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

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32 Pledges in Appeale of Rape 33 Within what time an Appeale shal be commenced 34 From what time the yeare shall haue relation 35 The yeare shall haue relation from the offence done 36 Within what time an appeale of Rape shal be commenced 37 In what County Appeale shal be brought 38 In what county an Appeale of Rape shal be brought 39 In what county an Appeale of Robbery shal be brought 40 Threatening in one county to bring money into another 41 Goods robbed carried into diuers Counties 42 Before whom an Appeale shal be brought 43 Remouing an Appeale out of the County 44 An Appeale before the Iustices of Gaole deliuery 45 An Appeale before the Iustices of the Kings Bench. 46 An Appeale against one bayled No Appeale against him that is let by mainprise 47 Appeale before Iustices of Peace 48 Appeale before the Constable and Marshall No Appeale in Parliament 49 Diuers Appeales for one felony 50 One onely Appeale for one Felony 51 Where diuers Appellees for one Felony 52 Two Appeals founded vpon one Felony 53 Robbery of seuerall parcels of goods 54 Where one shall answere to diuers Appeales or Indictments 55 Answere to diuers Indictments as well as to Appeales 56 He that hath his clergy shal answere to an Appeale of former offences 57 A Clarke shall answere to a former Appeale or Indictment of former offences 58 Proces in Appeale before the Coroner 59 Proces vpon an Appeale or Indictment 60 Proces against indictors in another County 61 Proces against Appellees and Indictees in forraine Counties 62 Proces vpon an Appeale remoued into the Kings Bench. 63 The party appealed must be supposed to be of a forraine countie 64 An appellee dwelling in no place certaine 65 Proces into a County Palantine 66 Proces against Principall and Accessarie 67 The Statute of West 1. extendeth onely to Appeales commenced by Bill 68 In Appeale one appeareth and others make default 69 Proces to remoue an Appeale 70 A Certiorari into the countie 71 Proces against the plaintife after an appeale remoued 72 Proces against the defendant after an appeale remoued 73 Proces against one that by the Shirifes returne escaped 74 Proces with a prouiso for the appellee 75 Proces to remoue prisoners or records 76 How the appellee shall bee led to the barre 77 Count in an Appeale An Appeale of Murther The yeare day houre time of the king and the towne materiall 78 The place where the fact was done 79 Count in an Appeale of death against three as principals The fact must be declared 80 Count in an Appeale of Robbery 81 Where in an appeale of Rape the Statute must be rehearsed in the Count and where not 82 Defence in an Appeale 83 Pleas to the Writ in Appeale 84 The forme of the Writ in an Appeale of Rape This word Rapuit materiall 85 Not two Appeales for one offence 86 Pleading of one in an Appeale brought against two 87 The plaintife in an Appeale misnamed 88 Two or three pleas to the Writ 89 Barres in Appeale Barre in Appeale of death brought by the wife 90 Barre in Appeale of death brought by the heire 91 Barre in Appeale of Rape or Robberie 92 Generall pleas in barre in Appeale 93 Barre for that the plaintife brought another Appeale 94 Barre by the plaintifes release 95 Pleading not guilty after other pleas 96 Where the king may prosecute an Appeale begun 97 No Appeale of Treason Indictments Fol. 169. 1 Commissions to Sherifes to take Indictments 2 When the Sherife shall hold his Turne An Indictment found in an vnlawfull time 3 Sherifes shall enquire by xij men at the least 4 Indictment before the Sherife shall bee by Roll indented 5 Of what sufficiencie Iurors returned in the Sherifes Turne shall be 6 Indictments taken in the Shirifes Turne shal be deliuered to the Iustices of Peace 7 Iurors in Indictments shal be returned without the denomination of any 8 Pannels for Indictments may be reformed by the Iustices 9 An Enquest to inquire of the concealement of other Enquests 10 In what case indictment and triall shall bee where the King will 11 Indictments and Trials of Treason committed out of the Realme 12 Indictment in the county of Lancaster of a forrainer 13 Indictment of a Lancashire man in a forraine County 14 Indictment for the striking or poisoning of a man in one coūtie who dieth in another Indictment of an accessary to an offence committed in another County 15 Indictments lacking these words Insidiatores viarum depopulatores agrorum 16 Words not necessary in Indictments 17 No more shall be in an Indictment then is true Felonicè or Piraticè in an Indictment 18 Where a verdict in an action of Trespas shall be an Indictment of Felony 19 The Sherifes returne is no Indictment 20 The yeare day and place necessary in an Indictment 21 An Indictment must be certaine in the matter 22 An Indictment must be certaine in the persons receiued 23 An Indictment vncertaine at what Court 24 Indictment for making of money 25 Indictment of a common theefe Indictment of the Ordinarie 26 The foresaid A. in an Indictment where none is before named 27 Indictment for the killing of a man vnknowne Indictment for the stealing of the goods of a man vnknowne 28 Indictment for the stealing of the goods of a Church or Chappell 29 An Indictment depending vpon an argument or implication 30 In an Indictment furatus est without felonicè or in Rape carnaliter cognouit without rapuit 31 An Indictment before Iustices of Peace 32 An Indictment before the Maior of London vpon sight of the body 33 Indictment of the receit of a Felon as accessarie 34 Indictment of the receit of the goods stolne and of the Felon 35 Indictments void for one purpose will serue for another 36 A prisoner discharged and after retained in prison 37 The difference between an Appeale and Indictment 38 Pleading another time acquit of the same Felony 39 Indictment of the death of a man knowne by two surnames 40 Indicted of the same mans death 41 Indicted in two counties of one offence 42 Arraigned vpon an insufficient Indictment or Appeale 43 Acquit vpon an erronious Appeale 44 Acquit vpon an Appeale brought by one that hath no right 45 Arraigned vpon an Indictment before the parties Appeale be determined 46 Acquit by battaile in an Appeale 47 A Murtherer indicted and arraigned at the Kings suit Another time acquit no plea in an Appeale but in an Indictment 48 No Indictment of Robberie vntill the Appeale bee tried 49 Pleading another time conuict of the same Felony 50 Another time attainted of the same Felony 51 The Kings Pardon obiected against the plea of another time attainted 52 Who is said attainted and who conuict of Felony Mainprise and Baile Fol. 180. 1 In what cases a prisoner is mainpernable in what not 2 The principall in Appeale of death not mainpernable 3 Where the principall let to mainprise 4 Pleading
the appeale be fresh and the signe of truth apparant by effusion of blood or an open outcrie leuied But if it be without any manifest token or outcrie two pledges shall suffice Within what time an appeale shal be commenced 33 The before mentioned Statute of Gloucester hath ordained St. 6. Ed. 1. 9 That an appeale shall not be abated for default of fresh sute where a man doth sue within a yéere and a day after the déede done These words of the Statute be generall not making mention more of an appeale of death than of an appeale of any other felonie But yet conferring them with the other words in the statute they may be intended specialy to extend to an appeale of death and to none other appeale for if a man that is robbed doth make fresh sute 7. H. 4 44. and doe his endeuour to apprehend the felon and vse all his diligence to find him although he doe not commence his appeale two or thrée yeares after the robberie committed yet he may then well pursue it And so in appeale of robberie fresh sute shall be decided by the discretion of the Iustices H. 22. Ed. 4 39. But in an appeale of death it is a good plea for the Defendant to pleade that he of whose death this appeale is pursued died aboue a yeare and a day before the said appeale commenced 34 The words of the foresaid Statute of Gloucester be St. 6. Ed. 1. 9 That a man shall pursue his Appeale within a yeare and day after the déed done From what time the yeare shal haue relation touching an appeale And therefore if one man doe strike another vpon one day and he dieth of the same stroake certaine daies after Co. l. 4. 42 the Appeale shal be commenced within the yeare and day after the death and not within the yeare and day after the stroake giuen for there was no felonie committed vntill the man was dead But yet if one mā doe giue to another a mortall wound in Februarie and the king doth in April next giue pardon to the offendor of all felonies before that time committed Plo. com f. 401 and the partie stricken doth die of the same wound in May following How the K. pardon shal haue relation this pardon shall discharge the offendor because the wound giuen by the offendor was the cause of the felonie the which wound was the offence towards the King and that the king hath pardoned and so thereby the death of the partie and all other things depending vpon the same offence be pardoned 35 Where the words of the Statute of Gloucester be The yere shall haue relation to that offēce That a man shall pursue his Appeale within a year and a day after the deed done St. 6. E. 1. 9. Those words viz. the déed done shal be intended of the felonie whereupon the appeale is commenced for if one be accessorie to another a yeare after the homicide or murder committed 26. Ass p. 52 an appeale shal be pursued against him and yet it is not within the yeare and day after the homicide or murder committed S. Br. 52. St. 3. E. 1. 13 36 It appeareth by Britton and also by the Statute of Westminster 1. that an appeale of Rape ought to be commenced within fourtie daies after the fact done Within what time an appeal of rape shal be commenced But then Rape was but a trespasse which after by the Statute of Westminster 2. was made felonie St. 13. E. 1. 34. In which Statute of Westminster 2. there is no time limited within the which a woman shal be compellable to pursue her Appeale of Rape And therefore it séemeth she is at libertie to bring it when she will so that it be within a reasonable time 18. Ed. 3. 32 37 An appeale ought to be brought in the Countie where the felonie was committed as if it be murder or homicide In what countie an appeale shal be brought where the same murder or homicide was done But if a man be striken in one county and then goeth into another countie and there dieth of the same wound by the common law an appeale may be commenced either in the countie where the stroake was giuen A man strickē in one countie dieth in another or in the countie where the partie stricken did after die and the trial thereof shal be by the Iurors of both the counties 3. H. 7. 12. 4. H. 7. 18. viz. as well of the countie where he was stricken as of the countie where he died And so it was at the plaintifes pleasure to bring his appeale in which of those two coūties he would But since by the Statutes of Anno 2. 3. E. 6. St. 2. 3. E. 6. 24. it is ordained That where any person shal be feloniously stricken or poisoned in one countie and die of the same stroake or poysoning in another countie then an indictment thereof found by Iurors of the countie where the death shall happen whether it be found before the Coroner vpon the sight of such dead bodie or before the Iustices of peace or other Iustices or Commissioners which shall haue authoritie to enquire of such offences shal be as good in law as if the stroake or poysoning had béene committed in the same countie where the partie shall die or where such inditement shal be found And such party to whom appeale of murder shal be giuen by the law may commence take and sue Appeale of murder in the same countie where the partie so feloniously stricken or poysoned shall die as well against the principal and principals as against euery accessorie to the same offences in whatsoeuer countie or place the accessorie shal be guiltie to the same And the Iustices before whom any such appeale shall be commenced sued and taken within the yeare and day after such murder manslaughter committed shall procéede against euery such accessorie in the same countie where such appeale shal be so taken in like manner and forme as if the same offence of accessorie had beene committed in the same countie where such appeale shal be so taken as well by the triall of the Iurors of the countie where such appeale shal be taken vpon the plea of not guiltie pleaded by such offendor Accessories in other offences sauing murder as otherwise But note that no Appeale is giuen by this Statute Stamford nor remedie prouided against accessories in a forreine countie of other felonies sauing for murder or manslaughter but the same is left to the common law In what coūtie an appeale of Rape shall be brought 38 An appeale of Rape ought to be brought in the countie where the Rauishment was done And therefore if a man doe take a woman against her will in one countie and then carrie her into another countie and there doe rauish her the appeale shal be onely commenced in the
proces in Appeale that hee bring the bodies of the apellées to the next countie to answer the plaintife And if the said Serieant do answer at the second county that he cannot find them Proces vpon Appeal before the Coroner thē an Exigent shal be awarded against the principals But the Exigent touching the accessories shall stay vntill the principals be outlawed And so it appeareth by Britton 22. Ass p. 81 Fi. Cor. 234 Fitz. Proces 226. some other authoritie that an Exigent shal be awarded in Appeale of death cōmenced before the coroner in the coūty after the first Capias returned Fitz. Proces 226. Fitz. Cor. 184. St. 25. Ed. 3. 14. 59 But in an Appeale or Indictment of robbery or other felony Proces vpon an Appeale or Indictment of felonie there shal be two Capias awarded before the Exigent And the same is confirmed by these words of the stat de proditionibus made 25. E. 3. viz. It is agréed that after any man be indicted of feloni ebefore the Iust to heare and determine in their Sessions the Sherif● shal be commanded to attach his body by a writ or precept called Capias And if the Sherife returne in the said precept that the body is not found another writ or precept of Capias shall incontinently be awarded returnable thrée wéekes after and in the same writ or precept it shall bée comprised that the Sherife shall cause to be seised all his chattels and safely kéepe them vntill the day of the writ or precept returned And if the Sherife returne that the body is not found and the indictée commeth not S. Forf 44. the Exigent shal be awarded and the chattels shal be forfeited as the law of the crown commaundeth But if he come and yéeld himselfe or be taken by the Sherife or other minister before the returne of the second Capias then the goods and chattels shall be saued This statute doth not make mention of the death of a man nor of robberie but of felonie generally which includeth all And yet some doe affirme that it was intended to be made onely for robberie and larcenie Fitz Proces 226. but it is prouided for those which be indicted before Iust to heare and determine and not for those against whom an Appeale is commenced before the Coroner and it was rather ordained to seise the felons goods vpon the second Capias than to giue proces Proces against indictées in another county 60 And because some persons appealed or indicted of diuers felonies in one countie or outlawed in the same countie were dwelling or receiued in another county whereby such felonious persons indicted and outlawed haue béen incouraged in their mischiefe for that they might not be attached in another countie for the redresse whereof by a stat made anno 5. E. 3. it was ordained St. 5. E. 3 11 That the Iust assigned to heare and determine such felonies shall direct their writ to all the counties of England where néed shall be to take such persons indicted 61 Because diuers persons for their singular reuenge and not of right malitiously of their subtill imagination haue caused and procured falsly to indict and appeale seuerall of the Kings subiects of diuers treasons felonies and trespasses before I. of peace and other commissioners other Iust hauing authoritie to take indictments or appeals in diuers forreine counties liberties and franchises of England wherein the said liege people neither bee nor euer were conuersant or dwelling By force of which appeales and indictments and the processes therupon made in the said counties franchises and liberties the said persons so indicted haue béen put in Exigent and after outlawed and therupon their goods and chattels lands and tenements haue bin forf and they in great perill of their liues whereas the said persons so indicted appealed or put in Exigent or outlawed had neuer knowledge of such indictmēts appeals Exigents or Outlawries For the preuention whereof it was ordained by the stat of an 8. H. 6. St. 8. H. 6. 10 That vpon euery indictment or appeale by the which any of K. liege people dwelling in other counties Appeale of indictments of persons dwelling in forrein Counties than there where the indictment or appeale shal be taken of treason felony trespas before I. of peace or any other hauing power to take such indictments or appeales or other Commissioners or Iustices in any county franchise or libertie within England before any Exigent awarded vpon any indictment or appeale to be taken in forme aforesaid immediatly after the first writ of Capias vpon euery such indictment or appeale awarded and returned another writ of Capias shal be awarded directed to the Sherife of the county whereof he which is indicted is or was supposed to be conuersant by the same indictment returnable before the same Iustices or Commissioners before whom he is indicted or appealed at a certaine day containing the space of iij. moneths from the date of the said last writ by the which writ of second Capias it shal be contained commanded to the same Sherife to take the body of him which is so indicted or appealed if he may bée found within his bailiwike if he cannot be found within his bailiwike that the Sherife shall make proclamation in two counties before the returne of the same writ that he which is so indicted or appealed shal appeare before the same Iust or Commissioners in the countie liberty or franchise where he is so indicted or appealed at the day contained in the said last writ of Capias to answer to the K. or to the party of the felony treason or trespas whereof he is indicted or appealed After which second writ of Capias so serued and returned if hée which is so indicted or appealed doth not come at the day of the said writ of Capias returned the Exigent shal be awarded against such indictees or appellées and euery of them And if any Exigent be awarded vpon any such indictment or appeale against the foresaid forme or any outlawrie therupon pronounced the sayd Exigent and the Outlawrie thereupon pronounced and euery of them shall bee void And the partie against whom such Exigent is awarded or outlawrie pronounced against the foresaid forme shall not bee endamaged in his life lands goods c. And euery one which is indicted or appealed in forme aforesaid after he is acquited by verdict in forme of law may haue an action vpon the case against euery procurer of such indictments or appeales in which actiō there shal be like proces as in an action of trespas vi armis And if the said procurers be attainted the plaintife shall recouer treble damages But this stat extendeth not to indictments or appeals taken in the countie of Chester Nor to any indictment or appeale of felonie or treason taken of any of the K. liege people which at the time of the same felonie or treason
doth not lye in those cases the court shall stay the awa●ding of the Exigent against the others vntill the court be aduised whether the Appeal wil lye or not 9. H. 4. 2. for if the Appeale do abate it doth abate against them all as well principals as accessories 69 The proces to remoue an Appeale out of the countie Proces to remoue an Appeale or from the Iustices of gaole deliuerie is a Certiorari awarded out of the Chauncery or the K. Bench 10. H. 4. 4. and it may be sued as well by the def as the plaintife which Certiorari must agrée with the Appeale or the Indictment that is to be remoued for if the Appeale or Indictment be of two horses 3. Ass p. 3. and the Certiorari is but of one this is no good writ 4. H. 6. 15. Register Ind. fo 76. 70 If an Appeale be attached within the countie Certiorari into the Countie before the Sherife the Coroners the Certiorari must be directed to them both viz. as wel to the sherif as to the coroners for a Certiorari directed to the sherife onely is void 71 After an Appeale is remoued Proces against the p●● after an Appeal remoued the parties be without day before the sherife the coroners And therefore if the plaintif do not procéed with his Appeale in the K. Bench yet he shal not be nonsuit therby vntil a Scire facꝰ be awarded against him and that he be thereupon returned warned and doth make default for if a Nihil be returned vpon him an Alias shal be awarded against him before he shal be nonsuit vpon which writ if at another time a Nihil be returned 48. E. 3. 32. another Scire facꝰ shal be awarded returnable at a certaine day and in the meane time the appellée shal be let to mainprise 72 After an Appeale is remoued if the plaintif pursue his Appeale Proces against the def after an Appeale remoued he néed not sue a Scir̄ facꝰ against the def if he do make default but a Capias Exigent And if the defendant doth appeare and plead and after at another day maketh default either because he is escaped out of prison or being let to mainprise doth not appeare yet the Enquest shall not bee taken in his default nor in any case of Felonie But Proces shall bée awarded against him ad audiendum Iudicium in such maner that if he come not at the beginning by the Exigent 16. Ass p. 13 then Exegi de nouo shal be awarded 26 Ass p. 51 Fitz. Exigent 1● by the which the Sherife shal be commanded to take him if c. to heare his iudgement And if not c. that he be outlawed But if he do not come at the first by Capias then a Capias de nouo shall be awarded and after the Exigent or another Capias according to the nature of the offence whereupon the appeale is grounded Proces against one that by the Sherifes returne is escaped 73 A woman brought an Appeale against another of the death of her husband 30. Ass p. 23 vpon proces awarded against the appellée the Sherife returned Cepi corpus and at the day had not the bodie whereupon he was amerced and also was commanded to bring the body and so twice or thrice and did nothing wherupon the plaintife praied an Exigent affirming that the prisoner escaped as the Sherife was carrying him to the gaole But the Iustices would not award the Exigent against one which appeared to them to bee in prison And therefore they sent to the Sherife to haue the body if he returned this escape then the plaintife should haue his request and not otherwise Proces with a prouiso for the appellée 74 In an Appeale if the parties be at issue 15. H. 7. 9. and the plaintife will not sue forth proces against the Enquest in that case the defendant may sue forth proces with a prouiso as well as he may in other actions which writ when it is returned serued the plaintife may pray a Tales notwithstanding that the Venire fac ' was pursued by the defendant and shall haue it by common course whether the defendant do agrée thereunto or not Proces to remoue prisoners or records 75 By the Statute of Anno 1. 2. P. M. it is ordained St. 1. 2. P M. 13. That no writs of Habeas co●pus or Certiorari shal be granted to remoue any prisoner out of any gaole or to remoue any Recognisance except the same writs be signed with the proper hands of the chiefe Iust or in his absence of one of the Iust of the court out of the which the same writs shal be awarded or made vpon pain that he which writeth any such writs not being signed as aforesaid shall forfeit to the K. for euery such writ v. l. How the appellee shall be led to the bar 76 He that is appealed or indicted of felonie and imprisoned for the same Bracton de Corona cap. 18. Britton when he commeth before the Iustices to the place of iudgement to answer for the same felonie shall come bare headed loose at libertie without any yrons or bonds sauing with shackles about his legs for feare of escaping so that no paine shall take away or weaken his reason to defend himselfe nor constraine him to make any other aunswer but such as best standeth with his owne frée will Count in Appeale 77 When the Appellée is at the barre to answer to the Appellant the Appellant must count or declare against the Appellée the which count doth varie according to the varietie of Appeales for some be of death some of rape some of robberie and some other of other felonies The forme of Appeale of Murder is in this manner An Appeale of Murder A. hic instanter appellat B. de morte C. fratris sui de eo quod cum praedictus C. fuit in pace Dei Domini Regis apud D. tali die hora anno ibi venit B. vt felo domini regis in assultu praemeditato vi armis c. in ipsum C. felonicè adtunc ibidem insultum fecit cum quodam gladio precij xij d' quem ipse in manu sua dextra adtunc ibidem tenuit praedictum C. super caput suum percussit et vnam plagam mortalem in longitudine duorum pollicium in anteriore parte capitis sui vsque ad cerebrum eidem C. adtunc ibidem felonicè dedit de qua quidem plaga praedictus C. per tres dies proxime sequentes languebat tunc ibidem obijt vel immediate ibidem obijt Et sic ibidem B. vt felo domini Regis praedictum C. felonice interfecit murdrauerit contra pacem dicti domini Regis coronam dignitatem suas quod hoc fecit nequiter vt felo contra
be passed And if the same Felons Murderers and Accessories or any of them so arraigned be acquited or the principall of the sayd felonie or any of them be attainted the wife or next heire to him so slaine as case shall require may take their Appeale of the same death and murder within the yeare and day after the same felonie and murder done against the said person so arraigned and acquit and all other their accessories or against the accessories of the sayd principall or any of them so attainted or against the sayd principall so attainted if they be then liuing and the benefit of the Clergie thereof before not had And the appellant shall haue such aduantages as if the sayd acquitall and attainder had not béene the acquitall or attainder notwithstanding The wife or heire of the person so slaine or murdered as case shall require may commence their Appeale in proper person at any time within the yeare after the felonie done before the Sherif and Coroners of the Countie where the sayd felony and murder was done or before the King in his Bench or Iustices of gaole deliuerie And though that by force of the sayd statute of 3. H. 7. at another time acquited is no plea in an Appeale of death at this day Another time acquit no plea in Appeale but in Indictment yet in an indictment of death it is a good plea to plead that he was at another time acquited in an Appeale brought of the same parties death S. Appeales 93. 48 And so it appeareth that the before rehearsed enormities that were at the common law and some others touching the indicting and arraigning of murderers and manquellers be remedied by the foresaid statute of 3. H. 7. but in other Appeales the rules of the common law doe continue in force For if a man be indicted of robberie and hee that was robbed hath an Appeale depending of the same robberie No indictmēt of robbery vntil the Appeal be tryed against the partie indicted in which Appeale he hath procéeded so farre that the Iust may perceiue that it is of the same robbery they ought to surcease to try the Appellée vpon the indictment 31. H. 6. 11 vntill the plaintife hath made his declaration For in an Appeale by writ the robbery cannot be certainly known vntil he hath made his declaration though it be otherwise in an Appeale commenced by bill 49 Though at another time conuicted or attainted of the same felony Another time conuict of the same felonie was and is a good plea for him that is the second time or more often indicted and arraigned againe vpon the same felony yet by the common law if one had béen indicted and arraigned of felonie and deliuered to the Ordinarie as a Clerke conuict and before he had made his purgation of the same felony he had broken the Ordinaries prison and escaped he might haue bin another time arraigned vpon the same indictment And it was no plea for him to plead Fitz. Cor. 232. that hee was another time conuict of the same felony and deliuered to the Ordinarie or that he was a Clerke and could not answer without his Ordinarie because hée remained vnpurged of the felonie and did loose the benefit of his Clergie by the breaking of prison And yet at that time if hee had not broken the Ordinaries prison but departed by his licence then at another time conuict shold haue bin a good plea for him vpon his second arraignmēt But now sithence by the stat of an 18. El. St. 18. El. 6. euery person which shal be admitted to haue the benefit of his clergie shal not therupō be deliuered to the Ordinarie as hath bin accustomed but after such clergie allowed and burning in the hand shal forthwith be enlarged and deliuered out of prison by the Iust before whō such clergy shal be granted Therefore at this day if one bee conuicted of felonie and hath the benefit of his Clergie Co. li. 4. 40. 45. and is burned in the hand if after in any case he shall be indicted and arraigned of the same felonie it shal be a good plea for him to plead that hée was another time conuict of the same felonie because the life of a man shall not be twice put in ieopardie for one offence yea though he shall breake the prison and depart from thence within that time after his conuiction which the Iustices shall thinke conuenient to detaine him in prison for his further correction for now he is not in prison for felonie but for correction 50 It is a good plea for him that is arraigned of felonie to plead that he is attainted of felonie Another time attainted of felonie and to demand iudgement if during this attainder he shal be put to answer to that felony whereof he is attainted or to any other felonie for if he should be put to answer no more could be recouered of him than is recouered 28. E. 3. 90 neither can he forf more than he hath forfeited hauing forfeited life lands goods and all that he hath and therefore it should bee to no purpose to trouble him any more But it is otherwise where it is to any end or purpose to put him to answer and plead againe to a new indictment as in some speciall cases it may be done As a man attainted of felony hath also committed treason at the time of the felonie committed in this case he shal answer to the treason for the K. aduantage 1. H. 6. 5. notwithstanding his attainder of felony before because if he be attainted of treason the king shall haue the escheat of his lands of whomsoeuer they be holden but if the treason were committed after the felony or at the least after the attainder of felony then it were otherwise for then the title which was vested in the chiefe Lord of whom his lands were holden 4. E. 4. 11. cannot be deuested by a matter accrued ex post facto And also where diuers men haue seuerall Appeals of robbery against one man though he be attainted at the suit of one of them yet to the intent that euerie of them may recouer his goods which were robbed and taken from him vpon his fresh suit hée shal be againe arraigned at euery of their suits And it is no plea for him in this case to plead that he was another time attainted of felony 51 In all cases where the defendant would discharge himselfe by pleading that he was attainted of another felony thē this whereof he is now arraigned The K. pard● obiected against another time attainted it may be replied for the party or the king that after the same attainder the K. did pardon him that felony whereof he saith he was attainted and his attainder thereof 6. H. 4. 6. whereby he was restored to the law and so he ought to answer to all other felonies notwithstanding they were committed before this
iudgement shall be giuen that the approuer shall be hanged And in like sort it is Fi. Cor. 456 if an approuer doe appeale seuerall persons in seuerall counties and processes be awarded against them vntill some of them be attainted and some of them depend in processe not attainted and the Iustices be informed by credible persons of the same countie wherein they were appealed that there be no such men to their knowledge in rerum natura the approuer shall be hanged An approuer did appeale two men in London and proces was awarded against them and it was returned that there were no such men dwelling in the city of London and the approuer agréeing to the same returne Fi. Cor. 460 saide that they were dwelling within the city of Lincolne and he was not thereunto receiued but was adiudged to be hanged So that if there be any falshood or lying in the approuer be it before his approuement or after and that the court do perceiue it they will take his appealing from him and adiudge him to be hanged And if they do otherwise Approuement after pleading not guiltie it is more of fauour than of right 12. Ed. 4. 10 for of fauour the court may allow the prisoner to waiue his plea of Not guiltie and to confesse the felonie and to become an approuer 21. H. 6. 35 And if an approuer doe appeale one who by his owne confession is out of the Realme he shall be hanged for the appellée cannot be attainted at his sute for though he should be outlawed yet he may reuerse it at his returne for that cause 6 When a prisoner vpon his arraignement doth confesse the felonie An Approuers othe and praieth a Coroner which is assigned vnto him by the court he must be sworn in the same court before his departing to appeale of all felonies and treasons which he doth knowe and the court shall appoint him a number of daies wherein to make his appeale in the which daies and in euery of them hée ought to appeale for if thrée dayes be appointed and in two of them he doth appeale 12. Ed. 4. 10. 26. As p. 19. Fit Cor. 439 and the third day he will affirme to the Coroner that he can say no more and the Coroner doth report the same to the court iudgement shall be giuen that he shall be hanged 7 An approuer shall haue wages of the King euery day that is assigned him by the court to approue in viz. a penny a day And some do affirme An Approuers wages that he shall haue no wages Fi. Cor. 439 vntill he hath made his proofe by vanquishing some appellée in battell or by conuicting him by verdict and then he shall haue wages of the King for euery day 8 When a Coroner is assigned to an approuer An Approuer set at liberty the approuer must he let out of prison to the intent that hee may approue or appeale of his owne frée will being at liberty without any dures for if it be by dures when he commeth againe before the Iustices hée may rehearse his appeale and disauow it for that cause which shal be tried by the examination of the Coroner vpon his othe Fi. Cor. 118 169. 255. And if the Coroner do say that the same appeale was not by dures the appeale shall stand and the approuer shall be hanged And when the approuer hath made his appeale before the Coroner he shall come againe before the Iustices and rehearse his appeale before them for they will not reade his appeale vnto him and if hée doe faile in the rehearsall of his appeale 26. As p. 19 in anie word otherwise than the Coroner hath recorded it he shall be hanged as if in his rehearsall he doe say that there was a blacke horse stollen where it it was recorded by the Coroner a redde Horse An Approuers appeale must be certaine For the Approuer must declare the thing certainely with all the circumstaunces thereof without any varying or alteration Bracton and he must know the person whom he hath appealed when hée is brought into question for if he know him not it is to be presumed that they were neuer companions Processe against the appellees 9 After an Approuer hath made his appeale before the Coroner if the appellees be dwelling in the Countie where the appeale is made the Coroner hath authoritie to award processe against them vntill the Exigent and to direct his processe to the Shirife to serue But so he cannot doe 29. Ed. 3. 42 if the appellées be dwelling in another countie for then he must not award processe against them but referre it to the iustices before whom he is to record the same appeale And they may award processe as the Iustices of the Kings bench and Iustices in Eire may do who may award processe by the common law and Iustices of Gaole Deliuerie by the statute De Appellatis made Anno 28. Ed. 1. which hath ordained St. 28. Ed. 1. That whosoeuer shal be appealed by any Approuers remaining in the Gaoles which the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie shall deliuer in what places soeuer of the Realme the persons appealed shall remaine immediatly the Shirife of that countie where such persons appealed be conuersant or may be found shall be commaunded by the Kings Writs vnder the testimonie of the same Iustices that he shall apprehend those persons appealed and conuey them to the Gaole where the approuers by whose appeale they be apprehended be imprisoned And the Shirife or Gaoler of that prison shall receiue them and there they shall answer before the same Iustices And if they put themselues vpon the country the Iustices shall send by a iudiciall Writ to the Shirife of the Countie where the felonie was committed that hée shall returne an Enquest before them at the place where the approuers do remaine at a certaine day Pleas for the Appellee against the Approuer 10 It is a good exception for the appellée in his owne defence to alleage against the approuer that the approuer is a person attainted of treason 11. As p. 27. Fi. Cor. 387 443 21. Ed. 3. 17 or felonie and to shew how viz. either by verdict outlawrie or abiuration or in any other manner for such a person is out of the Lawe and so disabled to appeale or accuse others And the same lawe is if the approuer be a clerke conuict for hee commeth now too late to confesse a felonie 17. Ed. 3. 13. when hée hath pleaded not guilty thereunto before which was found false at his owne sute and therefore it cannot be intended that the thing hée saith now is true And although hée had his clergie vpon confession of the felonie An Approuer conuict of felonie yet hée shall not now become an approuer for that he saide nothing at that time when hee ought to haue approued and therefore the Lawe cannot intend that hée hath
guiltie thereunto if the Coroner doth record that he did at another time confesse it before him And if an Approuer Approuer to prolong his life doe appeale others where there be none such and that bee testified by the Coroner the Approuer shall be hanged 25. Ed. 3. 24. without further enquirie of the approuement Who ought to appeare vpon the Coroners inquisition 12 By the Statute of Marlbridge made Anno 52. H. 3. St. 52. H. 3. 24. it was ordayned That vpon an inquisition to be taken by a Coroner of the death of a man euerie one of the age of twelue yeares ought to appeare except they haue a reasonable excuse of their absence The Coroner may take appeals 13 And though the foresayd Statute of Officium Coronatoris doe make mention but of certaine Appeales as ●n Appeale of Rape Mayhem c. yet the Coroner with the Sherife hath authoritie to take Appeales of Robberie and other Felonies and also to take the Appeale of an Approuer in this sort and manner following viz. he may take an Appeale of Robberie or other felonie committed in the same countie where he is Coroner and not elsewhere But he may take the Appeale of an Approuer of an offence committed in any countie of England and the reason of this difference is because by the approuement the Approuer is attainted of Felonie but so is not the offendor in the other case and therefore if in the former case he should receiue such an Appeale of Robberie Fitz. Cor. 437. or other Felonie it could not be tryed by a Iury of the countie where he is Coroner for that the felonie was committed in a forrein countie And yet in the foresaid case of approuement in another countie the Coroner cannot award Proces thereupon but he must enter it into his roll and send it to the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie Fitz. Cor. 462. who shall award Proces vnto the Sherife of that forreine countie to apprehend him which is so appealed And as the Coroner may take the Appeale of an Approuer in another countie so vpon the same reason he may take the abiuration of one which hath confessed a felonie committed by him in another countie Fitz. Cor. 416. 14 If the Coroner shall find any person drowned in a daungerous pond or pit he must commaund the towne where the same pond or pit is to stop it vp Stopping vp a place of danger and enter the same his commandement into his Roll And if after it bée found before the Iustices in Eire that the same pond or c. is not stopped vp the whole towne where it is shal be amerced 15 Though there be diuers Coroners in a Countie Where the presence of all the Coroners is requisit and where but of some one of them yet it is not requisit to haue more than one to enquire vpon the sight of a dead bodie And in like sort one is sufficient to giue iudgement vpon an Outlawrie 14. H. 4. 35 39. H. 6. 41. and in Redisseisin it is sufficient to haue two Coroners But where Proces is to bee awarded to the Coroners in default of the Sherife there all the Coroners within the Countie ought to serue or otherwise it is not good for they execute that office as ministers and not as Iudges as they doe in other cases And by the statute of Anno 23. H. 6. St. 23. H. 6. 11. euery of the Coroners shall bée present in his proper person at the assessing of the wages of the Knights of the same Shire for the Parliament with the Sherife Vndersherife Baylifes and others that will be present to assesse the wages of the sayd Knights after the deliuerance of the Kings writ De solutione feodi Militum Parliamenti and proclamation thereof made vpon paine of forfeiture of euery of them making default xl s̄ to the King St. 1. 2. P. M. 13. 16 By the Statute made Anno 1. 2. P. M. it is ordained The Coroner must record the euidence and bind the parties to giue it That euery Coroner vpon any inquisition before him found whereby any person shall bée indicted for murder or māslaughter or as accessory to the same before the murder or manslaughter committed shall put in writing the effect of the euidence giuen to the Iurie before him being materiall And he hath authoritie to bind all such by Recognisance or Obligation as doe declare any thing materiall to prooue the sayd murder or manslaughter or to be accessorie to the same to appeare at the next generall gaole deliuerie to be holden within the countie citie or towne corporat where the tryall thereof shall be then and there to giue euidence against the partie so indicted at the time of his tryall and shall certifie as well the same euidence as such bond in writing which he shall take together with the Inquisition or Indictment before him taken and found at or before his sayd tryall to be made And if any Coroner shall offend in any thing to the contrarie then the Iustices of gaole deliuerie for the Shire Citie Towne or place where such offence shal be committed vpon due proofe thereof by examination before them shall for euerie such offence set such fine on such Coroner as they shall thinke méet Inquirie of a man slaine within the K. house verge 17 Forasmuch as heretofore many felonies that haue béene committed within the Verge haue béene vnpunished because the Coroners of the county haue not béene authorized to inquire of felonies done within the Verge but onely the Coroner of the Kings house which neuer continueth in one place by reason whereof there can be no triall made in due manner nor the selons put in Exigent nor outlawed nor nothing presented in the Eire which hath beene great damage to the King and to the hindrance of his peace For the redresse whereof by a Statute made Anno 28. Ed. 1. St. 28. E. 1. 3 intituled Articuli super chartas it was ordained That if the death of a man where the Coroners Office is to make view and Enquest doth chaunce in any countie where the Kings house is and within the Verge the Coroner of the same countie shal be commanded with the Coroner of the Kings house to execute his office and to inroll it And that thing which cannot be determined before the Steward shall bee committed to the common law so that Exigents Outlawries and Presentments shal be thereupon made to the Iustices in their circuits by the Coroner of the countie as well as of other felonies done out of the Verge Neuerthelesse they shal not omit by reason hereof to make attachmēts freshly vpon the felonies done Which foresaid statute for so much thereof as doth touch or concerne the K. house onely is in part altered by the statute of Anno 33. H. 8. St. 33. H. 8. 12. whereby it is ordayned Inquirie if a
countie where the rauishment was committed 3. H. 7. 12. And though shee doe declare of the taking of her in another countie yet it shal be tried onely in the countie where the appeale is brought for the declaring of taking of her in another countie was but surplusage and néeded not to haue béene inserted which doth not cause her count to abate And in this case the woman appellant shall recouer nothing but the defendants death for the felonie which she shall obtaine in respect of his rauishment of her in the countie wherunto he forcibly carried her wherein only the felonie was committed Appeale of Robberie 39 By the same reason if a man doe take another by force in one countie 3. H. 7. 12. and then carrie him into another countie and there robbe him or kill him an appeale of felonie shal be commenced onely in the countie where the robberie or murder was done for the taking and carrying him away out of the first countie was but trespasse and there was no felonie committed vntill the robberie or murder was committed Threatning in one county to bring money into another 40 If one man doe threaten another in one countie that he will kill him if he doe not bring him a summe of money into another countie such a day 44. E. 3. 14 4. H. 4. 3. In this case if he that is threatened doe in respect of that menace carrie and pay the said summe of money to him that threatened him according to his promise in the said other countie this is robberie though the partie néeded not to haue paid the said money according to his promise for that his said promise was by menace and not voluntarie nor vpon cause And there is reason that the appeale of robberie shal be commenced in the countie where the money was paid and not in the countie where the menace was made for the effect and successe of the matter maketh it felonie which is the paiment of the money and not the first cause which was the threatening Goods robbed caried into diuers coūties 41 If a felon commit a robberie in one countie 7. H. 7. 44 4. H. 7. 5. and then carrie the goods stolen into diuers other counties hee that is robbed may haue his appeale of felonie in which of those Counties he will for the felon committeth felonie in euerie of the Counties Co. li. 7. 2. 26. As p. 32. whither he carrieth any of the goods And in which of those Counties the partie robbed doth commence his Appeale of Felony there it shal be tried for the propertie of those goods was alwayes in the first and right owner of them But he that is robbed may commence his Appeale of Robberie onely in that Countie where hee was robbed for there is no robberie done but in that Countie onely But if a man being in one Countie doe procure another man to commit a robberie in another Countie 29. H 8. Dyer 40 which he doth accordingly in this case the partie robbed shall haue his Appeale of Robberie against the said procurer as accessorie to this felonie in the Countie where the procurement was and not where the robberie was committed for there was his felonie committed where he did persuade and procure the robberie to be done 42 He that may pursue an Appeale is at his choyce whether he will haue it by writ Britton or by bill If he pursue it by bill Before Whōe an appeale shal be broght then he must find to the Sherife in the full Countie two sufficient pledges being of the Countie where the felonie was committed and distrainable within the sayd Countie that hee shall prosecute his Appeale according to the law of the Realme and he shal be thereunto receiued And then the Coroner shall enter his Appeale and the names of his pledges 22. As p. 97. and after the Baily of the place where the felonie was committed shall be commaunded that he shall bring the bodies of those that be appealed to the next Countie Court to answer to the plaintife And if the Baily doe answer at the second Countie Court that he cannot find them then it shall bee ordained that they which be principall Appellees of the fact shall bée solemnly commaunded to yéeld to the Kings peace and to appeare and stand to the answer of such a felonie whereof they be appealed And so they shall be demanded from Countie to Countie vntill they do appeare or bee Outlawed And yet because the Statute of Magna Charta hath ordayned That no Sherife Constable St. 9. H. 3. 17 Escheator Coroner or other Bailife of the Kings shall hold plea of the Crowne It is agréed for law that vpon an Appeale commenced before the Sherife and the Coroners although they may award proces against the Appellées vntil the Exigent yet they cannot award the Exigent against the Appellée if he do not appear neither if he do appear they can cause him to answer but onely they may commit him to prison and that by force of the sayd statute of Magna Charta 43 When an appeale is commenced before the Sherife and the Coroners in the countie it may be remooued into the Kings bench by a Certiorari Remoouing an appeale out of the countie which must be awarded out of the Chauncerie or out of the Kings bench and is to be directed to the Sherife and the Coroners which prooueth that an appeale is begunne and of Record as well before the Sherife as before the Coroners according to the Statute of West St. 3. E. 1. 10 1. which hath ordained That the Coroners shall lawfully attach and represent the pleas of the Crowne and that the Sherife shall haue counter-rolles with the Coroners as well of appeals as of Enquests of Attachments or other things that doe belong vnto this office And therefore a Certiorari to remooue an appeale directed to the sherife onely is voyd 4. H. 6. 15 and an appeale of murder may be commenced as well before the Sherife as before the Coroners as it is prooued by these words of the Statute of 3. H. 7. St. 3. H. 7. 1 viz. The wife or heire of the person slaine or murdered as case shal require may commence their appeale in proper person at any time within the yeare after the felonie done before the Shirife and Coroners of the Countie where the said felonie and murder was done or before the King in his Bench or Iustices of Gaole deliuerie 44 An appeale by Bill may be commenced before Iustices of Gaole deliuerie An appeale before Iustices of Gaole deliuerie but then the Appellée at the time of the Appeale begun against him 13. H. 4. 10. 9. H. 4. 2. must be prisoner in the same Gaole whereof those Iustices are to make deliuerie or else such an appeale is not to be receiued Or otherwise one of them at the least against whom and others the
said appeale is entred ought to be prisoner in the same Gaole and if not the same appeale is void S. Approuers 19. St. 28. E. 1. 9. H. 4. 2. Yet an approuer may appeale others that are not in prison but at large which is by force of the statute of 28. Ed. 1. de Appellatis And when an appeale is commenced before Iustices of Gaole deliuerie against diuers whereof there is but one in prison before them this appeale ought to be remooued into the Kings bench by a Certiorari and from thence proces shall be awarded against them which be at large Anno 1. M. Dyer 99. And Iustices of Assise may hold plea of appeales of robberie An appeale before Iu. of Assise by the commission of Gaole deliuerie An appeale before the I. of the Kings Bench. 45 As well as Iustices of Gaole deliuerie and the Sherife and Coroners haue authoritie to receiue an appeale by Bill 17. Ed. 3. 13 in like sort Iustices of the kings bench haue power to accept an appeale by Bill for they be the soueraigne coroners of the Realme Appeale against one Bayled 46 If one be in prison for felonie in the Kings bench 21. H. 7. 33. 32. H. 6. 4. or before the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie and after let to baile yet an appeale by bill may be commēced against him for he is a prisoner notwithstanding that bailement for they which tooke him in batle be his guardians and shall be charged if he escape some doe affirme that they may imprison him and some do hold that they shall be hanged for him And vpon his bailement he shall find sureties to answer to all persons No appeale against him that is let by mainprise But an appeale is not to be pursued against him 9. Ed. 4. 2. 39. H. 6. 27. who is let at libertie by mainprise for that he is not in ward No appeale before Iustices of peace 47 Some doe affirme that an appeale may be commenced before Iustices of peace for they haue authoritie by their commission 44. E. 3 44. and by the Statute of 18. Ed. 3. 2. to heare and determine felonies But others doe hold that they must onely procéed vpon indictment found by a Iurie before them and not vpon an appeale prosecuted at the suit of the partie grieued for the words of their commission be Ad inquirendum per Sacramentum proborum legalium hominum de comitatu praedicto per quos rei veritas melius sciri poterit de omnibus omnimodis felonijs c. Et ad omnia singula felonias c. indictamēta praedicta caeteraque omnia singula premissa secundum leges statuta regni nostri Angliae prout in huiusmodi casu fieri consueuit aut debuit audiendum terminandum By which words it is to be inferred that they shall enquire and punish at the Kings suit vpon indictment and not at the parties suit by appeale such felonies as shall bee committed within their Iurisdiction 48 If one of the Kings subiects doe kill another of his subiects in a forrain Realm the wife or next heire of him that was slain as the case requireth An appeale before the Constable and Marshall may haue an appeale of the same death in England before the Constable Marshall of England St. 1. H. 4. 14 by force of the Statute of 1. H. 4. which doth ordaine That all appeales of things committed within the Realme shall be tried and determined by the lawes of the Realme and of things committed out of the realme before the Constable and Marshall of England for the time being And no appeales fromhenceforth shal be made or pursued in Parliament No appeale in Parliamēt Bracton Britton 49 It doth appeare by Bracton and Britton Where there shal be diuers appeales for one felonie and where not that one might haue had in former ages one appeale against the principall and another against the Accessories but since that law is changed viz. The appellant shall haue but one appeale Co. li. 4. 47. in the which he must comprehend as well the principals as the accessories vnlesse it be in speciall cases and that is confirmed by the Stat. of West 1. St. 3. E. 1. 14 which doth ordaine That no person shall be outlawed vpon appeale of commandement force aide or receit vntill the principall be attainted But the appellant shall not let to attach his appeale at the next countie as well against the accessorie as against the principall But the Exigent against the accessorie shall staie vntill the principall be attainted by outlawrie or otherwise 9. H. 4. 1. 50 In an appeale against two if one doe appeare One only appeale for one felonie and the other make default yet the plaintife shall count against them both and the same law which compelleth the appellant to count at one time against them both doth enforce him to sue his appeale against them both for if an appellant doe bring an appeale against one person Co. l. 4. 47 and the appellée is attainted and hanged at his suit and after he will bring an other appeale against one or two others for the same offence he shall take no benefit by his suit for he should haue ioyned thē all in his first appeale 47. E. 3. 16. And the same law is if the first appellée had béene acquited or that the appellant had bin Non suit after apparance 51 It séemeth that in some cases at this day one may haue diuers appeals for one felonie Where diuers appeales for one felonie as if one in one countie doe procure another to robbe a man in another countie In this case the partie robbed shall haue one appeale against the principall in one countie and another against the accessorie in another countie or otherwise he should be without his remedie against the accessorie by Appeale St. 2. 3. E. 6. 24. But by the Statute of Anno 2. 3. E. 6. if one in one countie doe procure another to kill a man in another countie hee to whom the appeale of murder is giuen shall commence his appeale in the countie where the partie shall die S. Br. 37. 26. Ass p. 52 Co. li. 4. 48. 52 And so it is Two appeals founded vpon one felonie if the Appellant doe commence his appeale against the principall within a yeare and a day after the felonie committed and after the said appeale commenced another will receiue the same felon In this case the appellant may pursue another appeale against the said accessorie for these two be seuerall felonies which began at seuerall times S. Br. 35. Robbery of seuerall parcels of goods 53 If a man be robbed of two seuerall parcels of goods at one time he cannot haue two seuerall appeales for them and put parcel of the goods robbed in one appeale and parcel in
supposed is and was conuersant within the countie whereof the indictment or appeale maketh mention but the like proces shal be made against such indicted or appealed person as hath béene vsed 62 And because after the making of the sayd Statute of Anno 8. H. 6. some intending to defraud the sayd Statute did sue to remooue such appeales and indictments out of the hands of the Iustices or Commissioners aforesayd into the Kings bench and elsewhere by Certiorari or otherwise vnknowne to the partie so indicted and therupon sued the proces vsed at the common law before the making of the said Statute in the Kings Bench and elsewhere after the remoouing therof to the great impouerishment of diuers the kings subiects Therefore by the Statute made Anno 10. H. 6. St. 10. H. 6. 6 it was enacted Proces vpon an indictment or appeale remoued into the K. bench That if any such indictments taken before any Iustices of peace or any other hauing power to take such indictments or appeales or other Iustices or Commissioners in any county franchise or libertie of England shal be remoued into the Kings Bench or elsewhere by Certiorari or otherwise then after such remoouing before any Exigent awarded vpō any such indictment or appeal in form aforesaid taken immediatly after the first writ of Capias vpon euery such indictment or appeale awarded and returned another writ of Capias shall bee awarded directed to the Sherife of the countie wherof he that is indicted or appealed is or was supposed to be conuersant by the same indictment or appeale returnable in the K. Bench at a certaine day contayning the space of thrée moneths from the date of the said last writ of Capias according to the maner and forme that the I. of peace and others ought to haue done before such remouing And if any Exigent be awarded vpon any such indictment or appeale after such remouing against the forme aforesaid or any outlawrie thereupon pronounced as wel the same Exigent as the outlawrie and euery of them shal be void In the Appeale he must be supposed to be of a forrein County 63 The foresaid stat of 8. H. 6. doth not take place St. 8. H. 5. 10. but where by the Appeal or by the Indictment it is precisely supposed that the defendant was dwelling in a forrein county for if he be supposed to be dwelling there by an Aliàs dictꝰ it is out of the compasse of the stat 1. E. 4. 1. As in an appeal or indictment in the county of Middlesex against A.B. in comitatu tuo yeoman alias dictum A.B. de C. in comitatu Sussex yeoman Because that which is supposed by the Aliàs dictꝰ is not trauersable nor materiall And likewise it is in an appeale or indictment against I. of S. in comitatu H. nuper de L. in comitatu K. nuper de R. in com̄ T. An appellée dwelling in no place certaine 64 If a man be appealed to be dwelling in no place certaine the day of the Appeale commenced but in this maner Fitz. Proces 192. viz. nuper de S. in comitat̄ L. and nuper de B. in comit̄ T. then proces shal be awarded into all the counties whereof he is so supposed to be of late dwelling Proces into a County Palantine 65 The foresaid stat of 8. H. 6. hath ordained That after the first Capias St. 8. H. 6. 10 another Capias shal be awarded to the Sherife of the county whereof he which is so indicted is or was supposed to be dwelling by the same indictment And therefore if an appeale or indictment be exhibited against one in the countie of M. naming him of D. in the county of Chester or of some other place which is a countie Palantine In this case no proces can be awarded vpon this Stat. which may be directed to the Sherife according to the words of the Statute But proces shal be awarded vpon this statute to the prince or his lieutenant 19. H. 6. 2 31. H. 6. 11. for it is in like mischiefe and the statute is generall in all the Realme which doth bind as well those which be of a Countie Palantine as others But if they of the Countie Palantine will not serue and returne the writ directed to them vpon this statute then without further delay the Exigent shall be awarded otherwise the party should be infinitly delaied Proces against principal accessory 66 The foresaid Proces specified in the before rehearsed stat of 8. H. 6. shal extend as well to accessories as to principals sauing that the Exigent as to the accessories shall be staied vntill the principals be outlawed And that by the Statute of West 1. the words whereof be these St. 3. E. 1. 14 Because men haue vsed in some counties to outlaw such persons as be appealed of commandement force aide or escape within the same terme that they do outlaw him which is appealed of the fact it is ordained that none shal be outlawed for an appeale of commandement force ayd or receit vntill he that is appealed of the déed be attainted so that one law shal be thereof through the whole Realme But the appellant shall not let to attach his appeale at the next countie against them as well as against the appellées of the déed But the Exigent against the Accessorie shal stay vntill the appellée of the déed be attainted by outlawrie or otherwise And Britton Britton doth affirme That as soone as the principals be outlawed the Exigent shal be awarded against the accessories St. 3. E. 1. 14 67 The before rehearsed statute of West 1. séemeth onely to extend to Appeales commenced by bill The stat of W. 1. extēdeth onely to Appeals commenced by bil for in an Appeale commenced by writ it appeareth not vntill the declaration made thereupon that there bée any accessories in the Appeale but for any thing contained in the writ all doe appeare to be principals 43. Ed. 3. 17. and for that cause the Exigent is awarded against them all at one time And therefore the plaintife must be aduised how he doth pray the Exigent and against whom for if he do pray the Exigent against them all he is therby concluded after to count against any of them as accessories for the law intendeth that he must take knowledge which were accessories and which not And therefore in that case he should haue staid the demaunding of the Exigent against them vntill the principals had béene attainted And that is the difference betwéene the principals and the accessories as touching the time of the awarding of the Exigent 68 If an Appeale be brought against diuers and one doth appeare plead In Appeale one doth appeare and another makes default yet proces shall be continued against the residue But if hee which appeareth doth plead in abatement of the Appeale or matter in barre which proueth that the Appeale
indicted and tried in the County where he doth commit the offence whereof he is so indicted yet for the preseruation of mans life and condignely to punish such persons as vnlawfully and wilfully murther slay or destroy men and to preuent the practise of those Théeues and Robbers that doe steale or robbe in one Countie and conuey their spoyle or part thereof to some of their adherents knowing thereof in another Countie St. 2. 3. Ed. 6. 24. by a Statute made Anno 2. 3. Edw. 6. it was enacted That where any person or persons shall be feloniously stricken or poysoned in one County A man strickē or poysoned in one county dieth in another and dye of the same stroake or poysoning in another County that then an Indictment found by Iurors of the County where the death shall happen whether it shall be found before the Coroner vpon the sight of any such dead body or before the Iustices of Peace or any other Iustices or Commissioners which shall haue authoritie to enquire of such offences shall bee as good and effectuall in Law as if the stroake or poysoning had béene done or committed in the same Countie where the party shall dye or where such Indictment shall bée so found And by the same Statute it was further ordayned That where any Murther or Felony shall bée committed and done in one County and another person or moe shall bée accessarie or accessaries in any manner wise to any such Murther or Felony in any other County Indictment of an accessary in one county to an offēce done in another that then an Indictment found or taken against such accessarie or accessaries vpon the circumstance of such matter before the Iustices of Peace or other Iustices or Commissioners to inquire of felonies in the County where such offences of accessarie or accessaries in any manner of wise shall bée committed or done shall bée as good and effectuall in the Law as if the principall offence had béen committed or done within the same County where the same Indictment against such accessary shal be found 6. H. 7. 10 7. H. 7. 8 Before which Statute made the manner was B to carry the body of the offendor to the County where the first offence was committed and there to indict and try him A man was indicted in the County of Middlesex for that hee in the same County procured another man to kill a third man in the Countie of Essex Fi. Cor. 33 by force whereof hée did kill him accordingly This was a good and sufficient Indictment for hée was indicted in the county where he committed his offence Kel fol. 67. viz. the procurement And if a man being in one county doth procure another to kill a third person in another coūty whereby he doth kill him accordingly in this case a Iury of the county where the murther was committed may indict this procuror as accessory for that this murther was begun by his procurement Insidiatores viarum depopulatores agrorum 15 By the Statute of Anno 4. H. 4. it was ordained St. 4. H. 4. 2. That the words Insidiatorum viarum Depopulatores agrorum shall not be from henceforth vsed or put in Indictments Arraignements Appeales nor other impeachments Nor that by force of any such word or terme any of the kings people shall be arraigned appealed impeached nor grieued before any secular Iudge But the Iustices may take and receiue before them Indictments Arraignements and Appeales of Felony containing in them the effect of the said words and termes if any shal be hereafter indicted arraigned or appealed before them of any such Felonies And if in time to come any Clerkes shall be indicted arraigned or appealed and their indiments arraignements or appeales doe purport the effect of the said wordes or other wordes of the like effect notwithstanding they shall enioy the priuiledge of their Clergie Words not necessarie in Indictments 16 By a Statute made Anno 37. H. 8. the words vi armis viz. St. 37. H. 8. 8 cum baculis cultellis arcubus sagittis or such other like before time commonly vsed and comprised in all Indictments and inquisitions of Treason Murther Felony Trespas and other offences shall not of necessitie bée put or comprised in any Inquisition or Indictment Nor the party being indicted of any offence shall take aduantage by Writ of Error Plea or otherwise to auoid any such Inquisition or Indictment for that the said wordes or any of them shall not bée put in the said Inquisition or Indictment But the said Inquisitions or Indictments lacking the foresaid words or any of them shall bée taken to all intents as good and effectuall in Law as if the said words were in them No more shall be in an indictment then is true 17 By these two last Statutes it doth appeare St. 4. H. 4. 2. St. 37. H. 8. 8 that the Realms was offended because Indictments were stuffed with more words then the offence required and that of purpose to aggrauate the offence more then it was grieuous in it selfe For the circumstances of euery offence doe augment or diminish it according to the qualities thereof And therefore it is requisite that there shall be no further circumstance put in Indictments more then the fact sauing that which is true least Periurie should ensue and Iustice bée subuerted thereby for such words be not words of forme but as materiall and necessarie as Proditorié or Felonicè which ought to be put in euery Indictment of Treason or Felony or otherwise the Indictment is not good for they doe expresse the intent wherewith the fact was committed Felonice omitted in an indictment of felony which maketh the offence to bee knowne As one was indicted That he tooke his father being sicke Fi. Indict 3. carried him against his will from towne to towne in a great frost wherof he died and for that this word Felonicè was not in the indictment it was adiudged void And if one be indicted of murther or manslaughter 1. M. Di. 99. there must be of necessitie in the indictment a stroke supposed viz. tali die anno felonicè ex malitia praecogitata interfecit murdrauit c. without saying percussit And if a man be indicted of Piracy Piracie in an indictment there ought to be in the indictment not only this word felonicè Stamf. 114. but also this word piraticè 18. E. 3. 32. Fitz. Cor. 122. 13. Ass p. 6 18 In an action of trespas brought for the taking away of a mans wife Where a verdict shal be an indictment and the goods of the husband the def pleaded not guiltie and was found by verdict guiltie in this case the same verdict shall serue as an indictment for the K. and the def shal be thereupon arraigned of felony And in like sort ●n an action of trespas brought for the taking
Appellée be within the lists ready to atchieue the combate That none but the two combaters shall be so hardie to stirre or make any noyse whatsoeuer he shall sée or heare whereby the battell may be disturbed And whosoeuer shall doe any thing contrarie to the said Proclamation Britton shall bée imprisoned a yeare and a day And they shall fight with weapons of small length béeing bare headed and hauing their hands and féet bare with two staues of one length horned at both endes And either of thē shall haue a Scutchian foure cornerd without any yron for that one shall not hurt the other with the yron Bracton de coron c. 21. And if the appellée can defend himselfe vntill Starres may be séene in the firmament then he shal goe quit from the appellant And also when the appellant and the appellée be in the field ready to ioyne battell or in the Battell it is a sufficient vanquishment if the appellant will confesse his appeale to be false 21. H. 6. 34. Fi. Cor. 98 for by this acknowledgement he shal be adiudged to be ouercome in the field and barred of his appeale for euer And on the other side if the appellée doe confesse himselfe in the field to be vanquished Bracton de coron c. 21. he shal be presently hanged As in an appeale the defendant pleaded not guiltie and made his choyce to trie it by Battel and as they were in the combate the appellant cast the appellée to the ground did grieuously beat him 19. H. 6. 35. and the Iustices sent for the appellée and when he was brought vnto them they demanded of him if he would any more of the battell or not who answered that he would not and said further that by the oath which hée had taken hée was not guiltie of the felonie whereof he was appealed to whom the Iustices said That if he would any more of the battell he should be laid in the same sort that he was when they sent for him but he answered that he would no more of the battell and therefore hée was presently hanged The reason why the def may be tried by battel in appeale 3 The reason why in an appeale the Defendant shall bée admitted to trie his cause by Battell is for that no euident or probable matter doth appeare against him to prooue him guiltie of the felonie whereof hée is appealed but onely the bare accusation of the Appellant which is no witnesse of credit in his owne cause And therefore séeing the appellant doth demaund iudgement of death against the Appellée by an appeale and hath no other probable euidence to attaint him but his owne accusation it is more reason that the appellant shall aduenture his life with the appellée for the triall thereof if the defendant doe require it than to put the triall thereof vpon the countrey which for default of euidence may be ignorant of the truth thereof and so giue a false verdit and by that meanes to leaue it to God to whom the truth of all things be knowne to giue the verdit in this cause by attributing the victorie or vanquishment to which partie it shall please him Counter-pleas to the battel 4 If the appellant haue any vehement presumption or sufficient testimony to prooue that his appeale is true it will bée a good counter-plea and sufficiently serue him to put the appellée from his triall by Battell As if the Defendant were indited of this Felonie before the appeale commenced 22. E. 4. 19. 20. E. 4. 6 14. E. 4. 7. 4. Ass p. 1 Bracton de coron̄ c. 18. Britton or was taken with the manoure or was taken with a bloodie knife or other weapon ouer the bodie of him that was slaine or néere vnto him whereby there was vehement suspition that he killed him or that the defendant did lie alone in the house with him that was killed or that he and others did lie in the house with him that was slaine and receiued no blowes or wounds in his defence or that he made no Huy and Crie after the théeues or murderers to apprehend them or that he will not confesse which of those that were in the house with him did kill the man that was slaine or committed the felonie that was done or that he receiued the man that was slaine into his house which was séene to goe in aliue and after was found dead there and no meane prooued how he came by his death Taken with the manoure 5 If the Defendant be taken with the manoure as in an appeale of death with a bloodie knife or other weapon he shal be barred from waging of battel And so it shall be if he be taken with the manoure in an appeale of Robberie 7. H. 4. 44 Fit cor 230 4. Ed. 3. 9 which manoure the plaintife must bring into the Court at the time when the Appellée doth offer to ioyne in battell or otherwise he must plead that the Appellée was taken with the manoure which manoure hee would haue brought into the Court but that he was not able to bring it or else hee may say that the manoure is in the possession of another and pray the Court to write for it To which manoure when it commeth into the Court the defendant shall haue no trauerse or other exception if the thing brought into the Court for the manoure doe not varie from those goods or things which be contained in the Appeale 22. Ed. 4. 19 And in appeale of robberie if the Appellée be apprehended vpon fresh suit by Huy and Crie and some of the money robbed be taken in his custodie this is a sufficient taking with the manoure to put him from waging of Battell Fi. Cor. 375 though the money cannot be knowne from other money And the reasons why in an appeale of robberie the defendant being taken with the manoure shall not wage battell against the appellant be for that by the Appeale the plaintife doth endeauour to attaint the Appellée of felonie and also to haue his goods againe And it may be that if it should be tried by Battell the Appellée might vanquish the Appellant in combate though the appellee be guiltie of the felonie and by that meanes also retaine his goods stollen without cause Taken with the manoure And the manoure was accounted so pregnant an euidence in former ages that the Iustices would as readily arraigne a prisoner vpon the manoure taken in his possession as vpon an indictment 6 It is also a good counter-plea to the battell for the Appellant to say Breaking of prison that the defendant when he was taken or arrested for that felonie whereof the appeale is sued Fi. Cor. 251 281 1. As p. 6. and therefore imprisoned did breake the prison and escaped or did what he could to escape for it is a very great presumption against him that he is guiltie of the felonie whereof he is
Trial of treason committed in Ireland 5 If an Earle 19. 20. El. Dy. fo 360 or a Lord of Ireland doth commit treason in Ireland by open rebellion he cannot be arraigned and put to his triall therefore in England for he can neither be tried by his Péeres nor by any Iurie of twelue men in England because he is not a subiect of England but of Ireland and therefore his triall shall be in Ireland And the custome there is to attaint a Péere by parliament and not by his Péeres Misprision 6 This order of triall by the Péeres is likewise to be obserued where one of the Péeres of this realme is indicted but of misprision of treason or felonie in which triall the same forme shall be kept as it shall be where any Péere is indicted of treason or felonie and arraigned thereupon And the number of Péeres which shall be to trie a Péere indicted of treason The number of Péeres at the Triall felonie or misprision shall be twelue at the least and more if it shall please the King Triall by Peeres in all cases of treason and felony 7 In euery case where any offence or fact is of new made treason by any Statute the Lords of the Parliament and Péeres of the Realme offending therein shall haue their triall by their Péeres though the Statute doth not prouide for it by speciall words as other inferiour persons offending in the like crimes shal haue their triall by the verdict of twelue men their péeres viz. their equals so that the words which be commonly put into new Statutes that Péeres of the Realme offending therein shal be tried by their Péeres bée not of necessity inserted But because the course of the common law is in some sort altered by the statute of an̄ 33. H. 8. 23. St. 33. H. 8 23. authorizing the King to graunt a commission vnto such persons and into such shires as he will for the triall of any murder committed in any other countie or place of the Realme whatsoeuer And also by the Statute of 35. H. 8. 2. St. 35. H. 8. 2 giuing the King like power to direct a commission into any countie of this Realme and to any persons that he will for the triall of treasons and misprisions of treasons committed out of the Realme yet for that the triall in both those cases might be made by such persons as the common law hath appointed viz. of péeres by their péeres it is so prouided and ordained by the special words of both those statutes ❧ Triall by the Countrie TRiall by the Countrie Triall by the Country is a triall by twelue common persons of that vicenage or neighborhoode where the treason or felony was committed which kinde of triall séemeth also to be warranted and approued though not at the first begunne by the before rehearsed Statute of Magna Charta St. 9. H. 3. 29 which saith Neither shall any passe or sit in iudgement vpon him but by the lawfull iudgement of his Péeres or by the Law of the realme And thereupon it is accordingly vsed that Knights Esquiers and Gentlemen of great estate being indited of treason or felony be tried by their péeres viz. by their equalls in degrée being also Knights Esquiers Gentlemen or Merchants of good estate 1. M. Dy. 99 and inferiour persons be likewise tried by their péeres or equalls viz. by men of their owne degrée or most commonly by men of better or greater estate or degrée 2 If he that is charged to be an offendour in petit treason murder or felonie doe pleade to an Indictment found against him matter triable by an other Countie than the Countie which did indict him although by the common lawe he ought to haue béene tried in that forraine countie yet now by the Statute of Anno 22. H. 8. St. 22. H. 8. 14. 32. H. 8. 3 he shall be tried by the countie which did indict him the words of which Statute be these viz. For more spéedie trialles of murders and felonies Be it enacted c. That all manner of forraine pleas Triall of forraine pleas triable by the Countrie hereafter to be pleaded by any person or persons arraigned vpon any Indictment for any petit treason murder or felonie shal be forthwith tried before the same Iustices before whom such persons shall be arraigned and by the same Iurors of the same countie that shall trie the petit treason murder or felonie whereof he shall so be arraigned without any further respite or delay in whatsoeuer countie or counties place or places of this Realme the matter of the same pleas be supposed or alleadged This statute maketh no mētion of high treason therfore forrain pleas in high treason remaine to be tried in those forren counties as they were at the cōmon lawe And so be they in an appeale Appeale for this statute extendeth to Indictments onely But if A. doe strike B. vpon the Sea and there giue him a mortall wound whereof B. dieth in the Countie of L. in this case A. Coke 2.93 shall be discharged of the death of B. for they of the Countie of L. cannot inquire of the death without inquirie of the wound A man stricken vpon the Sea dieth vpon the Land and of the wound they cannot inquire because it was giuen vpon the Sea and not in any Countie or place in this Realme And they of the Admiralles Iurisdiction can not inquire as of a felonie of the wound without inquiring of the death and of the death they can not inquire because it was within the body of a Countie where by the statute of 13. R. 2. 15. R. 2. St. 13. R. 2. 5 St. 15. R. 2. 3. they are forbidden to meddle 3 The processe which shal be awarded against the Iury The Processe against the Iurie to trie an issue in an appeale is commonly a Venire facias Habeas corpora and Distringas as it is vsed in other actions sauing in the Kings Bench 27. H. 6. 10 for by the custome of that Court the first processe against the Iurie is an Habeas corpora and after a Distresse without suing a Venire facias And some say that in the K. Bench they vse to haue no Habeas corpora at the first day but a Venire facias and then a Distresse leauing out the Habeas corpora The processe which is to be awarded against the Iury Processe in an Appeale not in an In is for the most part intended in an appeale for in an Indictment though they may graunt processe against the Iury yet it is not vsed by the Iustices of Gaole deliuerie Fit Enquest 55 because they doe take the pannell which is returned by the Shirife without making any precept vnto him for that they giue a generall commandement to the Shirife before their comming to cause the Countrie to appeare before them But so do not Iustices of Oyer
that all men may kill him without punishment and specially if he defend himselfe or flie away in such sort that he may be hardly apprehended But if he doe not flie or defend himselfe then he that killeth a man so taken shal answere for him as for any other man for that life and death be in the kings hands vnlesse there be a custome to the contrary as in the Counties of Hereford and Glocester And he shal forfeit the benefit of Law for he which being outlawed will be so bold as to returne without the kings licence shall die without law or further examination in iudgement And he cannot appeale others for he hath lost the benefit of law and carieth with him his iudgement vpon his head he can haue no defence so long as the Outlary standeth in force It is vpright iustice that he shal perish without law and iudgement who refuseth to liue according to the law And he shall forfeit his right and possession of all things that he hath gotten or may get And all bonds obligations homages fealties oathes and other contracts made with him be dissolued which can neuer be reuiued but vpon a new contract though he be restored And he shal forfeit all his tenements and hereditaments from him and his heires and euery action that was due to him before his Outlary though he be after restored by the kings pardon And Outlary of felony and euery other iudgement of felony doth dissolue all the gifts sales of land that he made sithence the time of the felony committed The outlawes goods shal be the kings for he cannot be outlawed in any other place but in the kings Court as in the Country Court or in the Hustings of London ❧ Corruption of Blood 1 BY attainder of Treason or Felony commeth corruption of Blood that is to say that the offendors children cannot be heires to him that is attainted nor to any other auncestor Corruption of blood salued by Parliament only And if the offendor were a Nobleman or a Gentleman before by this attainder he is become ignoble and not onely he himselfe but also all his children hauing respect to the Nobilitie which they had by their birth And this corruption of Blood is so grieuous that it cannot bee salued otherwise then by authoritie of Parliament But if the King will pardon the offendor it will cleanse the corruption of blood of those children which be borne after the pardon and they which be borne after the pardon may inherite the land which their auncestor purchased at the time of the pardon or after but so cannot they which were borne before the pardon And also he that is attainted of Treason or Felony shall not bee heire to his father but his disabilitie shall hinder others to be heire so that during his life the land shall rather escheat to the lord of the fée 27. Ed. 3. 77. Fi. Petit. 20 then discend to another But if he that is attainted doe die without issue of his body during the life of his auncestor then his younger brother sister or cousin shall inherite for if the eldest sonne be hanged Fi. Discēt 6. 26. As p. 2. or doth abiure the Realme for Felony during the fathers life it is no impediment but that the youngest sonne may inherite 29. As p. 11 13. H. 4. 8. Fit Discent 17. And if he which is attainted of Treason or Felony in the life time of his auncestor doe purchase the Kings pardon before the death of his auncestor yet he shall not be heire to his said auncestor but the land shall rather escheat to the lord of the fée But if the eldest sonne be a Clerke conuict in the life of his father and after his father dieth in this case he shall inherite his fathers land because he was not attainted of Felony for by the common Law hée should haue inherited after hée had made his purgation And now by the Statute of Anno 18. Eliz. hée shall bee forthwith enlarged after burning in the hand Fi. Cor. 382 St. 18. Eli. 6. and deliuered out of prison and not committed to the Ordinary to make his purgation and so he is in case as if he had made his purgation Where corruption of blood shall preiudice tenant by the courtesie 2 If a man that hath land in the right of his wife haue issue 13. H. 7. 17 and doth commit Felony for the which he is attainted and the king doth pardon him in this case if his wife doe die before him he shall not be tenant by the courtesie for the corruption of blood of that issue But it is otherwise if he hath issue after the pardon for then he shall be tenant by the courtesie although the issue which he had before the pardon be not inheritable The eldest sonne attainted of felony during his fathers life 3 If a man seised of lands hath issue two sonnes 32. H. 8. Dyer 48. and the eldest is attainted of Felony in the life of his father and is executed for the felony or otherwise dieth during the life of his father and after the father dieth seised of the land the land shal discend to the youngest sonne as heire to his father if the eldest sonne hath no issue then liuing But if the eldest sonne that was attainted hath any issue in life which should haue inherited but for the attainder the land shall escheat to the lord and not discend to the younger brother for that the blood of the eldest brother is corrupted Where an attainder but n● corruption of blood 4 S. Forfeiture 27 That the attainder of Treason or Felony in certaine cases shal not extend to make any corruption of blood the disinheritance of any heire forfeiture of any dower nor to preiudice the right or title of any person other then of the offendor or offendors during his or their naturall liues only ❧ Restitution of stolne goods 1 HAuing written of Robberies and other Felonies and declared how Felons are to be prosecuted by Arrest Appeale Indictment Arraignment Tryall and Iudgement and what they shall forfeit I meane now to shew how true men whose goods were robbed stoln or feloniously taken from them by such Felons shall be restored to their goods againe As it is necessary for the Commonwealth that Felons should be punished least the impunity of some should incourage them and also allure others to commit the like offences so is it fit that they chiefely whose goods were taken from them and therby haue tasted the smart and receiued the losse by the Felons and are more likely to know who they be and where they be then others are should doe their vttermost endeauor to procure those Felons to be apprehended brought to their answers and to haue them punished according to their demerits that is to say he that was robbed What is fresh suit or whose goods were stolne from him ought presently after the
the appeale of the plaintife and then it shall be inquired by the Visne where the Felony was committed by the people of that County where the appeale is brought except it bee brought in London for London hath such a priuiledge that they shall not bée drawne to appeare vpon Iuries out of the Citie and the Kings Iustices cannot goe into the Citie and take the same by Nisi prius because it is but an Enquest of Office 1. H. 4. 5. 2. R. 3. 12. and therefore in that case they doe inquire of it by people of the County where the Felon was taken and from thence shall the Visne come But first the Court is to inquire of the Defendant in the appeale Fit Forfeit 15. if hée doe clayme any propertie in the goods or not and if hée clayme nothing therein then it must enquire if the goods were the plaintifes at the time of the Robbery committed and moreouer inquire of the Fresh suit 5 By the common Law there was no helpe for the party robbed by indictment of the Felon to recouer his goods againe or to haue restitution of them Restitution vpon attainder by indictment for although the enquest which tried the Felon vpon his arraignment would after they had found him guilty of the Felony Fi. Cor. 460. haue said that the party robbed had made Fresh suit yet that would not haue auailed to haue procured him restitution of his goods And therefore to redresse that enormitie there was a statute made Anno 21. H. 8. by which it was enacted St. 21. H. 8. 11. That if any Felon or Felons hereafter doe robbe or take away any money goods or cattels from any the Kings Subiects from their person or otherwise within this Realme and thereof the said Felon or Felons be indicted and after arraigned of the same Felony and found guilty thereof or otherwise attainted by reason of euidence giuen by the party so robbed or owner of the said mony goods and cattels and that as well the Iust of Gaole deliuery as other Iustices before whom any such Felon or Felons shal be found guilty or otherwise attainted by reason of euidence giuen by the party so robbed or owner or by any other by their procurement haue power by this act to award from time to time Writs of Restitution for the said money goods or cattels in like manner as though any such Felon or Felons were attainted at the suit of the party in appeale And so by force of this Statute the party robbed shall haue restitution of his stolne goods vpon euidence giuen by him or by any other by his procurement against the Felon though he neuer made any fresh suit S. Euidence 3. 4. Appeales 55. ❧ Dammages in Appeale 1 IVstice and reason doe require that when a mans life his fame and credit his lands his goods the disheritance of his posterity the corruption of his blood and all that he hath in this world to forfeit hath bin put in hazard and brought into question and triall without iust desert or other ground but only vpon the malicious accusation of some one or moe persōs and that he is found a true and lawfull man duly acquit by the country of the offence whereof he was appealed that he should haue recompence for it against his false accusor and if his accusor be not sufficient then against him or them that did procure or abet him to pursue the appeale And therefore the common law did giue dammages to the defendant in an appeale 48. Ed. 3. 22 and assigned him a meane to recouer them when he was acquit of the felony But because the dammages which were to be recouered against the procurors or abettors were to be recouered by writ originall viz. by a writ of Conspiracy and not otherwise which was not so spéedy a remedy as the great malice and wickednesse of the offence required the stat of West 2. was made for the quicker redresse thereof An̄ 13. Ed. 1. the words whereof be these St. 13. E. 1. 12 viz. For as much as many through malice intending to grieue others do procure false appeales of homicide and other felonies to be sued by appellants hauing nothing wherewith to satisfie the king for their false appeale nor to answer to the party damages It is ordained that when any which is appealed of felony imposed vpon him doth acquite himselfe in the K. Court in due manner either at the appellants suit or the kings The punishment of the appellant and abettors whē the appellée is acquit the Iustices before whom the said appeale shal be heard and determined shal punish the appellant by one yeres imprisonment and neuerthelesse such appellant shall yéeld to the appellée damages by the Iust discretion hauing respect to the imprisonment or arrest that the party hath sustained by reason of such appeale and to the slander which he hath receiued by the imprisonment or otherwise also he shal pay a grieuous fine to the K. And if the appellants be not able to recompēce the damages inquiry shal be made by whose abetmēt the appeale was maliciously cōmenced if the appellée desire it And if it be found by the same Enquest that any man is a●ettor through malice he shal be distrained by a iudiciall writ to appeare before the I. at the appellées suit and if he be lawfully conuict of such abetment by malice he shall be imprisoned and restore dammages as is aforesaid of the appellant In an appeale of the death of a man there shall no Essoine lie for the appellant for any cause No Essoine for the Appellant in appeale of death in whatsoeuer court the appeale shal be determined The appeale must be commenced vpon malice 2 And whereas the words of the foresaid stat of West 2. be St. 13. E. 1. 12 For as much as many through malice it doth thereby appeare that if the defendant in an appeale be to recouer dammages it ought to be in respect that the appeale was grounded rather vpon malice then vpon good matter 40. Ed. 3. 41. 22. Ass p. 39 32. H. 6. 2. And therefore if the defendant were indicted of that Felony wherof the appeale was sued before the suit of the appeale although the def be after acquit thereof yet he shall not recouer dammages because it shal be intended that the indictment induced him to bring the appeale and not malice But the law is méere contrary if he were not indicted vntill after the appeale commenced Or if there be any such variance betwéene the appeale and the indictment that the acquitall of him vpon the one is not the acquitall of him vpon the other as if he be indicted as principall and appealed as accessory vel e conuerso And yet it is otherwise 14. H. 7. 2 if the variance be not in a matter of substance for such a variance shal not so preiudice but that the acquitall
doth acquite himselfe either at the appellants suit or at the Kings suit This suit of the K. is alwaies intended vpon an appeale when the def is arraigned vpon an appeale after that the appellant hath declared in his appeale and is Nonsute for if the def were acquite at the kings suit vpō an indictment of the same Felony yet he shall recouer no dammages And the manner how he shall recouer dammages being acquite at the kings suit doth somewhat vary from recouering of dammages at the parties suit for when it is at the kings suit he shall not recouer his dammages though he be acquite vntill he hath sued a Scire facias against the appellant to bring him into the Court againe being out of the Court before by his Nonsute But if he be acquit at the appellants suit he shall haue his iudgement to recouer dammages without suing of any further Proces And if a woman that is appellant be Nonsute and after doth take a husband Fit Damag 77. the Scire facias shall bée awarded against the wife onely B. What Iustices may inflict the penalty vpon the appellant 8 And though the foresaid statute of West 2. hath prouided St. 13. E. 1. 12 That the Iustices before whom the said appeale shal be heard and determined shall punish the appellant by a yeares imprisonment that punishment cannot be inflicted by the Iust of Nisi prius and yet by the statute of Anno 14. H. 6. St. 14. H. 6. 1 the Iustices of Nisi prius haue power to giue iudgement in Treason and Felony tried before them and that as well where the defendant is acquite as where he is attainted But yet they be not such Iustices as this statute doth meane 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 120. 14. E. 4. 14. 22. E. 4. 18. For that all the plea of Appeale was not heard before them but a parcell viz. the triall onely The dammages for seueral persons assessed seuerally 9 And whereas the said statute of West 2. would haue the Iustices in assessing of dammages for the defendant in an appeale St. 13. E. 1. 1● to haue respect to his imprisonment arrest slander Therefore in an appeale brought against diuers if they be all acquite the dammages shal be taxed seuerally that is to say 8. H. 5. 6. Fi. Dam̄ 77. euery of the defendants shall haue his dammages taxed by himselfe for it may bée that one hath cause to recouer more then the other as if one were appealed as principall and the other as accessory or that the one were a gentleman or a man of greater estate and the other of a meaner degrée But yet this Recouery of dammages must be intended in one who is by the law enabled to recouer dammages for if an appeale be brought against a woman couert onely Fi. Cor. 276. without her husband as it must be vnles the husband committed felony with his wife the wife shall not recouer dammages though she be acquite And yet if the appeale be brought against the husband and wife together they be both acquite Fitz. Iudg. 108. then the dammages shal be seuerally taxed that is to say the husband shall recouer for his owne imprisonment and the husband and wife shall recouer iointly for the imprisonment of the wife St. 13. E. 1. 12 10 Though the foresaid statute of West 2. doth ordaine Where the appellant shall pay a fine to the king That the appellant shall be grieuously fined to the king yet that is to be intended where the appellant shall yéeld dammages to the defendant 9. H. 5. 1 for if the case be such as that the appellant shall not render dammages to the def then he shall not pay a fine to the K. but shal be amerced only as where an appeale doth abate by misnaming the appellant shal be only amerced And yet if the appellant be Nonsute after declaration 41. Ass p. 8. he shal pay a fine to the king and the Court will award proces against him for the same fine and though the defendant be after acquite at the kings suit by which meanes he shal recouer dammages against the appellant yet the appellant shall not pay a new fine to the king for that he hath paied it before And if the defendant be found guilty when he is tryed at the kings suit the appellant hath no remedy to recouer the fine which he hath paied before for by the common Law the plaintife in an appeale should haue paied a fine for his Nonsute which is the cause that a fine shal be paied by the appellant presently vpon his Nonsute St. 13. E. 1. 12 11 And for that the words of the said statute of West 2. be In what case inquiry shal be of the abettors If the appellants be not able to recompence the dammages inquiry shal be made by whose abetment the appeale was commenced by those words it is to be gathered that if dammages be not to be recouered against the appellant there shall neuer any inquiry be made of the abettors as in the cases aforesaid And where the words of the statute be If the appellant be not able to recompence the dammages it is intended all the dammages for if the appellant be sufficient to render part of the dammages 8. H. 5. 6. 8. Ed. 4. 3. but not the whole inquiry shal be made of the abettors and they shall pay the residue St. 13. E. 1. 12 12 The foresaid statute doth ordaine That inquiry shal be made of the abettors if the appellée do desire it so that the Court of Office ought not to inquire thereof but at the appellees request And if an appeale be brought against two and one of them is acquit by verdict if the Court do inquire of the abettors at the request of the same defendant and the Enquest doth find that there be no abettors and after the other defendant is arraigned and also acquite and if he do request also that inquiry may be made of the abettors the verdict of the former Enquest wherunto he was not priuy neither against which he shall haue any remedy being but an Enquest of Office shall not bind him but according to the words of the said statute inquiry shall be made againe at his request of the abettors for though it be commonly inquired of the abettors by the same Iury which doth trie the def yet their inquiry therein is but an Enquest of office for if they do find abettors the abettors when they doe appeare may trauerse all that the Enquest hath found As if they haue found that the appellant was not sufficient What pleas the abettors may plead or that such a man or such a one were abettors 8. Ed. 4. 3. because they that be supposed abettors may say by protestation not confessing the felonie for their plea that the appellant is sufficient or that they were no abettors for
the words of the Statute be And if they bee lawfully conuict of such abetment by malice which doth proue that they shal haue their answer to that which was found by the Enquest And also it is a good answer for him that is charged to be an abettor to shew sufficient matter to proue Fi. Cor. 386 that the defendant ought not to recouer his damages against the appellant or that the defendant was not lawfully acquit but erroniously But if the abettors would take exception to the inquisition found for that the enquest did not find at what day Fi. Cor. 45 M. 22. E. 4. yeare and place the abetment was made that is no good exception for in that they haue found the abetment they haue performed the words of the statute which be That inquirie shall be made by whose abetment and that they haue found And touching the yeare day and place the defendant in the Appeale must adde to the inquisition and so supply that which wanteth Proces against the abettors 13 Because the said statute hath ordained St. 13. E. 1. 12 that after by an Enquest an abettor is found he shal be distrained by a iudiciall writ at the appellees suit to appeare before the Iustices Therfore it is to be gathered by words of the said statute that the proces against abettors is distresse infinit for this proces of distresse is alwayes pursued by him that is acquit who for his spéedie remedie may prosecute it although the apppellant be not in the Court as where the Appellant was nonsuit in the Appeale and the defendant was arraigned at the Kings suit and acquit and his damages taxed and the abettors found Fi. Dam̄ 77. in this case the defendant shall haue proces against the abettors presently although the iudgement of damages shal be suspended vntill a Scire facias shall be awarded and returned against the appellant Nonsute in the proces against the abettors And the defendant who is acquit in an Appeale may be nonsuit in the proces which hee doth pursue against the abettors and begin againe if he will for that nonsuit is not peremptorie to him Fit Co. 386 A Writ against the abettors by the appellee 14 There is an originall writ to be purchased by the Appellée who is acquit by verdict against the abettors for their abetment Fitz. Act. sur stat 28. wherein he may count abettors of greater damages than were assessed by the Iustices in the Appeal for of those damages taxed in the Appeale there will lye no attaint because the inquirie touching them is but of office And the defendant in the Appeale cannot compell the Iustices to increase those damages and therefore it is reason that he should releeue himselfe by this action Procurors of indictments for suits in spirituall Courts 13 The same remedie which is giuen by the foresaid stat of West 2. to the def in an appeale of Felony if he be acquite is giuen by the stat made An. 1. R. 2. to him who is falsely indicted for pursuing in a spirituall Court a matter pertaining to the temporall iurisdiction after that he is acquite thereof St. 1. R. 2. 13 The words of which stat be these The Prelates Clergy of the realme do greatly complaine for that people of holy Church suing in the spirituall court for their tithes other things which ought of right and of auncient time were wont to appertaine to the same spirituall court that the Iudges of spirituall courts other persons dealing therein according to the Law be maliciously and vnduly for that cause indicted imprisoned and by the secular power horribly oppressed and also enforced by violence by oathes by grieuous obligations and by many other meanes vnduly compelled to desist and vtterly to leaue off from the things aforesaid contrary to the liberties of the holy Church Wherefore it is enacted That all such Obligations made or to be made by duresse or violence shal be of no value And touching those which do procure by malice such indictments themselues to be indictors after that the same indictées be thereof acquite such procurors and indictors shall haue and incurre the same paine which is contained in the statute of West 2. touching those which do procure false appeales to be made And the Iustices of Assise or other Iustices before whom such persons indicted shal be acquite shall haue authority to inquire of such indictors and procurors and to punish them duly euery person according to his desert ❧ A Writ of Conspiracie Where a writ of Conspiracy doth lie 1 A Writ of Conspiracy doth lie where two or thrée persons or more of malice and by co● in doe conspire and deuise to indict another person falsely and after he which is so indicted is acquited in this case he shall haue a writ of Conspiracy against those who did so conspire to indict him But this writ doth lye against two persons at the least 28. Ass p. 12 11. H. 4. 2. which doe so conspire for if one person of malice and his own false imagination doth labour and cause one to be falsely indicted the party which was so indicted shall not haue a writ of Conspiracy but an action vpon ●he case against him who caused him to be falsely indicted 2 At the common law a writ of Conspiracy did lie as well vpon an acquitall in an appeale as it doth at this day on an acquitall vpon an indictment But there hath growne a question thereof sithence the stat of West 2. was made St. 13. E. 1. 12 Registrum for that in the writ of Conspiracy in the Register it is noted for a rule and also it is affirmed by some others That a writ of Conspiracy doth not lye vpon an appeale for that the said stat of West 2. gaue to the def dammages against the appellant and the abettors Fit Na. Bre. 114. and so in a sort prouided for him another remedy But to say generally that the def shall not haue a writ of Conspiracy vpō an acquital in an appeale for that he may haue damages against the appellant and the abettors is no sufficient reason for the said stat doth not giue to the def inquiry against the abettors but vpon his owne request and therefore if he will omit to desire it he shal haue the remedy ordained by the common law which law is not changed by the foresaid stat of West 2. that is in the affirmatiue doth not restraine the benefit giuen by the common law And it may be that the damages assessed by the enquest of office will not be so beneficiall vnto him as the damages which wil be giuen by a Iury that is taken at the parties suit whereunto he shall haue his challenges and an attaint if they giue a false verdict Also in a Writ of Conspiracy proces is to be awarded by Capias and Exigent which proces is not to
enacted That the wife or heire of any person murdered or slaine Iudges in appeale of murder or manslaughter as case shall require may commence their Appeale in proper person at any time within the yere after the felony done before the Sherife Coroners where the said felonie and murder was done or before the King in his Bench or Iustices of Gaole deliuerie 9 To the intent to inable the Iust Iustices of Nisi prius Iudges in felonie treason of Nisi prius to giue iudgement of such persons as be either attainted or acquit of treason or felonie by a stat made an 14. H. 6. it was established St. 14. H. 6. 1 That the Iust before whom Enquests Inquisitions and Iuries shal be taken by the K. writ of Nisi prius according to the form of the stat thereof made shall haue power of all the cases of felony and of treason to giue iudgement Though this stat of 14. H. 6. doth giue authoritie to Iustices of Nisi prius to giue iudgement as wel vpon acquital 10. Ed. 4. 14 as vpon attainder of treason or felonie notwithstanding if in an Appeale the defendant bée acquit before them they cannot award damages against the plaintife Awarding of damages and inquiring of abettors nor inquire of abettors for their power by this stat extendeth but to treason and felonie onely wherof they may giue iudgement and of nothing else for the awarding of damages and inquiring of abettors doth yet remaine as it was at the common law St. 33. H. 8. 23. 10 By the stat of Anno 33. H. 8. it is ordained Iudges of murders by speciall commission That if any person or persons being examined before the K. Counsell or thrée of them vpon any maner of murders do confesse any such offences or that the said Counsell or thrée of them vpon such examination shall thinke any person so examined to bée vehemently suspected of any murder then in euery such case by the kings commandement the K. Commission of Oyer and Terminer vnder the great Seale shal be made to such persons and to such Shires or places as shal be appointed by his Highnesse for the spéedie tryall conuiction or deliuerance of such offendors which Commissioners shall haue authoritie to inquire heare and determine all such murders within the Shire and places limited by their Commission by such good and lawfull persons as shall bee returned before them by the Sherife his minister or other hauing power to returne writs proces for that purpose in whatsoeuer other Shire or place within the K. dominions or without such offences were cōmitted But Péers of the realme being indicted of the said offence shall be tried by their Péeres This stat was also made for the triall of treasons and misprision of treasons by speciall commission But by the stat St. 1. 2. P. M. 10. of an 1. 2. P. M. it was enacted That all trials to bee made for any treasons shal be only vsed according to the course of the common law 11 Where Traitors Pirats Théeues Robbers Murderers and confederators vpon the Sea many times escaped vnpunished because the tryall of their offences hath heretofore béene ordered iudged and determined before the Admirall or his Lieutenant or Commissarie after the course of the Ciuile lawes the nature whereof is that before any iudgement of death can be giuen against the offendors either they must plainly confesse their offences which they will neuer doe without torture or paines or else their offences must be so plainely and directly prooued by witnesses indifferent such as saw their offences committed which cannot bée gotten but by chaunce at few times because such offendors commit their offences vpon the Sea and many times murder and kill such persons being the ship or boat where they commit their offences which should bée witnesse against them in that behalfe and also such as should beare witnesse bee commonly Mariners and shipmen which because of their often voyages and passages vpon the Sea depart without long tarrying and protracting of time to the great costs and charges as well of the King as such as would pursue such offendors For reformation whereof by a Statute made Anno 28. H. 8. it was enacted That all Treasons St. 28. H. 8. 15. Felonies Robberies Murders and Confederacies committed in or vpon the Sea or in any other Hauen Riuer Créeke or place where the Admirall or Admirals haue or pretend to haue power authoritie or iurisdiction shall bee inquired tryed heard determined and iudged in such Shires and places in the Realme as shall bée limited by the Kings Commission or Commissions to be directed for the same in like forme and condition as if any such offence or offences had beene committed or done in and vpon the land And such Commissions shall bee had vnder the great Seale directed to the Admirall or Admirals Iudges in piracie where the Admirall hath iurisdiction or to his or their Lieutenant Deputie and Deputies and to three or foure other such substantiall persons as shall bee named or appointed by the Lord Chauncellor for the time being from time to time and as oft as néed shall require to heare and determine such offences after the course of the common lawes of this land vsed for Treasons Felonies Robberies Murders and Confederacies of the same done and committed vpon the land within the Realme And such persons to whome such Commission or Commissions shall bee directed or foure of them at the least shall haue authoritie to inquire of such offences and euerie of them by the othes of twelue good and lawfull inhabitants of the Shire limited in their Commission in such manner and forme as if such offences had beene committed vpon the land within the same Shire And euerie Indictment found and presented before such Commissioners of any Treasons Felonies Robberies Murders Manslaughters or such other offences committed or done in or vpon the Seas or in or vpon any Riuer Hauen or Creeke shall be good and effectual in the law And if any person or persons happen to be indicted for any such offence done vpon the Seas or in any other place aboue limited then such order Proces Iudgement and execution shal be vsed had done and made to and against euerie such person and persons so being indicted as against traitors felons and murderers for treason felonie robberie murder or other such offences done vpon the land as by the law of this Realm is accustomed And the trial of such offence or offences if it be denied by the offendor or offendors shal be had by xij lawfull men inhabited in the Shire limited in such commission which shall be directed as is aforesaid No challenge for the hūdred and no challenge to be had for the Hundred And such as shal be conuict of any such offence or offences by verdict confession or proces by authoritie of any such commission shall haue
Lord shall haue a Writ of Escheat and where he may enter 52 The forme of a Writ of Escheat 53 The kings remedy for lands escheated vnto him An office for those lands which doe escheat for Felony 54 The wiues forfeiture of title of Dower 55 What the appellee that wageth battell shall forfeit 56 A Rent-charge pro consilio not forfeited 57 The forfeitures of an outlaw Corruption of Blood Fol. 239. 1 Corruption of Blood salued by Parliament only 2 Where corruption of blood shall preiudice tenant by the courtesie 3 The eldest sonne attainted during his fathers life 4 Where attainder but no corruption of blood Restitution of stolne goods Fol. 240. 1 Restitution of goods vpon Fresh suit 2 What conuiction shal be sufficient to giue the owner restitution of his goods 3 Where the owner shall haue restitution 4 Before whom and by whom inquirie of Fresh suit is to bee made 5 Restitution vpon attainder by indictment Damages in Appeale Fol. 242. 1 The punishment of the appellant and the abettors when the appellee is acquit No Essoine for the appellant in an appeale of death 2 The appeale must bee commenced vpon malice 3 The statute of 13. Ed. 1. extendeth to all Felons 4 The defendant in an appeale acquited by battell 5 Where the accessarie in an Appeale shall recouer dammages 6 Where the defendant is said to acquit himselfe in due manner and where not 7 Acquitall at the Kings suit is only in appeale 8 What Iustices may inflict the penaltie vpon the Appellant 9 The dammages for seuerall persons assessed seuerally 10 Where the appellant shall pay a fine to the king 11 In what cases inquiry shall be made for the abettors 12 What pleas the abettors may plead 13 Proces against the abettors Nonsute in the proces against the abettors 14 A writ against the abettors by the appellee 15 Procurers of indictments for suits in spirituall courts A Writ of Conspiracie Fol. 245. 1 In what case a Writ of Conspiracie doth lye 2 Conspiracie maintenable vpon an acquitall in an indictment or appeale 3 The indictment must be false which giueth the Writ of Conspiracie 4 Conspiracie doubtfull whether true or false 5 The conspirators do become indictors A Iustice of Peace A giuer of Euidence 6 Who be conspirators 7 A Conspiracie must bee by more then one Where only one shal be charged in Conspiracie 8 No Writ of Conspiracie against the Husband and the Wife 9 The forme of the Writ of Conspiracie 10 The writ of Conspiracy for the accessarie 11 Barres in a writ of Conspiracie 12 Iudgement in Conspiracie A villanous iudgement 13 Inquiry of Conspiracie by Iustices 14 Inquiry of Conspirators at the kings or parties suit 15 Procurers of an indictment or an appeale in a forraine county 16 An offence supposed to bee done in a place where there is none such The Coroner and his authoritie and dutie in Felonies c. Fol. 249. 1 The office and duty of a Coroner 2 The Writ de Coronatore Eligendo 3 Who shall be Coroners and by whom they shal be chosen 4 Whether Coroners ought to be knights 5 Causes to remoue a Coroner 6 Where a Coroner shall haue fee and where not 7 What things Coroners shall inquire of 8 A Coroner shall execute his Office in his owne person A C●●oner shall see the dead body A body buried taken vp againe 9 A Coroner must presently doe his office 10 A Coroner shall onely enquire of the death of a man A man slaine in an arme of the Sea A Coroner concealing or not apprehending a Felon 11 The force of a Coroners Record Which Coroners Record shall be preferred Abiuring before the Coroner Confession of breaking of Prison before the Coroner 12 Who ought to appeare vpon the Coroners Inquisition 13 The Coronour with the Sherife may take Appeales 14 Stopping vp of a place of daunger by the Coroners commaundement 15 Where the presence of all the Coroners is requisite and where but some one of them 16 The Coroner must record the euidence and bind the party to giue it 17 Inquiry of a man slaine within the Kings House and Verge 18 One man Coroner of the Kinges House and the Countie Who shall be Judge in Treason and Felony Fol. 253. 1 The King ought not to bee iudge in Treason or Felony What men of condition Iudges ought to be 2 None shall make Iudges but the King 3 Iudges vpon the arraignement of the Peeres of the Realme 4 Iudges of offences that are done in the Kings Pallace 5 Iudges of Conspiracies made to destroy the King or any Lord c. 6 Iudges within the Verge 7 Iudges of Treason committed out of the Realme 8 Iustices of Gaole deliuerie Iudges in Felony 9 Iudges of Nisi prius Iudges in Felony c. 10 Speciall commissioners Iudges at the arraignement of a Murderer 11 Iudges of piracie or offences done vpon the sea 12 Iustices of Peace Iudges in Felony 13 The Lord of a Mannour Iudge in Felony Infangtheefe Outfangtheefe 14 A Felon first executed and then iudged FINIS
may make relation of those offences and of the whole circumstances thereof Confession before the Coroner 4 There is also a third kinde of confession made by an offendor in felonie which is not in Court before the Iudge as the other two be but before the Coroner in a church or priuiledged place whereupon the offendor by the antient Lawe of this Realme is to make his abiuration out of the Realme Of which approuing and abiuration I will write in the two next chapters Approuer AN Approuer is a felon that hath committed a felonie Who is an Approuer and after confesseth the same and then doth appeale and accuse others who were helpers or coadiutours with him to commit the same felonie which thing being done he is thereby called an Approuer who in latine is termed Probator for that he must prooue that which is contained in his appeale or accusation And the proofe must be by battell or by the verdict of twelue men at the choice of him who is appealed And if he doe prooue it the kings of this Realme haue vsed to graunt him pardon of his life Britton because he doth fight for the peace of the Realme and doth deliuer the countrie of malefactors for he is to make couenant or promise to the Iudge who will be sutor to obtaine his pardon how many offendors he will conuince and accordingly he is to vanquish them in battell attaint them by verdict or cause them to flée and so by that meanes to become outlawes But yet he shall be banished the Realme Bracton de coron̄ c. 34. and not continue therein An Approuer banished though he would finde pledges for his good abearing 19. H. 6. 47. 12. Ed. 4. 10 Fi. Cor. 231 387. 2 A man imprisoned for felonie may approue of treason if he will Of what offēces approuement may be and in like sort he that is imprisoned for treason may approue of felonie if he wil for when the Iustices doe admit him to approue they doe sweare him vpon a booke to approue of all felonies and treasons that he doth knowe And yet many doe affirme that approuement must be onely of the thing whereof the approuer is indicted Bracton de coron̄ c. 33. 25. Ed. 3. 39 and of none other and of that treason or felonie which he himselfe with others did commit and that approuement of all other offences is voide As if one will appeale an other for robbing of him viz. of the Approuer it is voide Or if one will appeale an other for procuring the saide approuer to commit a felonie Or that where he the saide Approuer had committed a felonie the appellée knowing thereof did feloniously receiue him and comfort him 10. E. 4. 14. 40. Ass p. 39 it is voide because those offences hée could not commit for he could not robbe himselfe nor be accessorie to himselfe Sed de hijs quaere Quaere Séeing the approuer is sworne to approue of all the felonies and treasons that he doth know Approuement in an Indictment and not Appeale 3 A man may approue in an indictment of felonie 11. H. 7. 5. Fi. Cor. 113 but not in an appeale of felonie for if he should approue in an appeale of felonie he should thereby delay the Plaintife in the appeale to haue execution of him And in like sort if one that is indicted of felonie doth become an approuer and after an appeale is sued against him vpon the same indictment Fi. Cor. 442 in this case he shall surcease to procéede any further in his approuement But vpon an indictment of felonie the prisoner which is arraigned may confesse the felonie pray a Coroner and so approue And though some haue thought that if a prisoner be not indicted but doth stand at the barre as one that is to be deliuered by Proclamation if he will refuse the benefit thereof confesse a felonie Fi. Cor. 231 and pray to become an approuer that he shall be thereunto receiued And some others haue béene of opinion that if a man be in prison but for suspition of felony he may confesse the felony before a Coroner and become an approuer But that cannot be by the Lawe for a man cannot be attainted by his confession if he be not indicted or appealed thereof before and it is alwaies requisite for him which shal become an approuer An Approuer must confesse the felonie that his confession be made vpon such matter vpon which the Iudge at all times at his pleasure may giue iudgement to attaint him Before whom one may approue 4 One may become an approuer before those who haue authoritie to assigne him a Coroner as the Iustices of the Kings Bench the Iustices in Eire and the Iustices of gaole deliuerie But so can not Iustices of Peace and therefore a man can not become approuer before them 2. H. 4. 19. 9. H. 4. 1. Neither can a man become an approuer in a Court Baron before the Steward and Sutors Nor in the Countie court before the Shirife and Suitors Nor before any other speciall Iudge vnlesse his Commission doth extend thereunto How an Approuer shall vse himselfe 5 He that will become an approuer must when he is at the barre before the Iudge confesse the felonie whereof he is arraigned and pray that a Coroner may be assigned vnto him to heare his approuement or appeale against others for without confession of the offence whereof he is arraigned Fi. Cor. 441 2. H. 7. 3. 21. Ed. 3. 18 19. H. 6. 47. Fi. Cor. 440 he cannot pray a Coroner No approuement after pleading And this confession must be at the beginning before hée hath pleaded any plea to the contrary therof For if he will pleade not guilty he cannot after waiue that plea and confesse the felonie and pray a Coroner And the reason is because it cannot be intended that hée will proue that which he hath affirmed against others when he hath shewed himselfe so false and vnconstant in his answer before for he is called an Approuer viz. Probator to the intent that he shall prooue that which he alleadgeth against others whereof there is small hope to be conceiued when in the beginning he hath made a lie of himselfe for if he will haue his approuement allowed for good An Approuer must tell truth he must alwaies be found to speake trueth without any lying And when the Court doth perceiue that he hath made a lie 25. Ed. 3. 42 they presently take his approuement from him and giue iudgement that he shall be hanged As an approuer did appeale diuers and the Shirife and Coroners did testifie that there were none such in that countie and without further inquirie the approuer was adiudged to be hanged And if vpon the appeale of an approuer 21. H. 6. 34 processe be awarded against those which he doth appeale and the Shirife returneth non sunt inuenti
excommunication in the plaintife 5 Who are mainpernable who not Bailement by the Shirife With-holding of Prisoners mainpernable 6 In what cases no mainprise by the common Law The King or Iustices commandement 7 The Marshall shall baile no prisoner The Iustices ordinarie or absolute commaundement 8 Mainprise for offendors in Vert or Venison 9 In what case hee that is outlawed may be bayled 10 Mainprise during an approuers life 11 Maineprise vpon good name The principall in Burglary and Robbery mainpernable 12 No bailement for a prisoner attainted 13 Bailement of offendors by Iustices of Peace 14 Bailement of offendors by the Shirife 15 Bailement by Shirifes and others 16 Imprisonment at the Kings pleasure 17 The difference betweene bailement in Felony and in a personall Action 18 Mainprise is matter of Record Confession of the offence Fol. 184. 1 An offendor in felony pleadeth one of three pleas 2 Confession of the offence before the Iudge vpon the prisoners arraignement may bee in two sorts Confession of the offence must be free and without menace 3 He that doth confesse his offence before the Iudge doth become an approuer 4 Confession of the offence before the Coroner whereupon abiuration doth ensue Approuer Fol. 185. 1 Who is an Approuer An Approuer shal be banished 2 Of what offences approuement may be 3 Approuement in an Indictment and not in an appeale 4 Before whom one may approue 5 How an Approuer shall vse himselfe No approuing after pleading An Approuer must tell truth 6 An Approuers oath 7 An Approuers wages 8 An Approuer set at liberty An Approuers appeale must be certaine 9 Proces against the appellees after the approuement 10 Pleas for the appellee against the approuer An Approuer attainted or conuict of Felony 11 An appellee cannot appeale others 12 An Approuer not in prison for felony or at liberty 13 The appellee an honest and credible man 14 Generall pleas in barre of the appeale 15 Where the king may pursue an Appeale begun 16 The appellants release to the appellee 17 An Approuer confesseth his Appeale to be false 18 An Appeale abating before declaration A Felon taken with the mannoure 19 No arraignment at the kings suit vpon a false declaration Where if not an appeale yet an Indictment may bee at the kings suit 20 The plaintife in the appeale excommunicat or outlawed 21 An Approuer pardoned the appellee shal be discharged 22 Vanquishing of one of the approuers 23 Examining of an offendor condemned Sanctuary and Abiuration Fol. 189. 1 What Sanctuarie is 2 What Abiuration is 3 All Sanctuaries be extinguished Abiuration by the common Law Abiuration to a place within the Realme 4 No abiuration for Treason 5 No abiuration for the robberie of a Church 6 No abiuration for a man attainted 7 No abiuration for a man before abiured 8 Where an offendor may bee drawne out of the Church by violence The offendors confession before the Coroner 9 Tarrying in a Church aboue the time limitted 10 The manner of Abiuration The oath of Abiuration 11 The attire of an abiured person 12 The vsing of persons abiured 13 The abiuration broken death ensueth A Clarke need not to abiure 14 Where no Felony no abiuration for Felony 15 The abiured pleadeth that he is not the same person The Kings pardon of Abiuration 16 Abiuration by a Recusant 17 Abiuration by a Popish Recusant 18 Abiuration by him that committeth Trespas Pleading not guilty Fol. 192. 1 The plea of not guilty the most common for a prisoner One may plead not guilty after other pleas 2 Where vpon the plea of not guilty counsel shal be allowed and where not Triall by Battaile Fol. 193. 1 Triall of not guilty by Battaile or by the Countrey 2 The forme of triall by Battaile 3 The reason why the defendant in an appeale may be tried by battaile 4 Counterpleas to the Battaile 5 Taken with the manoure 6 Breaking of prison 7 Le ts of triall by battell on the plaintifes part 8 Priuiledges of the appellants person The King A Citizen of London 9 No wager of battell in an appeale of Rape 10 One fighting with seuerall men 11 An Appeale by an approuer 12 The appellee wageth battell and then becommeth blind Triall by Peeres Fol. 196. 1 The triall of the plea of not guilty by Peeres 2 The forme of arraignement and triall of a Peere of this realme 3 By whom Peeres appealed shal be tried By whom Ladies shall be tryed 4 The triall of Bishops Arraignement and Tryall in Parliament 5 Triall of Treason committed in Ireland 6 Triall of Misprision of Treason The number of Peeres at the triall 7 Triall of Peeres by Peeres in all cases of Treason and Felonie Triall by the Countrey Fol. 198. 1 Triall of the plea of not guilty by the countrey 2 Triall by the country of forraine pleas A man stricken vpon the Sea dieth vpon the land 3 The Proces against the Iurie The Proces in an Appeale and not in an Indictment 4 Where a Nisi prius is grauntable in an Appeale 5 Remaunding of prisoners out of the Kings Bench into the Countrey 6 Triall of Felonies committed by English men in Scotland 7 The prosecutors and witnesses bound to giue euidence 8 The accessary tried though the principall be not 9 Euery Iuror must haue fiue pounds of freehold 10 The offendor shall forfeit no lands 11 A like Act made in Scotland 12 Scottishmen repairing into England to giue euidence shal be free from arresting 13 The offence shall be layed where it is done 14 Hee that is once tried shall not be eftsoones called into question 15 None shall bee sent out of England to receiue his tryall 16 The Iurors shall allow of or reiect the witnesses Challenge Fol. 201. 1 Where the prisoner is allowed to challenge peremptorily Seuerance in challenges 2 Which be challenges vpon cause for that hee was an indictor 3 Challenge for want of Medietatem linguae 4 Challenge for want of sufficient freehold 5 Challenge for the king 6 A man outlawed of Felony shall haue his challenge 7 A Iuror challenged for that he is an Alien a Villaine or Outlaw Euidence Fol. 204. 1 Some bound to giue euidence against an offendor let to baile 2 Some bound to giue euidēce against an offendor imprisoned 3 Restitution of goods vpon an attainder by euidence 4 Euidence giuen by a stranger 5 There must be two accusors to giue euidence in Treason 6 Euidence or accusors in high Treason 7 Euidence against abettors to offences 8 Euidence on the defendants part in Felony Verdict Fol. 206. 1 A Verdict at large may bee giuen in Felony 2 The Verdict sometime lesse penall then the Indictment 3 The Verdict sometime more penall then the Indictment 4 Where the Iury shal find who killed the dead man Clergy Fol. 207. 1 What Clergy is 2 Who shal not haue his clergy by the common Law 3 A committer of Sacriledge 4 The habite or tonsure of a Clerke 5 Clergie