A Treatise on the Rights of Manors: As Deduced from the Most Ancient and Best Authorities; with a Report on the Game Laws, and Comment

Front Cover
S. Brooke and sold by J. Butterworth, 1817 - Game laws - 143 pages
 

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 94 - ... committed ; the same to be levied by distress and sale of the offender's goods, by warrant under the hand...
Page 94 - ... other than the son and heir apparent of an esquire, or other person of higher degree...
Page 102 - ... to the House of Correction, there to be kept to hard labour for any time not exceeding three calendar months...
Page 99 - ... the same to be levied by distress and sale of the offender's goods, by warrant under the hand and seal of...
Page 98 - ... one half to the informer, and the other half to the poor of the parish where the offence was committed; T...
Page 94 - And it is hereby enacted and declared, that all and every person and persons, not having lands and tenements or some other estate of inheritance in his own or his wife's right of the clear yearly value of one hundred pounds per annum, or for term of life or having lease or leases of ninety-nine years or for any longer term of the clear yearly value...
Page 94 - Nonpayment thereof, shall be committed to the House of Correction for any Time not exceeding Two Calendar Months.
Page 102 - England have, or claim to have, jurisdiction, and in all cases of crimes or offences committed on land beyond the seas for which an indictment may legally be preferred in any place within England or Wales, it shall be lawful for any one or more of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for any county...
Page 96 - School-master, who upon the first day of May, which shall be in the year of our Lord God One thousand six hundred...
Page 101 - Person, one Moiety to the Informer, and the other Moiety to the Poor of the Parish where such Offence shall be committed...

Bibliographic information