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A32296 Reports of special cases touching several customes and liberties of the city of London collected by Sir H. Calthrop ... ; whereunto is annexed divers ancient customes and usages of the said city of London. Calthrop, Henry, Sir, 1586-1637. 1670 (1670) Wing C311; ESTC R4851 96,584 264

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shall take or receive any manner of Fine or Fines for the concealment and discharging of any of the offences afore recited but truly present the same offences and every of them according to their Oaths upon pain of imprisonment by the discretion of the Lord Mayor and Aldermen of the said City for the time being Provided always and be it enacted by the authority aforesaid that it shall be lawful for all and every of the said Inquests to take and receive towards the charges of their Fire and Candles and other necessaries during the time of their said Session all and every such sums of money as any honest person or persons of their free will and benevolent mind will give and offer unto them and when they have made their said presentments to go and assemble themselves together for their Recreation and solace where they shall think it good and there not only to bestow and spend the twenty shillings which every Alderman within his Ward according to a certain Order lately taken shall yearly give unto them at the time of the delivery of their said Presentments towards their said charges in this behalf but also the residue of the said money received and gathered as it is aforesaid of the Benevolence of their said loving Friends if any such residue shall fortune to remain Any clause or Article in this present Act contained to the contrary notwithstanding Not failing hereof as ye tender the Common Weal of this City and advancement of good Justice and as ye will answer for the contrary at your uttermost peril The Articles of the charge of the Ward-mote Inquest 1. YE shall swear that ye shall truly inquire if the Peace of the King our Soveraign Lord be not kept as it ought to be and in whose default and by whom it is broken or disturbed 2. Also if there dwell any man within the Ward that is outlawed or indited of Treason or Fellony or be any receiver of Traitors or Fellons 3. Also ye shall inquire and truly present all the offences and defaults done by any person or persons within the River of Thames according to the intent and purport of an Act made by our late Soveraign Lord King Edward the sixth in his high Court of Parliament and also of divers other things ordained by Act of Common Councel of this City for the redress and amendment of the said River which as now is in great decay and ruine and will be in short time past all remedy if high and substantial provision and great help be not had with all speed and diligence possible as more plainly appeareth in the said Act of Parliament and the said Act of Common Councel of this City 4. Also if any manner of person make Congregation or be Receiver or Garherer of evil companies 5. Also if any man be a common Riotor or a Barrator walking by Nightertale without light against the rule and custome of this City 6. Also if there be any man within this Ward that will not help aid ne succour the Constables Beadle and other Ministers of this City in keeping of the Peace and Arrest the evil dooers with rearing of Hue and Cry 7. Also if there be any Huckster of Ale and Beer that commonly useth to receive any Apprentices Servants Artificers or Labourers that commonly use to play at the Dice Cards or Tables contrary to the form of the Statute in that Case ordained and provided 8. Also if there be any Inholder Taverner Brewer Huckster or other Victualer that hold open their Houses after the hour limited by the Mayor 9. Also if any Parish Clark do ring the Bell called the Curfue Bell after Curfue rungen at the Churches of Bow Barking Church Saint Brides and Saint Gile's without Cripplegate 10. Also ye shall inquire if any Putour that is to say Man-baud or Woman-baud common Hazerdours Contectour maintainer of Quarrels Champartours or Embracers of Inquests or other common misdoers be dwelling within this Ward and present their Names 11. Also if any Baud common Strumpet common Adulterer Witch or common Scold be dwelling within this Ward 12. Also if there be any House wherein is kept and holden any Hot-house or Sweating-house for ease and health of men to the which be resorting or conversant any Strumpers or women of evil Name or Fame or if there be any Hothouse or Sweating ordained for women to the which is any common recourse of young men or other persons of evil fame and suspect conditions 13. Also if there be any such persons that keep or hold any such Hot-houses either for men or women and have found no surety to the Chamberlain for their good and honest behaviour according to the Laws of this City and lodge any manner of person by night contrary to the ordinance thereof made by the which he or they shall forfeit o● twenty pounds to the Chamber if they do the contrary 14. Also if any manner of person cast or lay Dung Ordure Rubbish Seacole-dust Rushes or any other thing noiant in the River of Thames Walbrook Flett or other Ditches of this City or in the open Streets Ways or Lanes within this City 15. Also if any person in or after a great Rain falleth or at any other time sweep any Dung Ordure Rubbish Rushes Seacole-dust or any other thing noyant down into the Channel of any Street or Lane whereby the common course there is let and the same things noyant driven down into the said water of Thames 16. Also if any manner of person nourish or keep Hogges Oxen Kine Ducks or any Beasts within this Ward to the greivance and Disease of their Neighbours 17. Also where afore this time it is ordained and enacted as hereafter followeth Item for to eschew the evils of misgoverned persons that dayly when they be indebted in one Ward fly into another It is ordained by the Mayor and Aldermen that as soon as a man or woman suspect first do come to dwell within any house in any Ward within the City the Constables Beadles or oother Officers of the same shall be charged by their Oaths at the general Court to inquire and espie from whence they come And if they find by their own confession or by the Record of any of the Books of any Alderman of the City that they be Indited or cast of evil noyous life and will not find surely for their good abeating and honest governance to the Alderman for the time being that then they shall not dwell there from thenceforth but shall be warned to aviod within three or four dayes or more or less after as it shall be seen to the Alderman of the Wa● for the time being and that the Land lo● that letteth the house or his Attorney shall be also warned to make them ●● avoid out of his house aforesaid with the said time limited by the Alderman
persons for dividing Houses or Inmates to write the Names and addition to the present Landlord receiving the Rent and the Names of the Tenants in possession and of the Inmate in any house and also to write in the Margent on the side of every Presentment the Name or Names upon whose evidence you make such Presentment An Act of Parliament for the Preservation of the River of Thames Made in the 27. year of King Henry the 8. VVHere before this time the River of Thames among all Rivers within this Realm hath been accepted and taken and as it is indeed most commodious and profitable unto all the Kings Liege people and chiefly of all other frequented and used and as well by the Kings Highness his Estates and Nobles Merchants and other repairing to the City of London and other places Shires and Counties adjoyning to the same which River of Thames is and hath been most meet and convenient of all other for the safegard and ordering of the Kings Navy conveighance o● Merchandizes and other necessaries to and for the Kings most honourable Houshold and otherwise to the great relief and comfort of all persons within this Realm till now of late divers evil-disposed persons partly by miso●dering of the said River by casting in of Dung and other filth laid nigh to the Banks of the said River digging and undermining of the Banks and Walls next adjoyning to the same River carrying and converghing away of Way-shides Shore-piles Boards Timber-work Ballast for Ships and other things from the said Banks and Walls in sundry places by reason whereof great Shelfes and Risings have of late been made and grown in the farway of the said River and such Grounds as lye within the Level of the said Water-mark by occasion thereof have been surrounded and overflown by rage of the said Water and many great breaches have ensued and followed thereupon and dayly are like to do and the said River of Thames to be utterly destroyed for ever if convenient and speedy remedy be not sooner provided in that behalf For Reformation whereof be it enacted established and ordained by the King our Soveraign Lord and by the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same That if any person or persons hereafter do or procure any thing to be done in the annoying of the Stream of the said River of Thames making of Shelves by any manner of means by Mining Digging casting of Dung or Rubbish or other thing in the same River or take pluck or conveigh away any Boards Stakes Piles Timberwork or other thing from the said Banks or Walls except it be to amend and the same to repair again or dig or undermine any Banks or Walls on the Water side of Thames aforesaid to the hurt impairing or damage of any the said walls Banks then the same person or persons and every of them shall forfeit and pay for every time so offending one hundred shillings the one Moyety thereof to be to the King our Soveraign Lord and the other Moyety thereof to the Mayor and Commonalty of London for the time being the same to be recovered obtained by the Mayor Commonalty of London by Bill or Plaint Writ of debt or information severally against every offender in any of the Kings Courts in which Actions and Suits or any of them the party Defendant shall not be essoyned or wage his Law or any protection to be allowed in the same And it is further enacted by the Authority aforesaid that if complaint shall happen to be made to the Lord Chancellour of England Lord Treasurer Lord President of the Kings Councel Lord Privy Seal or to any of them by any person or persons or body politick that Sir Thomas Spert Knight now having the Office and ordering of for ballasting of Ships or any other that hereafter shall have the Office and Order of ballasting of Ships do take any ballast for Ships near the said River of Thames and do not take for parcel of the said ballasting the Gravel and Sand of the Shelfes between Greenhith and Richmond within the said River of Thames or in any place or places that is or shall be unto the damage or annoyance of the said River of Thames or in any part thereof that then upon every such complaint the said Lord Chancellour Lord Treasurer Lord President of the Kings most honourable Councel Lord Privy Seal and every of them calling both the Cheif Justices of either Bench or one of them shall have power and authority from time to time to hear and finally determine every such complaint by their discretion and to put such order therein for the taking of ballast for Ships upon every such complaint as by their discretions shall seem most convenient for the preservation of the said River of Thames and the parties offending such order shall suffer imprisonment and make no less Fine then five pound to the Kings use for every time offending or breaking the same Provided alwayes and be it enacted that it shall be lawful to every person and persons to digge carry and take away Sand Gravel or other Rubbish Earth or thing lying or being in or upon any Shelfe or Shelfes within the said River of Thames with out let or interruption of any person or persons or paying any thing for the same any thing contained in this present Act to the contrary notwithstanding An Act of Common Councel concerning the conservation and cleansing of the River of Thames made the 28. of September in the 30. year of King Henry the 8. VVHere by the Statute made in the 27. year of the Raign of our Soveraign Lord King Henry the eight among other for Reformation of the misordering of the River of Thames by casting in Dung and other filth many great Shelves and other risings have been of late grown and made within the same River By reason whereof many great breaches have ensued by occasion thereof which of like shall be the occasion of the utter destruction of the said River unless that the same Law be put in due Execution according to the true intent and meaning thereof Wherefore for a further Reformation of the same and to the intent that the said good and wholesome Statute may be put in more Execution and better knowledge of the people It is enacted by the Authority of this Common Councel that Proclamation may be made within this said City and the same to be put in writing and Tables thereof made and and set up in divers places of this City that it shall be lawfully to every person or persons to dig carry away and take away Sand Gravel or any Rubbish Earth or any thing lying or being in any Shelve or Shelves within the said River of Thames without let or interruption of any person or persons and without any thing paying for the same and after that to sell the same
of London were confirmed by K. R. 2. in the Parliament holden in the seventh year of his Raign And averteth That he had served one in the Trade of a Wool-Packer as an Apprentice by the space of seven years and that he was a Citizen and a Freeman of London and that he did relinquish the trade of a Wool-Packer and betook himself to the trade of an Upholster as lawful it was for him to do and so he demandeth the Judgment of the Court if this Information against him will lie and upon this Plea in Bar the said Thomas Allen doth demur in Law The Questions in the Case were these 1. Whether the custome of relinquishing one Trade after that he hath been an Apprentice by the space of seven-years and betaking himself to another Trade wherein he hath not been an Apprentice be good or no 2. Whether it may be taken as a custome or no or whether it shall be said to be the Common Law of the Realm and so the Allegation of it as a custome nought 3. Whether the Statute of the Confirmation of the Customes of London made in the seventh of R. 2. as it is pleaded shall be taken to be an Act of Parliament or only a Confirmation made by the Letters Pattents of the King in Parliament 4. Whether the branch of the statute of 5. Eliz. cap. 4. being in the Negative inhibit all men to exercise the trade when they have not been Apprentice seven years thereunto is a Controlment of the custome of London which can receive no support by the Statute of confirmations and whether that custom shall stand good in opposition of that branch 5. Whether the trade of an Vpholstor be a Trade restrained by the Statute of 5. Eliz. so as Iohn Tolley may exercise it notwithstanding that he hath not been an Apprentice to it by the space of seven years according to the course of the Common Law 6. Whether the Court of the Mayor of London be such a Court of Record as that an Information may be exhibited there 7. Whether a Moyety may be demanded of this Forfeiture by the Informer when as a Proviso in the Stat. of 5. Eliz. 4. doth appoint the levying gathering and receiving of such Forfeiture as falls in a City or Town Corporate to the Mayor or other head Officers to the use and maintenance of the same City or Town Corporate As to the first Question Which is the lawfulness of the custome it was agreed to be good for it might have a reasonable construction beginning and just cause for the putting of it in Execution insomuch that London being a famous City for traffique and commerce cannot but sometimes have Merchants and Tradesmen in it who by misadventure of Pyrates or Shipwrack in the Seas or by conffiscation of their Goods in Forraign Countries abroad o● by casu●lties of Fire c. at home have their Estates sunk whereby they are not able for want of Stock and Meane● to continue that course of Merchandizing and Trade wherein they have been brought up there being great Stocks and sums of money requisite for the continning of it whereupon they are forc'd to leave that course and betake themselves to some other Trade proportionable to that means which they have left And it were lamentable that wher● inevitable casualties have disabled a man to proceed in that course wherin he was brought up he now should not be permitted to acquire his living by any other Trade Also it may be that the Trade whereunto he was an Apprentice requireth great labour and strength of body as the Trade of a Smith Carpenter and such like and that through sickness or other disasters befaln him he is become infirm in body and weak in strength whereby he is not able to use that Trade Now to deba● him of all other Trades which are more be fitting his crazy body were somwhat unreasonable Wherefore to meet with these inconveniencies and to give incouragement unto the Citizens and Freemen of London this Custome of relinquishing the Trade whereunto they have been Apprentices by the space of seven years and betaking themselves unto another Trade hath had a perpetual allowance and being grounded upon so good reason still hath its continuance and may not any wayes be called in question for the unreasonableness of it As to the second question scil Whether the Allegation of it as Custome in London that every Citizen and Freeman of London may relinquish his Trade wherein he hath been an Apprentice by the space of seven years and exercise another Trade or no be warrantable by the Rules of Law or no insomuch that before the Stat. of 5. Eliz. 4. which restraineth it it was lawful for every man to use what Trade he would although he had not been an Apprentice by the space of seven years And then it being the Common Law of the Realm that a man might use any Trade although he had not been an Apprentice for seven years it may not be alledged by way of custome in London but it ought to have been shewed as the custome of the Realm for that which is the Common Law of the Realm is the custome of the Realm It was answered and agreed That as this custom was alledged in this information the allegation of it was warrantable in the Law and it may well be said to be a custome before the Stat. of 5. Eliz. For first The custome is restrained to a Citizen and Freeman of London so as he that is not a Citizen and Freeman may not enjoy the benefit of this custome and it being restrictive of the Common Law which giveth power unto all as well Freemen as Citizens to exercise what Trade they will standeth well in custome and may well be alledged by way of custome This is alledged to be the custome of London and so is tyed to a particular place and howsoever it may be the Common Law of the Realm in other places yet in London which is for the most part governed by their particular Customes it may well be said a Custom and so the Plea in Bar good enough as to this exception As to the fourth Question soil Whether the branch of the Statute of 5. Eliz. 4. be a repeal and controul of the Custome of London concerning the exercise of a Trade where he hath not been an Apprentice by the space of seven years It was resolved that the Custome of London was of force and was not any wayes controuled by that branch First In regard that this being a particular Custome used in London the general words of the branch of that Stat● shall not be taken to extend to the repeal of it For so much regard is to be given unto that City being Camera Regis and as dear to him as the Apple of his Eye that the Customes of that place shall not be overthrown by the extent of general words where there is no particular provision
the Parish of Grace-Church street London for which house a rent of five pound yearly hath been reserved time out of mind in the third year of the King that now is by Indenture doth make a Lease for five years unto one Withers of part of the House and of the Shop rendring the Rent of five pound by the year at the four usual Feasts that is to say at the Feast of the Annuciation c. by even and equal portions And in the same Indenture it is further covenanted and agreed that Withers the Leassee shall pay unto Burrel the Leassor a hundred fifty pound in name of a Fine and Income the which said hundred and fifty pound is to be paid in manner and form following that is to say thirty pound yearly and every year during the said term at the four usual Feasts by even and equal portions the term of five years expired the said Burrel in the tenth year of the said King by Indenture maketh a new Lease for the term of seven years of the said part of the house and the Ware-house unto one Goff rendring the rent of five pound by the year at the Feast of S. Michael the Archangel and the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary by even and equal portions And in the same Indenture it is further covenanted and agreed that Goff shall pay unto the said Burrell 175. l. in the name of a Fine and Income in manner and form following that is to say twenty five pound yearly during the said te●m at the said two usual Feasts by even and equal portions Dunn Parson of Grace-Church exhibiteth his Petition unto the then Lord Mayor of London against the said Burrel and Goff wherein he supposeth that Tythes are paid unto him only according to the rate of five pound by the year where in truth he ought to have an allowance according unto the rate of thirty pound by the year The Lord Mayor by the advice of his Councel doth call the said Burrell and Goff before him and upon full hearing of the said cause doth order the p●yment unto Dunn according unto the rates of five pound by the year and not according to the rate of thirty pound by the year whereupon the said Dunn doth exhibit his Bill of Appeal unto the Lord Chancellour of England in the Chancery wherein he doth make a recital of the Decree made and established by Act of Parliament in 37. H. cap. 12. and also of the case special as it standeth charging the said Goff and Burrell with a practice of fraud and covin in the reservation of this twenty five pound by year by way of Fine and Income and defrauding him of that which belonged unto him The said Goff and Burrell do make their answer and shew that the rent of five pound by the year is the ancient rent reserved and that they are ready and have often tendred the payment of their Tythes according to that proportion but it hath been denied to be accepted and they do take a traverse unto the fraud and covin wherewith they stand charged And upon this answer Dunn the Parson demurreth in Law And this case was first argued in the Chancery by Sir Francis Moor Serjeant and Thomas Crew on the behalf of Dunn and by Sir Anthony Benn late Recorder of London and Iohn Walter on the part of the Defendants The Lord Chancellour having called Sir Henry Mountague Cheif Justice of the Kings Bench Sir Henry Hobart Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Sir Iohn Doddridg one of the Justices of the Kings Bench and Sir Richard Hutton one of the Justices of the Common Pleas to be his Assistants and after two Arguments heard on each side in the Chancery upon Suit made to the King by Sir Francis Bacon then Lord Chancellour of England a special Commission was granted unto Thomas Lord Archbishop of Canterbury Sir Francis Bacon Lord Chancellour of England Thomas Earl of Suffolk late Lord Preasurer of England Edward Earl of Warwick Keeper of the Privy Seal William Earl of Pembrook Lord Chamberlain of the Kings houshold Iohn Bishop of London Bishop of Eli Sir Henry Mountague Sir Iulius Caesar Master of the Rolls Sir Iohn Doddridg and Sir Richard Hutton wherein there was a special recital of the question and cause depending between Dunn on the one part and Burrell and Goff on the other part and power given unto them for the hearing and determining of this cause and likewise for the mediating between the Citizens of London and the Parsons of the several Parishes and Churches in London and making an arbitrary end betwixt them whereby a competent provision may be made for the Ministers of the Churches of London and too heavy a burthen may not beimposed upon the Citizens of London with a command further that they shall certifie the King what was done in the premises And this Commission was sat upon at York-house where the case was argued at several times by Sir Randal Crew and Sir Henry Finch Serjeants of the King on the part and behalf of the Ministers of London and by Sir Henry Yelverton Attorney of the King and Sir Thomas Coventry Solicitor of the King on the behalf of the Citizens of London and because the main Question remained as yet undetermined and no resolution is given either in point of Law nor Arbitrary end by way of mediation I shall only open the parts of the case and make a summary report of them without further debate of them The Case divideth it self into six parts that is to say First whether any thing can be demanded by the person for houses in London according to the course of the Common Law Secondly whether custome can establish a right of payment of any thing unto the Parson for houses and of what nature the payment established shall be Thirdly what was anciently payable by the Citizens of London for their houses unto the Ministers of London and how grew the payment Fourthly whether this twenty five pounds reserved upon a covenant by way of fine and income be a rent within the words of the Decree made 37. H. 8. cap. 12 Fifthly whether this reservation of twenty five pounds by the year by way of fine and income shall be adjudged to be a rent within the intent and meaning of the Statute an Decree or no Sixthly who shal● be Judge of the Tithes for houses in London and the remedy for the Parson in case that payment be not made unto him according to the Decree As to the first part which is whether by the Common Law any thing can be demanded for the houses in London It is to be agreed and clear that nothing can be demanded For that which the Parson ought to demand of houses is Tythes and it is improper and cannot be that Tythes can be paid of houses First in regard that houses do not increase and renew but rather decrease for want of reparations and