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

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Per quae servitia shall be entred upon Record unless the party attorning have first appeared in Court or by Attorney warranted under the hand of a Justice of one of the Benches or of Assize And every Attornment otherwise made shall be void without any Writ of Errour or other means to be used for the avoiding thereof IX There shall be an office for the inrolments of Writs for fines and recoveries and one of the Justices of the Common-Pleas besides the chief Justice shall have the care thereof and shall have for the inrolment and examination of every fine with the parts thereof 6 s. 8 d. and as much for a Recovery and the parts thereof and for every exemplification of them 5 s. and for the search of every year 4 d. and for every sheet of a Copy containning 14 lines 4 d. and shall subscribe his name to the Roll after he hath so examined it in pain of 5 l. X. The said Justice shall have power to punish the officers who manage that imployment by fine or amerciament for their misprision or negligence therein which shall be estreated amongst the fines and amerciaments of that Court. XI The Chirographer shall the first day of every Term fix in the Court of Common-Pleas a Table of each County containing a true content of the fines passed in any one Term and shall also deliver the like to each Sheriff in pain of 5 l. and the Sheriff shall fix it up in the Court at the next Assizes in like pain of 5 l. The said forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor and the Chirographer's fee for every such content is 4 d. XII The Records shall not be carried out of the Office of Inrolments and Fines and recoveries already passed and exemplified shall not be afterwards amended XIII Stat. 27 El. 8. Where a judgment is given in the King's Bench in debt detinue covenant accompt action upon the case ejectione firma or trespass first commenced there other then such where the Queen is party the plaintiff or defendant may sue forth of the Chancery a Writ of Errour commanding the chief Justice to cause the Record to be brought before the Justices of the Common Pleas and Barons of the Exchequer into the Exchequer-chamber which Justices and Barons or any six of them being of the Coif have there power to examine and reverse or affirm the said judgment other then for errour concerning the jurisdiction of the King's Bench or for want of form in any Writ Return Plaint Bill Declaration or other proceeding whatsoever and after such judgment reversed or affirmed the said record shall be remanded that the King's bench may proceed thereupon as shall appertain yet such reversal or affirmation shall not be so final but that the party who finds himself grieved may still sue in Parliament as before XIV Stat. 31 El. 1. The not coming of the Chancellor and Treasurer at the day of adjournment in any suit of Errour depending by force of 31 E. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 13. shall not be any discontinuance of the Writ of Errour But if both the chief Justices or either of those great Officers be there it shall be no discontinuance Howbeit no judgment shall be given therein unless both those Officers be there present XV. Any three of the Justices of the Common Pleas or Barons of the Exchequer may receive Writs of Errour award process thereupon and prefix days of continuance for such Writs notwithstanding the Statute of 27 El. 8. but no judgment shall be given therein without the full appearance of six according to that Statute and here also the party that finds himself grieved may sue in Parliament as before XVI Stat. 16 Car. 2. ca. 2. For preventing abatement of Writs of Errour upon judgments in the Exchequer enacted That the not coming of the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer or either of them at the day of Return of any writ of Errour to be sued forth by vertue of the Stat. 31 E. 3. ca. 12. recited in the Statute 31 El. ca. 1. shall not cause any abatement or discontinuance of any such Writ of Errour But if both the chief Justices of either Bench or either of them or any one of the said great officers the Lord Chancellor or Lord Treasurer shall come to the Exchequer chamber and there be present at the day of Return of any such Writ of Errour it shall be no abatement or discontinuance But the suit shall proceed to all intents as if the said Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer had come and been present at the day and place of return of such Writ Provided no Judgment be given in any such suit or writ of Errour unless both the Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer shall be present thereat XVII An Act to prevent Arrests of Judgment and staying Executions by Writs of Errour and Supersedeas Vid. Title Execution num XI ☞ Escape I. West 1.3 3 E. 1. Nothing shall be taken for the escape of a felon until it be judged an escape by the Justices in Eyre in pain of restoring as much to the party grieved and as much also to the King II. Stat. 31 E. 3. Stat. 1.14 The escape of felons and the chattels of felons fugitives and Clerks convict adjudged by the King's Justices shall be levied as they shall fall III. Stat. 1 R. 3.3 Justices of Peace have power in Sessions to inquire of escape of felons Eschange I. Stat. 9 E. 3.7 Exchanges shall be kept where it shall please the King and his Council II. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5.12 Every man may exchange gold for silver or silver for gold or for gold and silver so that no man hold the same as exchanged nor take profit for such exchange in pain to forfeit the money so exchanged except the King's exchangers which take profit for such exchange according to the ordinance before made Note that this Statute is thus also recited in 5.6 E. 6.19 Howbeit the French Copy in stead of so as no man hold the same as exchanged hath it thus issint que nul home teigne comen eschange and so the mistake seems to be in the word come which should have been comen and Rastal in the first Edition of his Abridgment which I have renders it thus null preigne riens pur eschange dor pur argent on è contra sur pain de forfetter del mony issint change for priss changours le Roy quex pregneront solunque lordinante ent fait III. Stat. 14 R. 2. Stat. 1.2 For every Exchange the Merchant shall be bound in Chancery to buy within three moneths after such exchange Merchandise of the Staple to the value of the summ exchanged in pain to forfeit the same IV. Stat. 11 H. 4.8 The Statute of 14 R. 2. shall be duly executed and the Lord Chancellor shall send the estreats or exchanges taken of Merchants into the Exchequer every 15 dayes and the Barons there shall have
found to satisfie the debt distresses shall be reasonable The Sheriff shall answer all debts received and where the Sheriff chargeth himself the debtor shall be acquitted IV. Marlbr 1. 52 H. 3. All persons high and low shall receive justice in the King 's Court. V. None shall take any distress of his own authority without award of our Court in pain upon conviction thereof to be punished by fine according to the trespass and the party grieved shall be also recompensed his loss VI. Marlb 2. 52 H. 3. None shall distrain any to come to his Court that is not of his Fee or upon whom he hath no jurisdiction neither shall distresses be taken out of the fee or place where he hath no jurisdiction in pain that the offender shall be punished as before VII Mralb 3. 52 H. 3. If any will not suffer distresses to be delivered by the King's officers or summons attachments or executions of judgments given in the King's Court to be done he shall be punished as aforesaid VIII If a Lord distrain his tenant for a thing for which he hath cause to distrain and yet it is afterwards found not to be due in such case if the Lord suffer the distress to be delivered he shall not be fined but onely amercied nevertheless the tenant shall also recover his damages against him IX Marlb 4. 52 H. 3. None shall drive a distress out of the County wherein it was taken in pain to make fine as before And if a Lord presume so to do against his tenant he shall be grievously amercied X. None shall take an unreasonable distress in pain to be grievously amercied XI Marlb 15. 52 H. 3. It shall be lawfull to none except the King and his Officers having special authority to take distresses out of his see or in the King 's high way or in the common street XII West 1.16 3 E. 1. None shall drive a distress out of the County or distrain wrongfully or out of his fee in pain to be punished as by the Statute of Marlb is provided or more greivously if the Trespass so require XIII West 17. 3 E. 1. If Beasts be impounded in a Castle or Fortress and after convenient notice to the impounder c. not suffered to be replivied by the Sheriff or some other of the King's Bailiffs the King will command that Castle or Fortress to be demolished and after the first demand of the Sheriff or Bailiff the Plaintiff shall recover double damages against the Lord or impounder or if the impounder be not able then against the Lord onely XIV In this case if the Bailiff of the Franchise refuse to do it then shall the Sheriff do it himself upon the aforesaid pains XV. Also deliverance shall be made by attachment of the Plaintiff made without writ and upon the same pain XVI West 2.36 13 E. 1. None shall procure any to distrain anther to make him appear at the County-court or any other inferiour Court on purpose to vex him and put him to charge and trouble in pain to make fine to the King and to pay to the party greived treble damages XVII West 2.37 13 E. 1. No distress shall be taken but by Bayliffs known and sworn in pain to restore damages to the party greived and to be greivously punished by the King XVIII Artic. Cleri 9. 9 E. 2. Distresses shall not be taken in the high way nor in the ancient sees of the Church * XIX Stat. 1. 2 P. M. 12. No distressee of Cattel shall be driven out of the Hundred where it is taken except to a pound overt within the same Shire nor above three miles distant from the place where it was so taken neither shall a distress be impounded in several Replevins for the delivery thereof in pain to forfeit to the party grieved for every offence committed against this Act 5 l. and treble damages XX. None shall take above 4 d. for the poundage of one distress and where less is usually taken to take less in pain to forfeit to the party grieved 5 l. besides what is taken above XXI The Sheriff shall at his first County-day or within two months after he receives his Patent depute and proclaim in the Shire-Town four Deputives to make Replevins not dwelling above 12 miles distant one from another in pain to forfeit for every moneth he wants such Deputy or Deputies 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and profecutor Dover see Title Havens and Rivers num XIV I. Atticuli super Chartas 7 28 E. 1. The Constable of Dover Castle shall not hold plea of any forrain County within the Castle gates except it concern the keeping of the Castle neither shall he distrain the Inhabitants of the five Ports to plead elsewhere or otherwise then they as they ought according to the form of their Charter confirmed by the great Charter Dower I. Merton 1. 20 H. 3. A woman deforced of her Dower or Quarentine in a Writ of Dower shall recover damages viz. the value of her Dower from her husbands death to the day of the Recovery of her Dower and the deforceor shall be amercied II. West 2.48 3 E. 1. In a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet the Writ shall not abate by the exception of the Tenant that she hath received her Dower of another before the writ purchased unless he can shew that she received part of her Dower of himself and in the same Town before the Writ purchased III. West 2.4 13 E. 1. The Wife shall be endowable as well where land was recovered against her husband by default as by covin so that albeit the land was lost by the husbands default yet that shall be no good allegation for the tenant but he must then proceed and shew his right otherwise the wife shall recover IV. When Tenant in Dower in Frank-marriage by the courtesy for life or in tail lose their land by default and the tenant is compelled to shew his right they may vouch the Aeversioner if they have warranty and then the Plea shall pass betwixt the tenant and the warranter according to the tenor of the Writ by which the tenant recovered by default and so from many actions they shall resort to one judgment viz. that the demandants shall recover that demand and the tenants shall go quit V. Here if the Action of such a Tenant which is compellable to shew his right be moved by a writ of right albeit the great Assize or Battel cannot be joyned by words accustomed yet shall it in that case be joyned by words convenient VI. If the wife be wrongfully endowed by the Guardian during the minority of the heir he at full age shall be righted yet shall the wife retain her just Dower if she make her title good VII By this Statute in place of a writ of right a Quod ci deforceat is given to tenant in Dower in free marriage by the courtesie for life and in tail upon losing
be freed from Castle-gard doing the service by himself or another or being with the King in his Host III. West 1.7 3 E. 1. No Constable or Castellane shall exact any thing of any but such as reside in their Town or Castle unless it be an ancient price due to the King Castle or Lord of the Castle Certificate of the cause of Attainder c. I. Stat. 34 H. 8.14 The Clerks of the Crown Assise and Peace shall certifie unto the King's Bench the tenor of every Indictment Outlawry or Conviction and Clerks Attaint had before them respectively for any felony or other offence and that within 40 days next after such attainder conviction or outlawry if it be Term-time otherwise within 20 dayes after the beginning of the Term next following the 40 dayes and shall also deliver a transcript of the indictment to the Ordinary to whom the person attainted is committed and all this in pain of 40 s. to the King and prosecutor But note that the transcript to the Ordinary need not now since the Statute of 18 Eliz. 7. which see after in Clergy * II. The Clerk of the Crown shall receive such certificates in pain of 40 s. for every one refused III. When the indictment containeth more names then are convict a transcript containing onely the names of such as are convict shall serve IV. The Clerk of the Crown being sent to by the Justices of Gaol-delivery or Peace for the name of any person so convict and certified shall without delay send a certificate thereof in pain of 40 s. V. No certificates out of Wales Chester Lancaster Duresm Cessavit I. Gloucester cap. 4. 6 E. 1. If a Free-farmer cease to pay his rent two years together the Lessor shall have a Cessavit against him and recover the land unless before Judgment he pay the arrearages and give security to pay duly for the future II. West 2 cap. 21. 13 E. 1. A Cessavit by the Chief Lord against his Free-hold tenant that ceaseth per biennium III. A Cessavit is maintainable by the heir of the Demandant against the heir or assigne of the Tenant Challenge I. Stat. De Inquis 33 E. 1. If one challengeth a Juror for the King he shall forthwith assign the cause which shall be presently tried by the discretion of the Justices II. If he alledge not a good cause or it go against him the Inquest shall be forthwith taken III. Stat. 7 H. 7.5 Riens diens le Garde shall not be admitted for challenge in London IV. Stat. 33 H. 8.23 Peremptory challenge shall not be admitted in cases of High Treason or misprision of Treason V. Stat. 1 E. 6.12 All Statutes made during the Reign of H. 8. touching challenges and forem pleas are confirmed Champerty * I. West 1.25 3 E. 1. No Officer of the King shall maintain plea of lands or other things to have part thereof or other profit by Covenant between them made in pain to be punished at the King's will II. West 2.49 13 E. 1. The Chancellor Treasurer Justices or any of the King's Councel Clerks of Chancery Exchequer or of any Justice or other Officer or any of the King's house Clerk or Lay shall not receive any Church or Advouson Land or Tenement in fee by gift by purchace to farm by Champerty or otherwise so long as the same thing is in plea nor shall take any reward thereof in pain to be punished at the King's will both buier and seller III. Stat. 20 or 21 E. 1. made at Barwick The attainted of Champerty shall suffer three years imprisonment and be fineable at the King's will where you have also the form of a Writ for remedy thereof to be issued out by Gilbert de Thornton IV. Artic. super Chart. 11. 28 E. 1. None shall take upon him a business in suit with an intent to have part of the thing sued for neither shall any upon any such Covenant give up his right to another in pain that the taker shall forfeit to the King so much of his lands and goods as do amount to the value of the part so purchased for such maintenance to be recovered by any that will sue for the King in the Court where the plea hangeth V. This shall not prohibit any to take counsel at Law for the fee or of his parents or friends VI. Stat. 33 E. 1. Anno Domini 1304. Champertors are such as move pleas and suits or cause them to be moved either by themselves or others and prosecute them at their own charge to have part of the thing in variance or part of the gains VII Stat. 33 E. 1. Anno Domini 1305. None of our Court of Pleaders Attorneys Stewards Bailiffs or any other shall take any plea or suit to Champerty or for maintenance in pain that they together with the consenters thereunto shall suffer three years imprisonment and be fined at the King's will See also there the form of a Writ for the same purpose and also against Conspirators Chancery Masters in Chancery I. Artic. super Chart. 5. 28 E. 1. The Chancellour and the Justices of his Bench shall follow the King to the end he may have always near him such as be learned in the Laws to order matters that shall come to the Court. II. Stat. 36 E. 3.9 Whosoever findeth himself grieved with any Statute shall have his remedy in the Chancery III. Stat. Car. 2. not printed The office of the Masters in Chancery being of very ancient institution and necessary attendance for dispatch of business in the Court and being thought more proper and safe for the subject in general that Affidavits Answers Recognisances and acknowledgments of Deeds should be in some publick place then in private studies and houses as formerly and for the just incouragement of the said Masters for their attendance and support in due discharge of their places enacted that one publick office be kept and no more near the Rolls in which the said Masters some or one of them shall constantly attend for the administring of oaths caption of deeds and recognisances and dispatch of all matters incident to their office References upon accounts and insufficient answers onely excepted from 7 a clock in the morning until 12 at noon and from 2 in the afternoon until 6 at night and the said Masters may demand and take the Fees following viz. For every Affidavit or oath taken in the said office 12 d. For every bill of Costs to be taxed by them for the Plaintiff's not putting in his bill or not proceeding to reply or for the Defendant's 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 recognisance 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 pursuance of any order
shall not give liberty to any Badger c. to buy Grain out of open Fair or Market to sell again unless there be special words in his license to warrant the same in pain to forfeit for every time so offending 5 l. V. These forfeitures are to be divided betwixt the Queen and the prosecutor VI. The Queen's moiety shall be estreated according to the usual manner and the prosecutor's levied by Fiery facias or Capias but when the suit is wholly the Queen's the whole shall be estreated for her use VII Justices of Peace have power to hear and determine these offences in Sessions by inquisition or verdict or otherwise upon the oath of two witnesses at their discretions and to make process thereupon VIII This Act shall not restrain Purveyors of Cities and Towns Corporate neither yet the inhabitants of the Counties of Westmorland Cumberland Lancaster Chester and York ☞ IX Stat. 13 Eliz. 13. For the increase of tillage and the maintenance of the Navy and Mariners the Lords Presidents and the Councils in the North and VVales Justices of Assise in their Circuits and Justices of Peace in their Sessions have power to license or prohibit the transportation of Grain at their discretions Provided their order be first approved by the Queen or her Council which also may be countermanded by the Queen's Proclamation if there be cause for it X. Stat. 3 Car. 4. Corn may be transported to the Kin●● Allies when Wheat is sold for 32 s. Rie for 29 s. Beans for 10 s. and Barley or Malt for 16 s. the quarter or under See Title Trade num 1. ☞ Coroner I. West 1.10 3 E. 1. Sufficient men of the most wise and discreet Knights shall be chosen in all Counties for Coroners II. The Sheriffs shall have counterparts with the Coroners of all things which concern their Office III. They shall take nothing of any man to doe their office in pain of great forfeiture to the King IV. Stat. 4 E. 1. Officium Coronatoris See the Statute at large V. Stat. De Exonia de inquisitione super Coronatores 14 E. 1. See the Statute at large together with the Articles thereunto annexed VI. Stat. 14 E. 3.8 A Coroner shall have sufficient in the County whereof to answer all people VII Stat. 28 E. 3.6 Coroners shall be chosen in the full Counties of the most convenient and lawful men saving unto the King and other Lords that may make Coroners their Franchises VIII Stat. 1 H. 8.7 Where one is slain by misadventure the Coroner shall execute his office without fee in pain of 40 s. IX Justices of Assise and Peace have power to inquire of and punish the defaults and extortions of Coroners Corporation I. Stat. 19 H. 7.7 Corporations shall not make or execute any Ordinances in diminution of the prerogative of the King or of other or against common profit except approved by the Chancellor Treasurer and the chief Justices or three of them or by the Justices of Assise in pain of 40 l. II. They shall make no Ordinance to restrain suits in the King's Court upon the like pain of 40 l. III. Stat. 22 H. 8.4 They shall take but 2 s. 6. d. for the first entry of an Apprentice and 3 s. 4 d. for his entry of Freedom in pain of 40 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor IV. Stat. 28 H. 8.5 No Corporation shall by oath or bond restrain any Apprentice or Journey-man from keeping Shop or take money of them for their freedom or the occupying of their profession otherwise then as is limited by 22 H. 8.4 in pain of 40 l. to be divided as aforesaid V. Stat. 33 H. 8.27 In Acts to be done by Corporations the consent of the greater part shall binde and the Oath taken by them to the contrary shall not be observed VI. No person shall hereafter give any such oath in pain of 5 l. to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor VII Stat. 13 Car. 2. ca. 1. An Act impowering the King to issue Commissions for governing and regulating Corporations Exp. 25 March 1663. Corpus cum causa Certiorari Habeas Corpus Supersedeas I. Stat. 2 H. 5. Stat. 1.2 If a Corpus cum causa or Certiorari be granted out of the Chancery to remove one that is in prison upon an execution at another man's suit he shall be remanded II. Stat. 43 El. 5. No Writ of Habeas Corpus or other Writ sued forth to remove an Action shall be allowed unless it be delivered unto the Judge or Officer of the Court before the Jury appear and one of them be sworn III. Stat. 21 Jac. 8. Process of the Peace and good behaviour shall not issue out of the Chancery or King's Bench but upon motion in open Court and good cause shewed upon oath which shall also be indorsed upon the Writ Howbeit if that cause shall be afterwards disproved the Judge or Judges of the said Courts respectively shall commit the offender to prison until he pay the party grieved all his costs and dammages IV. All Writs of Supersedeas shall be void unless such process be likewise granted upon motion as aforesaid and upon such sufficient sureties as shall appear to the Court upon oath to be Subsidy-men assessed at 5 l. lands or 10 l. goods and also unless the prosecution against the party for the peace or good behaviour be bonâ fide and here false sureties procured for the gaining of such Writs shall be punished by the Judges V. Certioraries shall not be allowed unless the indicted will become bound with sufficient sureties such as the Justices of Peace in Sess shall like of to pay to the prosecutor within one moneth after conviction such costs and dammages as the said Justices shall assess VI. Stat. 21 Jac. 23. No Writ to remove a suit commenced in an inferiour Court shall be obeyed unless delivered to the Steward c. of the same Court before issue or demurrer joyned so as such issue or demurrer be not joyned within six weeks after the arrest or appearance of the Defendant VII An Action or suit once remanded shall never afterwards be again removed VIII When the thing in demand exceedeth not 5 l. the suit shall not be removed by any Writ save onely by Writs of Error or attaint IX This Act shall onely extend to Courts of Record where an Utter-barister of 3 years standing is Judge Recorder Steward or c. or assistant to such Officer there and not of Council in any Action there depending X. Neither shall this Act extend to any Action which cannot be tried in such inferiour Courts Cousenage Ayel and Besayel I. West 2.26 13 E. 3. In Writs of Cousenage Ayel and Besayel the tenant's answer that the Plaintiff is not next heir of the same Ancestor by whose death he demandeth his land shall be admitted and inquired and according to the same inquisition the Justices shall proceed to judgment ☞ Cottages * I. Stat.
to the true intent of this Act shall be void Decies tantum * I. Stat. 38 E. 3.12 If a Juror take any thing of either party to give his verdict and be attainted thereof by process contained in the Article of Jurors of the 34 E. 3.8 which see in Jurors he shall pay ten times so much as he hath taken to be divided betwixt the King and the prosecutor And all imbraceors that procure such Inquest shall incurre the like punishment II. If the Juror or Embraceor have not whereof to make gree he shall suffer a years imprisonment III. But no Justice or other Officer shall inquire of this offence ex officio Declaration I. Stat. 36 E. 3.15 By the ancient terms and forms of pleaders no man shall be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Declaration and in the writ Deeds and Writngs I. Stat. 1 M. Parl. 1 Sess 2. cap. 4. All Statutes Recognizances and writings made by or to any person since the sixth of July last and before August under the name of any other then the Queen shall be good II. This Act shall not extend to make good any letters patents commissons grants or other writings made by the Lady Jane Dudley since the said sixt of July last Demurrers I. Stat. 27 El. 5. After Demurrer joyned and entred the Judges shall proceed and give judgment according to the right of the cause and matter in law without regard to any defect in the proceeding except such onely as the party shall express together with his demurrer after which time no judgment shall be reversed by writ of Errour for any other defect then such as he shall there mention And if there happen to be any other the Judges may amend them II. This Act shall not extend to the proceeding in an Appeal of felony or murther upon an Indictment Presentment or penal Statute Dilapidations I. Stat. 13 El. 10. If any Ecclesiactical persons who are bound to repair the buildings whereof they are seized in right of their Place or Function suffer them to fall into decay for want of repair and make fraudulent gifts of their personal estate with purpose to hinder their successors from recovering dilapidations against their executors or Administrators in such case the successors shall have like remedy in the Ecclesiastical Court against the grantee of such personal estate as he might have had against the executor or administrator of the predecessor II. Stat. 14 El. 11. All moneys recovered for dilapidations shall within two years be imployed upon the buildings for which they were paid in pain to forfeit to the Queen c. double so much as shall not be so imployed ☞ Deceit * I. West 1.29 3 E. 1. If any person do act or consent to any thing in deceit of the Court or party and thereof be attainted he shall suffer a year and a days imprisonment at least and if he be a pleader he shall be also expelled the Court and if they shall deserve greater punishment it shall be at the King's pleasure II. Officers Criers of Fee and Marshals of Justices in Eyre shall not take money otherwise then they ought to do in pain to pay the treble thereof to the complainants III. Stat. 2 E. 3.17 A Writ of deceit shall be maintainable as well in case of garnishment touching a Plea of land as in case of summons in Plea of land Discontinuance of right or estate I. Stat. 11 H. 7.20 If a woman that hath an estate in Dower for life or in tail joyntly with her husband or onely to her self or to her use in any lands c. of the Inheritance or purchase of her husband or given to the husband and wife by the husbands ancestors or any seized to the use of the husband or his ancestors do sole or with an after taken husband discontinue or suffer a recovery by coven it shall be void and he to whom the land ought to belong after the death of the said woman may enter as if the woman were dead without discontinuance or recovery II. Provided that the woman may enter after the husbands death but if the woman were sole the recovery or discontinuance barreth her for ever III. This Act extends not to any recovery or discontinuance with the heir next inheritable to the woman or by his consent of record enrolled Discontinuance of process I. Stat. 11 H. 6.6 No suit before Justices of Peace shall be discontinued by a new Commission of Peace II. Stat. 1 E. 6.7 The death of the King shall not discontinue any suit betwixt party and party neither shall the variance between the original and judicial process in respect of the King's name be material as concerning any default to be alledged therefore III. Assizes of Novel disseisin Mortdancester Juris utrum or Attaints shall not be discontinued by reason of death new Commissions Associations or the not coming of the same Justices or any of them IV. Preferment of the demandant or plaintiff to be Duke Archbishop Marquess Earl Vicount Baron Bishop Knight Justice of the one Bench or the other or Serjeant at Law shall not make the suit abatable V. Preferment of a Justice of Assize Goal-delivery or Peace or of any other Commissioner to the dignities aforesaid or to be Sheriff shall not lessen his power But note that to be Sheriff is altered by 1 M. Parl. 1.8 which see in Sheriffs VI. New Justices of Goal-delivery may give judgment of a prisoner found guilty of treason or felony though he were reprieved by other Justices VII No process or suit before Justices of Assize Goal-delivery Oyer and Terminer or Peace or other of the King's Commissioners shall be discontinued by a new Commisson or by the alterations of any of their names ☞ Dispensations I. Stat. 28 H. 6.16 All Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations from the Bishop or See of Rome to any of the Kings subjects in any of the Kings Dominions shall be void and shall not be used in pain of a Praemunire II. Former lawfull marriages are confirmed III. A confirmation of all Arch-bishops and Bishops and their authority and of other Ecclesiastical persons and orders by authority of this Act and not by any forreign power IV. The effect and contents of all Bulls Breves and other faculties purchased of the See of Rome which are allowable shall be confirmed under the great Seal Distresses I. Stat. de districtione Scaccarii 51 H. 3. The owner of impounded cattel may give them food without disturbance II. A distress taken for the Kings debt shall not be sold within fifteen days and upon shewing of a tallie and giving surety for his appearance in the Exchequer upon the next accompt the distress shall cease the Sheriff shall also attach the party that received the debt to be there also at the same time III. Neither draught nor cattel nor sheep shall be distrained except for damage feasant so long as other goods may be
costs and damages for delaying of execution by the writ of errour VIII Stat. 21 Jac. 24. The party or parties at whose suit any person shall stand charged in execution for debt or damages recovered their executors or administrators may after the death of the person so charged in execution lawfully sue forth new execution against the lands and tenements goods and chattels of the person so deceased in like manner as if the person deceased had never been taken in execution Howbeit this Act shall not extend to lands sold bonâ fide after the Judgment given when the money raised thereupon is paid or secured to be paid to Creditors in discharge of due debts IX For further remedy against the inconvenience of staying Execution after judgment in part provided against by the Stat. 3 Jac. cap. 8. no Execution shall be stayed in any of the said Courts by writ of Errour or Supersedeas after Verdict and Judgment in action of debt upon the Stat. 2 E. 6. for tithes promise for payment of money Trover Covent Detinue or Trespass unless such recognisance in the same Court be first entred as directed by the said Statute And if Judgment be affirmed the party presenting such writ or error shall pay double cost for such delay X. Proviso this Act not to extend to any popular action except Stat. 2 E. 6. for tithes nor to any Indictment Information Inquisition or Appeal XI Stat. 16. 17 Car. 2. cap. 8. After a Verdict of 12 men in any action suit bill or demand comenced after the 25 of March 1665 in any the Courts of Record at Westminster or Courts of Record in the County Palatine of Chester Lancaster or Durram or Courts of the Great Session or in any of the 12 Shires of Wales Judgment thereupon shall not be stayed or reversed for default in form or lack of form or lack of pledges or but one pledge to prosecute returned upon the original writ or for default of entring of pledges upon any Bill or declaration or for default of bringing into Court of any Bond Bill Indenture or other deed whatsoever mentioned in the declaration or other pleading or for default of allegation of the bringing into Court of letters Testamentary or letters of Administration or by the reason of the omission of 6 c. armis or Contra pacem or for mistaking of the Christian-name or Sur-name of the Plaintiff or Defendant Demandant or Tenant summe or summes of money day moneth or year by the Clerk in any Bill Declaration or Pleading where the right name Sur-name summe day moneth or year in any Writ Plaint Roll or Record proceeding or in the same Roll or Record where the mistake is committed is rightly alledged whereunto the Plaintiff might have demurred and shewn the same for cause Nor for want of the averment of Hoc paratus est verificare or Hoc paratus est verificare per Recordum or for not alledging Prout patet per Recordum or for that there is no right venue so as the cause were tried by a Jury of the proper County or place where the action is laid XII Nor any Judgment after verdict confession by cognovit actionem or relicta verificatione shall be reversed for want of Miserecordia or Capiatur or by reason that a Capiatur is entred for a Miserecordia or a Miserecordia for a Capiatur Nor that Ideo concessum est per Curiam is entred for Ideo confideratum est per Curiam nor for that encrease of costs after a verdit in any action or upon a nonsuit in Replevin are not entred to be at the request of the party for whom the Judgment is given nor by reason that the costs in any whatsoever are not entred to be by consent of the Plaintiff But that all such omissons variances defects and other matters of like nature not being against the right of the matter of the suits nor whereby the issue or tryall are altered shall be amended by the Justices and other Judges of the Courts where such Judgments are or shall be give or whereupon the Record is or shall be removed by writ of Errour Provided this Act extend not to any Writ Declaration or suit of Appeal of Felony or Murther nor any indictment or presentment Felony Murther Treason or other matter nor to any process upon any of them nor to any Writ Bill Action or information upon any penal Statute other then concerning Customes and Subsedies of Tunnage and Poundage XIII And after the 20 of March 1664. No Execution shall be stayed in any of the aforesaid Courts by writ of Errour or Supersedeas thereupon after verdict and judgment in any action personal whatsoever unless a recognizance with condition according to the former Statute made 3 Jacob. cap. 8. shall be first acknowledged in the Court where such judgment shall be given XIV In writs of Errour to be brought upon any judgment after verdict in any writ of Dower or of Ejectione firmae no Execution shall be stayed unless the Plaintiff in such writ or Errour shall be bound unto the Plaintiff in such writ of Dower of Ejectione firmae in such reasonable summe as the Court to which such writ of Errour shall be directed shall think fit with condition that if the judgment shall be affirmed in the said writ of Errour or the writ of Errour discontinued in the default of Plaintiff therein or that the said Plaintiff be nonsuit in such writ of Errour that then the Plaintiff shall pay such costs damages and summes of money as shall be awarded after such judgment affirmed discontinuance or nonsuit And the Court wherein such execution ought to be granted upon such affirmation discontinuance or nonsuit shall issue a writ to enquire as well of the mean profits as of the damages by any waste committed after the first judgment in Dower or Ejectione firmae And upon return thereof Judgment shall be given and Execution awarded for such mean profits and damages and for costs of suit Provided this Act extend not to any writ of error to be brought by any Executor or Administrator nor any action popular nor to any other action which is or shall be brought upon any penal Law or Statute except actions of debt for not setting forth of tithes nor to any Indictment Presentment Inquisition Information or Appeal This Act to continue in force for 3 years and to the end of the next Session of Parliament after the said 3 years and no longer Execution of Statutes I. Stat. 3 H. 7.1 The Lord Chancellor Treasurer and Privy Seal or any two of them calling to them a Bishop a Lord of the Council and the two chief Justices or two other Justices in their absence upon bill of information put to the Chancellor for the King or any other for maintenance retainers embraceries untrue demeanings of Sheriffs taking of money by Juries great Riots or unlawful assemblies have authority to call before them by writ or privy Seal
All fines whereupon Proclamations are not duly made by reason of the adjournment of any term by Writ shall be good as if that term had been holden from the beginning to the end and Proclamations therein made according to the Statute 4 H. 7.24 XXXIV This Act shall not extend to any fine heretofore levied of lands now in suit or heretofore lawfully recovered by judgment or otherwise XXXV Stat. 35 El. 2. Fines in the Common Pleas shall be proclaimed four times onely viz. once in the Term wherein the fine is ingrossed and once in each of the three Terms then next following ☞ Fines to the King I. Magna Chart. 26. 9 H. 3. Nothing shall be given for a Writ of Inquisition nor taken of him that prayeth Inquisition of life or member but it shall be granted freely and not denied First-fruits and Tenths I. Stat. 26 H. 8.3 The first-fruits and profits for one year of every spiritual living is granted to the King which every spiritual person shall pay or secure by bond before his actual possession of his Benefice II. Search for the value of Benefices and composition for the First-fruits thereof shall be made by the Lord Chancellor Master of the Rolls and other Commissioners to be appointed by the King for that purpose and the money and securities taken upon such Compositions made before the Chancellor and Master of the Rolls only shall be paid and delivered unto the Clerk of the Hanaper for which he shall render account as he useth to do for other profits of the Great Seal but being made before other Commissioners shall be paid and delivered unto the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or such other person or persons as the King shall authorize under the Great Seal for that purpose to receive the same III. Acquittances for the receit of any money paid for First-fruits under the hands of the Clerk of the Hanaper Treasurer of the King's Chamber and the Commissioners or any of them shall be a sufficient discharge for the same in any of the King's Courts IV. An obligation for First-fruits shall be of like force as a Statute-staple and no more shall be so taken for such an Obligation then 8 d. and 4 d. for an Acquittance V. The Commissioners shall every six moneths deliver by Indenture unto the Treasurer or other person or persons authorized as aforesaid such money and specialties as they shall receive and in case they do not or do conceal them they shall forfeit their office and be fined at the King's pleasure VI. If any be convicted by presentment verdict confession or witness before the Lord Chancellor or other Commissioners to have entred upon any spiritual living before payment or composition made as aforesaid he shall forfeit the double value of the First-fruits VII All First-fruits heretofore payable to other persons shall be from henceforth paid to the King VIII Provided that Bishops may give institution and induction Notwithstanding this Act. IX A rent of pension out of every spiritual living amounting to the tenth part of the annual value thereof shall be yearly paid unto the King at Christmas and the Collector thereof shall pay them in yearly befor the first of April X. The Lord Chancellor shall appoint Commissioners in every Diocess for the Discovery of the yearly value of every spiritual living there and to make Certificate thereof as also of such deductions as are to be made out of the same which Commissoners shall be aforehand sworn by Dedimus potestatem duely to execute their Commmissions XI Every spiritual person shall be charged for his tenth in the Diocess where he is albeit their possessions ly elsewhere XII Bishops shall be charged with the Collection of all the tenths within their respective Diocesses and shall make payment thereof yearly before the first of April unto the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or other person authorized to receive the same and upon non-payment thereof process shall issue out of the Exchequer against them XIII Bishops shall have power to levy the Tenths by Censures of the Church distress or otherwise and no replevin prohibition supersedeas or other writ or impediment shall be allowed to hinder the same XIV During the vacation of a Bishoprick the Dean and Chapiter shall be charge therewith XV. If tenths being due shall not be paid within 40 days after demand thereof made by the Bishop or his officers the Incumbent so making default after certificate thereof into the Exchequer under the Seal of the Bishop shall be adjudged deprived ipso facto of all such Benefices as he hath at the time of such certificate made or at any time after and the Benfice or Benefices which he so hath shall be adjudged void as if he were dead XVI The Bishop making such certificate shall be discharged of so much as is certified to be unpaid for the recovery whereof process shall issue out of the Exchequer against the Incumbent his Executors or Administrators or rather then the King should lose it against his successor XVII The Acquittances of the Treasurer of the King's Chamber or other Commissioners authorized to receive the tenth and all such certificates as aforesaid shall be allowed in all Courts without further warrant XVIII No Officer of the Exchequer shall take any thing of the Bishop or his Collector for his Account or Quietus est in pain to lose office and to be fined at the King's will XIX They which pay pensions to others out of their spiritual livings may retain the tenth part thereof and shall be therein protected by plea upon this Act. XX. No pension shall be reserved upon the resignation of a Benefice above the value of the third part thereof XXI They who in one Corporation aggregate of many have several and distinct possessions belonging to their respective dignities shall only pay for their own possessions and not for those of others XXII No First-fruits shall be paid for a Benefice being not above the yearly value of 8 marks except the Incumbent live three years after his Induction or Collation thereunto and there shall be an exception inserted in the Obligation that in case he live not out those three years the Obligation shall be void but if he outlive them the First-fruits shall be paid by him his Executors or Administrators XXIII Fees payable by any Bishop or other Prelate for temporal Justice shall be defalked out of the valuation of their several dignities XXIV Stat. 26 H. 8.17 Farmers of spiritual persons shall not be compelled to pay First-fruits or Tenths for their lessors XXV Stat. 27 H. 8.8 Every spiritual person at his entry into specialty for the payment of his First-fruits shall have deduction of the tenth part thereof in respect of the tenth which shall be by him payable that year XXVI Where the last incumbent leaves the tenth unpaid the successor may distrain the said incumbents goods found upon the Benefice and keep them until the Incumbent if living or if dead
Stat. 18 El. Two Acts were made but not printed the one for the Hospital of S. Cross near Winchester and the other for one at Leicester VI. Stat. 27 El. Also two Acts not printed the one for the Hospital of Christ at Sherbourn in Bishoprick and the other for that of Eastbridge in Canterbury VII Stat. 39 El. 5. It shall be lawful for any person within 20 years next insuing by deed inrolled in Chancery to erect and found an Hospital or house of correction to have the same continue for ever and for him his heirs and assignes to place such head and members and such number of poor as they please which said Hospital or house so founded shall be incorporated and have perpetual succession for ever which Corporation shall have power to purchase goods and Chattels also lands not exceeeding the value of 200 l. per annum nor held by Knight service or in chief of the Queen and all this without licence or the writ of ad quod damnum the Statute of Mortmain or of any other to the contrary VIII They shall also have power to sue and be sued in all Courts and to have such a common seal or seals as the Founder his heirs or assigns shall appoint by which they may seal all Instruments which concern the said Corporations IX They shall also be visited and ordered by such person or persons as the said Founders their heirs or assigns shall nominate according to the Statutes of the Foundation being not repugnant to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm Howbeit the Founder his heirs and assigns upon the death or removal of any head or member shall have power to place another in their stead X. Provided that all leases and estates made by any such Corporation for above 21 years and that in possession and whereupon the accustomed yearly rent for the greater part of 20 years before shall not be reserved and yearly payable shall be void XI The right of all persons save of the Founders their heirs and successors is saved XII This act shall not inable Infants Femes covert without their husbands or persons not of sane memory to make such Corporations or to endow the same XIII No such Corporation shall be made unless the same be upon the foundation thereof endowed with lands of the clear yearly value of 10 l. per annum XIV Provided that the Corporations aforesaid shall not by force of this Act do or suffer to be done any thing in prejudice thereof but such construction shall be made thereof as shall be most beneficial for the maintenance of the poor and for avoiding of all divices which may be invented or put in ure contrary to the true meaning thereof XV. Stat. 39 El. 6. Commissions may be awarded to certain persons to inquire of lands or goods given to Hospitals or other charitable uses mis-imployed and to reform them But this Act was afterwards repealed by 43 Eliz. 4. saving for the execution of orders and decrees before made by Commissioners according to the Statute XVI Stat. 43 El. 4. It shall be lawful for the Lord Chancellor or Keeper for the time being and for the Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster within that precinct to award Commissions into any part of the Realm respectively to the Bishop there and his Chancellor if any at that time and to other persons of good behaviour authorizing four or more of them to inquire as well by the oaths of twelve or more lawful men as otherwise of all grants gifts assignments limitations and appointments and of all abuses and mis-imployments of all lands tenements and hereditaments and of all goods and chattells given limited or appointed to charitable uses XVII The Commissioners having called the parties interessed made inquiry by the oathes of such 12 men or more unto whom lawfull challenge may be made by the parties so interessed and set down such orders and decrees therein that the things so given to charitable uses may be faithfully imployed the orders and decrees so made being not repugnant to the Statutes of the Founders or Donors shall stand firm and be executed accordingly until they shall be altered by the Chancellor Keeper or Chancellor of the said Dutchey respectively upon complaint made to them thereof by the party grieved XVIII This Act shall not extend to any thing given to any Hall or Colledg in the Universities or to the Colledges of Westminster Eaton or Winchester or to any Cathedrall Church or to any City or Town Corporate or to any lands or tenements given to the uses aforesaid in any such City or Town where there is a special Governour or Governours to govern things disposed to such uses or to any Colledg Hospital or Free-School having special Visitors or Governours appointed by the Founders XIX This Act shall not be prejudicial to the Ordinary or his jurisdiction XX. None having the thing in question or pretending title thereunto shall be either Commissioner or Juror XXI This Act shall not impeach any purchaser bonâ fide of things given to charitable uses not having notice thereof Howbeit in that case the party or parties who have broken their trust in selling the same their heirs executors and administrators shall make satisfaction by the Decree of the said Commissioners if they have left assets or so far as the assets so left shall extend XXII The Commissioners shall not meddle with any lands conveyed or come to the hands of H. 8. E. 6. Qu. M. or Qu. El. unless the grant to charitable uses were made since the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign XXIII The Orders Judgments and Decrees shall be certified into the Chancery or Dutchy Court as the case shall require under the Commissioners Seals within such time as shall be limited in their Commissions And the said Lord Chancellor Keeper or Chancellor of the Dutchy respectively shall take such order for the due execution of the said Decrees as to them shall seem fit XXIV If the party against whom the Decree is past conceive himself injured thereby upon complaint thereof to the said Chancellor Keeper or Chancellor of the Dutchy respectively he shall have redress if there be cause but if not they shall award good costs against him for complaining without cause Hounslo-Heath I. Stat. 37 H. 8.2 Hounslo-Heath in Com. Midd. which contains 4293 acres and one rood of ground extendeth into several Parishes so much thereof as is the King's inheritance and is meet for tillage pasture meadow or other several ground shall be of the nature and condition of Copy-hold land or the same may be let by the Steward of the Mannor at will or for 21 years which lessee shall and may improve it Hull I. Stat. 33 H. 8.33 The Statute of 27 H 8.3 which was made for the taking away of certain customs that the Mayor and Commonalty of Hull took for fish is repealed but by this they may take of every person priviledged for a last of hering 20 d. for
well by Aliens as Denizons XI Stat. 34 E. 3.18 All persons who have lands and possessions in Ireland may freely import and export their Commodities thither and from thence without Impeachment XII Stat. 1 H. 6.3 All Irish-men shall avoid the Kingdom except Graduates Beneficed men Lawyers having Inheritance in England and English parents religious persons professed Merchants Burgesses and others inhabitants of good fame and persons married in England and all they shall find surety for the good abearing XIII No Irish-man shall inhabit here in the Universities or elsewhere without a testimonial under the seal of the Lievtenant or Justices of Ireland testifying that he is of the King's obeysance to be delivered to the Chancellor here in pain to be punished as a Rebel XIV No Irish-man shall be Head or Governour of any Hall or house XV. Stat. 2 H. 6.8 Irish-men coming to live in England shall give surety for their good abearing viz. In the Universities to the Chancellors in Counties to the Justices of Peace and in Corporations and other liberties to the Head-officers respectively XVI Stat. 16 17 Car. 30. An Act for a speedy contribution and loan towards the relief of the King 's distressed subjects of the Kingdom of Ireland See the Statute at large XVII Stat. 16 17 Car. 33. An act for the speedy and effectual reducing of the Rebels in Ireland to their due obedience to the King and the Crown of England and cap. 34.35 37. Certain other additional Acts were made for the same purpose and for the sale of forfeited lands there All which see at large ☞ Iron * I. Stat. 28 E. 5. Iron made in England or brought into England and sold shall not be exported in pain to forfeit the value thereof to the King II. Justices assigned have power to inquire of Labourers And other Justices to be assigned by the King shall also have power to inquire of such as sell Iron at too dear a price and to punish them according to the quantity of the trespass ☞ Judgment I. Stat. 14 E. 3. Stat. 1.5 A Prelate two Earls and two Barons shall have power by the King's Commission to hear by Petition complaints for delay of entring Judgments and to call before them the Justices and Records whereof such complaint shall be made and calling to them the Chancellor Treasurer the Justices of the one Bench or the other and others of the King's Council as many as they shall think fit shall give Judgment thereof and then the Records shall be remanded together with the Judgment which shall be immediatly entred accordingly II. In case the matter be too difficult it shall be referred to the next Parliament to be determined III. Judges and other Officers in Courts of Justice may be increased or diminished as need shall require and when they shall enter into their offices they shall make oath duly to serve the King and his people IV. Stat. 4 H. 4.23 Judgments given shall continue and the parties for whom they are so given and their heirs shall be in peace until they shall be reversed by attaint or errour if any be Judicial Proceedings I. Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 12. Which Judicial Proceedings during the late usurpation shall be good and effectual in law and which not ☞ Jurisdiction I. Artic. Cleri cap. 6. 9 E. 2. Albeit a case be debated and have judgment in the spiritual Court yet the King's Court may afterwards discuss the same matter as the party shall think expedient for himself II. Stat. pro Clero 25 E. 3. Stat. 3. cap. Conisance of avoidance of Benefices belongs to the Ecclesiastical Judge and not to the Temporal Juris Utrum I. West 1. cap. 24. 13 E. 1. A Writ of Juris Utrum shall be granted to trie whether free alms belong to one Church or another in case where they are transferred from one Church to another ☞ Jurors I. Marlb cap. 14. 52 H. 3. Such as have Charters of exemption not to be impannelled upon Juries shall notwithstanding their priviledge be sworn upon great Assizes Perambulations in deeds and writings of covenants where they be named for witnesses and in Attaints and when their oaths are so requisite that without them Justice cannot be administred II. West 2. cap. 38. 13 E. 1. No more Jurors shall be summoned in one Assize then 24. Also old men above the age of 70. or sick or diseased at the time of the summons or not dwelling in the Countrey shall not be put in Juries of petit Assizes neither shall any be put in Assizes or Juries that have not land worth 20 s. per annum And if the Assizes or Juries be taken out of the County their revenue shall be 40 s. per annum at least except such as be witnesses to deeds or other writings and be able to travel III. This Statute shall not extend to great Assizes where many times Knights are to be impannelled for they by reason of their scarcity may serve albeit they dwell out of the Countrey so they have land in the County for which they serve IV. No Sheriff Under-Sheriff or Bailiff shall offend against this Law in pain to answer damages to the party and to be amercied to the King V. Justices of Assize have power to hear and determine these offences VI. Stat. 21 E. 1. Stat. 1. None shall be impannelled to serve out of their proper County unless they have lands worth 5 l. per annum at least nor in the County unless they have lands worth 40 s. per annum VII This Statute shall not extend to Juries taken before Justices errant nor to Corporations but that they may do as in times past * VIII Artic. super Cart. cap. 9. 28 E. 1. None shall be impannelled but as is ordained by Statute and they shall be next neighbours most sufficient and least suspitious in pain that the Officer who doth otherwise shall answer double damages to the party grieved and be grievously amercied to the King IX Stat. 5 E. 3.10 If a Juror take a bribe of either party and be thereof attainted he shall serve no more of any Jury be imprisoned and ransomed at the King's will and the Justices before whom he serves shall have power to hear and determine this offence according to this Statute X. Stat. 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 3. No Indictor shall be put upon the Inquest for the deliverance of the Indictee of felony or trespass if he be challenged by the Indictee for that cause XI Stat. 34 E. 3.4 Sheriffs and others shall array their pannels of the next people not suspected nor procured in pain to be punished by the Justices that take such Inquests both to the King and the party grieved according to the quantity of the trespass and damage XII Stat. 34 E. 3.8 If any of the Jurors be accused by either of the parties for taking a bribe to give his verdict the Justices may presently trie it by a Jury then also to be taken
2. 31 E. 1. Ecclesiastical persons being debarred by the former Statutes to obtain lands in Mortmain by alienation endeavoured fraudulently to obtain them by default in a suit And therefore in such case it was ordained by this Statute that it should be inquired by the Countrey whether or no the demandant had a just title thereto and if so then he should recover seisin but if otherwise the Lord of the fee should enter as aforesaid And by this Statute each mean Lord hath a full half year given him after the Lord next before him until it come to the King And here also the Lords as also the King are allowed their challenges IV. After the judgement given the lands shall remain clear in the Kings hand until it be deraigned by the demandant or some other chief Lord and the Sheriff shall be charged to answer for it in the Exchequer V. Ordinatio de perquirendis libertatibus 27 E. 1. To obtain licence to make a Park or to amortize lands the writ Ad quod damnum shall issue out of the Chancery to inquire concerning the same VI. Here inquisitions of Lands that shall be found by extent to be worth yearly more then 20 s. shall be returned into the Exchequer and there the parties shall make fine for the Amortizements and for the Park if the Inquisition passe for them And afterwards the Chancellor or his Deputy shall have order to do his duty therein VII When the yearly value of the lands exceed not 20 s. the inquisition shall be returned to the Chancellor and he or his Deputy shall rate and take the fine according to the quantity of the land VIII The like shall be done by such as purchase lands holden of the King in chief IX If persons dwelling beyond Sea and having lands or rents in England are desirous to purchase Letters of protection or would make general Attorneys they shall be first sent to the Exchequer to make their fines and from thence to the Chancellor or his Deputy for that which he ought to do therein X. In like manner shall they do that will purchase any Fair Market Warren or any other liberty also such as will purchase instalment of their debts shall be sent into the Exchequer XI Also such as are unable to travel or dwell in remote parts from the Chancery which plead or be impleaded shall have a writ out of the Chancery to some sufficient man that shall receive their Attorneys when need is XII For the better remembrance of these things there shall be a tripartite Indenture made whereof one shall remain in the Chancery another in the Exchequer and the third in the Gardrobe XIII The Statute of Amortizing Lands 34 E. 1. Lands shall not be aliened in Mortmain where there be mean Lords without their consent declared under their seals Neither shall any thing passe where the donor reserveth nothing to himself or when the Inquisition is made and returned without war viz. without the Writ original returned with the Inquisition and unlesse the original make mention of every thing according to the new Ordinance devised by the King XIV The Statute of Writs for making Inquisition of Lands to be put to Mortmain Incerti temperis Writs ad quod damnum for amortizing lands shall not be granted but upon Petition in full Parliament XV. Stat. de Clero 3. 18 E. 3. If Prelates Clerks beneficed or other people of Religion being impeached for purchasing lands in Mortmain shew the Kings Charter of Licence and process thereupon made by an Inquest of ad quo ● damnum or of the Kings Grace or by Fine they shall be in peace And albeit they cannot sufficiently shew that they have entred by due process after licence to them granted in general or in special yet they shall be well received to make a convenient fine for the same XVI Stat. 15 R. 2.5 It is within the compass of the Statue of 7 E. 1. to convert any Land into a Church-yard albeit it be done by the consent or connivence of the ter-tenant and confirmed by the Popes Bull. XVII If any be seised of any lands or other possessions to the use of any spiritual person with purpose to amortize them and whereof such spiritual person takes the profits they shall before the Feast of S. Michael next cause them to be amortized by the licence of the King and other Lords or dispose of them to some other use otherwise they shall be forfeit according to the form of the said Statute as lands purchased by people of Religion Add no such purchase to the use of such spiritual persons shall be hereafter made upon the like pain XVIII The same Law shall be of Lands or other possessions purchased to the use of Guilds and Fraternities Also lands purchased by Corporations or to their use shall be within the compass of the said Statute de Religiosis XIX Stat. 23 H. 10. If any grant of Lands or other Hereditaments shall be made in trust to the use of any Churches Chappels Church-wardens Guilds Fraternities Commonalties Companies or Brotherhoods or to have perpetual Obits or a continual service of a Priest for ever or for 60 or 80 years or to such like uses or intents All such uses intents and purposes shall be void they being no Corporations but erected either of devotion or else by common consent of the people XX. Such uses and intents may be made and declared to continue 20 years from the time of such limiting of them but no longer XXI Collateral assurances made for the defending of this Statute shall be void and this shall be interpreted most beneficially for the destruction of such uses as aforesaid XXII This Act shall not prejudice Corporations where there is a custome to devise lands in Mortmain XXIII This Act shall not prejudice the Executors of Jannis and Terry late Aldermen of Norwich ☞ Mortuaties I. Stat. 21 H. 8.6 No spiritual person his Bayliff or Lessee shall take or demand more for a Mortuary then as is hereafter expressed nor shall convent any person before any Ecclesiastical Judge for the recovery of more for the same then as is hereafter declared in pain to forfeit so much as he takes or demands more and likewise 40 s. to the party grieved to be recovered by action of debt wherein no essoin c. shall be allowed II. None shall take or demand for a Mortuary any thing at all where by the Custom they have not been usually paid nor upon the death of a Woman Covert a Child a person not keeping house a wayfaring man one not residing in the place where he happens to die nor where the goods of the dead person debts deduct d amount not to the value of 10 marks Nor above the sum of 3 s. 4 d. when they exceed not 30 l. nor above 6 s. 8 d. when they exceed 30 l. but not 40 l. nor above 10 s. when they amount to 40 l. or above And if
be thereupon awarded for the levying of them for the Kings use to the Sheriff of every County who shall account before such Auditors as shall be thereto assigned which Auditors shall make due allowance unto the Sheriffs upon their accompts for the fees of the Justices and Clerks of the Peace as is used in England CI. The President Council and Justices of Wales or three of them at least whereof the President to be one shall yearly nominate three able persons in every of the said twelve Shires to be Sheriffs thereof and shall certify their names to the Lords of the Privy Council Crast Animarum to the end the King may appoint one of them in every of the said Shires to be Sheriff for that year like as is used in England And thereupon the said Sheriff shall have their Pattents under the Great Seal of England and shall make oath and acknowledg recognizances before the President and Justices or one of them by a Dedimus for the due execution of their Offices and for their just accompt before the Kings Auditors assigned for Wales CII The said Sheriffs have power to use their Offices as Sheriffs of England do shall be observant to all lawful commands and Precepts of the President Council Justices of Wales Justices of Peace Escheators and Coroners and every of them in all things appertaining to their Offices shall yearly accompt to the Auditor or Auditors assigned by the King for VVales and shall each of them have yearly for his fee 5 l. CIII All Officers and other persons in VVales shall be obedient attendant and assisting to the President Council and Justices of Wales and shall obey the Kings commands and process from any of them directed and all lawfull and reasonable precepts of them and every of them and also shall be obedient to all Justices of Peace Sheriffs and Escheators within their several limits in all things appertaining to their duties and offices CIV Also Escheators shall be named in every of the said Counties by the Treasurer of England with the advice of the President Council or three of them whereof the President to be one which Escheators shall make oaths and acknowledg Recognizances before the President or one of the Justices by a Dedimus for the due execution of their Offices and for their true account before the Kings Auditor or Auditors to be assigned for that purpose which oath and recognizance shall be agreeable to those used for Escheators in England CV Such Escheators shall yearly have their Pattents under the Great Seal and shall exercise their Offices as Escheators in England and shall be bound to all Laws and Statutes of England But they need not have above 5 l. per annum free-hold and shall accompt yearly before such Auditor or Auditors as the King shall assign for Wales CVI. There shall be also two Coroners elected for each of the said 12 Shires by the Writ De Coronatore Eligendo awarded out of the Chancery of England which Coroners shall exercise their Offices and have like fees as in England Only the Writ de Cor. elig for the County of Flint shall be directed out of the Exchequer of Chester ☞ CVII The Justices of Peace or two of them 1. Qu. shall appoint in every hundred within their limits two substantial Gentlemen or Yeomen to be chief Constables of the Hundred where they dwell who shall preserve the Peace and use their Offices and be bound in all things as High-Constables in England CVIII The Sheriff shall have a Goal in a place of the Castle of the Shire-town or such other convenient place as by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one shall be appointed any Patent or Grant notwithstanding The Sheriff also shall make Bail●ffs of the Hundred who shall attend upon the Justices at their Courts and Sessions CIX Sheriffs shall keep their Counties Monthly and their Hundred-Courts for pleas under 40 s. and shall take for entring of plaints process pleas and judgments there as is used in England and not above Also all tryals in such Courts or before Stewards in Court Barons shall be by Wager of Law or verdict of six men at the election of the party Plaintiff or Defendant that pleads the plea. CX Sheriffs shall hold their Turns yearly after Easter and Michaelmas as is used in England CXI The King shall have all Fines Issues Amerciaments and Forfeitures lost in the said Courts and Turnes to his own use and the Sheriff shall account for the same accordingly having been first affered by the Justices of Assize of that Circuit before they be levied And the Sheriff shall not levy them before they be so affered in pain to forfeit to the King 40 s. Also the Sheriff upon every Judgment in his County or Hundred Court may award a Capias ad satisfaciendum or a Fieri facias at the election of the Plaintiff CXII Certain fees which the Sheriff is to have for the return and execution of divers writs For which see the Statute at large CXIII Every Sheriff within this limit may put suspitious persons under common main-prise according to the Statute of 37 H. 8.26 which see before binding them with two sufficient Sureties by recognizance to appear before the Justices at the next great Sessions and shall then also certify the names of the parties so bound without concealment CXIV The Sheriffs fee for taking such common main-prise is 2 d. but he shall take no fee for the return of any writ of execution unless he return the same executed CXV The fees of Sheriffs Escheators and Coroners and their Ministers Prothonotaries and their Clerks and other Ministers of Justice in Wales shall be rated augmented and diminished by the President Council and Justices or three of them whereof the President to be one from time to time at their discretions CXVI None for murder or felony shall be put to his fine but suffer according to the Laws of England except it please the King to pardon him And if the Justices see cause of pity or other consideration they may reprieve the prisoner till they have advertised the King of the matter CXVII The Statute of the 26 H. 8.6 which see before is confirmed notwithstanding this Act and from henceforth shall be put in execution CXVIII Abertannad heretofore reputed parcel of the County of Merioneth shall now be annexed to Salop and be reputed parcel of the Hundred of Oswestry CXIX If any forreign plea or voucher be pleaded or made before any of the Justices of Wales tryable in any other County in Wales in this case the said Justice shall send the Kings Writ with a transcript of the Record unto the Justice of the County where the matter is tryable commanding him to proceed to the tryal thereof according to Law which tryal being had he shall remand it with the whole record unto the Justice that sent it who thereupon shall proceed to Judgment as
be of as good force as the orignal record it self CLIX. The Justices Clerks may write out and enroll the said Records but shall not carry them out of their offices CLX No Fine or Recovery heretofore levied or suffered shall after exemplification be amended CLXI This Act shall not prejudice the heirs of Sir Edward Gray Knight Lord Powis or Sir Edward Herbert Knight his heirs or assigns or Henry Vernor or John Vernor Esquires their heirs or assigns concerning any fine levied or recovery suffered by or against the said Lord Powis of Lands in the County of Mountgomery Nor to Henry now Earl of Kent concerning any lands in Wales whereunto he pretends title Walsingham I. Stat. 35 H. 8.13 The Demesne Lands in Walsingham belonging to the late Priory there may be let by Copy and shall hereafter be Copyholds Wapping-Marsh I. Stat. 35 H. 8.9 An Act for the Partition of Wapping-Marsh Wards I. Magna Charta 3. 9 H. 8.9 The Lord shall take homage of the heir within age before he have the Wardship and such heir after he hath been in ward shall at his full age of 21 years have his Inheritance without relief or fine and if the heir within age be made a Knight yet his Land shall remain in Ward untill his full age aforesaid II. Magna Charta 6. 9 H. 3. Heirs shall be married without disparagement III. Magna Charta 27. 9 H. 3. If any hold of the King by Fee-farm Soccage or Burgage and holdeth lands of another by Knight-service the King shall not have the custody either of the heir or land by reason of the tenures in Fee-farm Soccage or Burgage Neither shall he have the custody of such Fee-farm Soccage or Burgage except Knight-service be due to him out of such Fee-farm Also by reason of petty Serjeancy viz. to pay a Knife Arrow or the like the King shall not have the custody either of the heir or land IV. Merton 6. 20 H. 3. Where heirs are led away and withholden or married by their Parents and others with force against the Peace if a Lay-man be convict thereof he shall render to the party the value of the marriage and remain in prison until he hath satisfied the same if the child be married and besides until he hath satisfied the King for the trespass Howbeit this is to be understood of an heir within age of 14 years V. If an heir 14 years old or above marry himself without licence of his Lord to defraud him of the marriage and his Lord offer him reasonable and convenient marriage without disparagement the Lord shall retain the Land beyond the term of his full age until he may receive the double value of the marriage according to the estimation of lawful men or as was offered him before without fraud or collusion and as it may be proved in the Kings Court. VI. If Lords marry their heirs to Villains Burgesses or others whereby they are disparaged such heir being then within the age of 14 years In this case upon complaint of the Wards friends the Lord shall lose his Wardship and the profits thereof shall be by friends converted to the use of the heir But if it be 14 years old or above and consent to such marriage no pain shall insue VII Merton 7. 20 H. 3. If an heir of what age soever he be will not marry at the request of his Lord he shall not be compelled thereunto But when he is of full age he shall pay his Lord before he receive his land as much as any would have given the Lord for the marriage And that whether the heir will marry himself or not for of right the marriage of the heir within age pertaineth to the Lord. VIII Marlbr 6. 52 H. 3. Where any enfeoff their eldest sons and heirs within age of the Inheritance with purpose to defraud the Lords of their Wardships It is accorded that by occasion of any such Feoffment no chief Lord shall lose his Ward IX As for such as feign false Feoffments of their land which they would deliver out for term of years with purpose to defraud the chief Lords of their Wards in which Feoffments is contained that they are satisfied of the whole service due unto them until a certain time so as such Feoffees are bound at the said term to pay a certain sum to the value of the same lands or far above so that after the end of such term the land shall return to such Feoffors and their heirs because no man will be content to hold it at the price It is accorded that by such fraud no chief Lord shall lose his Ward Howbeit the Lords shall not disseize such Feoffees without judgment but shall have a Writ of Ejectione custodiae to recover the Ward And when by the witnesses to the Feoffment with other lawful men of the Country the value of the land and the quantity of the sum payable after the term it shall be tryed whether such Feoffments were made bona fide or by Collusion as aforesaid And if the chief Lords in such cases recover their Wards by judgment the Feoffees nevertheless may have their action to recover such term or fee which they had therein when the heirs come to their lawful age X. Where chief Lords maliciously implead such Feoffees feigning this ease when the Feoffments were made bona fide in such cases the Feoffees shall recover against the chief Lords their damages and costs and besides the Plaintiffs shall be punished by amerciament XI Marlbr 7. 52 H. 3. In a plea of Communi Custodia if the deforceors come not at the great distress that Writ shall be renewed twice or thrice at such terms as it may be done in within the half year following so as at every such time the writ may be read in open County if the deforceor be not found before and be there openly proclaimed that he may appear at the day limited and if he come not in to answer within the half year nor the Sheriff can take his body to answer before the Justices according to Law then as a Rebel and one that will not be justified he shall lose the seisin of the Ward saving to him at another time his Action if he have right to the same XII Howbeit where the Wardship belongs to the Guardian of Wards being within age and where Guardians demand a Wardship which belongeth to the heir such heirs within age shall not lose their inheritance by the negligence of their Guardians as in the case aforesaid but in such cases the Common Law shall run as hath been accustomed XIII Marlb 17. 52 H. 3. Guardians in Soccage shall make no waste sale or destruction of the heirs inheritance but safely keep the same to the use of the heir and when he cometh to age shall answer him the issues thereof by a lawful accompt saving their reasonable costs Neither shall such Guardians sell the marriage of such heir but to his advantage and
Officer or Clerk of the Chancery Justices of either Bench Barons of the Exchequer or other Officers or Clerks of the said places the Kings Attorney or Sollicitor Serjeants at Law any of the Kings Officers in Berwick or Carlisle or the Clerk of the Kings Council See also another Statute to the like effect for the fo●feiture of lands made 19 H. 7.1 VI. Stat. 16.17 Car.c. 2. An Act was made for the relief of the Kings Army and the Northern parts of this Kingdome otherwise called the Act of the Poll money or four Subsidies VII Cap. 3. Another Act was made for the reforming of some things mistaken in the Stat. of 16 Car.c. 2. And to make good the Acts of the Commissioners and other Officers by them authorized or appointed and to be then authorized or appointed VIII Cap. 4. Another Act was made for the levying of two intire Subsidies for the further relief of the Kings Army and the said Northern parts of the Kingdome IX Cap. 5. An Act was made for the levying of Mariners Sailers and others for the present guarding of the seas and necessary defence of the Realm X. Cap. 9. This Act was made for the speedy provision of money for disbanding the Armies and setling the peace of the two Kingdoms of England and Scotland XI Cap. 13. Another Act for the securing of such moneyes as are or shall be due to the Inhabitants of the County of York and the other adjoyning Counties wherein the Kings Army is or hath been billeted for the billet of the souldiers of the said Army as also to certain Officers of the same Army who do forbear part of their pay according to an Order in that behalf made in the Commons House of Parliament this present Session for such part of their pay as they shall so forbear VVaste I. Magna Charta 4.9 H. 3. No Waste shall be made by the Guardian in Wards lands and if the custody be committed to the Sheriff or any other that is accomptable to the King and they commit waste they shall make recompence and the wardship shall be committed to two discreet men of the fee who shall answer the issues of the land to the King or his Assignee II. The Committee of the Ward making such waste shall lose the custody and then likewise he shall be committed to two discreet men who shall be answerable to the King as aforesaid III. Magna Charta 5.9 H. 3. The Guardian of the Wards lands shall with the issues thereof uphold his Houses Parks Warrens Ponds Mills and other things pertaining to the said lands and shall deliver unto him at his full age lands stored with ploughs and other things at least as he received them IV. The like shall be observed in the custodies of all spiritual dignities which pertain to the King during their vacancy Howbeit such custodies ought not to be sold V. Marlbr 23.52 H. 3. Pars inde Farmers during their terms shall not make waste sale or exile of house woods men or any thing else which appertains to the tenements that they have in farm without special license had by writing of Covenant making mention that they may so do in pain that they being thereof convict shall yield full damage and be grievously punished by amerciament VI. The Statute of Glocester 5.6 E. 1. An Action of Waste is maintainable against tenant by the courtesy in dower for life or years and the party attainted thereof shall lose the thing wasted and recompence thrice so much as such waste is taxed at VII As for Waste done in the time of Wardship Magna Charta 4. 9 H. 3. before 1. shall be observed and moreover the Guardian shall recompence the heir for the waste done if the Wardship lost shall not amount to the value of the damages before the Heirs full age VIII West 2.14.13 E. 1. The processes in an action of waste shall be summons attachment and distress and if the defendant appear not upon the distress a writ of enquiry shall be directed to the Sheriff to inquire of the waste upon return whereof the Court shall proceed to Judgment according to the Statute of Glocester cap. 5. before IX West 2.22.13 E. 1. An action of waste shall be maintainable against one tenant in common against another of wood turfland fishing or the like and when the cause comes to Judgment the defendant shall choose either to take his part in a certain place to be set out by the Sheriff with a Jury or to grant to take nothing but as his pernors do and if he chuse to take his part in a place certain the place wasted shall be assigned for his part The writ in this case is Cum A. B. tenent Boscum pro indiviso B. fecit vastum c. X. The Statute of Waste 20 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable by the heir for waste done in his ancestors time as well as for that done in his own time XI Artic. sup Chart. 18.28 E. 1. An action of waste is maintainable against Escheators and Sub-escheators for waste by them commitred in Wards lands XII Stat. 11 H. 6.5 An action of Waste is maintainable by the reversioner against tenant for life or years that first aliens his estate to a stranger and afterwards still receiving the profits thereof commits waste Howbeit this Statute shall not extend to such tonants as hold without impeachment of waste ☞ VVatches I. Stat. 5 H. 4.3 Watches shall be kept upon the Sea-costs as they were wont to be and in that case the Statute of Winchester shall be observed Which see in Robbery II. In every Commission of Peace hereafter to be made this article shall be inserted viz. That the Justices of Peace shall have power in their Sessions to inquire of Watches and to punish them who shall be found in default according to the tenor of the said Statute ☞ VVax * Stat. 11 H. 6.12 No Wax-chandler shall sell or put to sale any Candles or other wares made of Wax at a dearer rate then that he may have only 4 d. in every pound of wares above the common price of plain wax in pain to forfeit all such wares put to sale and the value of them sold and besides to make fine to the King II. Justices of Peace Mayors Bailiffs and Stewards of Franchises have power to examine and search concerning the breach of this Law and also to hear and determine the offences committed against it III. Stat. 23 El. 8. None in mingling or making of wax shall use or cause to be used any deceit by mixture and mingling the same with Rosin Tallow Turpentine or other deceitful thing to the intent to sell it or to put it to sale in pain to forfeit the same And if such deceitful wax happen to be sold before it be discovered the melter or procurer thereof shall forfeit for every pound thereof 2 s. to be divided betwixt the Queen and the party deceived if he will
Coroner shall do his office and inrol it And what cannot be determined by the Steward before the Kings departure shall be remitted to the Common Law so that Exigents Outlawries and Presentments shall be made thereupon in Eyre by the Coroner of the County as in case of other Felonies done out of the Verge ● Howbeit they shall not omit by reason hereof to make attachments freshly upon the Felonies done IV. Stat. 5. E. 3.2 Pars inde and 10 E. 3. Stat. 2.2 Inquests before the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house shall be taken by men of the Countrey thereabouts and not by men of the Kings house except it be contracts covenants or trespasses when both parties are of the same house and in the house V. Stat. 9. R. 2.5 Priests and others of the Holy Church taken in the Marshalsey shall pay such fees as Lay-people pay and no more VI. Stat. 13. R. 2. Stat. 1.3 The jurisdiction of the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house shall extend no further then 12 miles from the Kings lodging VII Stat. 4. H. 2.23 The fees of the Marshal of the Kings house shall be as in times past and no more viz. for him that cometh in by Capias 4 d. and if he be bailed 3 d. more of the defendant in trespass that findeth bail to answer the suit 2 d. for every commitment by judgment 4 d. o● every one delivered of Felony and of a Felon bailed by the Court 4 d. And if the Marshal or his Officers take more they shall lose their Offices and pay treble damages to the party grieved and that the party grieved have his suit before the Steward of the same Court VIII Here a server of bills shall take no more then 1 d. for every mile distant from the Court to the place where he doth his office but when he serves a v●nire facias or a distringas he shall have the double If such an Officer takes more he shall be imprisoned make a Fine to the King at the discretion of the Steward and be from thenceforth fore-judged the Court. IX Stat. 15. H. 6.1 In a suit commenced before the Steward and Marshal of the Kings house the defendant shall not be estopped to plead that the Plaintiff or he are not of the Kings house but his averment thereof shall be received notwithstanding any record of the same Court to be produced to the contrary Marshes Fens c. I. Stat. 4. Jac. 8. An Act for winning from Inundation the drowned grounds and Marshes of Lesnes and Fants in Kent by the 10. of October 1609. See the Statute II. Stat. 4. Jac. 13. Another for draining the Fens and low grounds in the Isle of Ely containing about 6000. Acres compassed about with banks called the Ring of Waldersey and Coldham See also the Statute III. Stat. 7. Jac. 20. A mean to recover a great quantity of ground lately surrounded in Norfolk and Suffolk by the Sea and to prevent the like for the future See the Statute IV. Stat. 15. Car. 2. cap. 17. An Act for setling the draining the great level of the Fens called Bedford Level See the Act at large V. Stat. 16. 17. Car. 2. cap. 11. An Act for draining of the Fen called Deeping Fen and other Fens therein mentioned See the Act at large Masons I. Stat. 3. H. 6.1 It shall be felony to plot confederacies amongst Masons and such as assemble upon such confederacies shall suffer Imprisonment and make fine and ransome at the Kings will ☞ Matrimony and Marriage I. Stat. 32. H. 8.38 Pars inde All Marriages shall be adjudged lawful that are not prohibited by Gods Law II. Stat. 23. E. 6.21 All Laws Canons Constitutions and Ordinances which prohibit marriage to spiritual persons who by Gods Law may marry and all pain and forfeitures therein contained shall be void III. Provided that this Act shall not give liberty to marry without asking in the Church and other Ceremonies appointed by the Book of Common Prayer IV. Degrees and divorces heretofore made are saved V. Stat. 5. E. 6.12 The Marriage of Priests and other spiritual persons shall be lawful and their Children legitimate and inheritable likewise they to be tenants by the Curtesy and their Wives nowable VI. Stat. 1. Jac. 11. A Bigamus shall suffer death as a felon unless he or she have had no notice that the husband or wife was living within seven years before or the marriage be severed by divorce VII This felony shall cause no corruption of blood or loss of dower or inheritance VIII Stat. 12. Car. 2. ca. 33. All Marriages had and solemnized in any of the Kings Dominions since the 1. of May 1642. before any Justice of Peace of England or other his Dominions and so pronounced and declared or had and solemnized according to Act or Ordinance of Parliament or any Convention having that style shall be adjudged good and valid in Law as if the same had been solemnized according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Church of England Mesne I. Stat. Westm 2.9 13. E. 1. The tenant distrained by the Chief Lord may have a writ of Mesne in the County where he is distreined against the Mesne who having land in that County and not appearing till the Grand distress day shall be given in the Grand distress so as two Counties may be holden before the return wherein the Sheriff shall proclaim that he come to answer the tenant at the day at which day if he come not he loseth his service and then the tenant shall answer to the Chief Lord such services as he ought to have done to the Mesne II. The Chief Lord shall not distrein the tenant so long as he offers him the services due and if the Lord exact more then the Mesne ought to do the tenant may have such remedy as the Mesne might have had III. Upon a return that the Mesne hath nothing to be summoned by an attachment shall go out and then upon a Nihil returned the G●a●d distress with Proclamation as before IV. The Mesne having no l●nd in that County but in another upon such a return by the Sheriff the party shall have a Writ judicial to summon the Mesne in that County where it is testified that he hath lands and both there and in the other County shall proceed to the Grand distress Proclamation and Judgment as before V. The Mesne comming into the Court and acknowledging or being adjudged to acquit the Tenant and not doing it the Tenant shall thereupon have a judicial writ of acquittal whereupon if the Mesne come in and the Tenant can aver that a Mesne hath not acquitted him he shall be satisfied his damages be quit of the Mesne and hold of the chief Lord And here also if the Mesne come not at the first distress then another distress shall go out Proclamation shall be made and Judgment had as before VI. This Statute extendeth only where there is but one Mesne
between the Lord that distraineth and the tenant the Mesne also being of full age and the Tenant Tenant in fee-simple Militia See Captains and Souldiers Numb XXXIX Ministers I. Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 17. An Act for confirming some and restoring other Ministers to their Benefices Monasteries Abbeys Priories Colledges Free-Chappels Hospitals Chanteries their Governours and Possessions and also all other Religious persons I. Marlb 28. 52. H. 3. If wrongs or trespasses be done to Abbots or other Prelates of the Church and they dye before Judgment given thereof whether or no the suit be commenced in their life-time yet their successors shall have actions to demand the goods of their Church out of the hands of such trespassers II. The successors shall also have a writ to recover seisin of their lands intruded into in time of vacation and therein damages shall be awarded them as in Assizes of Novel disseisin is used III. West 1.1 3. E. 1. The Peace of the Church and Realm shall be duly kept and Religious houses shall not entertain any at the charge of the house save only the Founders c. neither shall any charge them in pain of imprisonment to make fine and to be otherwise punished at the Kings will IV. No purveyance shall be made of a Prelate without his consent V. The Sheriff shall not ride with above 5 or 6 horse nor indamage Religious persons by lodging too often at their houses or Mannors VI. Artic. Cleri 11. 9. E. 2. Religious houses shal not be charged by compulsion with Corodies Pensions resort or taking of their Horses or Carts upon the pains ordained by the Statute of West 2. VII Stat. 1. E. 3. Stat. 2.10 There shall be no more grants of Pensions Prebends Churches or Corodies at the Kings request by Bishops Abbots Priors Abbesses or Prioresses VIII Stat. 27. H. 8.28 All Monasteries Priories and other Religious Houses of Monks Canons and Nuns which have not above the clear yearly value of 200 l. per annum are given to the King and his heirs to have and hold the same in as large and ample manner as they injoyed them And all grants thereof made or to be made by the King to others are confirmed The right of others having any profit out of the same being saved IX Fraudulent Conveyances made by Governours of such houses within one year next before the making of this Act shall be void Howbeit all Leases upon the accustomed rents and grants of accustomed Offices Fees or Corodies are saved X. All Ornaments Jewels Goods and Debts which they had the first of March 1535 or at any time since are also given to the King XI The King shall have the actual and real possession of the said houses without inquisition of office so that he may lawfully grant them at his will and pleasure XII Cels which are only obediencers to the Abbies and Priories dissolved by this Act shall still remain undissolved notwithstanding this Act The right also of Founders Patrons and Donors is saved XIII Stat. 27 H. 8.27 Pars inde Upon the grant of Abbey Lands in fee a tenure in Capite shall be reserved to the King and also a yearly payment of the tenth part of the yearly value mentioned in the Letters Patents XIV Stat. 31 H. 8.13 The King and his heirs shall have all the Monasteries Abbies Priories Nunneries Colledges Hospitals houses of Friers and other religious houses and places together with their estates which since the 4. of Feb. 27 H. 8. have been dissolved suppressed renounced relinquished forfeited given up or by any other means are come into the Kings hands in as large and ample manner as the Governors thereof held them in right of the said houses XV. All Religious houses dissolved and to be dissolved together with the revenues to them belonging shall be in the actual possession of the King XVI These Abbey lands except such of them as shall come to the King by attainder of Treason shall be within the survey of the Court of Augmentations XVII Here the right of all others is saved save only for Rents-service Rents-seck and all other services and suits which are excepted out of the said saving XVIII Provided that all Leases of any such Religious or Ecclesiastical house or of any hereditaments thereunto belonging granted within one year next before the dissolution thereof which hath not heretofore been usually demised or whereof there was a former Lease in being or whereupon such ancient yearly rent is not reserved as hath been usually paid for the same twenty years next before the beginning of this Parliament and also wood-sales made within one year as aforesaid shall be void XIX Also all Feofments Fines and Recoveries of such Lands whereof the King was Founder made acknowledged or suffered by the Governours or Governesses thereof without the Kings Licence within one year next before such dissolution shall be void XX. The like provision is made for making void Leases and Wood-sales of Lands belonging to such Religious or Ecclesiastical houses as are hereafter to be dissolved Also all Feofments fines and Recoveries of such lands where the King is Founder made acknowledged or suffered by the Governours or Governesses thereof shall likewise be void XXI Leases for years not exceeding 21 made a year before this Parliament or the dissolution of such house and whereupon the accustomed rent is reserved and where a former term therein is not expired at the making of such Lease shall be good notwithstanding this Actiso also is a Lease for life or lives granted a year before dissolution to the old tenant or the former lease for life o● 〈◊〉 being not expired and the accustomed rent being reserved XXII Grants also for life by Copy of Court-Roll according to the custom where the old rent is reserved shall be good XXIII Leases examined inrolled decre●d or affirmed in the Court of Augmentations albeit they be made within the year shall be good XXIV Where any hath paid money for wood and by this Act is abridged from having his bargain he shall be relieved therein by the Chancellor and other Officers of the said Court or any three of them whereof the Chancellor is to be one and if any other hath taken the Wood he shall make satisfaction for the same to the party grieved XXV Grants to other persons by such Religious persons with the Kings consent and licence under the great Seal shall be good Howbeit here the right of others is saved XXVI A confirmation of the Kings exchanges and purchases since the fourth of February 27 H. 8. Howbeit here also the right of all persons but the exchangees and bargainees is saved rents-service rents-seck and other services excepted XXVII The Kings Letters Patents of Lands or other hereditaments granted since the fourth of February 27 H. 8. and within three years after the making of this Act shall be sufficient notwithstanding mis-recital non-recital mis-nosmer cause consideration or thing material to the