge Writs and Writs in Forma Pauperis Ordo Curiae WHereas the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England was this day informed by Mr. Collins on the behalf of several Officers and Clerks of the Court that all small Writs which pass the Great Seal for all priviledged persons and for such as are admitted to sue in this Court in Forma Pauperis and renewed Writs were and usually have been by ancient course delivered to the person for whom such Writs have been sealed or to their Clerks without paying of any Fee therefore until of late that one Mr. Hutton a Clerk or Deputy to the Right Honourable the Lord Newburgh through whose Office all Writs of that nature do pass hath refused to deliver the same without paying of Fees for the Seals thereof his Lordship doth order that all Writs which shall be Sealed for priviledged persons Priviledge Writs and Pauper Writs to be sealed without Fee and for Suitors to this Court in Forma Pauperis and renewed Writs be from henceforth delivered to the persons for whom the same shall be Sealed or to their Clerks without paying or giving any Fee for the same And the said Hutton is required to observe this Order and to conform thereunto accordingly Mercurii 20 die Aug. Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 14. 1662. Touching Inrolments of Patents Ordo Curiae WHereas upon the Humble Petition of the Six Clerks of His Majesty's High Court of Chancery on the 29th of April last preferred to the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England shewing that it having been their ancient and undoubted Right to inroll the Warrants of all such Leases as pass the Great Seal which they peaceably and quietly enjoyed until about the tenth year of the late King one Baseley by colour of a Patent to him granted of inrolling the King's Deeds did prefer several Petitions to the said late King and to the then Commissioners for exacted Fees the Lord Keepers Coventry Finch and Littleton that all such Warrants might be delivered to him to be inrolled But upon hearing the Six Clerks he had no relief but the Six Clerks and their Predecessors enjoyed their ancient Rights therein and in the 11th year of the said late King the Lord Coventry upon careful examination thereof with the concurrent opinion of the then Master of the Rolls and Sir John Banks then Attorney General did amongst other of the Six Clerks Rights certifie the said late King under his Hand that it was the Right of the Six Clerks to inroll all Warrants for Parents whatsoever and that it was the right of the Clerk of Inrolments to inroll all Recognizances c. in the Close Rolls which were made from Subject to Subject or from the Subject to the King for the Subjects benefit for the accustomed Fee and if the Attorney General or Solicitor require it to inroll any Deed or Writing made to his Majesty for his own use without Fee Whereupon the said late King in the said 11th year of His Reign confirmed the said Rights amongst others to the Six Clerks and the Clerk of the Inrolments with an Inhibition to all others to intermeddle with their said Rights Nevertheless Mr. Kipps upon a claim by Mr. Hains by colour of the like Grant to him as formerly to Baseley refuseth to deliver such Warrants of Leases that lately passed the Great Seal to them to be inrolled And therefore they humbly prayed his Lordship to order Mr. Kipps to
References to them upon Hearings for the ease of the Court in stating of Accounts and other like matters have of late been armed with Commissions to Examin Witnesses and Power to direct Commissions into the County if they saw cause Whereupon difference hath risen between the said Masters and the Six Clerks and Examiners of this Court about the Right of taking and keeping such After-Examinations and to whom such Commissions and the Depositions thereby taken should be returned kept and copied And the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England being acquainted therewith was pleased to appoint this present day for hearing all the said parties and accordingly his Lordship being assisted by the Honourable the Master of the Rolls and having respectively heard the said Masters Six Clerks and Examiners then present touching the same declared That such Commissions and Examinations ought not to be returned to or taken or kept by the said Masters in regard whilst they are in their hands the same are not any Records to ground their Reports and the Judgment of the Court upon in case the Cause should afterwards come to hearing upon Exceptions to such Reports or be otherwise reheard and that the Client cannot have authentick Copies at any such Hearing nor exemplifie or otherwise make use of the same at any Trial at Law to be directed by this Court or otherwise And in regard such Examinations are in danger to be lost or not known where to be found upon the death or removal of such Master who keeps the same and that Clients will be encouraged more frequently to neglect or forbear to make their full proofs although they ought and might do it before publication purposely to take advantage of such later proofs which may occasion the lengthning out of Causes to the great charge and delay of the Suitors in this Court. Therefore his Lordship upon serious consideration of the whole matter and preventing such inconveniences and irregular proceedings as aforesaid doth think fit and so order That for the future all parties concerned do at their perils as much as in them lies After publication Interrogatories may be exhibited to examin Witnesses make their full proof before publication passeth in the Cause But if upon any such reference the Master shall find any particular points or circumstances needful to be proved to ground his Report upon which are not fully proved nor could properly be examined to before the hearing of the Cause he shall then direct the parties to draw Interrogataries to such Points or Circumstances only and examine thereupon in Court by the Examiners if the Witnesses shall be or reside within ten Miles of London as by the Rules of the Court they ought to do but if farther off and the parties desire it he may direct a Commission into the Country Or to direct a Comission into the Country which is to be made out by the Six Clerks which said Commission and the Depositions thereby taken shall be returned unopened to the respective Six Clerk which ought to have the keeping thereof and publication to pass according to the course of the Court in such Cases and all other Examinations in this Court for the future not taken and kept of Record by the Six Clerk or Examiners as aforesaid are from henceforth declared to be void and shall not be admitted to ground any such Report or otherwise be made use of in any proceedings in this Court or at Law Clarendon Chanc ' Sabbati 1 Feb ' Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 20. 1668. Ordo Curiae WHereas by an Order made by the Right Honourable Edward Vide supra 18. July 1666. Repealed Earl of Clarendon late Lord. High Chancellor of England and the Honourable Master of the Rolls bearing date the 18th day of July 1666. It was ordered that all Bills Answers and other Pleadings thereupon in the Six Clerks Office and all Exemplifications Writs and Copies in the Causes should be filed made and expedited according to the division and allotment of the Letters of the Alphabet in the Causes wherein the Plaintiff or first Plaintiffs Surname began as therein is mentioned by the respective Six Clerks therein named and their Successors respectively and by no other against which several Complaints have been made to the Lord Keeper by several Suitors upon examination whereof and Conference with the Master of the Rolls his Lordship held the said Order unfit to be continued and further put in Practice and doth therefore order that the said Ordinance be from henceforth discharged and that the Method thereby directed be not from henceforth for the future practised or observed but all Clients be at liberty to chuse their own Attorney Clients to be at liberty to chuse their own Clerk or Attorney and that the business of the Court from henceforth be dispatched as formerly was used before the making of the said Ordinance Bridgman C. S. Lunae 25 May Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 20. 1668. Touching the Usher of the Court. Ordo Curiae WHereas by two several Orders the one of the 8th and the other of the 10th of April last made in a Cause wherein John Elliott Esq is Plaintiff and Jane Hicham and others Defendants upon Complaint of the said Plaintiff against Mr. Joseph Herne late Usher of this Court Usher of this Court forfeited his Place fornon-attendance for the Reasons then alledged it was the said 8th day of April ordered that the said Mr. Herne should be called in Court three several times that Day and so three times on three several days successively to attend in Court according to the duty of his Place And the said Mr. Herne being according to the Command and Direction aforesaid called by the Cryer of this Court three several times upon three several days and not appearing upon either of them to give his attendance in order to the execution of his Place as Usher of this Honourable Court The Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England did the said 10th day of April order that the said several defaults should be recorded in the Petty-Bag to the end such further Order should be taken as should be just with the said default being accordingly recorded and the said Mr. Joseph Herne being again this day by the command of his Lordship called three several times to give his attendance in this Court as aforesaid and not appearing his Lordship declared the said Place to be void and that the same was forfeited for his not attendance and doth therefore order that the aforesaid several defaults together with this Order be also recorded in the Petty-Bag Jovis 18 die Junii Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 20. 1668. Touching Under-Clerks and Fees Ordo Curiae FOr the better regulating of the Office of Six Clerks and for setling the differences lately arisen between the Six Clerks and the Under-Clerks of the said Office in such manner as that the inconveniences occasioned
from them or their Deputies in contempt of the said Order It is therefore now ordered by his Lordship That the Clerk of the Subpoena Office The Clerk of the Subpoena Office to observe the said Order having notice hereof shall hereafter observe and perform the said former Order his Lordship minding to have the same put in Execution in all points Anno Regni Caroli Regis primo Ter. Hill 1625. Touching Examiners Ordo Curiae FOrasmuch as Complaint hath been often made by the Examiners of this Court Vide postea 19 May 1658. how that after Depositions of Witnesses have been taken before them between parties Plaintiffs and Defendants and otherwise one of the said parties Plaintiff or Defendant after publication have taken out the Copy of the Depositions for his own part only and then afterwards the same party which hath so taken out Copies delivering the same to his Solicitor or Agent to the end they should abbreviate or keep the same the said Solicitors or Agents by mutual practice and combination with the adverse party in the Suit his Clerk Solicitor or Agent without the consent or privity of the said party who took out the said Copies hath for Mony or other rewards either given or suffered other Copies to be made and delivered to the adverse party his Solicior or Agent without the Examiners knowledge by reason whereof the Examiners have been often times defrauded of the said second Copies and of the fruits of their own Labours to the abuse of this Court and to the prejudice of the Examiners who besides the said Disinherison of the due Fees do also incur a scandalous imputation for the writing by reason the Copies so surreptitiously made are for the most part very ill and loosely written which are commonly supposed to be taken out of the Examiners Office It † The Examiner may take our Subpoena's ag inst such as shall be suspected to deliver undue Copies of Depositions to the adverse party his Clerk or Solicitor to defraud him of his Fees of second Copies for the Examination of such Offenders upon Interrogatories to be executed before the other Examiner and to be allowed of by a Master of ●h● Court is therefore ordered by the Right Honourable the Master of the Rolls That if at any time hereafter it shall probably appear unto the said Examiner or either of them that any undue Copies shall be made as is aforesaid the Examiner who findeth himself so abused may if he will take out Subpoenas against one two or any three such persons as he shall suspect to have deceived him for the examination of such misdoers upon Interrogatories in that behalf to be executed before the other Examiner and first allowed of by a Master of the Court touching the point of the Fraud and Abuse in delivering out any such unlawful Copies as are before mentioned And if upon consideration had of the Answers of the said parties suspected unto the said Interrogatories it shall appear unto the said Master of this Court who allowed of the Articles and be so certified by him that the said parties are faulty in making or procuring such undue Copies to the prejudice of the Examiner That then every such person so found offending shall for such his Misdemeanor be committed to the Prison of the Fleet from whence he shall not be discharged till he hath satisfied the Examiner Upon a Certificate of the said Master the Offender to be Committed to the Fleet till satisfaction to the Examiner for the said undue Copies Provided That if the parties drawn in question shall acquit themselves upon their Examination that then the Examiner who called them in by such Process shall pay such Costs for unjust Vexation If the suspect party acquits himself the Examiner to pay Costs as the Court shall think meet Mercurii 10 Decembris Anno Regni Caroli Regis Quarto 1628. Concerning References of Insufficient Answers Ordo Curiae IT is Ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper in respect of the great expence of time and many delays used upon References of insufficient Answers to the Masters of this Court That if hereafter upon any Reference of insufficient Answers made to any Master of this Court Report upon a Referrence upon insufficient Answer to be fil'd within one Month after date of such Refererence a Report be not thereupon procured and filed in the Register within one Month at the farthest after the date of such Reference that the same Reference shall stand absolutely void by this general Order without any Motion or special Order to be obtained in that behalf Or else the Reference to be absolutely void without Motion or special Order Martis 22 die Decembris Anno Regni Caroli Regis Quinto 1629. Of Priviledge Ordo Curiae THE Right Honourable the Lord Keeper taking notice of the great Abuse that hath been lately offered to the Dignity of this Court in the frequent granting of Priviledge unto such as no ways have any dependance upon the Court but only under colour that they are or have been Servants to some of the Masters Ministers and Officers of the Court which heretofore hath not usually been admitted but to such as have been menial Servants unto such Ministers and Officers For prevention of which Abuse his Lordship doth Order That from henceforth no Writ of Priviledge shall be granted to any person whatsoever but only unto such as are Ministers Officers and known Clerks of the Court No person to have Privilege but Masters Ministers Officers and known Clerks of the Court and their Menial Servants and shall be so certified by the Master of the Office where such Clerks write and to such others as shall first make Affidavit that they are menial Servants unto some one of the Masters Ministers or Officers of the Court and such Writ of Priviledge to continue in force no longer unto such Servants than they shall continue menial Servants And before any Writ of Priviledge shall pass the Seal except it be for a Minister Officer or known Clerk of the Court It is Ordered That it be first presented unto and signed by the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper for the time being and where any Writ of Priviledge shall be presented to his Lordship to be signed for any such menial Servants as aforesaid the Affidavit so to be by him made is to be annexed to the Writ it self And it is lastly Ordered That no Writ of Priviledge do issue for any menial Servant until such time as his Writ of Priviledge hath been first allowed of by his Lordship Writ of Priviledge how and by whom to be allowed as aforesaid Sabbati 23 Jan. Anno Regni Caroli Regis Quinto 1629. Concerning Registring of Affidavits Ordo Curiae Post 8 Anno 21 June 1660. THE Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and the Master of the Rolls having this day taken into their serious
into the right County by reason of an unusual neglect and want of endeavour in the Prosecutor to get the same executed the Sheriff returneth a Non est inventus or a Proclamari feci and sometimes that Return made by others in the Sheriffs name in an ordinary course His Lordship therefore to remedy such Inconvenience and Abuse hereafter and to prevent the vexation of the Subject in this kind doth think fit and Order That all Process hereafter to be made upon any Contempt be made out into the proper County where the party against whom the same Process issueth shall be resident or dwelling unless he shall be then in or about London All Process made upon Contempt to be made out into the proper County where the party is resident unless in or about London in which case it may be directed into the County where he shall then be that it may be served upon him there and that every Suitor who prosecuteth Process of Contempt against any of his Majesties Subjects shall do his best endeavour to procure the said Process to be duly executed He who prosecuteth for Contempt to do his best endeavor that the precedent Process be duly executed and the supposed Contemners to be apprehended thereby and if any be hereafter arrested upon a Proclamation or Commission of Rebellion or by the Serjeant at Arms and shall make it appear unto the Court by proof that the Prosecutor of those Processes hath not done his best endeavour to have had the first and precedent Process duly executed as by the Order is required then the party so offending shall pay unto the other party grieved very good Costs for his wrongful vexation contrary to the direction of this Order And his Lordship doth also Order That notice be given thereof to the Officers and Clerks of the Court that so their Clyent may have knowledge thereof that the same may be observed accordingly Jovis 28 die Februarii Anno Regni Caroli Regis Octavo 1632. Concerning Affidavits Ordo Curiae VVHereas the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and the Master of the Rolls have by an Order of this Court dated the 23th day of January Antea An. 1629. in the 5th year of his Majesties Reign Ordered and straightly charged and required That all Affidavits of this Court except those only which belong to the Supplicavit Office should before the same be exhibited in Court or otherwise produced to ground any Order Writs Process or Proceedings of Court thereupon be brought into the Office of Registring Affidavits and be there duly Filed and Registred and that no Copy of Affidavits be made or subscribed but by the sworn Register of Affidavits or his Deputy for the time being and that no Counsellor at Law nor any of the six Clerks or other Clerks or Officers of this Court nor any Solicitor of Causes there depending should from thenceforth offer to read or give in Evidence to the Court any Affidavit that is not first Filed and Registred in the said Affidavit Office and attestation thereof given by a Copy under that Officers Hand or his Deputy and that neither the six Clerk nor any of the Cursitors nor the Register of this Court their Clerks or Deputies do make pass or enter any Order for Attachments Commissions Writs Process or Proceedings grounded upon any Affidavits unless the said Affidavit be first Filed and Registred in the Affidavit Office as aforesaid and that all Clerks of the Court Solicitors of Causes there should by the end of Hillary-Term then next following bring into the said Office all such Original Affidavits as should remain in their Hands and cause the same to be there duly Filed and Registred at their Peril All which notwithstanding many Original Affidavits have not been brought into nor Filed in the said Office as in and by the said Order was required but contrarywise many Affidavits have since been read and used in Court and Orders and proceedings have been thereupon made drawn up and entred before the said Affidavits have been Filed and Registred in the said Affidavit Office And whereas also many Affidavits have been and are brought into the Register of the Affidavit Office by the parties themselves whose Cause the same concerneth and by others for many Weeks Months and some Years after the same Affidavits sworn with sundry Interlineations sometimes in another Hand oftentimes a Line or two struck out usually blotted or altered in one place or another not without apparent suspition of being corrupted and falsified after the Master of this Court his Hand put thereunto or use made thereof upon Motion in Court or Orders or Process thereupon grounded Now upon due consideration had by their Honours of the Premisses It is this present day Ordered and by their Honours strictly given in charge and commanded That the said Order of the 23th of January in the said fifth year of his Majesties Reign shall be henceforth both at the Court at Westminster at the Seals and at the Rolls by the Officers of this Court and all others whom the same doth or may concern duly observed and kept at the perils of such as in contempt of this Honourable Court shall presume wilfully or negligently to decline or not observe the same And further it is Ordered by their Honours That neither the Register of this Court his Clerk or Deputies shall or do at any time hereafter draw up sign or set his or their Hand or Hands unto any Order whatsoever grounded upon an Affidavit unless the Affidavit be first Filed and Registred with the Register of the Affidavits Filing Affidavits vide ant● f. 10. and attestation thereof brought and shewed to the said Register of this Court his Clerk and Deputies under the Hands of the said Register of the said Affidavits or his Deputy attending in the said Office And it is further Ordered by their Honours That no Master of this Court shall accept of or take the Oath of any person to an Affidavit except the same be fairly and handsomely writ in one hand without blotting or interlining Affidavits to be fairly written in one Hand without blotting or itnerlineation otherwise no use to be be made of them in Court and in case any Affidavit shall escape the said Master of this Court and pass so blotted and interlined under their or any of their Hands It is further Ordered That the Register of Affidavits or his Deputy shall thereupon refuse the same and that afterwards no use shall be thereof made in any of the proceedings of this Court. And lastly It is wished and directed by their Honours That all Affidavits taken or henceforth to be taken before any Master of this Court be brought unto the said Register of the Affidavits or his Deputy for the time being to be there Filed and Registred in some due and convenient time after the same be sworn unto Affidavits to be Filed in
order that from henceforth the Attorney of this Court upon the Filing of any Pleadings or Record with them The Attorney of this Court upon the Filing of any pleadings or Records with him shall by himself or his Deputy transfer the same to the Attorny of the other side shall by himself or his Deputy transfer and deliver the same Pleadings or Record to the Attorney of the other side or his Deputy without trusting any other Clerk to do the same and to the end that those Errors and inconveniences may be prevented and avoided for the future which do and may arise by reason sometimes more Records and Pleadings are entred in the Attorneys Filing-Book than in the Tituling Book of the same Attorney It is thought fit Every Six Clerk after the end of every Term shall examine their Tituling Book by the Filing-Book and so ordered by his Lordship that every of the Six Clerks or their Deputies shall from henceforth after the end of every Term and before the beginning of the then next Term examin and compare the Tituling-Book by them kept and the Filing-Book kept for the same Office the one with the other and certifie the Errors and supply the defects and omissions which they shall find therein that both may be made perfect and agreeable the one with the other Ordo Curiae vel Ordo Regis pro Fees 1638. Concerning Fees Ordo Curiae IT is his Majesties pleasure that the Judges of all his Majesties Courts at Westminster Juries in all the Courts to enquire the Fees of the Courts that have occasion to Impannel Juries of the Officers and Clerks of the same Courts to enquire of matters concerning the same Courts shall Impannel such Juries this Term and enquire what Fees have been usually taken in such of his Majesties Courts of Justice by the several Officers of the same Courts for the space of thirty years last past upon Certificate whereof his Majesty will take such course for the setling of those Fees in the said several Courts as to his Wisdom shall seem meet and the Lord Keeper is not only to perform this his Majesties pleasure in the Court of Chancery but to signifie the s●me his Majesties pleasure to the Judges of the other Courts that they may perform the same this Term. The Oath of the Officers that are to enquire of Fees in the Court of Chancery YOU shall diligently enquire and true Presentment make of all such Fees and payments as now are and by the space of thirty years last past have been used to be taken by any Officer Minister or Clerk of this Court as belonging or claimed to belong to him or them by reason of his Office place or Clerkship and what Fees now taken or claimed have been begun inhansed increased or innovated within the space of thirty years and when and how long since and how the same were so begun innovated inhansed or increased Martis 23 die Junii Anno Regni Caroli Regis 16. 1640. Concerning Subpaena's Ordo Curiae THe Right Honourable the L. Keeper taking notice that Subpaena's retornable immediate have been lately granted upon Petition by the Master of the Rolls which is a thing proper to be granted by his Lordship No Clerk shall take out any S●bpaena retorn immediate without Order of the Lord Keeper and not otherwise It is ordered that all the Clerks of this Court do hereby take notice that from henceforth they may not take forth any Subpaena retorn immediate without the special command of the Lord Keeper Veneris 26 die Junii Anno Regni Caroli Regis 16to 1640. Concerning Subpaena's ad audiendum Judicium Ordo Curiae WHereas several Lord Keepers of the Great Seal of England having been informed of sundry abuses in the untimely and disorderly setting down of Causes for hearing in this Court Vide supra 1. Order confirmed fol. 1. and the obtaining of Subpaena's ad audiendum Judicium thereupon whereby ancient Causes have been kept back from hearing and other Causes thrust in to the prejudice of other Clients and scandal to the Court the Six Clerks towards the Cause never being made acquainted therewith for Reformation whereof their Lordships upon sundry Complaints to them made have by several Orders of the 18th of Feb. 19 Jacob. Regis the 28th May 21 Jac. and the 30th June 1th Car. now perused by the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper that now is Ordered and required that hereafter it should be carefully observed that no Subpaena should be made ad audiendum Judicium for any Cause of hearing whatsoever before the Clerk that makes the same Writ have a Note under the hand of the Six Clerk that is Attorny in the Cause No Subpaena ad audiend ' Jud ' before the Clerk have a written Note under the hand of the Six Clerk and Register to warrant the same and under the hand of the Register and in their absence under the hand of their sufficient known Deputies to warrant the same and that if any such Clerk should presume to offend therein then the said Clerk so offending was to stand committed for such his contempt Now forasmuch as the Right Honourable the now Lord Keeper was this day informed by the Six Clerks of this Court that of late times the said Order hath been neglected and divers Subpaena's have been made without any such Note from them or their Deputies in contempt of the said Order Whereupon his Lordship minding as his Predecessors have done to have the said Order put in Execution in all points and the penalty aforesaid to be inflicted upon the offenders Doth now Order that the Clerks of the Subpaena-Office having notice hereof shall at their peril and under the penalty aforesaid observe and perform the aforesaid recited Order without putting the said Six Clerks to make further Complaints to his Lordship for breach thereof Jo. Finch C. S. Sabbati 23 die Januarii Anno Regni Caroli Regis 22. 1646. At the Rolls Master of the Rolls Sir Edward Low Concerning Decrees made with the Assistance of the Judges Ordo Curiae IT is ordered that all Injunctions Decrees and Dismissions hereafter to be granted or made by any of the Judges sitting in Chancery Injunctions Decrees and Dismissions made by any of the Judges sitting in Chancery to be Signed by them shall be first Signed by them or such of them as shall grant or make the same before the Order whereby the same shall be so granted or made shall be entred in the Register whereof all the Six Clerks and other Clerks of this Court are to take notice and carefully to observe the same and to enter the Orders before the same be Signed by the Commissioners Lunae 26 die Aprilis Anno Regni Caroli Regis 23. 1647. Concerning Petitions The Earl of Manchester Speaker Ordo Curiae THE Right Honourable the Commissioners for the Custody of the Great Seal of England taking into consideration the many complaints that have
hands by the time aforesaid William Lenthall C. S. Lunae 1. Aprilis Anno 1650. Concerning Prisoners Ordo Curiae IT is this day Ordered by the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners for the custody of the Great Seal of England that such Prisoners now in the Custody of the Warden of the Fleet Prisoners in the Fleet not worth 5 l. to have their Liberties by Habeas Corpus who have made Affidavits according to the late Act of Parliament for Prisoners that are not worth 5 l. shall have their Liberty by their Habeas Corpus upon their own Security to be given to the Warden of the Fleet. Veneris 21 die Junii 1650. Touching the Six Clerks Ordo Curiae WHereas only Mr. Hales one of the Six Clerks of this Court gave his Attendance this Morning sitting the Court at the entring into the hearing of the Cause wherein Kitchen is Plaintiff against Meredith Defendant Fine on a Six Clerk for not attending at an Hearing and the rest of the Six Clerks made default It is therefore this present day Ordered that such of the Six Clerks who so made default of their attendance and service to this Court at the beginning of that Cause be fined 10 s. a-piece to the Poor and the Usher of this Court is to receive the same to the use aforesaid Lunae 17 die Febr ' Anno 1650. Pleas and Demurrers Ordo Curiae THe Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners for the Custody of the Great Seal of England taking notice of many inconveniences by the entring Demurrers in the Paper after the same is set up in the Registers Office Plea and Demurrer to be put into the Paper at least two days before the hearing such Plea or Demurrer and after such Paper put in the Registers Office no alteration to be made therein whereby the other Side is many times surprized do think fit and order That from henceforth the Registers do not enter any Plea or Demurrer in the Paper at the instance of any person or Warrant for setting down the same on any certain day unless the Suitor shall bring such Order or Warrant to the Register to be so entred at least two days before the day appointed for hearing such Demurrers or Plea and that after such Paper made and set up in the Registers Office no addition or alteration shall be made therein Jovis 31. die Decembris Anno Regni Car ' Regis 16. 1640. The Nobility Answering Ordo Parl ' ORdered upon the Question Nemine Contradicente That the Nobility of this Kingdom and Lords of the Upper House of Parliament are of Ancient Right to answer in all Courts as Defendants Peers of the Realm to answer in all Courts upon Protestation of Honour only upon protestation of Honour only and not upon the Common Oath and that the said Order and this Explanation doth extend to all Answers and Examinations upon Entries in all Causes as well Criminal as Civil and in all Courts and Commissions whatsoever and also to the persons of the Widows and Dowagers of the Temporal Peers So the Widows and Dowagers of Temporal Peers of the Land and that the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England for the time being or the Speaker of the Lords House for the time being do forthwith give notice of it together with the explanation to all the Courts of Justice and the Judges Clerks and Registers of them by causing our former Order with this explanation to be recorded in all Courts and that all Orders Constitutions or Customs entred or practised to the contrary whensoever may be abolished and declared void and the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal for the time being or Commissioners of the Great Seal out of Parliament-time shall see all practice to the contrary hereafter to be punished with exemplary severities to deter others from the like attempts Jo. Browne Cleric ' Parl ' Lords Commissioners Wednesday the 15th of Octob. 1651. Concerning Examiners Ordo Curiae UPon motion this day made unto the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners for the Custody of the Great Seal of England by Mr. Rich and Mr. Raven on the behalf of the Examiners of this Court touching an abuse by some persons of late often committed in taking out and executing Commissions in and about London contrary to the General and Known Rules and Practice of this Court that no Commission shall be executed in London No Commission to be executed in London or w thin 20 miles thereof or within twenty miles thereof and several Orders of Court heretofore made in confirmation thereof their Lordships do appoint the Examiners to attend them with the Orders and Presidents of the Court in this Case and they will then be pleased to give such order for relief of this abuse as shall be just Lords Commissioners Fryday the 18th of June 1652. Concerning Motions Ordo Curiae WHereas heretofore Thursday in every Week in the Term-time was appointed by the Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners c. for the hearing of Motions and so observed for several Terms together to the great benefit of the Suitors but of late the said Custom hath been let fall without any Direction or Order from their Lordships and Causes appointed to be heard every day except the First and last through the whole Term. Their Lordships upon the motion of Mr. Chute do order that from henceforth Thursday in every week in the Term-time to be observed for motions only Thursday in every week in the Term-time unless when it happens to be the the second of the beginning or the last day save one of the end of the Term to be observed for hearing of Motions only and the Six Clerk as also the Secretary are to take notice thereof and not to tender or procure any Cause to be set down for hearing on that day Thursday the 16th of March 1653. An Order made by the Honourable William Lenthall Esq Master of the Rolls for the better ordering and safe-keeping the Records in the Six Clerk Offices FOr as much as there have been Complaints lately made to the Honourable the Master of the Rolls of divers Records lost or so mislaied in the Six Clerks Offices that they are not to be found which abuse and other mischiefs upon enquiry he finds to grow from the great neglect of due filing of Bills Answers and other Pleadings and carrying them out of the Office to be copied and lying scattered up and down the Offices in the Under-Clerks Seats His Honour taking consideration thereof and for redress for the future doth order and command all the Clerks in the said several Offices that they forthwith turn over all Bills Answers and Pleadings which they have in their several custodies or have delivered out to be copied and which ought to have been turned over and filed before this time to the end they may be all forthwith filed with the several Six Clerks for their safe custody And that all the
deliver the said Warrants to the riding Clerk to be inrolled according to their Just Right Whereupon his Lordship desired the Master of the Rolls to call all parties concerned before him having heard their several Allegations to certifie his Lordship how he found the case between them who having accordingly heard them made his Report or Certificate to his Lordship in these words 9 July 1662. To the Right Honourable the Earl of Clarendon Lord High Chancellor of England According to your Lordships directions the 29th of April 1662. Upon the Six Clerks Petition to have the Warrants of Leases delivered unto them by Mr. Kipps to be inrolled I have heard them and Hains with his Councel who made it appear that there had been several Patents of like nature to his granted to several persons since the 26th of Henry the 8th In Answer whereunto the six Clerks say that notwithstanding the said Patents Mr. Hains doth not shew that ever any of the said Patentees did inroll any Warrants for Grants that pass the Great Seal nor do any words as I conceive in his or any former Patents mentioned by him extend to the inrolment of any such Warrants The Six Clerks further made it appear that Edward Basely the late Patentee petitioned the lat King against them in 1634. concerning the inrollments of His Majesty's Deeds which was referred to the Commissioners of exacted Fees and I find in the year following upon examination had by the Lord Keeper Coventry with the concurrent Opinion of Sir Julius Caesar Master of the Rolls and Sir John Banks Attorney General it was certified under the hand of the said Lord Keeper amongst other things to have been the due ancient Right held and enjoyed by the Six Clerks to inroll all manner of Warrants for Patent Leases c. whereby the said Patent Leases c. pass the Great Seal Six Clerks to inroll all Warrants for Patent Leases c. whereby the Patend Leases c. pass the Great Seal whereupon his late Majesty by his Letters Patents bearing date the 17th of June 1635. to take away all questions doubts and ambiguities that heretofore have been or hereafter may be raised concerning the same and to the end the Six Clerks and their Successors for ever after might inviolably hold the same did allow approve grant ratifie and confirm the same And it was therein declared to be His Majesty's pleasure that the said Warrants shall be delivered from time to time by him or them in whose custody they shall remain to the Six Clerk who shall be riding Clerk for the time being to the end the said Warrants might be inrolled His Majesty further by the said Patent straightly charging and commanding that no other person or persons whatsoever should from thenceforth encroach or usurp upon them therein or molest or disturb them touching the same And the Six Clerks accordingly have ever since inrolled the said Warrants and before and ever since have received the Fees due for the same All which I humbly submit to your Lordships grave consideration as by the said Report remaining filed with the Register of this Court appeareth Har. Grimstone And his Lordship having perused the said Report doth declare his Concurrence in Opinion with the Master of the Rolls and doth therefore order and appoint the said Mr. Kipps to deliver out the said Warrants to be inrolled as by the said Petition is desired Master of the Rolls Sir Tho. Estcott Sir Mondeford Bramstone Lunae 25 die Januarii Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 15. 1663. Concerning Subpaena's Ordo Curiae FOrasmuch as this Court was this day informed by His Majesty's Attorney General that one John Hungerford hath forged made and counterfeited Subpaena's and that he hath put Seals thereon like unto those sealed with the Great Seal as by two several Affidavits now produced and read in Court appeared And further informing that one Theophilus Aylmer had lately bespoke paid 18 s. for and had from the said Hungerford one forged and counterfeit Subpaena for 51 l. 13 s. 4 d. Costs in a Cause depending in this Court between Sharp and Brooks which coming to be examined before the Master of the Rolls he committed the said Hungerford and Aylmer for such misdemeanour contempt and abuse of this Court unto the Prison of the Fleet Punishment of those that forge Subpaena's who are still in Custody It was therefore prayed that the said Hungerford and Aylmer may be punished and made exemplary for such their Misdemeanour Abuse and Contempt of this Court and his Majesty's great Seal Whereupon it is ordered that the said Hungerford and Aylmer be brought into this Court when the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England doth sit in Court and in the mean time the Register is to search Presidents of what hath been done by the Court in punishing Offences of like nature Mercurii 18 die Julii Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 18. 1666. Touching the Business of the Court divided according to the Letters of the Alphabet Ordo Curiae THe Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon Lord High Chancellor of England and the Honourable Sir Harbottle Grimstone Baronet Master of the Rolls taking into their Consideration the manifold disorders and undue practices which in the late times have crept into the Six Clerks Office to the great dishonour of this Court the obstruction of Justice the damage of the Client and confusion and loss of the Records and the several ways of redressing the same And having divers times heard the Six Clerks and their Under-Clerks concerning the settlement by division of Letters formerly to this end ordered by the Lord Coventry late Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and after long deliberation and several conferences with some of the Reverend Judges and of the King 's learned Councel finding no expedient so equal and effectual for the due filing and easie search of the Records and the orderly proceedings and quiet dispatch in all Causes nor so proper to prevent the mislaying and the imbezling the Records ●eceiving filing bundling of Bills Answers c. and the making all Exemplifications Writs and Copies thereof to be divided amongst the Six Clerks according to the Letters of the Alphabet Vide infra Feb. 1. 1668. this Order Repealed and that confusion which is every day discovered from thence to the extream scandal of the Court and prejudice of the Subject as the reviving and re-establishing the aforesaid settlement Do hereby Order and Ordain that the said method be revived and from henceforth observed by the present Six Clerks and their Successors and by their Under-Clerks viz. that the receiving filing bundling and keeping of all Bills Answers Pleadings and all Proceedings thereupon and the making and expediting of all Exemplifications Writs and Copies of or concerncerning the same be divided among the said Six Clerks and their Successors respectively by and according to the Letters of the Alphabet in manner following that is to say that all
Bills Answers and other Pleadings of Clients in Causes wherein the Plaintiffs or first Plaintiffs Sirname shall begin with A. B. C. D. F. or Y. and all Proceedings thereupon in the said Six Clerks Offices be from henceforth received filed bundled and kept by Mr. Pyndar and Mr. Bluck or one of them and their Successors in their Offices respectively and by no other And all Bills Answers and other Pleadings of Clients in Causes wherein the Plaintiffs or first Plaintiffs Sirname shall begin with E. G. H. J. K. L. M. N. or O. and all Proceedings thereupon in the said Six Clerks Offices be from henceforth received filed bundled and kept by Sir Cyrill Wych and Mr. Wilkinson or one of them and their Successors in their Offices respectively and by no other And all Bills Answers and other Pleadings of Clients in Causes wherein the Plaintiffs or first Plaintiffs Sirname shall begin with P. Q. R. S. T. V. W. X. or L. and all other proceedings thereupon in the said Six Clerks Offices be from henceforth received filed Bundled and kept by Sir John Marsham and Mr. Longville or one of them and their Successors respectively and by no other in manner as formerly hath been done by the Six Clerks And that all Cross Bills Bills of Reviver and Bills of Review and all proceedings thereupon be revived filed bundled and kept in the same Division of Letters where the former Suit touching the same matter began and not elsewhere and all Exemplifications Writs and Copies of or concerning the same Bills Answers Pleadings and Proceedings thereupon be made and expedited by them to whom the reviving filing bundling and keeping of the Records doth belong according to the allotments of Letters aforesaid and by no other And it is further ordered and ordained That if at any time hereafter there shall happen any difference to arise betwixt any of the Six Clerks touching any of their Under-Clerks or touching their Clients or their Causes or touching the filing of any Bill Answer or Pleading or other thing according to the division of Letters aforesaid or any other matters of their Offices that then the said differences be from time to time examined by the rest of the Six Clerks for the time being whom such difference for the present shall not concern who are to decide and determine the same or otherwise to certifie the true state of the Fact with their Opinion to the Master of the Rolls And because it is very manifest that these misdemeanours and enormities are gotten into the Office of the Six Clerks by the liberty and license which the inferiour Clerks have of late assumed to themselves and by their withdrawing their Obedience from and their dependence upon the Masters of the several Offices in which they write and by receiving too many Clerks of little or no experience into the several Offices It is likewise further ordered and ordained that every of the Six Clerks shall be limited and stinted to twelve Clerks Every Six Clerk to be stinted to 12 Under-Clerks at the most to serve immediately under him whereof fix at the least shall be expert in writing the Chancery Letter and every of those twelve shall take a Corporal Oath before the Master of the Rolls not to imbezil falsifie corrupt raze or deface any Bills Answers Pleadings Commissions Depositions Warrants Decrees Dismissions or other Records whatsoever belonging to the High Court of Chancery and to deliver forthwith unto the Six Clerks respectively or his Deputy unopened all Commissions and Depositions that shall come to their hands to be kept safely and secretly by the Six Clerk till publication and after being copied forthwith to return them Orders heretofore used in Chancery With such Alteration and Additions as the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon Lord High Chancellor of England with the Assistance of the Honourable Sir Harbottle Grimston Baronet Master of the Rolls have thought fit to Ordain Bills THat no Counsellor do put his Hand to any Bill How Counsellors are to demean themselves in drawing Bills Answer or other Pleading unless it be drawn or at least perused by himself in the Paper-draught before it be Ingrossed which they shall do well for their own discharge to sign also after perusal and Counsel are to take care that the same be not stuffed with the repetition of Deeds Writings or Records in haec verba but the effect and substance of so much of them only as is pertinent and material to be set down and that in brief terms without long and needless traverses of points not traversable tautologies multiplication of words or other impertinencies occasioning needless prolixity to the end the ancient brevity and succinctness in Bills and other Pleadings may be restored and observed much less may any Counsel insert therein matter meerly criminal or scandalous under penalty of good Costs to be laid on such Counsel to be paid to the party grieved before such Counsel be heard in Court If there be matter scandalous in a Bill Bill scandalous a Master of Chancery is to expunge it and to tax Costs for the Party scandalized but if on such reference the Master Reports the Bill not scandalous the Party procuring such reference shall pay Costs to the Plaintiff for such his reference That all Bills be dated the same day they are brought into the Six Clerks Office Bills to be dated the same day they are brought into the Office and that no Six Clerk presume to antidate any Bill and that no Under-Clerk presume to keep any Bill by him but with the first opportunity deliver the same to the Six Clerk or his allowed Deputy in his absence to be accordingly filed No Bill Answer or other Pleading shall be said to be of Record or to be of any effect in Court until the same be filed with such of the Six Clerks with whom it ought properly to remain Subpoena's THat all Plaintiffs may have liberty to take forth Subpoena's ad respondendum before the filing of their Bills if they please notwithstanding any late Order or Usage to the contrary That every Subpoena to Answer How every Subpoena is to be served Revive Review Rejoyn to Testifie or to hear Judgment shall be served personally or left at the Defendants dwelling-House or place of Residence with one of the Family And no Clerk of this Court shall issue any Attachment for not appearing but upon Affidavit first made Affidavit to be made of the Service positive and certain of the day and place of such Service of the Subpoena and the time of the Return thereof whereby it shall appear that such Service was made if in London or within twenty miles thereof four days at the least excluding the day of such Service Attachment for not appearing and if above twenty miles then to have been eight days before such Attachment entred and that such Attachment shall not be discharged but upon payment of usual Costs and
Action and by Process thereupon the Defendant is not only usually arrested but frequently proceeded against to the Outlawry to the great damage of the Subject and the loss and diminution not only of the proper Original Writs issuing out of this Court but also of his Majesty's Revenue for the casual Fines thereupon due and payable It is therefore Ordered That no Cursitor of this Court from and after the first day of Trinity Term next ensuing make or cause to be made any Writs of Clausum fregit or Clausum Domum fregit within the City of London without special Warrant from the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England or Master of the Rolls for the time being unless it be made appear by Affidavit or some other probable Evidence that the same is the true and proper Cause of Action No Clausum fregit to be made in London without special warrant from the Lord Chancellor c. or it be made appear that the same is the true cause of Action That no Cursitor of any other County do make or permit to be made within his respective Division any of the said Writs of Clausum fregit or Clausum Domum fregit of any other Return than of the last Return of every respective Term unless it be to warrant Arrests No Writs of Clausum fregit to be made of any other retu●n than of the last return after every Term except in two cases and Testatum Capias only That no Cursitor shall from and after the end of Michaelmas Term next ensuing make Of what returns the Cursitor is to make his Original Writ● or permit to be made within his respective Office and Division any Original Writ whatsoever of any Return past unless he shall receive the Instructions for making thereof within the Term wherein the said Writs are to be returnable or at the farthest on or before the first Essoyn-day of the next succeeding Term without special Warrant from the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal of England or Master of the Rolls for the time being or good Cause to be allowed of by the Principal and Assistants of the Company of the Cursitors for the time being or the major part of them at their publick Meetings according as heretofore hath been used The Cursitors are to take care that they employ under them in their Office none but persons of known Integrity and Ability and if any Clerks or Persons so employed shall be found faulty in the Premisses he shall be expulsed the Office and the Cursitor who so employed him shall be answerable to the Court for such Misdemeanors and such person or persons who shall be discovered to do or proceed otherwise than is before mentioned shall be liable to such Censure for his Offences as the Court shall find just to inflict upon him Petitions NO Injunction for stay of Suit at Law shall be granted revived dissolved or staid upon Petition nor any Injunction of any other Nature shall pass by Order upon Petition without Notice and a Copy of the Petition first given to the other side Injunction not to be staid granted or dissolved upon Petition without notice and a Copy of it to the other side and the Petition filed with the Register and the Order entred No Sequestration Dismission Retainers upon Dismissions or final Orders are to be granted upon Petition No Sequestration dismission Retainers upon dismissions to be granted upon Petition No former Order made in Court is to be altered or explained upon a Petition or Commitment of any person taken upon Process of Contempt to be discharged No former Order of Court to be altered or explained upon a Petition or Commitment of any person on Contempt to be discharged by it but upon hearing the adverse Party his Attorney or Clerk towards the Cause Paupers AFter an Admittance in Forma Pauperis no Fee Profit or Reward shall be taken of such Party admitted by any Counsellor or Attorney for the dispatch of the Paupers Business during the time it shall depend in Court No Fee to be taken during the Paupers business depending in Court and the Penalty and he continued in Forma Pauperis nor any Contract nor Agreement be made for any Recompence or Reward afterwards And if any person offending herein shall be discovered unto the Court he shall undergo the displeasure of the Court and such farther punishment as the Court shall think fit to inflict upon him and the Party admitted who shall give any such Fees or Reward or make any such Contract or Agreement shall be from thenceforth dispaupered and not be afterwards admitted again in that Suit to prosecute in Forma Pauperis Causes of being dispauper'd and dismissed If it shall be made appear to the Court That any person prosecuting in Forma Pauperis hath sold or contracted for the benefit of the Suit or any part thereof while the same depends such Cause shall be from henceforth totally dismissed the Court and never again retained Such Counsel or Attorney as shall be assigned by the Court to assist the person in Forma Pauperis either to prosecute or defend may not refuse so to do unless they satisfie the Lord Chancellor of England or Lord Keeper or Master of the Rolls who granted the Admittance with some good reason of their forbearance That the Counsellor who shall move any thing to the Court on the behalf of a person admitted in Forma Pauperis ought to have the Order of Admittance with him The Counsel who moves for a Pauper ought to have the Order of admittance with him and first to move the same before any other Motion And if the Register shall find that such person was not admitted in Forma Pauperis he shall not draw up any Order upon the second Motion made by any such Counsel but he shall lose the fruit of such second Motion in respect of his abuse to the Court. No Process of Contempt shall be made forth and sent to the Great Seal at the Suit of any person prosecuting as Plaintiff in Forma Pauperis until it be signed by the Six Clerk No Process of Contempt to be made at the Suit of a Pauper till it be signed by the Six Clerk who deals for him and the Six Clerks are to take care that such Process be not taken out needlesly or for vexation but upon just or good grounds as they will answer it to the Court if the contrary shall appear And lastly It is Ordered That all Masters of the Court of Chancery Counsellors and all Officers Ministers Clerks and Solicitors in the said Court do observe these Orders which are to continue until upon farther consideration and experience any alterations shall be fit to be made therein Clarendon Har. Grimston Mercurii 27 die Feb ' Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 19. 1667. Touching Examination of Witnesses Ordo Curiae WHereas the Masters in Chancery upon
by the said differences to the hindrance of the dispatch of the business of this Court may be hereafter avoided it is this present 18th day of June in the 20th Year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord Charles the Second c. by the Right Honourable Sir Orlando Bridgman Knight and Baronet Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and the Honourable Sir Harbottle Grimstone Baronet Master of the Rolls and by the Authority of this High and Honourable Court of Chancery ordered ordained and decreed That on or before the 1st day of November next ensuing all the present Under-Clerks of the said Office who now are allowed and admitted to practise except such only against whom there is just cause of exception in the Judgment of the Honourable the Master of the Rolls shall be admitted Clerks of this Court and that as well they the said Under-Clerks so to be admitted as every other person hereafter to be admitted to the place of an Under-Clerk in the said Office shall at or before the time of such his admission and before his or their entrance upon that Imployment take this Oath following that is to say The Oath of the Under-Clerks YOU shall swear that you shall not willingly do procure or assent unto any thing whereby any of the Records Rolls Pleadings Books or Writings of or belonging unto the Court of Chancery which shall be under the keeping or charge of the Master of the Rolls for the time being or of any of his Clerks or Ministers or which shall come to your hands or whereunto you shall have recourse shall be imbezled falsified corrupted rased or defaced or whereby any corruption fraud or deceit may be done thereby but shall well and truly entreat and deal with the said Records Rolls Pleadings Books and Writings according to your best knowledge and understanding and that you shall do your utmost endeavour for the safe and secret keeping of all Examinations and Depositions of Witnesses that shall be delivered unto you or shall come to your hands without opening publishing or disclosing till publication be granted by the Court or otherwise by the assent of the Parties or their Attorneys according to the Course of the same Court. So help you God And that upon the death or removal of any of the said Under-Clerks so to be admitted and sworn in each respective Six Clerks division no other person or persons shall from and after the time aforesaid be admitted or sworn an Under-Clerk of the said Office or be admitted to practise in the place or places of him or them so dying or being removed until the number shall be reduced to ten Under-Clerks in each respective Six Clerks division that so the number of the Under-Clerks of the whole Office may be reduced to sixty Clerks and no more Sixty Under-Clerks in the Office at which number the said Under-Clerks shall from and after such reducement be continued unless this Court shall find it necessary to increase or abridge the same and when any vacancy shall happen of any the Under-Clerks places after such reducement as aforesaid none shall be nominated by the Six Clerks respectively for the place of the said Under-Clerks respectively unless he and they have been educated and brought up in the said Office Under-Clerks to be such as are brought up in the Office and have served seven years at the least as a Clerk under some of the Six Clerks or Under Clerks and shall be of honest and civil behaviour and be otherwise fitly qualified for the said imployment And it is hereby further ordered ordained and decreed that no person upon any pretence whatsoever shall be permitted to practise as an Under-Clerk in the said Office but such only as shall be sworn and admitted as aforesaid and that no Under-Clerk so to be sworn and admitted as aforesaid shall at any time on any pretence whatsoever be deprived suspended or in any ways hindred in or from the exercise of his or their said Imployment but by Judgment or Order of the Lord Chancellor Lord Keeper or Master of the Rolls for the time being only And that out of the Fees payable by the Clients the said Under-Clerks respectively so to be sworn and admitted as aforesaid shall and may have receive retain and keep to their own uses respectively the several Fees and Allowances hereafter-mentioned and shall be accountable to the Six Clerks respectively for any business to be dispached in the said Office after the rates and proportions only herein after set down and not otherwise that is to say Clerks Fees That the Under-Clerks shall have and receive and retain to their own uses respectively OUt of the Termly Fee of 3 s. 4 d. the sum of 1 s. 4 d. And for all Copies of Bills Answers Pleas Demurrers Replications Rejoynders Depositions Interrogatories and other Records usually dispatched in the said Office for four pence a sheet and the Fee of 6 d. per sheet usually paid for the transcript of the Bill annexed to the Writ of Dedimus potestatem 4 d. And 12 s. 8 d. per skin for all Exemplifications 12 s. 8 d. And 2 s. 8 d. for every Dedimus potestatem 2 s. 8 d. And 3 s. 2 d. for every Ordinary Commission and Rejoyning Commison to examin Witnesses 3 s. 2 d. And 4 s. for every Commission of Rebellion 4 s. And 3 s. 2 d. for every Writ of Execution of an Order 3 s. 2 d. And 16 s. 4 d. for every Decree and Dismission 16 s. 4 d. And 13 s. 2 d. per skin for every Writ of Execution of a Decree 13 s. 2 d. And 6 s. 8 d. for every Injunction 6 s. 8 d. And 1 s. for every Attachment and Attachment of Proclamation 1 s. And a Moiety of oll other Fees for all other Writs usually dispatched by the Clerks in their Clients Causes Moiety And the Under-Clerks respectively shall be accountable to the Six Clerks respectively only For 2 s. residue of the said Termly Fee of 3 s. 4 d. 2 s. And 4 d. per sheet of all Copies of all Bills Answers Pleas Demurrers Replications Rejoynders Depositions Interrogatories and other Records usually dispatched in the said Office 4 d. And 14 s. a skin for every Exemplification 14 s. And 4 s. for every Dedimus potestatem 4 s. And 3 s. 6. for every Commission and Joyning in Commission to examin Witnesses 3 s. 6 d. And 6 s. for every Commission of Rebellion 6 s. And 3 s. 6. for every Writ of Execution of an Order 3 s. 6 d. And 17 s. for every Decree and Dismission 17 s. And 13 s. 6 s. per skin for every Writ of Execution of a Decree 13 s. 6 d. And 6 s. 8 d. for every Injunction 6 s. 8 d. And 1 s. for every Attachment with Proclamation 1 s. And for a Moiety of all other Fees for all other Writs usually dispatched by the Clerks in their Clients Causes Moiety And it is further ordered
the High Court of Parliament and in imitation of that Provision which is made by the Statute made in the 27th year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth whereby it is enacted That no Recognizance in the nature of a Statute Staple shall bind any Purchasor unless the same be inrolled within six Months after the acknowledgment thereof Doth hereby declare and order That for the future no Recognizance which after the first day of September next ensuing shall be acknowledged in this Court of what Nature or Kind soever shall be inrolled in this Court unless such inrolment be within the space of six Months after the acknowledgment thereof And that all Officers and Ministers of the Court do for the future observe and take care that no such Recognizance be inrolled in the said Court contrary to this present Order Recognizances to be inrolled within 6 months after acknowledgment and all Recognizances heretofore acknowledged in this Court and not already inrolled shall be inrolled within the space of six Months after the 23th day of October next and shall not be received nor inrolled after that time and because there may be special circumstances wherein it may be fit to dispense with these Rules no Recognizance shall ever be inrolled after the time prescribed be elapsed without motion in open Court Except by Motion in open Court to the end that the Conusor and all Purchasers and Tertenants may have due notice and the Court may by Special Order and consent of the Party paying such inrolment out of due time provided for the indemnity of such Purchasers as may be otherwise prejudiced thereby and that all persons concerned may take notice of this Order Copies hereof are to be set up and fixed in the several Offices of the Court concerned herein Mercurij 4 die Novembris Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 26. 1674. Touching Contempts Ordo Curiae UPon Complaint made to the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper Vide infra 13 Julij 85. 17 Maij 1 Jac. 2. c. by the Serjeant at Arms attending the Great Seal that after Contempts are prosecuted to a Serjeant at Arms and a Commitment pronounced the Prosecutors will draw up the Order and never take forth a Warrant thereon but make use thereof to force the party prosecuted into some Composition sometime for the whole Matter in difference but usually for the discharge of the Contempts whereby the Serjeants Imployment is rendred in great part ineffectual for prevention whereof his Lordship doth thereupon Order After any Order for a Serjeant at Arms shall be granted the Register shall draw up the same and deliver the same to the Serjeant and no other That after any Order for a Serjeant at Arms shall be granted by the Court the Register shall on request draw up the said Order and deliver the same to the Serjeant at Arms or his Deputy and no other person they paying for the same by which means he shall or may endeavour to apprehend the Party prosecuted and bring him into this Court to answer the second Contempt if he can but if he cannot his Lordship doth further order The said Order not to be discharged nor the Contempt thereupon without the Serjeants Fees be paid and Certificate under his hand testifying the same That no Order for a Serjeant at Arms drawn up and past by the Register be discharged and the Contempt thereupon without the Serjeants Fees be paid to him and a Certificate under his Hand testifying the same and after the said Order being so drawn up and past as aforesaid no private or other agreement shall be made between the Party or Parties or the Person or Persons so standing in Contempt as aforesaid or any other person there or any on their behalfs without such satisfaction shall be made and a Certificate of the same shall appear to Court Veneris 18 die Decembris Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 26. 1674. Ordo Curiae Private UPon Complaint made to the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper c. on the behalf of Mr. Thomas Middleton Solicitor committed to the Feet for an Assault a Clerk in the Register's Office of an Assault made upon him by one James Bradley a Solicitor by striking off his Hat and beating him over the Head and Face with a Staff in the Register's Office whereby his Head and Face are very much swelled and bruised which upon the examination of the matter his Lordship finding it to be done without any cause or provocation save the said Middleton's drawing and expediting an Order against a Client of the said Bradleys according to the direction of the Court his Lordship resenting it to be a great abuse and misdemeanor against the Court for Officers or Clerks to be thus used especially for discharging the Duty of their Imployments doth order that the said Bradley for this great misdemeanor be committed close Prisoner to the Fleet there to be kept without Pen and Ink or any access to him from without the Fleet till further Order to the contrary Lunae 10 die Aprilis Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 28. 1676. Concerning Quakers Ordo Curiae WHereas divers persons that go under the Name of Quakers being sued and served to answer Bills in this Court or served with Process to testifie their knowledge in Causes here depending have used many devises to prevent the taking of their Oaths to their Answers and procured themselves to be personated by others and yet their Answers have been certified as if they were really sworn whereby the Suitors have been hindred from discovery of the matter charged on them and the truth is suppressed And in case of false swearing the Persons cannot be proceeded against according to Law For the preventing therefore of all abuses of that nature for the future the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England doth Order That such Suitors to this Court who demand the Answer Examination or Deposition of any person that goes under the name of or is reputed a Quaker he or his Clerk in this Court shall duly inform and leave a Note in writing with the Clerk of the other side thereof And the Clerk for such Defendant Respondent or the Party on whose behalf such Witnesses is to be examined Two days notice in writing of the persons abode and time and before whom the Defendant is to be sworn shall take care that two days notice in writing as aforesaid be given to the Plaintiffs Clerk of the place of abode the time when and before what Master such person shall be sworn either to his Answer or Plea or to any Interrogatories in order to take his Deposition or Examination in this Court to the end that some person may if they think fit be present and receive satisfaction that the party is duly and regularly sworn and is the same person intended for the Defendants Respondent or Witness and that every Defendant shall subscribe his Name or Mark to
his respective Plea or Answer which the said Master is to certifie and also in whose presence such Answer or Plea was sworn and in case any Defendant or Respondent shall put in any Answer Plea or Examination or Witnesses be examined without such notice being left as aforesaid such Defendants or Respondents may be proceeded against as if no Answer were put in or Examinations taken and the Depositions of such Witness or Witnesses are to stand suppressed And the Masters of this Court are to be very circumspect careful and wary in the Administring of Oaths to all persons whatsoever that the same be administred reverently and according to Law Finch C. Term ' Paschae _____ Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 28. 1676. Touching farther Answer Ordo Curiae WHereas all persons summoned to appear in propriis personis and answer such Bills as are exhibited against them ought fully to answer before they depart Yet of late Complaints have been made that Defendants for delay either put in frivolous Pleas or Demurrers on insufficient Answers and such Plea or Demurrer being over-ruled or Answer reported insufficient new process of Subpoena issued to make farther Answer and when Defendants had stood out Process of Contempt for want of Appearances or Answers in time and have been discharged thereof by paying or tender and refusal of the Costs new Process of Contempt were to issue for any subsequent fault which occasioned not only great delay but expence and vexation to the Prosecutor which the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England taking into consideration for prevention of the like dilatory proceedings for the time to come doth order and ordain That in all such cases where the Defendants are to make farther Answers The Plaintiff need not serve the Defendant with a Subpoena to make a further or better answer but to give a Rule to the Defendants Clerk or a copy of the Order the Plaintiff shall not be obliged to serve the Defendant with a Subpoena to make a better Answer but shall only be obliged to give a Rule to make a better Answer if it can be given in T●rm time or if not then to give the Defendants Clerk in Court a Copy of the Order or Report whereby the Defendant shall be ruled to make such better answer during the continuance of the publick Seals before or after the Term and if after such Rule or Notice so given And if the Defendant do not in eight days put in a perfect Answer Process of Contempt the Defendant do not in eight days put in a perfect answer or by order or consent of the Clerk on both sides obtain a Commission to answer and thereby return a perfect answer at the return thereof the Process of Contempt shall issue for want thereof and in case any former Process of Contempt shall have issued against such Defendants for want of appearing or answering And the Plaintiff may proceed upon any former Process of Contempt notwithstanding Costs paid the Plaintiff may resort back to such Process of Contempt and proceed thereupon after such Rule or Notice given as aforesaid notwithstanding the Costs of such former Process were paid upon the coming in of such insufficient or frivolous Answer Plea or Demurrer but when the Defendant hath put in a full Answer such Costs as he had paid for such former Process shall upon payment of the rest be deducted and allowed to him Finch C. Lunae 3 die Julij Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 28. 1676. Of sending Records into the Chappel of the Rolls Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England and the Honourable the Master of the Rolls That the Six Clerks of the High Court of Chancery do forthwith send the Inrolments of all Patents which they or any of them or their respective Clerks have in their or any of their Custody fairly written in Parchment and carefully examined into the Petty Bag Office to be estreated together with the Privy Seals and Warrants for the same and also all Decrees with the Docquets thereof to the Chappel of the Rolls The inrolments of Patents to be sent into the Petty Bag to be estreated together with the Privy Seals and Patents for the same and the Records of Deeds c into the Chappel of the Rolls to remain there And that the Clerk of the Inrolments do also send the Records of all Deeds and Recognizances Inrolled duly examined to the said Chappel and that all Records in the Petty Bag Office after the same are estreated be remitted with their Warrants from thence into the Chappel of the Rolls according to the ancient usage heretofore for sending Records into the said Chappel viz. the Patents after three years from the time of their Inrolments and the Records of Deeds and Recognizances from the Inrolment Office after two years The Patents after three years from the time of the Inrolment and the Records c. after two years from the time of Inrolment and so from year to year for the future And that such Records as are come into the Chappel and not fit to be received and continued there by reason of their ill Carracter bad Parchment Razures or Interlineations be transcribed within the Chappel of the Rolls at the Charge of the said Six Clerks and the Clerk of the Inrollments to which of them the said Records did at first properly belong Martis 1 die Januarij Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 29. 1677. Touching hearing Causes Ordo Curiae WHereas Complaint hath been made to this Court as well by the Counsel at the Bar as others that there is a great abuse committed in not timely publishing of Causes Pleas Demurrers Exceptions to Reports and the like that are ordered to be heard and not setting of them up in a Paper in the Registers Office in due time by reason whereof the Counsel are many times surprized and cannot be prepared to hear their Clients Causes as they ought to be to the great prejudice of the Suitors and parties that sue in this Court for Justice For regulation whereof A Note of all Causes Pleas Demurrers Exceptions to Reports c. to be set down for hearing shall be set up by the Registers in their Office it is ordered That a Note of all Causes Pleas Demurrers Exceptions to Reports and the like that are ordered to be set down for hearing shall hereafter from time to time be affixed and set up by the Registers in their Office two days before the same are respectively appointed to be heard And in order hereunto all Clerks Solicitors and others are hereby required to bring to the Registers Office in due time all Orders for setting down of Causes Pleas Demurrers Exceptions to Reports and the like made upon Petitions or otherwise that so they may be set up in the Registers Office as aforesaid otherwise the said Causes Pleas Demurrers Exceptions to Reports and the like
shall respectively be put off from hearing for that time and shall not come on again to hearing without farther order Finch C. Venetis 20 die Junij Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 31. 1679. Touching filing Exceptions to Reports Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor No Exception to Reports touching the sufficiency or insufficiency of Answers shall be filed in the Registers Office unless notice given to the Clerk on the other side that from this day no Exceptions whatsoever shall be received by or filed with the Register to Reports touching the sufficiency or insufficiency of any Defendants Answer unless such Exceptions shall be brought and filed and notice thereof given to the Clerk in Court of the other side And it is farther ordered That this Order be set up and affixed in the publick Offices of the Six Clerks and Registers ●o the end that all persons concerned may take notice thereof and act accordingly Jovis 25 die Martij Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 32. 1680. Touching Bankrupts Ex Parte Thomae Knatchbal Armigeri Ordo Curiae THe Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England being now attended by Mr. Mathew Petley and his Counsel in the matter of the pretended Office of Register upon all Commissions of Bankrupts within the City of London and Places adjacent which pretended Office hath formerly been and now is claimed by the said Mr. Mathew Petley under colour of some Patent granted by His Majesty and several persons who have been usually concerned as Commissioners in Execution of such Commissions now also attending with their Counsel several Objections were made against the validity of the Grant or Patent under which the said Mr. Petley claimed And that upon a former debate it had been by his Lordship upon severel Complaints and Petitions on that occasion declared that it would be a very great burthen on the Subject His Lordship on hearing what was insisted on by all Parties declared That although he saw no cause to give any countenance at all as to the establishment of any such Office of Register as the said Mr. Petley claimed by vertue of the said Patent Neverthelss in regard many Complaints and Petitions have been frequently made and presented to his Lordship occasioned by the ill management of Commissions of Bankrupts in and about the City of London and Westminster and the Counties adjacent and more particularly of the losing and mislaying of such Commissions and Depositions and Orders thereupon taken whereby great loss and prejudice hath hapned to the Subject His Lordship thought it necessary and convenient That some person should be appointed to attend the said Commissioners either by himself or his sufficient Deputy or Deputies in that behalf and should have the Custody of such Commissions and Proceedings as should be had before the said Commissioners and see them to be safely kept in some publick or convenient place whereof all persons may have notice to the end such Creditors as are concerned in the taking out and prosecution of such Commissions may resort thither as occasion requires And the Commissioners and Creditors now present together with their Counsel acknowledging that it is most necessary for the safety of both the Commissions and Orders and also for the Bankrupts themselves and their Creditors that the Custody of such Commissions and Proceedings should be put in some safe and secure hands His Lordship is thereupon pleased to order and doth hereby order That Mr. Tho. Knachball shall be and is hereby ordered and appointed to have the inspection by himself or his sufficient Deputies from time to time of all the Commissions of Bankrupts and Proceedings thereupon that shall at any time or times hereafter be taken out against any Bankrupts within the City of London and Westminster and places adjacent within the Weekly Bills of Mortality as also of all such Commissions as shall be taken out against any person or persons becoming Bankruptor Bankrupts within the adjacent Counties hereafter mentioned A Register of all Commissions of Bankrupts in London Middlesex Essex Hartfordshire Kent Surry c. that is to say within the Counties of Middlesex Essex Hartfordshire Surry Sussex Buckinghamshire Berkshire and Kent to the end he may upon any Complaints or occasion be the better enabled to inform his Lordship of the true state of the Matters whereof any Complaints shall or may happen to be hereafter made And also that he or his sufficient Deputy or Deputies shall have the keeping of all such Commissions and Depositions and other Orders and Proceedings thereupon that the same may at all times be produced and that the person concerned may have free resort thereunto as occasion shall require Finch C. Lunae 29 die Octobris Anno Regni Caroli II. Regis 35. 1683. Concerning Orders touching Accounts Ordo Curiae THe Right Honourable the Lord Keeper c. taking into his most serious Consideration the delays and great expences that doth happen to Suitors by Exceptions taken to Masters Report made in pursuance of Orders upon hearing and especially such whereby Accounts are directed to be taken which his Lordship conceives might in a great measure be prevented if the Master were informed of the Matter of such Exceptions before the signing and allowing of the said Report A Master to whom an Account is referred upon the hearing of the Cause when he hath prepared the Report shall send out a Summons that both Parties shall attend him to peruse or take a Copy of it And if the Party be dissatisfied within 4 days to bring in a Note of Exception and to be heard and then and the M●●●er to settle his Report His Lordship doth therefore order That every Master of this Court to whom any Accounts is referred or other Matter by any Order upon the hearing of the Causes when he hath fully heard both parties and prepared his Report shall at the request of either party give out a Summons that both parties or some for them shall again attend him who shall have liberty to peruse such his Report or take a Copy thereof And that such person that is dissatisfied therewith do in four days next after such attendance bring in a Note in Writing of their Exceptions thereto and take out a Summons to be heard thereupon and then the said Master is to settle and finish his Report as he shall find Just And it is further orderd That when upon hearing of Exceptions it shall appear to the Court that the party excepting did not offer his Object●ons before the Master because he depended upon his Appeal to the Court and sought delay In such Case though the Exception shall be allowed yet the party for his neglect and occasioning trouble to the Court and charge and delay to his Adversary The Party neglecting to pay Costs shall pay such Costs as the Court shall think reasonable And it is further ordered That where by Special Order the Court
shall admit Exceptions to any Report whereby Mony is reported due If Mony be reported due after the time wherein such Exceptions should have been filed no proceeding shall be staid without bringing the Mony into Court or giving security after the time wherein such Exceptions should regularly have been filed no proceedings upon such Report shall be staid without giving security or bringing the Mony reported due into the Court unless the Court shal provide otherwise by particular Order Gilford C. S. Sabbati 9 die Maij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 1. 1685. Touching Witnesses Examined Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper c. That when any Witness shall be brought to any Clerk in Court to be shewed before he be examined the party that produceth him shall not only have a Note in writing of the Name and Title of such Witness The Clerk that shews a Witness ought to have a Note of his Abode and Lodging and Parish where he lives But if such Parish shall happen to be any of the Parishes within the Bills of Mortality such Note shall also contain what Street and House in such Parish such party lives and whether he be a Housekeeper or Lodger to the end such Witness may with more ease be enquired after and cross-examined if required and the Clerks are to take care to see this Order performed Lunae 13 die Julij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 1. 1685. Touching Clerks Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper Agreement between any Clerks and Solicitors to be put in writing c. That no agrement that shall hereafter be made between any of the Clerks or Solicitors in this Court relating to any of their Clients Causes shall be of any avail unless such Agreement or some Note or Memorial thereof be put into writing and subscribed by the party that is to be bound thereby Lunae 13 die Julij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 1. 1685. Touching Serjeant at Arms. Ordo Curiae WHereas Complaint was made to the Right Honourable the late Lord Chancellor Finch by the Serjeant at Arms attending the Great Seal Vide supra 13 Julij 85. 4 Nov. 74. Vide infra 19 Maij 1 Jac. 2. that after Contempts were prosecuted to a Serjeant at Arms and a Commitment pronounced the Prosecutor would draw up the Order and never take out the Warrant thereon but make use thereof to force the party prosecuted into some Composition sometimes for the whole Matter in difference but usually for the discharge of the Contempts whereby the Serjeants Imployment was rendred in great part ineffectual For the prevention whereof his Lordship did thereupon order That after an Order for a Serjeant at Arms should be granted by the Court the Register should on request draw up the said Order and deliver the same to the Serjeant at Arms or his Deputy and no other person they paying for the same by which means he should or might endeavour to apprehend the Party prosecuted and bring him into the Court to answer the Contempts if he could but if he could not his Lordship doth further order that no Order for a Serjeant at Arms drawn up and past by the Register should be discharged the Contempts thereupon No Order or Contempts thereupon to be discharged unless the Serjeants Fees be paid without the Serjeants Fees be paid to him and a Certificate made under his Hand testifying the same and after the said Order being so drawn up and past as aforesaid no private or other Agreement should be made between the Party or Parties and the Person or Persons so standing in Contempt as aforesaid or any other person on their or any of their behalfs without such satisfaction should be made and a Certificate of the same should appear to the Court Now upon Information made to the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England by the Serjeant at Arms that the said Order had not been duly observed to his great loss and prejudice His Lordship doth order that the said Order be revived and that all persons concerned do take notice thereof and yield obedience thereto accordingly Lunae 26 die Octobris Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 1. 1685. Touching Affidavit of Witnesses Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England That where any person Plaintiff or Defendant shall ground any Motion or Petition on an Affidavit of material Witnesses to examin In Affidavit of material Witnesses to examin the names of the chiefest Witnesses and the material points on which they are to be examined to be inserted whereby to gain longer time to examine such Affidavit shall not only contain the Names of the chiefest of such Witnesses but the points on which such Witnesses are desired to be examined to the end the Court may see whether such points be material to be examined and whether before or after the hearing that all delays heretofore occasioned by unnecessary examination may be avoided for the future Mercurij 12 die Maij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 2. 1686. Touching Rehearing Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor c. No Rehearing to be granted without depositing 5 l. into the hands of the Register That no Rehearing or Appeal shall for the future be granted but the party appealing shall deposite in the hands of the Register the sum of 5 l. to recompence the other party in Costs on such Rehearing he shall not be relieved and when any Rehearing is granted such Rehearing shall not any way stop or hinder any proceedings on the Order or Decree appealed from Decree appealed from without special Order of this Court but the party in possession of any Order shall be at liberty to proceed thereon as if no Appeal or Rehearing was granted Veneris 30 die Aprilis Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 2. 1686. Touching Exceptions to Reports Ordo Curiae Revived WHereas by an Order of the 12th of February Vide supra 20 Junij 1675. 22 Car. II. It is ordered that every person that should put in Exceptions to a Masters Report should besides the 40 s. deposited upon exhibiting the same pay 10 s. further Costs for every Exception and distinct branch of an Exception which should upon the hearing thereof be over-ruled Which said Order having not of late been observed and the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England taking notice of the trouble and loss of time to the Court and expence and delay to the Suitors 10 s. to be paid for every Exception to a Masters Report over-ruled occasioned by putting in Exceptions to Masters Reports many of which do prove frivolous and vexatious doth for prevention thereof declare and order That the said Order of the 22th of February aforesaid be revived and duly observed
and doth further Order That for the future where any Plaintiff or Plaintiffs shall take Exceptions to a Defendants Answer The like as to Exceptions to an Answer appealed from the Master and shall appeal to the Court for their Judgment thereon from the Report of any Master such Plaintiff or Plaintiffs shall pay 10 s. for every Exception or distinct branch of an Exception which upon the hearing thereof shall be likewise over-ruled as frivolous beyond the Costs which by the course of the Court he or they are to pay Veneris 18 die Junij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 2. 1686. Touching Hearing Ordo Curiae IT is this present day ordered by the Honourable the Master of the Rolls That for the future when any Cause or Causes shall come to be heard before his Honour at the Rolls the Clerk in Court on either side shall attend such hearing The Clerks in Court on either side to attend the hearing to the end that his Honour may be informed if occasion require that such Cause or Causes are ready for his Honours Judgment and that the party or parties for whom they are concerned do appear to hear Judgment gratis or that they were regularly served with Process for that purpose as the Case shall require Mercurij 9 die Junij Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 2. 1686. The Transacting of Records into the Chappel of the Rolls Ordo Curiae Revived WHereas by an Order of this Court of 3d of July Vide 3 Julij 1676. 28 Car. 2. nuper Regis It was ordered That the Six Clerks of this Court should forthwith send the Inrolments of all Patents which they or any of them or their respective Clerks then had in their or any of their Custodies fairly written in Parchment and carefully examined into the Petty Bag Office to be Estreated together with the Privy Seals and Warrants of the same and also all Decrees with the Docquets thereof to the Chappel of the Rolls to remain there and that the Clerk of the Inrolments should also send the Records of all Deeds and Recognizances duly examined to the said Chappel The inrolments of Patents to be sent into the Petty Bag to be Estreated with the Privy Seals and the Records of Deeds into the Chappel of the Rolls and that all Records in the Petty Bag Office after the same were Estreated be remitted with their Warrants from thence into the Chappel of the Rolls according to the ancient usage heretofore for sending Records into the said Chappel viz. the Patents after three years from the time of their Inrolment and the Records of Deeds and Recognizances from the Inrolment Office after two years from the time of Inrolment and so from year to year for the future and that such Records as were come into the Chappel and not fit to be received and continued there by reason of their ill Character bad Parchment Razures or interlineations be transcribed within the Chappel of the Rolls The Patents after 3 years from the time of the Inrolment and the Records after 2 years at the charge of the said Six Clerks and the Clerk of the Inrolments to which of them the said Records did at first properly belong which Order having not of late been duly observed by reason whereof great inconveniences may happen to arise to the Suitors of this Court in their particular concerns As also to divers others of his Majesty's Subjects concerned in the Records in the said respective Offices the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England and the Honourable the Master of the Rolls taking notice thereof and of the great neglects that have been done by the respective Officers of the particular Offices in not transmitting the Inrolments of Patents and Decrees and Docquets Records Deeds and Recognizances according to the Direction and Intent of the said Order do therefore order That the said Order be revived and a due performance and obedience given thereto by the respective Officers concerned in their respective Offices and Places they now are or shall be concerned in relation to any of the Matters of this Order Veneris 6 die Aprilis Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 3. 1687. Touching Decrees Ordo Curiae WHereas for the preventing of differences that did arise upon Decrees and Orders pronounced in open Court the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor Minutes of Decrees and Order to be ●ead in open Court c. hath from time to time caused all Minutes to be read in open Court that the Counsel at the Bar and other persons concerned might take notice of what did concern their respective Clients and speak for the rectifying thereof or adding thereto as occasion offered whilst the Matters were fresh in the memory of the Court and have several times given directions that afterwards none should presume either to petition or move the Court complaining against any Order agreeing with the Minutes except the Minutes should after the reading thereof be altered or the Register shall fail in doing his duty persuant thereto without consent and yet without due regard thereto several Petitions have been since causelesly preferred His Lordship doth therefore this day order That due observation be given to the parties concerned when any Minutes are read in Court to the end that no further Complaints may be made against the Officer or the Minutes by him taken in Court except as aforesaid and to the end no person may plead ignorance hereof his Lordship doth direct That this Order be fixed up in the Offices of the Six Clerks and Register of this Court that all due obedience may be given thereto Veneris 29 die Aprilis Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 3. 1687. An Examiner suspended Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor c. That Richard Burreston One of the Examiners of the Court suspended one of the Examiners Clerks in the Office of William Adderly Esq one of the Examiners of this Court for that the said Richard Burreston did intrust one Philips who is no sworn Clerk of the said Office to transcribe part of the Depositions of a Witness examined by the said Burreston in a Cause now depending in this Court wherein one Woollaston is Plaintiff and Winford Defendant before the said Witness had perfected his Examination or Publication past in the Cause be suspended from any further Imployment in the said Office till further Order Lord Chancellor Veneris 29 die Aprilis Anno Regni Jacobi II. Regis 3. 1687. Touching Interrogatories Ordo Curiae WHereas by Experience great inconveniences have hapned in several Causes by the exhibiting Interrogatories which are impertinently drawn into great length whereby the Suitors have been put to great and unnecessary Charges as also leading Interrogatories whereby the Witnesses by turning the Negative into the Affirmative are led to swear to the whole Contents of an Interrogatory and oftentimes thereby drawn ignorantly to forswear themselves which
the Honourable the Master of the Rolls bearing date the 18th day of June in the 20th year of the Reign of his late Majesty King Charles the Second of blessed memory for the better regulating the Six Clerks Office it was amongst other things Ordered Ordained and Decreed That the Number of the Under-Clerks to be allowed and admitted to practise as Clerks of this Court in the said Six Clerks Office should be reduced and stinted to Sixty Clerks and no more at which number the said Under-Clerks should be continued unless this Court should find it necessary to increase or abridge the same and further that as well the Under-Clerks then to be admitted as every other person thereafter to be admitted to the place of an Under-Clerk in the said Office should be in the Judgment of the Master of the Rolls fitly qualified for such Imployment at or before the time of such his admission and also before his and their entrance upon that Imployment should take the Oath thereby directed for his honest and faithful behaviour and true dealing with and towards the Records Rolls Pleadings Books and Writings of this Court and the other due performance of his place And it was thereby further Ordered Ordained and Decreed That no person upon any pretence whatsoever should hereafter be permitted to practise as an Under-Clerk in the said Office but such only as should be first sworn and admitted as aforesaid And whereas for want of observance and due obedience to the said Decree and other Orders made in persuance thereof manifold disorders and undue practices have crept into the said Six Clerks Office amongst the Six Clerks and the sworn Clerks and especially by a liberty that the Six Clerks of this Court have assumed and continued to themselves against the express words of the said Decree the Duty of their places and in Contempt of this Court to allow permit and license several persons to practise in the said Office without being either allowed sworn or admitted by the Master of the Rolls as the sworn Under-Clerks of this Court are and of right ought to be to the confusion mislaying imbezling falsifying razing and defacing and sometimes to the loss of the Records Rolls Pleadings Books and Writings of this Court And also that the sworn Clerks of this Court have retained more Under-Clerks than one apiece and have discharged and turned them off from their Service before they are preferred to the undoing and utter ruin of many and to the discouragement of the training up and breeding of industrious and diligent Young Clerks to serve and succeed in the said Office which this Court hath always taken care of and contrary to an Order for that purpose made by the Right Honourable Sir Harbottle Grimstone late Master of the Rolls All which Abuses Irregularities and Disorders tend manifestly to the obstruction of Justice and the orderly proceedings and dispatch thereof to the great scandal and dishonour of this High and Honourable Court and the irreparable damage to the King and Subject if not prevented the Right Honourable George Lord Jeffreys Lord Chancellor of England and the Right Honourable Sir John Trevor Master of the Rolls taking the same into their serious consideration and the ways and means for redressing and preventing the same for the future do hereby and by the Authority of the High and Honourable Court of Chancery Order Ordain and Decree That all and every such person and persons so as aforesaid allowed Supernumerary Clerks except two waiting Clerks to each Six Clerks not sworn discharged from practising in the said Office permitted or licensed by the Six Clerks in their several Divisions and Offices called supernumerary or Licenciary Clerks not allowed sworn and admitted as Under-Clerks to practise as Clerks of this Court excepting the two waiting Clerks allowed to each Six Clerk be and are hereby absolutely to all intents and purposes discharged and inhibited from practising in the said Office and from sitting and writing in the said Office of Six Clerks until they shall be duly qualified sworn and admitted so to do And the several Six Clerks of this Court are hereby required and commanded forthwith upon the forfeiture of their respective Offices to discharge all such person and persons out of the Office of Six Clerks from whom as well as from the said supernumerary Clerks this Court doth expect all due and ready observance and obedience to this Decree And to the end that there should not be wanting a convenient and sufficient number of honest able and expert Under-Clerks for the orderly proceeding carrying on and quiet dispatch of the Suitors and business of this Court his Lordship the Lord High Chancellor and his Honour the Master of the Rolls do think it very fit and necessary and do thereby Order Ordain and Decree Five Under-Clerks to be added to ten sworn Under-Clerks in every Six Clerks Division That five Under-Clerks such as his Honour the Master of the Rolls shall in his Judgment think able fitly qualified and allow of shall be forthwith added to the ten sworn Under Clerks in every Six Clerks Division and that each of them shall by the Master of the Rolls be sworn and admitted Clerks of this Court and to practise in the same with all the like advantages paying the like Fees Dues and Duties as the now sworn Under-Clerks of this Court have enjoyed and paid or ought to have enjoy and pay all which number making fifteen in every Six Clerks Division the sworn Under-Clerks of this Court shall continue unless this Court shall find it necessary to reduce abridge or increase the same and from time to time upon any vacancy by Forfeiture Surrender or Death such only shall be sworn and admitted by the Master of the Rolls into their respective places as his Honour in his Judgment shall think fitly qualified and allowed of for the said Imployment the nomination of the Six Clerks being only for his Honours information and the presence of the Six Clerks at the swearing and admittance of an Under-Clerk being only that he the Six Clerk may take notice of such new Under-Clerk so sworn and admitted And further the said Under-Clerks hereby decreed to be sworn and admitted are to have such Seats and Places provided and appointed for them to sit write and officiate in in the Six Clerks Office as the Master of the Rolls shall think fit to order and appoint But no Seat now belonging to any of the sworn Clerks shall be hereby altered removed or abridged without his or their consent And for the better putting in execution of this Ordinance and Decree and the encouragement of the Young Clerks now Servants or which hereafter shall be Clerks Servants to the sworn Under-Clerks of this Court None permitted to dispatch any business in ●he Office as a Clerk or have necess to the the Records but sworn C●erks and their Servants it is hereby Ordered Ordained and Decreed That from henceforth none
Orders have been made as often as grounds for the said Complaints have been offered for the redressing thereof but the directions thereby given have proved ineffectual some of them tending rather to put the Party agrieved to a further charge than to redress the grievances complained of And whereas the present Examiners of this Court have by their humble Petition besought the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England for redress in the Premisses and to prevent the like inconveniences for the future and his Lordship having taken their said Petition into his serious consideration and calling to mind that the like matter thereby complained of happned lately in Court in the Causes of Wilcox and Doughty and Doughty and Wilcox and observing that the last Order made in such Cases that the Causes should be put off and five Pounds paid to the other side is no redress to the Court who is the Party grieved he being put to the new charge of another days attendance and the five Pounds being never paid forasmuch as the Clerks and Agents on both Sides are Confederates in the said practice wherefore for the prevention of the like Scandal to the Court Charge to the Clients and Fraud to the said Officers for the future his Lordship doth order No Deposition to be made use of in any Court or before any Master in any Cause but such as is taken out of the proper Office and signed by the Party for whom the same shall be read That no Copies of Depositions shall be read or made use of either in Court or before any Master in any Cause but such as is taken out of the proper Office and signed for the Party for whom the same shall be read And to the end this Order may be more strictly persued his Lordship doth further order That the said Examiners shall by themselves or by their Deputy have liberty from and after the 22th day of January instant to attend in Court at the hearing of all Causes to inspect all Books of Depositions which are brought into Court and read either for Plaintiff or Defendant and to see whether they be duly signed for the Party that doth produce the same And in case the said Examiners or either of them or their Deputy shall discover to the Court any such fraud or practice committed that then the Cause or Causes wherein such practice or fraud is committed shall be put off and the Parties offending shall stand committed to the Prison of the Fleet until the Officer injured be agreed with and paid his due Fees and until they shall have also paid the sum of five Pounds into the hands of such person as his Lordship shall direct for the use of the Poor and until such Client or Clients as shall be prejudiced by putting off his or their Cause shall be reimbursed his Charges in respect thereof and until the further Order of this Court And that no person may plead ignorance herein this Order is to be set up in the several Offices concerned therein belonging to this Court Martis 12 die Junij 1694. Touching Serjeant at Arms. Ordo Curiae Revived ... VVHereas Complaint was made to the late Lord Chancellor Finch by the Serjeant at Arms attending the Great Seal Vide supra 4 Nov. 74. 13 Julij 85. That after Contempts were prosecuted to a Serjeant at Arms and a Commitment pronounced the Prosecutor would draw up the Order and never take out the Warrant thereon but make use thereof to force the Party prosecuted into ome Composition sometimes for the whole matter in question but usually for discharge of the Contempts whereby the Serjeants Employment was rendred in great part ineffectual For the prevention whereof his Lordship did thereupon order That after an Order for a Serjeant at Arms should be granted by the Court the Register should on request draw up the said Order and deliver the same to the Serjeant at Arms or his Deputy and to no other person they paying for the same by which means he should or might endeavour to apprehend the Party prosecuted and bring him into the Court to answer the Contempts if he could but if he could not his Lordship did further order That no Order for a Serjeant at Arms drawn up and past by the Register should be discharged and the Contempt thereon without the Serjeants Fees be paid to him and a Certificate made under his Hand testifying the same and after the said Order being so drawn up and past as aforesaid no private or other agreement should be made between the Party and Parties and the Person and Persons so standing in Contempt as aforesaid or any other person on their or any of their behalfs without such satisfaction should be made and a Certificate should appear of the same to the Court. Now upon information made to the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England by the Serjeant at Arms that the said Order had not been duly observed to his great loss and prejudice his Lordship doth order That the said Order be revived and doth further Order That when any Motion shall be made for a Serjeant at Arms The Counsel moving for a Serjeant at Arms shall immediately in Court deliver to the Register the Commission of Rebellion and tell who is Clerk in Court the Counsel moving for the same shall immediately in Court deliver unto the Register the the Commission of Rebellion and tell who is Clerk in Court that the Serjeant at Arms may have an account of him where the Contemner lives and that the Order be drawn up by the Register and delivered to the Serjeant at Arms or his Deputy and to no other person whatsoever they paying for the same to take out a Warrant thereon whereby the Party or Parties so in Contempt may be taken into Custody and be brought into this Court to Answer the same And that this Order be hung up in the Registers and Six Clerks Office of this Court that all persons may take notice thereof and yield obedience to the same accordingly Mercurij 28 die Octobris Anno Regni Regis Gulielmi Tertij 8. 1696. Ordo Curiae IT is this day ordered by the Right Honourable the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England That where any Reference is now or shall be directed to any of the Masters of this Court and at any time hereafter upon such Reference any matter of Fact shall be admitted or agreed to before him the said Master he shall take a Memorandum of the Fact so admitted or agreed to in his Book of Minutes and the Party so admitting or agreeing shall subscribe such Minutes or the Memorandum in the presence of the Master which Subscription shall be binding and conclusive to the Party on whose behalf the same was so subscribed so as that the other side shall not be put to any further proof to make good the same And it is further ordered That this Order be hung up
in the several Offices of the Masters Six Clerks and Registers that all Parties concerned may take notice thereof Lord Chancellor and Master of the Rolls the 17th of May 1697. forbidding all Masters Clerks of this Court and Examiners Clerks to practise as Solicitors Ordo Curiae VVHereas there have been former Complaints and the causes thereof have lately appeared to be still continuing that the Clerks belonging to some of the Masters of this Court and also some Examining and Copying Clerks in the Examiners Office have taken upon them the soliciting of Causes depending between Party and Party in the said Court so as no person that is a Suitor to the Court can be safe in his Person or Estate where any such Clerks shall be retained as Solicitors against him which practice of theirs hath and may hereafter tend to the perverting of Justice to the great Scandal of the Court for the prevention whereof and that the Suitor may be preserved from suffering by the ill consequences that may happen thereby for the future the Right Honourable the Lord High Chancellor of England with the advice and assistance of the Honourable the Master of the Rolls doth hereby order That from henceforth no Clerk belonging to any of the Masters of this Court nor any Clerk belonging to either of the Examiners of this Court shall take upon him either by himself or any other person under him the managing or soliciting any Cause whatsoever either already commenced or which shall hereafter be commenced in this Court. And if any person so related to the said Court or which shall hereafter be so related shall be found to offend against this Order they shall not only be suspended their Imployments but for their Contempts shall stand committed to the Prison of the Fleet and the Masters of this Court as also the Examiners are to take care that all their Clerks do give obedience hereto And that all persons concerned herein may have due notice hereof his Lordship doth further order That Copies of this Order be sent to the Publick Officers of the said Masters and Examiners of this Court Geo. Edwards Deputy Register AN Alphabetical Table of the Principal Matters A Affidavits FIling and Registring of Affidavits before they are read 23 Jan. 1629. 21 June 60 Page 8 92 And no Process to be grounded upon Affidavit except it be filed Page 10 Affidavits to be filed and registred in convenient time Page 94 How the Masters are to take Affidavits Page 15 Or certifie them Page 74 146 Affidavits to be written without Blots or Interlineations 28 Feb. 1632. Page 18 Affidavits to be filed in due and convenient time after they are sworn ibid. and Page 93 Table of Fees of the Affidavit Office vide Fees Page 35 Answer vide Report Peers to answer upon Reputation of Honour only Page 63 Plaintiff need not serve the Defendant with a Subpoena for a further Answer 1676. Page 192 If the Defendant put not in a perfect Answer within four days then Process of Contempt ibid. And the party may proceed on former Pro-Process Answer how to be drawn Page 121 No second Commission to Answer without special Order ibid. Of hearing upon Bill and Answer Page 122 Twenty shillings Costs for amending an Answer and if the first Answer be certified insufficient 40 s. Page 123 124 Of a second Answer Page 124 So of a third or fourth or fifth Answer ibid. The Plaintiff need not serve the Defendant with a Subpoena to make a further or better Answer but to give a Rule to the Defendants Clerk or a Copy of the Order Page 193 And if the Defendant put not in a perfect Answer in eight days proces● of Contempt Page 193 No Exception to Reports touching the sufficiency or insufficiency of the Answers shall be filed in the Registers Office unless notice given to the Clerk on the other side Page 197 Attachments After Attachment with Proclamation is retorned no Commission to Answer nor no Plea or Demurrer without notice Page 121 Register not to enter any Commission Rule or Attachment but by Warrant of the Six Clerk Page 54 Amendment of Letters Patents the manner how 16 November 1635. Page 22 How the Master is to demean himself when an Account is referred to him 29 October 83. Page 201 Attachment for not appearing to a Subpoena Register not to enter any Commission Rule or Attachment but by Warrant under the Six Clerks hand 1646. vide Contempt B. HOw Counsel to demean themselves in drawing Bills Page 113 Of Scandalous Bills Page 114 Bills to be dated the same day they are brought into the Office ibid. No Bills to be Engrossed or Copied out of the Office 1646. Page 55 No Bills Answers or Pleadings to be Copied till they are duly filed 1646. Page 131 Bills to be filed with the Six Clerk according to their several dates 16 May 59. 30 May 59. Page 83 86 No Bills c. or Records to be carried by the Under-Clerks to be Ingrossed in their Chambers Page 55 Paper Books called the Bills and Costs to be brought into Court Page 80 Register of Commissions of Bankrupts Page 201 C. Clerks UNder-Clerks to be allowed Parchment for passing Decrees 5 June 11 Car. 1. Page 23 Differences between the Six Clerks and the Examiners setled 3 March 36. Page 81 Every Six Clerk after the end of the Term to examine their Titling Books by the Filing-Book 9 June 14 Car. 1. Page 43 Every Six Clerk to be stinted to twelve Under-Clerks 25 Jac. 63. Page 111 226 Ordinances for regulating the Under-Clerks and augmenting their number 20 March 88. Page 162 226 None to have access to the Records but the sworn Clerks Page 228 Fine on a Six Clerk for not attending the Hearing Page 61 Rules of Behaviour of the Six Clerks and Under-Clerks 9 December 93. Page 160 The Oath of an Under-Clerk Page 161 A Six Clerk is to take an Articled Clerk for a waiting Clerk and not to have above two waiting Clerks each ibid. No sworn Clerk to have more than one Articled Clerk ibid. The time of admitting the Under-Clerks enlarged 31 October 68. Page 171 Division of the business of the Six Clerks Office according to the Alphabet Page 37 Repealed Page 108 Commissions No Commission for examination of Witnesses to be in or near London 7 March 1629. not within 20 miles 15 October 1651. Page 12 Commissioners Names to be entred in a Book 1646. Page 56 Upon a renewed Commission all the Witnesses to be examined Page 133 No Commission ad examinand ' Testes to be in London or within 20 miles Page 64 Who to bear the Charges of the Commission Page 132 Certificate vide Orders Masters The Masters not to return special Certificate to the Court unless required by the Court Page 144 How Certificates and Reports of the Master are to be drawn Page 145 The Masters Certificate not being to ground a Decree is positive Page 146 Contempts Process of Contempt to be