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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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counterfeit money any such false and counterfeit coine of money being currant within this realme as is aforesaid knowing the same coine or mony to be false counterfeit to the intent to vtter or make paiment with the same within this realme or any the dominions of the same by marchandizing or otherwise then all euery such person or persons so offending as is aforesaid their counsellors procurers aiders and abettors in that behalfe shal be déemed and adiudged to be offendors in high Treason and shall suffer after lawfull conuiction or attainder thereof such paines of death losse and forf of lands goods and cattels as other offendors shall do in cases of high Treason And all euery person and persons By what euidence an offendor shal be indicted or attainted that shal be accused or impeached of any of the offences contained and prouided for in this stat or of any other offence or offences cōcerning the impairing coūterfeiting or forging of any coin currant within this realme shal and may be indicted conuicted or attainted by such like euidence in such manner and forme as hath béene vsed within this realme at any time before Anno 1. Ed. 6. Any Statute custome law c. notwithstanding 12 Because diuers false and euill disposed persons for wicked lucre gains sake did diminish impaire and falsifie the money and coynes currant within this Realme Clipping washing roūding or filing of money by clipping washing rounding and filing therof to the dishonor of the Quéene and losse of the subiects of this Realme for the remedy wherof by a stat made An. 5. El. it was enacted That clipping washing rounding St. 5. El. 11. or filing for wicked lucre or gaines sake of any the proper monies or coynes of this realme or the dominions therof or of the monies or coines of any other realme allowed and suffered to be currant within this realme or the dominions thereof at this present or that hereafter at any time shal be the lawful monies or coines of this realme or the dominions thereof or of any other realme and by proclamation allowed and suffered to bee currant here by the Qu. her heires or successors shal be taken and adiudged by vertue of this act to be treason and the offendors therein their counsellors consenters and aiders shal be taken déemed and adiudged as offendors in Treason and being thereof lawfully conuicted or attainted according to the due order of the law shall suffer death and lose forf all his and their goods and cattels and also shall lose and forf all his and their lands and tenements during his and their naturall life or liues onely To whom the forfeiture shall accrue And euery person which hath any lawfull grant to haue and enioy the forf of lands goods or cattels of offendors and men attainted of high treason within any Manor Lordship Towne Parish Hundred or other precinct within this realme of England or Wales shall may at all times hereafter haue like libertie to take seise enioy all such forf of lands tenements goods and cattels as shall come or grow within their liberties by force of the attainder of any person or persons for vpon any offence and offences made treason by this act as they or any of them should ought or might by vertue of any good and lawfull grant to them or any of them heretofore had or made Prouided alwayes No corruptiō of blood or forf of dower and be it enacted That this act nor any attainder or attainders of any person or persons for any offence or offences made treason by this act shall extend or be expounded to make any corruption of blood to any the heire or heirs of any such offendor or offendors or to make the wife of any such offendor to lose or forf her dower of or in any lands tenements or hereditaments or her title action or interest in the same Any thing in this act contained or attainder c. notwithstanding Tryall of a Peere If any of the Lords of the Parliament or Péere of the realme shal be indicted of any offence made treason by this act then they shall haue their triall by their Péeres as heretofore hath béene vsed in cases of High Treason By a stat made An. 3. H. 5. it was ordained That clipping St. 3. H. 5. 6 washing or filing of the money of the land shold be adiudged treason but that stat was repealed by the before rehearsed stat of An. 1. M. as is aforesaid 13 For that diuers euill disposed persons knowing that the said act of an 5. El. 11. being penall ought to be expounded strictly according to the words therof the like offences not by any equitie to receiue the like punishment did sithence the making of the said stat practise for gaines sake other vndue means to falsifie impaire diminish and lighten as wel the proper mony of this realm as also of other realms Diminishing scaling or lightning of money allowed to be currant within this realm and the dominions thereof by the Qu. proclamation to the great losse and deceit of the Q. and her subiects for the redresse whereof by a Statute made Anno 18. St. 18. El. 1. Eliz. it was established That if any person or persons shall for wicked lucre or gaines sake by any act waies or means whatsoeuer impaire diminish falsifie scale or lighten the proper monies or coynes of this Realme or any the Dominions thereof or the monies or coines of any other Realmes allowed and suffered to bée currant at the time of the offence committed within this Realme of England or any the Dominions of the same by the proclamation of the Qu. her heires or successors it shall be taken déemed and adiudged to be Treason and the offendors therein their counsellors consentors and aydors shall bee likewise déemed and adiudged as offendors in treason and being thereof lawfully conuict or attainted according to the due course of the laws of this realm shall suffer death lose and forf all their goods and cattels to the Quéene her heires and successors and shall lose and forfeit to the Quéene her heires and successors all their lands tenements and hereditaments during his or their naturall life or liues onely Prouided alwayes that this Act No corruptiō of blood nor forf of dower nor any attainder or attainders for any offence or offences made treason by this Act shall in any wise extend or be iudged or expounded to make any corruption of blood to any the heire or heires of such offendor or offendors or to make the wise of any such offendor to lose or forfeit the dower of or in any lands tenements or hereditaments or her title action or interest to the same Any thing in this Act contained or any attainder hereafter to be had c. notwithstanding If any Lord of the Parliament or Péere of this Realme Tryall of a Peere shal
same in a writ of Maintenance brought against him but he cannot retaine or intreat a man learned in the law to be of counsell with the principall partie nor meddle further in that cause than to sée the mainprise performed and himselfe discharged Maintenance in respect of his interest in the land 24 Euerie person that hath any interest in land may meddle and maintain him who is impleaded for the same land and not bee punished therefore in a writ of Maintenance As if tenant for terme of life or in taile of land bée impleaded for the same land or any part thereof Bro. Maint 53. he in the reuersion or remainder thereof may at his owne charges maintaine him in that suit for the safegard of his owne estate for it is in a sort his owne case and the defence of it is to his owne benefit and the euiction to his owne disheritance But this maintenance must be after tenant for terme of life hath atturned vnto him in the reuersion for i● he maintaine the suit before it is punishable in him 9. H. 6. 64. And so it is if a man being seised of land hath issue a daughter who is maried to another if the father in law be impleaded of that land in a reall action the sonne in law may maintaine him at his owne charges for that by possibilitie that land may after the decease of his father in law descend to his wife and so come to him in her right But if the daughter dye without issue of her bodie begotten by the said husband before the said suit commenced 14. H. 7. 2. 6. E. 4. 5. 19. E. 4. 3. then the sonne in law cannot maintaine the father in law in that suit Neither can hee maintaine him during the life of his wife if an action of Debt couenant account or any other personall action be brought against him for he is neither to take benefit or losse by any of those suits 6. E. 4. 2. 39. H. 6. 20. And if a man seised of land make a lease for certaine yeares of the same and after a suit is commenced betwéene the said lessée for yeares and a stranger touching the same land or any part thereof the lessor may giue euidence for the lessée vpon the triall of the cause in question or otherwise may maintaine him in that suit at his owne charges for it tendeth to his owne priuat benefit or losse And in some case a man may maintaine a suit lawfully though he be neither heire to the land nor in possession reuersion Maintenance in respect of his possibilitie or remainder thereof As if a man being seised of land 9. H. 6. 64. doe make a lease thereof to another for the terme of the life of the lessee and after doth grant to a straunger that if the said tenant for terme of life doe dye during the same lessors life that then the same stranger shall haue and enioy the same land for the terme of xx yeares after the death of the same tenant for life if in this case the tenant for life be impleaded for this land the same stranger may maintaine him for the sauing of his owne estate for yeares and yet he hath no certaintie but a possibilitie of a terme for yeares which peraduenture will neuer chance And likewise in some other case a man may maintaine a suit lawfully though he be neither in possession reuersion remainder or possibilitie of the thing in question Maintenance in respect of his warranty As if a man be seised of a rent going out of another persons land 11. H. 6. 49. to him and to his heires and by his déed doth graunt the same to another and to his heirs with clause of warrantie and the tenant of the land out of the which this rent is issuing doth atturne to the grauntée of this rent if after the grauntée be impleaded of this rent vpon tryall of the issue the grantor may come into the Court and shew to the Iurors such euidence as he hath to prooue the title of this rent and it is lawfull maintenance and not punishable in him though he was neither called into the Court by voucher to warrantie or by Warrantia Chartae And so might he haue done if he had beene called to warrantie by any of the meanes aforesaid vpon a warrantie made of land or rent for it is to preserue himselfe out of daunger and from recompencing in value of that whereof before he had made warrantie 25 As it is in lands and leases so is it in rents goods and debts Maintenance in respect of his rent for euerie person that hath interest in them may meddle and maintaine and defend him who is impleaded or prosecuted by suit or doth implead or prosecute by suit any other for any matter or cause concerning him or whereupon hee doth depend so that the same suit doth tend to impeach preiudice or trouble his estate therein or may redound to his benefit or profit or may be a meane thereof 9. H. 6. 64. As if a man haue a rent charge in fée out of certaine lands and another man hath in custodie a boxe of writings concerning the same rent and after hée that hath the rent doth graunt it to a stranger and his heires to the which graunt the tenant of the land charged doth atturne and moreouer the grantor of that rent charge doth graunt to the assignee of the same that if he can recouer the same boxe of writings that then the same assignee shall haue them If after this graunt the grauntor doth pursue a writ of Detinue against him that hath the custodie of this boxe of writings he to whom the same rēt charge was graunted may lawfully maintaine him in that suit for that by promise he is to haue the same boxe of writings if it be recouered for the preseruation of his estate in the said rent charge 11. H. 6. 47. And a Lord may maintaine his tenant if he be impleaded for his freehold A Lord may maintaine his tenant in respect of his rent and seruices that he is to receiue and haue of him And so it was before the Statute of Vses made anno 27. H. 8. if a man had made a feoffement of land to others to his owne vse the feoffor might maintaine the freehold tenant which held of his feoffees in respect of the vse which he hath in the rent and seruice of that tenant 15. H. 7. 2. 26 And the same law is touching debt As if A. do owe vnto B. xx l. and C. doe owe to A. xx l. due by Obligation Maintenance in respect of debt and A. will deliuer vnto B. the same Obligation in satisfaction of the xx l. which he doth owe him In this case B. may sue an Action of Debt vpon this Obligation against C. in the name of A. and retaine an Attourney and learned counsell and pursue and
their owne vse and in the said Lands and Tenements did commit wast and destruction to the disheritance of them in the reuersion For the restraint and punishment of which said offence being both an oppression and also a fraud and deceit St. 11. H. 6. 5 Fit N.B. 59 by a Statute made Anno 11. H. 6. it was ordayned That they in the reuersion in such case may haue and maintaine a writ of Wast against the said Tenants for terme of life anothers life A termor alieneth his estate occupieth the land cōmitteth wast or for yeares and so recouer against them the place wasted and their treble dammages for the wast so by them done as they ought to haue done for the wast done by them before the said Graunt and Lease of their estate Prouided That this Ordinance shall not hold place but where the first Tenants before the Graunt and Lease of their estates in the manner and forme abouesaid were punishable of wast and also where after the said Graunt and Lease the said first Tenants of the said Landes and Tenements do take the profits at the time of the wast done to their owne proper vse And though the wordes of the said Statute doe giue an action of Wast in the case aforesaid but onely to him in the reuersion Co. li. 5. 77. yet he in the remainder also being in the like mischiefe shall or may take the benefit thereof and maintaine an action of Wast in this case against his particular Tenant for life or yeares if eyther of them doe commit wast to his disheritance And whatsoeuer the intent of the Grauntor is in the case aforesaid yet if the Grauntée doe assigne his Lease take the profits thereof and commit Wast he is punishable according to the sayd Statute for his intent shall not be issuable nam exitus acta probat viz. the taking of the profites doe sufficiently expresse his intent and euery assignée of the first Tenant mediat or immediat is within the compasse of this Statute for the Statute was made to suppresse Fraud Wast and Oppression And so was the Statute of Westminster the second béeing made and prouided to restraine Wast and Oppression committed by one Tenant in common to the preiudice and disheritance of another by which it was ordayned St. 13. E. 1. 22 That whereas two or more doe hold Wood Wast cōmitted by a tenant in common Turbarie Fishing or such like things in common wherein none knoweth his owne seuerall and one of them doth commit Wast against the will of the other an action of Wast may lye and when it is come vnto iudgement the defendant shall chuse eyther to take his part in a place certaine by the assignement of the Shirife and by the view and oath of his neighbours sworne and tryed for the same intent or els he shall grant to take nothing from thenceforth in the same Wood 3. E. 1. Wast 25. 50. Ed. 3. 3. Turbarie and such other but as his parteners will take And if he doe chuse to take his part in a place certaine the place wasted shall be assigned for his part according as it was before he committed the Wast And because the before rehearsed statute of Marlebridge doth expresse in generall termes in what thinges Wast may be committed as in Houses Woods and Men and the words of the writ of Wast in the Register be Quare fecit vastum venditionem seu destructionem de terris domibus Boscis Gardinis and the foresaid Statutes of Anno 6. Edw. 1. 13. Edw. 1. and 11. H. 6. doe declare who are forbidden to doe that Wast and séeing Wast in Lands Houses Woods or c. is a great wrong and oppression to him or them in reuersion or remainder of the same therefore I will somewhat particularly explaine which the Law doth construe and expound to be Wasts prohibited and punishable by the foresaid Statutes or either of them to the intent that both he that hath the inheritance and also the particular Tenant may know what is due to either of them in respect of their seuerall estates and what to take and what to leaue And to begin with the words of the Writ touching Wast in Land Wast in land If one person doe demise or conuey to another for the terme of yeares life or c. Land 22. H. 6. 18 2. H. 7. 14 17. E. 3. 7. 9. Ed. 4. 35. Co. li. 5. 11. Fit Nat. Br. 149. Lib. in t 6●6 where there is included in the bowels of the earth Tynne Yron Lead Coale Stone Grauell Morter Sand Chalke or Marle if the Myne or Pit thereof be not open when the Lessées estate or terme doth begin the said Tenant may not open the ground make a new Myne and take the same Coale Stone Grauell or c. for if he doe it is Wast of the land and he in the reuersion or remainder may punish him therefore by an action of Wast For whereas there was assured to the Tenant but Vesturam terrae and the annuall profit of the Land hée hath digged and carried away the Land it selfe and impaired the inheritance thereof for euer But if there bée a Myne or Pit open in any part of the ground so demised or assured at the time of the Lease or assurance thereof or at the time when the estate of the Tenant did begin then the Tenant may digge there and take and carry away so much of the Coale Stone Grauell as shall be necessarily vsed or imployed for or towards the repaire or maintenance of the House Land or other commodities therewith demised and it is no Wast But if he do giue sell 41. E. 3. Wast 82. or otherwise dispose the same to any other person place or vse sauing as is aforesaid then for so much as he shall so mis-imploy it is Wast If one person doe lease or assure his Land to another and all the Mynes or Pits therein for yeares life Co. li. 5. 11. or c. the Lessée may open and digge the ground for Coale Morter Stone c. and take and carry away the same though there was not any Myne open at the time of the Lease or estate made For by the assurance it doth appeare that the Lessor was contented that wast should be made in any part of the ground leased by myning or digging and in this case the Lessée may sell or otherwise dispose the same Coale Stone Marle or c. at his pleasure 17. Ed. 3. 7 for it is as much as if the Lease or assurance had béene made to the Tenant without impeachment of any manner of Wast to be committed by Mynes Pits or diggings If the Tenant for yeares life or c. doe eyre plough vp and conuert into Tillage or Wood ground an auncient and vsuall m●wen Meddow it is Wast and so it is 15. H. 3. Wast 131. 46. Ed. 3. Wast 91. if he doe drowne or
who was accessarie before the birth of the childe and the murder done was adiudged to continue accessarie after the murder done and to suffer death without the benefit of his Clergie Fitz. Cor. 383 30 If a man intending the death of another Meaning without act is not homicide doth beate him so gréeuously that he doth leaue him by all the beholders iudgement thought to be dead and then doth flie away and after the other doth reuiue and liue this is not felony in him that did that violence though it doth plainely appeare that hée had a meaning to kill him for it is not felony except the partie stricken be indéede killed and die within a yéere and a day after the stripes giuen But on the other side if one man doe strike another with intent onely to beate him yet if hée die of this battery within a yeare and a day after it is felonie in him that did strike him For though as Bracton affirmeth Act without meaning is homicide the old Lawe of this Realme did hold Quod in maleficijs spectatur voluntas non exitus nihil interest vtrùm quis occidat an causam mortis praebeat But now we say Lex antiqua mutatur and doe affirme Quod exitus in maleficijs spectatur non voluntas duntaxat Co. l. 4. 40. 31 A man brought drinke to another that was mingled with poison Homicide by giuing poisoned drinke to another and aduised him to drinke it telling him that it would be a meane to procure him to get a childe of his wife by reason of which perswasion he to whom that poisoned drinke was brought did receiue it after drunke it in the absence of him who brought it vnto him and shortly after died In this case hee that brought the drinke was adiudged a principall murderer though he was not present at the time of the receipt of the drinke or otherwise he shoulde haue beene guiltie of that horrible offence and yet haue escaped vnpunished for there was none in this case to whom hee could be accessarie And so note this for a speciall case where a felonie is committed and neither principall nor accessarie be present at it Many doe attempt an vnlawfull acte and one of them committeth homicide 32 If seuerall persons assemble together to doe a disseisin Fitz. Cor. 350. 11. H. 4. 13. to breake a house or commit any vnlawfull act and of them killeth a man he and all the other shal be adiudged principall fellons because they all came to doe an euill acte though not that act As if they all had come to haue killed or robbed one man and after they killed or robbed an other Homicide by carying abroad 33 A man was indicted that he did feloniously carry his owne father being sicke against his will in a frostie and colde time from one towne to an other whereof he died and this was adiudged felony in him 2. Ed. 3. 18 for in this case the sonne had a meaning that his fathers life should be shortened and he brought to his death A man dieth in the hands of a Phisition or Surgion 34 If a phisition ar surgion hath a man in his cure Fit cor 163 who dieth being in his cure or at any time after this is not felony in the same phisition or surgion bicause he did not any thing to his patient with a felonious intent but against his will And moreouer it is not to be discerned whether the man came to his death by any willfull default in the said Phisition or Surgion or by his former infirmitie or other cause Homicide vpon the euill wordes of an other 35 Anno. 3. Ed. 3. Itin. North Fit cor 331 it was presented that through the euill wordes of a woman two men did fall out and fought and one of them killed an other and this was adiudged felony in the woman But it must be intended that the woman by her words did perswade councell or aduise them or one of them to fight with the other and so was accessarie before the felonie committed Homicide by a franticke man 36 A man that is franticke though he kill an other man M. 21. H. 7. 13. Fitz. forf 33 Fi. Dower 183. Fitz. N. b. 202. d Fitz. cor 193 351. Co. l. 4. 42 26. Ass p. 27 Plow com 19. Co. l. 4. 125 cannot commit murder for he hath not a felonious intent nor doth carrie within him malice prepenced to any neyther doth know what he doth And therefore he is not to be arraigned for the killing of a man in his Lunacie though after hee doth recouer his memorie neither shall he be inforced to sue for his pardon And the same law is of a man that is deafe and dumbe who can not commit murder for he hath not a felonious intent neither doth he know what hee doth And therefore if he kill a man he shall not be arraigned thereof nor driuen to sue for his pardon But if a man that is drunke doe in his drunkennes kill an other man it is felony and he shal be hanged therefore for it is voluntarie ignorance in him to be drunke Homicide by an Infant 37 An Infant of the age of twelue yeares 3. H. 7. 2. 12. 12. Aff. p. 30 or aboue may commit murder and so may an Infant of the age of eight or nine yeares if it may appeare by hiding of the person slaine or by any other act that the aboundance of his malice doth excéede the tendernes of his yéeres But if an enfant of tender and yonger yéeres doe kill a man this is no felonie because he wanteth discretion and vnderstanding Pl. com 19. and the Lawe will impute it to the ignorance which commeth to him by nature Fit cor 311. 38 If a man hath a beast that is accustomed to doe hurt Homicide by a beast and the owner knowing thereof doth not tie him or otherwise kéepe him fast shut vp but suffer him to goe at libertie and after that beast killeth a man this is felony in the owner for by his sufferance of the beast to goe at libertie the owner doth seeme to haue a will to kill or that hée vsed this beast as an instrument wherewith to kill And this was a Lawe ordained by Alured Alured king of the West Saxons Fit cor 263 22. Ass p. 94 39 To make it Homicide it is requisite that the partie killed be in Esse In homicide the party killed must be in Esse viz. in rerum natura for if a man kill an infant in his mothers wombe this is no felonie neither shall he forfeit any thing for it and that for two causes the one because the thing had no name of Baptisme the other for that it is hard to iudge if the infant died of that batterie or not or vpon some other cause Wherefore a man being indicted in
and vnlawfull assemblies St. 1. M. 12. St. 1. El. 16. Anno 1. M. 12. S. Felonies by statute 31. 22 If an offence be made felonie by statute Accessorie to offences made felony by stat although the same statute doth not expresly make mention of abettors procurers councellors and receiuers yet they shall be taken within the compasse of the same statute as the consenter and aider to the counterfeiting of the great Seale priuie Seale or the Kings money 19. H. 8. 47. St. 25. E. 3. 2 is Treason and yet the words of the statute bée If any doe counterfeit c. which the other doth not because hee was but consenting and ayding thereunto St. 13. E. 1. 34. 11. H. 4. 13. Fitz. Cor. 228. Br. Appeale 32 23 In Rape Rape if one doe commit the fact and another doth ayde and assist him therein hee is thereby a rauisher as well as his companion which committed the Rape and yet the words of the statute of Westminst 2. be If a man doe rauish a woman for the assistant was the cause of the offence without whom peraduenture the Rape had not béen done And he is principal because hée was present when the fact was done and therefore as much guiltie as hée which did the fact And yet in the foresayd case if two bée indicted for committing of a Rape one for doing the fact and the other for ayding and assisting him whereby they both be principals if hée that was indicted for ayding and assisting bée first arraigned and by one Enquest found guiltie Plo. Com. 97. and after he that was indicted for doing the act is arraigned and by another Enquest is acquite In this case iudgement shall not bée giuen against him who was found guiltie of ayding and assisting because he cannot be guiltie but in respect that the principall actor was guiltie and hée beeing found not guiltie of doing the fact the other could not be ayding and assisting to a thing which was not done And séeing both the verdicts cannot bée true but one of them must néeds be false the Iudges ought to giue more credit to the verdict which acquited him who was charged with doing of the fact than to the other For the Enquest which acquited him that was charged with the fact was charged vpon the principall poynt viz. if the supposed rauisher committed the rape or not and the other Enquest was not so fully charged vpon the principall poynt but onely whether hée that was indicted of ayding and assisting bee guiltie of the Felonie whereof hée is impeached viz. of the ayding and assisting Imbeciling of Records 24 By the Statute of Anno 8. H. 6. 12. St. 8. H. 6. 12 it was ordained That if any record or parcell of the same writ returne panell proces or warrant of Atturney in the Chauncerie c. bée willingly stolne taken away withdrawne or auoyded by any Clerke c. such stealer taker away withdrawer and auoyder their procurers counsellors and abettors béeing thereof indicted c. shal be adiudged felons S. Felonies by statute 16. Rebellious assemblies 25 By the stat of an 1. M. 12. 1. El. 16. St. 1. M. 12. St. 1. El. 16. it is enacted That if any wife or seruāt of any of the persons being in rebellious manner vnlawfully assembled contrarie to the ordinance of the same statute or any other person whatsoeuer shall willingly and without compulsion bring send deliuer or conuey any money harneyes artillerie weapon meat drinke or other victual to any person or perfons so béeing assembled during such time as hée or they shal be so assembled or be together then euery wife seruant or other person so bringing or conueying any of the foresaid things to the same persons so being assembled together in forcible manner or to any of them and not departing to their houses vpon request or commaundement made shal be adiudged Felons But no person shal be put to any losse forfeiture paine or punishment of life lands or goods as accessorie to any person or persons that shall commit any of the offences contained in this Act for receiuing comforting or aiding of any such offendor after such act committed or done S. Felonies by Statute 31. Riots c. Coniuration 26 By the stat of An. 1. Iac. St. 1. Iac. 12 it was ordained That if any person or persons shal vse practise or exercise any inuocation or coniuratiō of any euil or wicked spirit c. then euery offendor or offendors their aiders abettors and counsellors being of any of the sayd offences lawfully conuicted and attainted shall suffer paines of death as a felon or felons without benefit of Clergie or Sanctuarie S. Felonies by Stat. 29. 27 By the Statute of An̄ 3. H. 7. 2. St. 3. H. 7. 2 it was prouided That if any person shal take any maid widow or wife which hath lands or goods or is heire apparant to her ancestor against her will vnlawfully such taking procuring and abetting to the same and also receiuing wittingly the same woman so taken against her will Taking a woman against her will and knowing the same shall be felonie And such misdoers takers and procurers to the same and receiuers knowing the saide offence in forme aforesaide shall be reputed and iudged as principall felons S. Fel. by Stat. 5. Br. 23 24 25 26 27. 28 Note that in all the Cases aforesaid touching offences made felonie by Statute the aidors abettors and councellers be made principalles Aydors c. be principals by the speciall wordes of the same Statutes and not accessories to the same felonies 27. Ass p. 10 8. H. 5. 6 2. Ed. 3. 26 Bro. Coro 185. 29 If one be acquited of the principall act hée is acquited of all offences committed as accessorie Acquitall of the principall is acquitall of accessorie before the doing of the principall fact but not of offences committed as accessorie after the principall fact A man being indicted as accessorie in murder was acquite by verdict and after hee was indicted as principall of the same murder and was found guiltie and hanged for though it concerned the same murder yet it was not the same offence wherof he was first arraigned Co. l. 4.43 30 A. brought an appeale of the murder of B. his brother against C. Principall and accessorie in manslaughter as principall and D. as accessorie before the murder committed and E. as accessorie after the murder C. the principall pleaded not guiltie and by the Iurie was found guiltie of manslaughter but not of murder and then praied and had his Cleargie In this case D. which was charged as accessory before the offence committed was discharged because he cannot be charged as accessorie before the act of manslaughter committed for manslaughter doth follow vppon a sodaine debate or fray for if it be premeditate it is murder And because C. the principall had his Cleargie
the sayd auntient law for they would not deliuer the prisoner vnto the Ordinarie vntill hée was indicted and also arraigned and that it was enquired by an Enquest of Office whether hée were guiltie or not In which case if he were found not guiltie they would discharge him and if he were found guiltie his goods should bée forfeited his lands taken into the Kings hands and his bodie deliuered to the Ordinarie And the cause of chaunging this law was that the Ordinarie might take greater charge of the prisoner being now indicted than before and to benefit the King by the forfeiture of the prisoners goods and to bréed a greater feare in Clerkes after that they should not offend Which alteration was obserued for law vntill the raigne of King Henry the sixt at which time the Iudges would not admit a prisoner to demaund his Clergie vpon his arraignment but put himselfe first to answer to the Felonie and if hée were found guiltie of the Felonie at his owne suit then to heare him demaund his Clergie and not before 3. H. 7. 1. 12. which is a more reasonable law than the former for before hee should haue forfeited his goods vpon an Enquest of Office whereunto hée could haue no challenge and now he shal be tryed at his owne suit and shall haue his challenge to the Enquest and then if he be found guiltie hée shall forfeit his goods and for the sauing of his life and his lands hée is to pray his Clergie Which hath bin vsed euer sithence and is obserued for law at this time vnlesse the prisoner himselfe will refuse the benefit thereof and pray to haue his booke without hearing the verdict As if a prisoner after an Enquest is charged vpon him Clergy demanded before verdict and before their returne againe will say that he is a Clerke and desire his booke at his perill in this case the Court hath allowed him his Clergie and yet after hath receiued a verdict as well in fauour of life as in fauour of the King for if he be found not guiltie the prisoner shall be discharged and if he bée found guiltie the King shall haue his goods as forfeit And the request of his booke in that case is more for the prisoners disaduantage than the Kings for it may bée a meane that the Iurie vnderstanding thereof will the rather find him guiltie of the felonie than otherwise they would haue done 26. Ass p. 19 33 If a prisoner doe say that hée is no Clerke Denying to be a Clerke and yet is yet after if before iudgement hée doe pray his Clergie where Clergie is allowable by the law and then doth read as a Clerke hée shall haue his Clergie notwithstanding his former words But it hath béene a question Whether clergie is allowable without request whether the Iudges ought to allow any man his Clergie without praying of it though the offendor be indicted by the name of Priest Fi. Cor. 254 Clerke c. or that by some other meanes the Iudges themselues doe know that hée is a Clerke or that without praying of his Clergie they shall giue iudgement of death against him And in this case some doe affirme that if the prisoner doth not pray his Clergie hée shall not haue it though the Iudge doth vpon his owne priuat knowledge vnderstand that hée is a Clerke for the Iudge must in those cases procéed according to his iudiciall knowledge and as by record things bée found proued and tryed before him and not according to his owne naturall knowledge And they bée the rather so induced to thinke by the words of the aforesayd statute of 1. Edw. 6. St. 1. E. 6. 12 which ordayned That a Péere of the Realme shall vpon request haue the benefit of his Clergie and so inferre that without request he shall not haue it nor any other without request which is to haue it vpon request 34 The temporall Court shall be Iudge to allow or disallow of Clergy Who shall allow of clergy and not the Ordinary 15. H. 7. 9. for it was entred into the roll of the court legit vt Clericus ideo tradatur Ordinario by which words it doth appear that the court doth giue allowance therof for the felony being the act which is cōmitted is temporal and the Iudge which did commit him to the Ordinary is temporal so is the authority wherby he did commit him And the Ordinary should haue bin punished if before the stat of 18. Eli. St. 18. El. 6. he had letten to baile or at liberty any prisoner cōmitted to him or if he had imprisoned him too straitly or too easily or would not haue suffered him to haue made his purgation and in that case the king might haue sent his Writ vnto the Ordinarie commaunding him to suffer his prisoner to make his purgation or might haue pardoned him or set him at liberty Fitz. Cor. 44. 17 without making his purgation and if one read as a Clerke and yet the Ordinarie will refuse him notwithstanding hee shall haue the benefite of his Clergie and on the other side if the Ordinarie will say that hee doth read as a Clerke whereas in truth hee doth not read as a Clerke the Court must giue iudgement that hée shall bee hanged and cause execution to bee done of him And further to prooue that the Temporall Court is Iudge of the reading the Court doth appoint the verse or place to the prisoner to read and not the Ordinarie And also doth set a fine vpon the Ordinary 34. H. 6. 49. 21. Ed. 4. 21. 9. E. 4. 28. for saying that the prisoner doth read as a Clerk where he doth not which the court could not do if the reading were referred to the Ordinarie A felon doth read vnder the gallowes 35 If a felon doth not read as a Clerke before the Iudge at the time of his arraignment whereupon he is adiudged to be hanged yet in fauor of life 34. H. 6. 49. if hée arraignment whereupon he is adiudged to be hanged yet in fauor of life if hée do demand it at another time vnder the gallows if any of the Iudges do passe that way and doth read as a Clerke he shall haue the benefit of his Clergie although there be no Ordinary there to demaund him But this is in case where the felon is arraigned and iudged before the Iust of the K. Bench 3. 4. El. Dy. fo 205. or else in case where he is arraigned and iudged before the Iust of gaole deliucrie and it is entred by the Court non legit vt Clericus and then for some cause he is repried vntill the next Session and then againe he is demanded if he can read and then he can and doth read in this case he shall haue his Clergy in fauor of life And though he was taught to read in the gaole this shall saue his life but the
of treason or felonie which graunting of Pardon is one of the most ancient and honourable prerogatiues that is annexed to the Imperiall Crowne of this Realme being an authoritie in a sort to reuiue a dead man and to continue him in life whom the Lawe adiudged to die And it is only granted vpon a good hope that the king hath of the amendment of the life of that subiect who hath offended his lawes and whose crime his owne conscience doth assure him that he may pardon notwithstanding his othe taken at his coronation which othe is that he will to the vttermost of his power cause equall and right iustice to be done in all iudgements and discretion in mercy and truth for as Bracton Bracton saith The King at his coronation The Kings oath at his coronation by an oathe taken in the name of Iesus Christ the sonne of God ought to promise his subiects thrée things The first that he will commaund and doe his whole indeuour during his raigne that true peace may be performed to the Church of God and all his people The second that he will by all meanes restraine euery kind of rapine and oppression The third that in all Iudgements he will commaund iustice and mercie to be obserued that by his mercifull dealing with others the God of mercie may take commiseration vpon him and that by his iustice all his people may enioy peace 2 Because authoritie to remitt and pardon Treasons Murders Manslaughters and other felonies with diuers others of the most ancient prerogatiues and authorities of Iustice appertaining to the imperiall Crowne of this Realme were seuered and taken from the saide Crowne by sundrie gifts of the Kings of this Realme to the great diminution and detriment of the royall estate of the same and to the hindrance and delay of iustifie For reformation whereof by a statute made Anno 27. H. 8. St. 27. H. 8. 25. it was enacted That no person or persons of what estate or degree soeuer they be shall haue anie power or authoritie to pardon or remit any treasons None but the king shal pardon treasons felonies c. murders manslaughters or felonies whatsoeuer they be nor any accessories to any treasons murders manslaughters or felonies or any outlawries for any such offences aforesaid committed done or diuulged by or against any person or persons in any parts of this Realme or Wales or the Marches of the same But that the King his heires and successors kings of this Realme shall haue the whole and sole power and authoritie thereof vnited and knit to the imperiall crowne of this realme as of good right and equitie it appertaineth any graunts vsages Acts of parliament or any other thing to the contrary notwithstanding 3 But because the Kings of this Realme haue not had that circumspection in graunting of pardons which Bracton doth thinke fit and haue béene many times deceiued in their grants by false suggestions and for that offendors in times past were greatly encouraged and lesse feared to offend in respect that pardons of manslaughters robberies felonies and other trespasses against the Peace were so easily graunted For the redresse whereof by a statute made Anno 2. Ed. 3. St. 2. Ed. 3. 2 it was ordained In which cases onely the K. may grant pardon of felonie c. That no such charters should be graunted but where the King may doe it by his oathe that is to say in case where a man doth kill an other in his owne defence or by misfortune which laide Statute was after rehearsed and confirmed by an other Statute made Anno 4. Ed. 3. St. 4. E. 3. 13 And also by another Statute made Anno 14. Ed. 3. St. 14. Ed. 3. 10. the effect of the same was rehearsed and confirmed and it was moreouer ordained That if any charter of pardon were from thenceforth graunted contrarie to the purport of the said Statutes that then the same should be accompted as voide 4 And though there be wordes large enough in the foresaide Statutes to make frustrate all those charters of pardon which be graunted against the forme of the same Statutes Non obstante in a pardon yet by putting into the Charters of pardon these wordes viz. Non obstante aliquo statuto actu ordinatione in contrarium edito the force of those Statutes be cleane taken away and not onely of those but also of all other in which this clause of Non obstante is inserted for it is a dispensation of the Statute and commonly put in euerie Letters patents But because the Kings of this Realme were oft times deceiued in granting of charters of pardon by the false and vntrue suggestion of others Therefore to auoide those abuses by a Statute made Anno 27. Ed. 3. St. 27. E. 3. 2 it was accorded That in euery charter of pardon of felonie The suggestion comprised in the pardon which shall be graunted at the suggestion of any person the suggestion and the name of him that maketh it shall be comprised in the same charter And if after the suggestion be found vntrue the Charter shall be disallowed and accounted nothing worth And the Iustices before whom such Charters shall be alleaged shall enquire of the same suggestions and if they finde them vntrue they shall disallow the Charters and procéede further as the Lawe requireth 5 Because the Commons did complaine in Parliament of the outrages mischiefes and dammages which did come to the Realme by treasons murders rauishments of women commonly done committed and the rather for that charters of pardon were too easily granted thereof and did desire the King that such charters of pardon might no more be granted in those Cases Whereunto the K. did answer that he would yéeld to their petition sauing the prerogatiue and regal authority which his progenitors before that time had And to the intent that the King would be certainely informed before of what offences he did graunt pardon Therefore by a Statute made Anno 13. R. 2. St. 13. R. 1. 1 Stat. 2. the King did graunt with the assent of the Parliament That no Charter of pardon shall be allowed before any Iustice for murder The offences shall be specified in the pardon for the death of a man slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed treason or rape of a woman vnlesse the same murder death of a man slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed treason or rape of a woman be specified in the same Charter And if a Charter of the death of a man be alleadged before any Iustice in which Charter it is not specified that hée of whose death any such is arraigned was murdered or slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed the same Iustices shall enquire by a good Enquest of the visne where the dead was slaine if hée were murdered or slaine by awaite assault or malice prepensed And if they shall find that he was murdered or
not yéeld to be iustified and tried by the Law but will either kill himselfe or giue cause to other men to slay him Fi. Cor. 289 290 312. S. Br. 5. for resisting and not submitting his obedience to the Law then he shal forfeit his goods so that this offence be found and presented by twelue men before the Coroner or some Iustices after his death for in this case the default is in the offendor and not in the Law that he came not to lawfull triall of his offence for the law requireth no more but that the supposed offendor shal be safely kept sub custodia legis by imprisonment or maineprise vntill it be tried whether he be an offendor or not But though the person thus slaine shall for his disobedience forfeit his goods béeing not attainted either of treason or felonie yet in the like case he shall not forfeit his lands if hee bee slaine in arresting or after arrest or otherwise die before he be attainted St. 34. E. 3. 12. as it appeareth by the Stat. of an̄ 34. Ed. 3. 12. which hath established That for forfeitures of dead persons not attainted nor adiudged in their liues their heires or land-tenants shall not be impeached or challenged nor of any other forfeiture except the forfeitures in old time adiudged after the death of the persons by presentment in Eyre or in the Kings bench or of felons of themselues or others And yet some doe affirme if a man doe leuie warre or open rebellion against the King or is assistant to his enemies in the field and then is slaine in battell he shall forfeit his lands goods And others doe adde thereunto that the same his Treason and manner of death must also after his death be found by a Iurie super visum corporis Co. li. 4. 57 Pl. Com. 262. 263. before the chiefe Iustice of England being the soueraigne Coroner of the realm and he must returne it into the Kings Bench and make a Record therof and then that person shall forfeit his lands and goods And vpon those words of the sayd Statute of 34. Ed. 3. viz. Except the forfeitures in old time adiudged after the death of the persons by presentment in Eire or in the Kings Bench or c. some doe inferre that if a presentment in Eire or in the Kings Bench be made of such an open rebellion and battell thereupon foughten and of those that manifestly shewing themselues to bée open enemies or rebels to the King were slaine therein that by the words of the same Statute they shall forfeit their lands But if a man bée arrested for counterfeiting the K. great or priuie Seale for forging of his money or for a priuy conspiracie of the death of the King or c. and is slaine in resisting the said arrest or for a rescous attempted before or after the sayd arrest hee shall forfeit his goods but not his lands And if he bée arrested for any of the sayd offences and committed to prison for the same and after doth dye in prison before he bee attainted of any of the sayd offences he shall neither forfeit lands nor goods though he be taken with the manoure viz. found hand hauing and backe bearing for though it is a mischiefe that a man committing high Treason shall forfeit neither life lands or goods yet the law doth rather beare with that mischiefe than to suffer such an inconuenience that a man onely accused or but only a supposed offendor should bée attainted and forfeit his lands and goods where being preuented by death viz. by the hand of God hee cannot come to answer and defend himselfe and by that meanes cannot bée condemned by such lawfull tryall which is meant and specified in the before rehearsed Statute of Magna charta But for the auoiding of questiō and doubt in the case aforesaid they which haue béene knowne parties to such open and manifest rebellions St. 29. H. 6. 1 St. 12. El. 16 St. 29. El. 1 St. 35. El. 5. St. 3. Iac. 2. haue béen of late yeares attainted by Act of Parliament and their lands and goods giuen as forfeit to the King As it appeareth by the stat of Anno 29. H. 6. 13. El. 29. El. 35. El. 3. Iac. The forf of the yeare day and wast 31 There is another forfeiture besides the losse of life lands annuities Fi. Cor. 310 290. 327. and goods wherewith the law hath deuised to punish those that doe commit petit Treason or Felonie and be attainted thereof which is called in Latine the forfeiture of Diem annum vastum the forfeiture of the yeare day and wast which is executed vpon the houses and lands of the offendor that be holden of any other sauing of the king That is the felons houses and lands shall bée seised into the Kings hands where they shall remaine by the space of a yeare and day and then the houses shall be throwne downe to the ground the trées shall be pulled vp by the roots the medowes shal be ploughed vp and all things which the felon did build or plant shal be cast downe digged vp Fitz. Cor. 358. and supplanted Which punishment was ordained in despight of offendors and to shew to others how much the law doth detest murderers committers of burglarie robberie and other felonies and as much as may be to terrifie and discourage others to attempt or practise the like 32 It appeareth by Bracton that by the common law the King should haue had but onely the wast of a Felons lands viz. the benefit to pull downe his houses root vp his trées plough vp his medowes and such other commodities as he could haue raised by spoyling and wasting of the felons houses trées and lands and that then the land so wasted should haue béene presently deliuered to the Lord of the fée of whom the same lands were holden which wast and spoyle was then made without redemption And after by a composition made betwéene the King and the Lords it was agréed By what means the K. came by the yere day and wast That the King should haue the benefit of the felons lands a yeare and a day to redeeme the spoyle and wast which hée might make of the sayd felons lands And the K. graunt by the great Charter made Anno 9. H. 3. St. 9. H. 4. 3 22. tendeth to the same effect viz. Wee will not hold the lands of those that bée conuict of felonie but a yere and a day and then they shall bée deliuered to the Lords of the fées And so it séemeth that King Henrie the third and King Edward the first did hold themselues satisfied with the yeare and day of the felons lands without taking the wast thereof St. 17. E. 2. 16 But after Anno 17. Ed. 2. the Kings Prerogatiues royall béeing expressed or enacted by Parliament amongst others it is ordayned That the King shall haue all the goods of felons which be