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Petitions to the House of Lords: 1696

Petitions to the House of Lords, 1597-1696.

This free content was born digital and sponsored by the Arts and Humanities Research Council Research Grant: ‘The Power of Petitioning in Seventeenth-Century England’ (AH/S001654/1). CC-NC-BY.

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The Royal Lustring Company. HL/PO/JO/10/1/479/984 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the Royall Lustring Company for makeing and dressing alamodes renforces and lustrings in England

Humbly sheweth

That your petitioners having pattent for the [illegible] [...keing?] of plain black alamodes and lustrings in England for fourteen yeares which was obtained by the consent and wel likeing of the Weavers Company at which time there was [but?] one or two looms in England and these were set up by the pattentees since which your petitioners have [increased?] them to about seven hundred and your petitioners have now sent considerable quantities of the woollen manufacture to Piedmont to furnish that country therewith, that the Duke of Savoy may the better [illegible] enabled to prohibit the commerce with France from whence he has hitherto been supplied with [illegible] woollen manufacture but your petitioners have many enemies to hinder them in this publick good. Those of Lyons in particular having [resolved?] to use all possible means to destroy the said company

That your petitioners understand there is a bill [illegible] most honourable house which has been once read intituled An Act to Supply the Defects of an Act [illegible] the Last Session of Parliament Intituled An Act for Granting to His Majesty Certain Duties upon [illegible] Stone and Earthen Bottles, Coates and [C...?] for Carrying on the War Against France, and [illegible] same should pass into an act, it would destroy your petitioners pattent and utterly spoil that trade [illegible] thereof that manufacture will return to France from whence it came; to the great joy and [advantage?] of his majesties enemies and the ruine of many hundreds of families in England now imployed by your petitioners.

Your petitioners therefore humbly [pray?] they may be heard at the barr of this most honourable house to give their reasons against the said bill in such manner as your lordships great wisdom shall think fitt

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc.

  • Peter Lekeux
  • Lewis Gervaize [secretary?]
  • [illegible]
  • John Blondel
  • William Sherards
  • Thomas Firmin
  • William Lewen deputy governor
  • Paul [Clawdisley?]
paratext

Lustring Company peticon reade 17o January 1695 Ordered to be heard 24th instant

January 29o heard and the bill rejected

James Grahine, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/479/985 (1696)

To the right honorable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of James Grahine esquire

Sheweth

That whereas the 14th day of January last past your petitioner presented his peticion of appeale before your lordshipps to be releived against a decree made in the Court of Chancery upon the 27th day of May in the yeare of our Lord 1691 whereby the timber and wood in Barowfeild and other places in the county of Westmerland were decreed in sale to Richard Harnage Jaques Wiseman John Singleton George How Joseph Devonish John Prigge Richard Sutton James Paulett William Smith William Blinkherne and Peter Essington who offered themselves purchasers thereof for the payment of their debts and other debts due to like creditors of Allan Bellingham esquire and the said appeale comeing to be heard the 2d day of this instant March your lordshipps did not think fitt to proceed therein for that Francis Mollineux Richard Rigby William Hudson Jeremy Davis John Bignall William Phillipps Richard Sill William Hart and David Allen who are also plainants in the said cause in Chancery though not purchasor under the said decree and William Bellingham esquire brother heire and residuary devisee of the said Allan Bellingham Charles Pigeon esquire and Robert Hilton gentl trustees of the said Allan and defendants in the said cause in Chancery were not made respondents to the said appeale

May itt therefore please your lordshipp to grant leave to your petitioner to add and make the said Francis Mollineux Richard Rigby William Hudson Jeremy Davis John Bignall William Phillipps Richard Sill William Hart David Allen William Bellingham Charles Pigeon and Robert Hilton respondents to the said appeale and that all the said parties being in towne a short day may be appointed for them to answer thereunto

And your petitioner shall pray etc

James Grahme

paratext

James Grahams petition for leave to amend his appeale by adding some names reade 3d Martii 1695 ordered as desired and the new respondents to answere.

Francis Mollineux, Richard Rigby and others. HL/PO/JO/10/1/479/985 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Francis Mollineux Richard Rigby William Hudson Jeremy Davis John Bignall William Phillips Richard Sill and William Hart.

Sheweth

That your peticioners on Thursday last were served with an order of this honourable house made the third of this instant upon the peticion of James Grayham esquire by which order your peticioners are made parties to an appeale of the said James Graham depending in this honourable house, and your peticioners by the said order are required to put in theire answer to the said appeale tomorrow being Tuesday

That the matters appealed from are orders reports and decrees made in the High Court of Chancery.

That one Richard Tolson who was formerly your peticioners solicitor hath gott all your peticioners orders reports decrees and papers in the said cause in his custody and your peticioners altho they have often applyed them selves to him (and altho nothing is due to him your peticioners having his receipt in full) cannot get the same papers from him, without recourse to which your peticioners cannot make sufficient answer to the said appeale.

Your peticioners therefore most humbly pray your lordshipps would be pleased to order the said Tolson to deliver to your peticioners theire said papers and to assigne your peticioners a further day to answer the said appeale and your peticioners will accordingly put in theire answers to the same

And your peticioners will ever pray etc.

  • William Phillipps
  • Richard Sill
  • William Hart
  • Francis Molyneux
  • Richard Rigby
  • William Hudson
  • Jeremy Davis
  • John Bignall

The humble peticion of Francis Mollineux Richard Rigby and others

paratext

versus Grahams appeale reade 9o Martii 1695 and the cause ordered to be heard 16th instant.

The dean and chapter of Saint Pauls and Lewis Rogell, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/480/989 (1696)

George Smith and Margaret his wife appellants

The deane and chapter of Saint Pauls and Lewis Rogell esquire respondents

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of the respondents

Sheweth

That the appellants the 22th of January last exhibited their appeale against an order in Chancery made above tenn yeares since for allowing of a demurrer put in by the respondent Rogell to a bill brought by the appellant Margaret to compell the then deane and chapter of Saint Pauls to receive a peticion in the nature of a writt of false judgment to reverse a common recovery suffered in their mannour forty three yeares agoe upon pretence of errors in the proceedings

5 February instant the respondents put in their answer to the said appeale since which the appellants have not stirred one stepp.

Wherefore and for that there is nothing in the said appeale designed but vexation and to put the respondents to charge, and keep a pretence on foot to the prejudice of the respondents title

It is humbly prayed that a day may be appointed for the hearing of the said appeale.

Lewis Rogell

paratext

Lewis Rogles petition versus deane Saint Paules reade 17o February 1695

Merchants trading to the Eastland countries. HL/PO/JO/10/1/480/994 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of severall merchants tradeing to the Eastland countryes whose names are subscribed on behalf of themselves and divers other merchants

Sheweth

That your peticioners understand a bill is past the House of Commons for the incouragement of privateers and is now before your lordshipps in order to passe into an act

That should the said bill as the same is now worded passe into an act, it would not onely bee a great prejudice to your peticioners, but to trade in generall

Wherefore your petitioners humbly pray this most honourable house that they may be heared by their councell to give their reasons in such manner as to your lordshipps great wisdomes shall seem meet

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc

  • Theodore Jacobsen
  • William Benson
  • Robert Bloome
  • Thomas Stiles
  • Paul Darby
  • Peter Joye
  • David Debary
  • Joseph Martin
paratext

Eastland merchants peticon reade 25 January 1695

William Oldiss, doctor of laws. HL/PO/JO/10/1/480/995 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of William Oldiss doctor of lawes.

Sheweth

That whereas Charles Domville did in Trinity terme last recover a judgment upon a prohibicion in his majesties Court of Exchequer against your peticioner, which said judgment was in Michaelmas terme following affirmed in the Exchequer chamber whereupon your peticoner did on Monday the seaven and twentieth day of January last past bring a writt of error retorneable in Parliament to reverse the said judgment given against him, and did on Monday the second day of this instant February (according to the rules in that case made) by his councell assigne errors, whereunto the said Charles Domville has joyned issue with your peticioner.

Your peticioner therefore humbly prayes that your lordshipps will please to appoint a certaine day for the hearing councell on both sides upon the said writt of error.

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc.

William Oldys

paratext

William Oldys petition for day of heareing writt error versus Charles Domville read 12o February 1695

John Norwood. HL/PO/JO/10/1/481/1007 (1696)

John Norwood appellant

Thomas Norwood clerke and Elizabeth Norwood widdow respondent

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion and appeale of the said John Norwood from an order of dismission in the High Court of Chancery on the 5th day of December 1694 in a cause wherein the said peticioner was plantiffe against the said Thomas Norwood clerke and Elizabeth Norwood defendants

Most humbly sheweth

That Francis Norwood your petitioners late father being possessed of the mannor of Leckhampton with the appurtenances in the county of Gloucester and haveing six sonns (videlicet) Richard Charles John Francis William and Thomas besides severall daughters and being indebted and desireous to raise money to satisfye the same and for porcions for his children and to settle his said estate for the preservacion and advantage of his family on the 19th of August 1674 did enter into articles with Collonel Henry Norwood a relacion to the effect following videlicet

That the said mannor and lands should bee conveyed to the sayd Henry Norwood and his heires and the stock of goods corne and cattle upon the same to be assigned over to him att the vallue the same should bee appraised upon payment off 4450 pounds for dischargeing of debts and porcions and upon settling of three annuityes (videlicet) 60 pounds per annum to the said Francis the father and 20 pounds per annum a peice to Francis the son and Jane one of the daughters of their respective lives and that the said Henry Norwood should give security to pay the same or otherwise to pay 950 pounds more in respect of the said annuityes makeing in all 5400 pounds which was agree by the said articles to be for the absolute purchase of the demeasne lands onely of the said mannor and the said Henry Norwood was also to secure the money to be paid for the said stock and goods and to pay interest att 6 pounds per centum per annum untill the whole money should be paid and to execute (to some persons in trust for the said Francis the father and his family) a lease of the whole estate for 1000: yeares with a provisoe (videlicet) that if the said Henry should by any act in his life tyme or by his last will settle and assure the said mannor and premisses imediately after his decease to the said Francis the father for life and after to Richard the first sonne for life (in case they should be then liveing) and after to the use of such of the issue male of the said Francis and the heires male of his and their bodyes issueing as the said Henry Norwood should thinke fitt soe as the same should descend and come to some one of the posterity of the said Francis Norwood or in default thereof if the said Henry Norwood should execute to the said Francis or such as hee should appoint and his and their heires (or in default of such appointment to the said Francis Norwood and his heires a good estate in law of the services and coppyholds of the said mannor and of all other the tenementes [lett?] for old rentes and also should pay unto him or them all summes of money which hee should have received in the meane tyme for the cheife rents or herriotts of the said tenementes or should have raised by fines for reneweing of estates in the same and also that the household stuffe in the mannor house of Leckhampton to be left in the same should be vallued [att?] together with damages for the same then and in eyther of the said cases the said estate and terme were to be void

September the 28th and 29th by lease and release the said mannour and premisses were conveyed to the said Henry Norwood in pursueance of the said articles to hold to him and his heires for ever

October the 1st 1674 the said Henry Norwood in pursueance of the said articles executed a lease for 1000 yeares to William Brent and David Williams esquires in trust for the said Francis the father and his heires and has thereby covenanted that from and after the breach of the provisoe therein mencioned the said trustees should hold the estate freed of incumbrances

March the 20th and 24th 1687 the said Henry Norwood in consideracion of a marriage had betweene William Norwood (one of the younger sons of the said Francis) and Elizabeth his wife and 1500 pounds to be paid to the said Henry for her porcion and for provideing a joynture for the said Elizabeth granted the said mannour and premisses to persons in trust to the use of himselfe for life then to Richard Norwood for life then to the said William for life then to the said Elizabeth his wife (as to parte) for her joynture then to the issue male of William and Elizabeth and for want of such issue then to other issue male of the said William and for want of such issue then to the use of Thomas Norwood the now respondent and his issue male and for want of such issue then to the heires male of the said Richard and for want of such issue then to the use of Charles John and Francis successively and their issue male and then to the right heires of Francis the father for ever with liberty for every one in possession to make leases and joyntures etca

That the said Francis the father dyed in the yeare 1682 and the said Henry Norwood and Richard the [1st?] son of Francis both dyed in the yeare 1689 and the said William Norwood dyed without issue in the yeare 1693 soone after whose death the now respondent Thomas Norwood gott into possession of the said mannor and premisses (dureing your petitioners absence beyond the seas) and hath ever since held and enjoyed the same

That as soone as your petitioner came into England hee exhibited his bill as eldest issue male of the said Francis then liveing) into the said High Court of Chancery against the now respondentes and others to have an account of the profitts of the premisses and for recovery of the possession thereof and the said respondentes being served with process appeared and put in their severall answeres and the cause being att issue diverse wittnesses were examined on both sides and the cause comeing to be heard before the right honourable the Lord Keeper of the great seale of England on the 5th day of December 1694 his lordship was pleased to dismiss your petitioneres said bill out of the said court.

Which said order of dismission (as your petitioner is advised) is erroneous and contrary to equity and your petitioner ought to have been releived upon the said bill

Wherefore your petitioner doth most humbly appeale from the same unto your lordshipps in Parliament and doth most humbly pray that the said respondentes may answer the premisses and that the said order of dismission may be reversed and sett aside and that your petitioner may have such releife in the premisses as to your lordshipps shall seeme meete

And your petitioner will ever pray etca.

John Norwood

paratext
  • William Whitelocke
  • John Brewer

John Norwoods peticion versus Thomas and Elizabeth Norwood reade 14o February 1695

March 10th 1695 heard and judged and peticon dismissed and the decree affirmed

Hugh Jones junior, gentleman. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1010 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion, and appeal of Hugh Jones juniour gentleman

Sheweth

That in or about Easter terme 1686 your petitioner as he was advised exhibitted his bill in the High Court of Chancery against Hugh Jones seniour your petitioners father Sir Jeffery Shackerly, and John Massey thereby setting forth that Edward Jones your petitioners grandfather being seized in fee of certain tythes in the county of Denbeigh, in consideracion of a marriage betweene the said Edward, and Anne Massey your petitioners grandfather and grandmother the said Edward did grant the said tythes to John Massey and his heires in trust that the said tythes after the decease of the said Edward Jones, Anne his wife and Hugh Jones senior your petitioneres father, should come to the eldest issue male of your petitioneres father successively, and that the same after the decease of your petitioners father ought pursuant to the said settlement to descend and come to your petitioners his father haveing no power to dispose thereof from your petitioner and that your petitioners father haveing contracted severall debts that were very uneasy to him, your petitioner being willing to contribute his assistance towards their satisfaccion at the desire of his said father did enter into articles with him dated the 10th day of Aprill in the 31th yeare of the reigne of his late majestie King Charles the second and your petitioners did thereby covenant to pay and secure to his said father the payment of 80 pounds (videlicet) 40 pounds at the sealing the said articles and 40 pounds more within foure months next after. That your petitioners said father did covenant in the said articles that he would at or before the 1st day of June then next following convey the said tythes to the uses in the said articles limmitted (videlicet) a moiety to the use of himselfe for life, with power in case he dyed within the terme of seaven yeares then next comeing to dispose of the profitts of the remainder of that terme to any person he should appoynt, and the other moiety, and reversion of the first moiety to your petitioner for life, remainder to the issue of his body in tayl generall, remainder to the right heires of your petitioners father with power to your petitioner to charge the premisses in default of issue with any summe not exceeding 100 pounds and power to settle a joynture in the moyety of the premisses on any wife your petitioner should marry.

That your petitioner in pursuance of the said articles became obliged to pay the said debts of his father, and performed the said agreement on his part, and was and still is ready to performe on his part what farther may be thought necessary to be done and for seaven yeares enjoyed the moiety of the said tythes, and paid his proporcion of the cheife rent, notwithstanding which your petitioners father refused to performe the said articles on his part, and to convey the said premisses to your petitioner, but instead thereof entred into a treaty with Sir Jeffery Shackerly in or about Aprill 1686, about selling to him the premisses which your petitioner hearing of gave the said Sir Jeffery notice that his said father could make him no good tytle thereunto by reason of the articles before mencioned which he had entred into with your petitioner notwithstanding which notice the said Sir Jeffery proceeded in his said treaty and as he pretends purchased the said premisses of your petitioners father which if he did, he purchased the same at not above halfe the vallue thereof, and tooke security from your petitioners father to indempnifye him against your petitioner and all other persons claiming any title to the premisses or any part thereof, soon after which the said Sir Jeffery possessed himselfe, and still continues possessed of the said premisses by which unjust dealings of the said Sir Jeffery Shackerly, and your petitioners said father your petitioner being very much injured, prayed in his said bill that his father might be compelled to settle the premisses aforesaid on your petitioner according to the articles aforesaid.

That the said Sir Jeffery Shackerly and your petitioners father haveing put in their answers to the said bill, and witnesses haveing been examined on both sides and the said cause being heard the twelfth day of December in the 3d yeare of the reigne of his late majestie King James the 2d before the right honourable George Lord Jefferys then Lord High Chancellor of England your petitioners said father and the said Sir Jeffery obtained an order against your petitioner whereby it is declared that the said Lord Chancellour saw no cause in equity to give your petitioner any releife in any of the matters for which, by his said bill he sought releife and therefore thought fitt and did order that your petitioners bill should from thenceforth stand clearly and absolutely dismissed out of the said court without costs, which dissmission hath since been signed and enrolled, since which your petitioner brought a bill of review in the said court, praying thereby a rehearing of his said cause but could never obtain the same.

That your petitioner is advised that he ought not to be bound by the said order and dismission he haveing proved in the said cause the said settlement made by his said grandfather Edward Jones and the said articles entred into between your petitioner and his said father concerning the premisses, and likewise his haveing performed what was incumbent on him from the said articles, and also his haveing given notice to the said Sir Jeffery of the said articles entred into between your petitioner and his father and that therefore the said purchase (if any) made of the premisses by Sir Jeffery Shackerly from your petitioners father ought not to barr your petitioners right and tytle thereunto, wherefore your petitioner most humbly appeals from the said order, and dismission unto your lordshipps in that supream judicature in Parliament, for the judgment and determinacion in the premisses

May it therefore please your lordshipps to order the said Hugh Jones senior being your petitioners father and the said Sir Jeffery Shackerly to appeare and answer before your lordshipp this your petitioners humble peticion of appeal, and that the said bill answers, and all other the proceedings may be removed out of the said Court of Chancery before your lordshipps and that upon hearing thereof upon the whole proceedings, the said order and dismission may be reversed and that your lordshipps would be pleased to give your petitioner such releife in the premisses as to your lordshipps greate wisdome and justice shall seem most meete

And your petitioner shall allwayes pray etc

Hugh Jones

paratext

14 February 1695 wee conceive the petitioner hath good cause to appeale from the sayd order and dismission

  • Robert Price
  • John Robins

Hugh Jones junior. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1010 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Hugh Jones junior

Humbly sheweth

That your peticioner hath brought his appeale into this most honourable house against an order of dissmission of your petitioners bill made in the High Court of Chancery in Michaelmas terme in the 3d yeare of the reigne of the late King James the 2d wherein your petitioner was plainant against Sir Geoffery Shackerly knight and Hugh Jones senior defendants

That your pettitioner by reason of his poverty was admitted to prosecute his suite in the said court in forma pauperis and the persons assigned for his councell (save onely the [honourable?] Master Finch doe not now practice the law as will appeare by a coppy of an order thereunto annexed

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prays your lordshipps will be pleased to admitt your petitioner to prosecute his said appeale in forma pauperis. And to assigne Sir Thomas Powis and Sir Bartholamew Shores knights for his councell

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

  • Hugh Jones

Hugh Jones junior, gentleman. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1010 (1696)

Hugh Jones junior gentleman appellant

Hugh Jones senior and Sir Jeffrey Shackerly respondents

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of the appellant

Humbly sheweth

That your petitioner having brought his peticion of appeale [illegible] this most honourable house the [respondents?] have put in their answer thereunto

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prays that a short day may be appointed for the hearing [on?] the same at the barr of this most honourable house

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

Hugh Jones junior

paratext

Hugh Jones petition for day heareing versus Shakerley reade 19o Martii 1695

The justices of the peace, gentlemen and freeholders of Wormelow. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1017 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the justices of the peace gentlemen and others the substantial freeholders of the hundred of Wormelow in the county of Herefford whose names are subscribed and annexed

Sheweth that your petitioners are by the votes of Parliament informed that there is a bill passing in your honorable house for makeing the rivers of Wye and Lugg in the said county navigable or portable, and that your petitioners doe in noe wise oppose the same neither doe they envy the inhabitantes of the citty of Herefford and the upper partes of the said county the advantage and beniffitt that may thereby redound unto them, but wee humbly desire to bee excused from contributeing towards the charge of the said navigacion being able to prove (allmost to demonstracion) that wee shall bee so farr from receiveing any benifitt there by that it will bee very prejuditiall to us on many accountes as in our meadows, in raiseing the price of lime and coale, and lessening the price of our corne and in other particulars too many to bee here inserted the foards allsoe being taken away (as they must bee when the navigacion is perfected which wee esteem a very doubtfull undertakeing) the commerce betweene the inhabitantes of each side the river will be very difficult. And the dayly trouble of crosseing by boates greate and chargeable, besides the marketts of Monmeth and Rosse are soe neare us and soe conveniently scituated that they are very suffitient either to supply us with what nessesarys wee want or receive from us what wee have to spare which will is now and allwayes will bee done sooner and cheaper and with more certainety by land then water, by which it plainely appeares that if the rivers were navigable it would bee noe advantage to us and wee doe further say that wee doe not desire to have any beniffitt of portage upon the said rivers any further or otherwise then now wee have and are contented that they who beare the charge shall take the proffitts and soe hopeing this honourable house will consider the matters and truths herein expressed to wherein your petitioners are soe much concerned

And your petitioners as in duty bound will ever pray etc

  • John Williams
  • William Gwillym senior
  • William Gwillym junior
  • Guy Hill
  • John Hoskyns
  • E Hoskyns
  • Roger Scudamore
  • John Scudamore
  • Rouland Scudamore
  • Oswald Hoskyns
  • William Jones
  • John Hereford
  • John Baskervile
  • Thomas Marrett
  • Richard Gwillym
  • Joseph Watts
  • Richard Kidley
  • John Rogers
  • Titus Nove
  • Thomas Rogers
  • James [Lamearne?]
  • Walter Rogers
  • John Bodenham
  • James Williams
  • George Eckly
  • John Gwatkin
  • William Phillips
  • Edm Gomonds
  • John Gomonds
  • Edmund Gomonds
  • Thomas Rooke
  • William Osborne
  • John Rogers
  • John Wellington
  • William Coldikott
  • R: Powells
  • John Higgs
  • John Jones
  • Jacob Pridith
  • Rud: Betham
  • Walter Gwatkin
  • Robert Geathing
  • Walter Baker
  • Joel Howe
  • Thomas Gwillym
  • Edward [Morse cleric?]
  • Edward Morse
  • William Gwatkin
  • John Ballard
  • Phillip Woodward
  • Thomas Gwatkin
  • John Mathews
  • Charles Hunt
  • John Sayse
  • David Sayse
  • William Watkins
  • Richard Harris
  • Thomas Morgan
  • Richard Wilcox
  • Richard Jones
  • Edward Jones
  • John Coldicott junior
  • John Collicott senior
  • Gyles Parsons
  • John Davis
  • John Willim clerke
  • Edward Powell
  • Thomas Bennett
  • Thomas Smyth
  • John Gwatkin
  • Francis Webb
  • Geordge Webb
  • Willim James
  • John [Rooke?]
  • John Smith
  • Thomas Rogers
  • John Willim
  • Richard Garrell his marke
  • Gilbert Nourse
  • John Nourse
  • John Puckmore
  • William Prideth
  • William [Stoch?]
  • James Drew
  • William [Teysell?]
  • John Powell
  • Charles James
  • William Roberts
  • Phillip Cowles
  • William Peirce
  • Walter Parry
  • John Peirce
  • William Donne
  • John Powell
  • William Rodd
  • Thomas Colley senior
  • Thomas Colley junior
  • Walter Roocke
  • Thomas Morgan
  • William Phillips
  • Luke Price
  • William Reece
  • Walter Edwins
  • Charles Harris
  • William Phillpotes
  • James Man
  • William Philpots
  • John Williams
  • John Philpots
  • George Drew
  • Thomas Cook
  • James Jones
  • Benjamin Mason
  • Thomas [Cope?]

The mayor, comon council, gentlemen, and inhabitants of Monmouth. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1017 (1696)

Monmouth town

To the most reverend most noble most honourable and right reverend the lords spirituall and temporall now in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of the mayor, bayliff, comon councell, gentlemen, and other inhabitants of the town of Monmouth in the county of Monmouth

Whereas we are given to understand that the honourable House of Commons have passed the bill for makeing the river of Wye navigable and sent the same to your lordshipps for your concurrence these are therefore most humbly to beseech your lordshipps to suffer us to be heard at the barr of your house or our councell against the said bill by whom we hope to give your lordshipps such prevaileing argument as will induce your lordshipps to [reject?] the said bill for if it passes your most honourable house, it will be the utter ruine of this towne and county. We therefore most humbly beseech your lordshipps to take this our petition into your most serious consideration not to inrich one citty by the ruine of a whole county. Soe we take the boldnes to subscribe [ourselves?]

Your lordshipps most humble and [most?] obedient servants

  • John Fortune
  • [Richard?] Vaughan
  • John Jones
  • Charles Green
  • Thomas Lewis
  • James Campbell
  • Michael Bohune
  • James [..ey?]
  • Phillip Watkins
  • [illegible]
  • [illegible]
  • William Stephens
  • Thomas Stephens
  • John Hill
  • Joseph Michell
  • James Barrow
  • Thomas Belchien
  • Edward Bevan
  • Benjamin Andrews
  • Edward Jones
  • William King
  • John Norton
  • Lewis Watkins
  • [T?] Morgan
  • Daniel Lewis mayor
  • Samuell Pye
  • William Daniell bayliffs
  • Phillip Meakings
  • John Phillpott
  • William Macklon
  • Henry Barnes
  • Adam Addams
  • Thomas Edwards
  • Francis [Stephnes?]
  • [illegible] [...kins?]
  • Richard [illegible]
  • Peregrine Lewis
  • John Middleton

The gentlemen, freeholders and other inhabitants of Saint Briavels. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1017 (1696)

To the right honourable the [lords?] spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the gentlemen free [holders?] and others the inhabitants of the parish and hundred of Saint [B...ells?] in the said county whose names are subscribed

Sheweth that the makeing the rivers Wye and Lugg navigable for which there is a bill now passing this honourable house [will?] manifestly impoverish the our whole hundred by discouradging tilladge on which we cheifely depend and otherwise.

Wherefore your petitioners humbly pray that you would be pleased to take the same into your serious consideracion soe that the said bill may not passe and that your petitioners may be heard by their councell att the bar of this honourable house and your pettitioners shall ever pray etc

  • George Nicolson
  • William Gough
  • Richard Byrkin
  • [A..m?] Ricketts
  • Edward Barrow
  • James Borrow
  • William Morgan
  • Edward Morgan
  • George Huling
  • John Roberts
  • Bryan Griffith
  • Warren Griffith
  • Arthur King
  • Edward Dale
  • Richard Gough
  • William Prichard
  • Richard King
  • Thomas Price
  • John Dowle
  • John Dowle
  • John Tyler
  • William Dowle
  • Edmund Bond
  • Richard Barrow
  • William Gough
  • Richard Barrow
  • [George N...?]
  • Walter Price
  • Richard Church
  • Thomas Barrow
  • John Church
  • Richard Tiler
  • [Warran Tiler?]
  • Thomas [Barrow?]
  • [Chales?] Gough
  • George Blunt
  • Joseph Constant
  • Christophor Thorn
  • Arthur Pitchard
  • Thomas [Wreight?]
  • Cristifer [Phill?]
  • William Davis
  • Warran Silcoke

The mayor, aldermen, common council and inhabitants of Gloucester. HL/PO/JO/10/1/482/1017 (1696)

To the most honourable House of Lords now assembled in Parliament

The humble peticion of the maior aldermen sherives common councill and inhabitants of the city of Gloucester.

Humbly sheweth

That whereas there is sent up into this noble house a bill for the making the rivers of Wye and Lugg navigable within the county of Hereford and in case the same should pass into an act the same will be very much prejudiciall and of ill consequence to the said city of Gloucester and adjacent places by reason our marketts are chiefly served with all sorts of corne and graine bacon and other provisions from the said county of Hereford and vast numbers of familyes who are imployed in carrying of the same will be destitute of their livelyhoods and whereas we have now very plentifull marketts whereby the poor of this city and neighbouring parishes (who are very numerous) are supplyed upon reasonable termes and prices who otherwise must be putt to great distress and likewise the tolls and customes which greatly help to the support and maintenance of our corporacion will wholy fall or come to very little we therefore humbly pray the premisses may be taken into the consideracion of this honourable house and [that?] the said bill may not pass. Dated under our common seal the twelfth day of February anno domini 1695.

The lord mayor, aldermen and commons of the City of London. HL/PO/JO/10/1/483/1028 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the lord mayor aldermen and commons of the City of London in common councill assembled.

Sheweth

That there is a clause in a bill lately past the honourable House of Commons and now depending before your lordships to disable persons to serve in Parliament not having estates according to the qualifications of that bill which may very much limitt the elections of this city (as your petitioners humbly apprehend) by rendring very many eminent merchants and traders of great estates knowledge and fittness, uncapable to represent this city in Parliament.

Your petitioners doe therefore humbly beseech your lordships that they may be heard at the barr of this most honourable house by themselves or their councell against the said clause soe farr as it relates to the City of London or may be otherwise releived by your lordships therein as to your great wisdome shall seem meet

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc

Goodfellow

paratext

Citty Londons peticion versus bill for regulateing eleccions etc reade 29 February 1695

The mayor, aldermen, common council and citizens of Exeter. HL/PO/JO/10/1/483/1028 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of the mayor aldermen and common councell of the city of Exon, and cityzens of the same.

Sheweth.

That there is a clause in a bill lately past the honourable House of Commons, and now depending before your lordships to disable persons to serve in Parliament not having estates in land according to the qualifycations of the said bill, which may so limit the elections of members to serve for this city (as your petitioners humbly apprehend) that many eminent merchants and other cityzents of great personall estates, knowledge and fitnesse will be thereby rendered uncapable to represent the said city.

Your petitioners do therefore humbly beseech your lordships that they may be heard at the barr of this most honourable house by themselves or their councell against the said clause so farr as relates to the said city of Exon, or may be otherwise releived by your lordships therein as to your great wisdom shall seeme meete.

And your petitioners (as in duty bound) shall ever pray etc

  • Francis [Lydston?]
  • Philip Hooper
  • John Adams
  • John Poole
  • Benjamin Brimley
  • Thomas Jeffery
  • Clement Weekes
  • Richard Hooke
  • Richard Hooke junior
  • Edmond Cock
  • John Mortimer
  • Thomas Foxwell
  • Thomas Atkey
  • Nicholas [Minckley?]
  • John Vowler
  • John Dell
  • Francis [Bere?]
  • Thomas [Tacke?]
  • Roger Prowse
  • William [Bury?]
  • James White
  • John Stephens
  • Joseph [illegible]
  • John Chears
  • [William?] Atkins
  • William Marker
  • Thomas Foxwell
  • John Rowe
  • Nicholas [Ca...en?]
  • John [Brigham?]
  • David Robinson
  • Gabriel Mayne
  • Richard Burges
  • James Gould
  • [illegible]
  • Henry Harris
  • James Horswell
  • John Wakeham
  • Samuel Ford
  • John Becket
  • Thomas Townsend
  • Joseph Pince
  • [illegible] [Pym?]
  • Hugh Palmer
  • John [Dally?]
  • Anthony Vicary
  • Benjamin Heath
  • Robert Pearce
  • Benjamin Hawkins
  • Joshua [Mechoe?]
  • William [Mauduit?]
  • Robert Wolcombe
  • John Butson
  • Thomas Wood
  • Richard White junior
  • Hugh Bidwell
  • Thomas Sommers
  • Edward Spicer
  • Henry Hugh
  • George Cary
  • Alexander [Bonnell?]
  • Robert Dacie
  • John Alford
  • Edward Rowe
  • Richard White
  • Tristram Whitter
  • William Sealy junior
  • John Starr
  • Josiah Sealy
  • [illegible]
  • John Pyle
  • Francis Bere
  • John [Youatt?]
  • Peter Stephens
  • Abraham [...vill?]
  • James Fortescue
  • Peter Menheir
  • James [Clarke?]
  • Francis Bidwill
  • John Hardy
  • Christopher Taylor
  • John Rice
  • Bernard Goddard
  • Thomas Turner
  • Samuell Munckley
  • [Jerem?] King
  • Daniel Clutterbucke
  • Josh: Jordaine
  • William Butler
  • Thomas Butler
  • Symon Mayow
  • Jonas Pinsent
  • Michael Hide
  • William Arnold
  • Richard Veale
  • Henry Marker
  • Robert Heath
  • George Powell
  • Francis Galhampton
  • John Keese junior
  • Gilbert Yard maior
  • George Tuthill
  • [S Wotridge?]
  • Joseph Mauduit junior
  • Christopher Coke
  • Daniell Ivie
  • [Richard P...m?]
  • Isaac Gibbs
  • John Munckley
  • Joshua Hickman
  • William [Bohthoe?]
  • Philip [Pear?]
  • George Blatchford
  • Gregory Bryant
  • John Osmond
  • William [Hullett?]
  • Isaac Searle alias [Savery?]
  • William Lobb
  • John Carwithen
  • Nicholas Browne
  • William Pitfield
  • [Hu?] Knowlton
  • John Slade
  • John Atken
  • John Atkin junior
  • George Gould
  • Richard Atwill
  • Edward Bayly

Dodington Mason, gentleman. HL/PO/JO/10/1/483/1029 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition and appeal of Dodington Mason gentleman against and from a decree of the High Court of Chancery made in a cause there lately depending between Thomas Berrington esquire son and heire of Humfrey Berrington esquire deceased plainant and George Mason esquire and Sarah Mason widow your petitioners late brother and mother deceased defendants which Sarah was the sole daughter and heire of George Dodington esquire long since deceased.

Sheweth

That the said Humfrey Berrington being seized of the mannors of Pixley and Catley and the impropriate tythes of Kinaston and a wood called Maynes Wood in the county of Hereford being together of the yearly value of 93 pounds or thereabouts and having before and during the late civill warrs contracted severall great debts by mortgage statutes and otherwise and his said estate being under sequestration for 650 pounds charged upon the same for his delinquency in those times and he by reason thereof under such great and pressing trouble and necessities that he had not any meanes or prospect of extricating himself out of the same but by an absolute sale of the premisses he did for that purpose apply himself (amongst others) to Benjamin Mason your petitioners late father who thereupon proposed the same to the said George Dodington being a moneyed man and his father in law and prevailed with him to purchase the same.

That thereupon your petitioners said father for and on behalf of the said George Dodington your petitioners said late grandfather treated and came to an agreement with the said Humfrey Berrington for the absolute purchase of the premisses and pursuant thereunto by indenture bearing date on or about the 2d day of February 1652 and made between the said Humfrey Berrington of the one part, and George Mason John Wingfeild and John Alderne of the other part (being persons nominated on the behalf and in trust for your petitioners said grandfather) the said Humfrey Berrington did for the considerations therein mencioned absolutely grant and convey the premisses unto the said George Mason John Wingfeild and James Alderne and their heirs for ever as by the said indenture may appeare.

That the said purchase cost your petitioners said grandfather above 1900 pounds which was the full value of the same at above twenty years purchase.

That the said Humfrey Berrington having before made a mortgage in fee of part of the premisses to one Thomas Geers for security of 600 pounds principall money and the same being took in by and assigned and conveyed to your petitioners said grand father and the said George Mason and Thomas Hobbs and Henry Upton (trustees for your petitioners said grandfather) and their heires the said Humfrey Berrington by indenture did on or about the 15th day of February aforesaid for perfecting your petitioners said grandfathers title to the said mortgaged premisses did release to him and his said last mencioned trustees and their heirs all his right and equity of redemption of the same as by the same indenture may appear.

That the premisses being so vested and settled in your petitioners said grandfather and his said trustees as aforesaid they by indenture bearing date on or about the 25th day of Aprill 1653 (pursuant to articles of agreement made upon the marriage of your petitioners said father and mother) did convey and settle the said mannor of Pixley and impropriate tythes and glebe of Kinaston to the use of your petitioners said father for his life remainder to the use of your petitioners said mother for her life the remainder to the use of the heirs of the body of your petitioners said father on the body of your petitioners said mother to be begotten the remainder to the use of the right heirs of your petitioners said father for ever as by the same indenture may appear.

That your petitioners said grandfather dyed in or about the year leaving issue behind him only your petitioners said mother his daughter and heir to whom as such the said trust of the rest of the premisses descended upon the death of your petitioners said late grandfather.

That your petitioners said father dyed in or about the year 1665 leaving issue behind him of his body on the body of your petitioners said mother (amongst others) the said George Mason his eldest son [illegible] Benjamin Mason his second sonn who is dead without yssue and the appellant Dodington his third sonn

That your petitioners said eldest brother dyed sometime since as is hereinafter mencioned without issue and your petitioners said mother dyed very lately as is hereinafter also mencioned and thereby your petitioner became intituled unto and ought now to have and enjoy the premisses that is to say the said mannor of Pixley and the glebe and tyths aforesaid to him and the heirs of his body by virtue of the said last mencioned settlement and the rest of the premisses to him and his heirs as heir at law (as your petitioner sheweth he is) to his said late mother.

But your petitioner farther sheweth that the said Thomas Berrington in or about the year 1674 and not before (athough his said father dyed in or about the year 1658 and he the said Thomas Berrington was then of full age and your petitioners said father had been so long dead as aforesaid) did pretend and give out that the said conveyance of the 12th of February aforesaid was in trust for your petitioners said father but subject and in trust to pay and compound the debts of the said Humfrey and to take off his sequestration and raise portions and make provision for his children and after that was done the premisses to be preserved for the said Humfrey and his heirs and thereupon exhibited his bill into the said court against your petitioners said mother and brother to have a discovery of such pretended trust and an account of the rents and profits and a reconveyance of the premisses and the said Humfrey having in the said year 1652 made a lease for his own life of the mannor of Bishopstone in the said county of Hereford to your petitioners said father at the yearly rent of 50 pounds which (though in truth an absolute lease) had some colour of a trust for the said Humfrey the said Thomas Berrington did therefore to give colour to the rest of the premisses being also a trust as before pretended set forth and charge the same in his said bill (but untruly) to be a trust to help to raise money for the purpose aforesaid.

That your petitioners said mother and brother putt in their answers to the said bill and absolutely denyed the said pretended trust and insisted (as the truth was) that the said George Dodington was an absolute purchaser to his own use.

That the said Thomas Berrington nevertheless proceeded in his said suit and after examinacion of severall witnesses on both sides brought the same to a hearing on the 30th of Aprill vicesimo septimo Caroli 2di before the then Lord Chancellor Nottingham and then with much difficulty (his witnesses being suspected persons and his proof but slender and uncertain obtained an order for a tryall at law to be had on these issues that is to say whether the said lease of Bishopstone was in trust for the said Humfrey and his heirs and whether the said conveyance made the 2d February 1652 was an absolute sale of the premisses therein contained or of any part thereof or whether the estate after the consideracion of the deed was satisfyed was in trust for the said Humfrey or not.

That your petitioners said mother and brother conceiving it not only very hard to have such a tryall directed after above twenty years quiet enjoyment without any pretence of such trust either by the said Thomas Berrington or his said father but also that there was not any sufficient proof in the said cause to induce or warrant such direction the said Thomas Berrington's proofs being not only suspected and uncertain as aforesaid but also tending cheifly to some generall and uncertain words that had passed from your petitioners said father concerning a trust and which the said Thomas Berrington's witnesses without caution and sufficient reason seemed to apply to a trust of the said purchased premisses although he had not in truth any power to declare any trust of the said premisses your petitioners said mother and brother petitioned for and obtained a rehearing on the 16th day of July then next following but his lordship then declared that before he could deliver any finall judgment it was necessary for the satisfaction of the conscience of the court to have a tryall at law and ordered the same accordingly upon the issues aforesaid.

That accordingly a tryall was had at the then next assizes for the county of Worcester a place where the said Thomas Berrington was well known and had many relations and friends but where your petitioners said mother and brother were utter straingers and the jury then (but contrary to the judges direction who tryed the said issues) gave a verdict for the said Thomas Berrington in both the said issues but the same being contrary to the judges directions aforesaid and the said Thomas Berrington's witnesses at the said tryall being not only persons of little or no credit and suspected, and their evidence cheifly relating to and being about some generall words that had fallen from your petitioners said father and the same and a matter of a trust being given generally in evidence when the same might as in all probability they did (if any such were ever spoken) relate only to the said lease of Bishopstone which was the only part of the said Humfrey's estate that your petitioners said father had from the said Humfrey or to the trust expresly mencioned in the said deed of the 2d of February aforesaid for payment of some particular summes of money therein mencioned and agreed to be paid as part of the consideration thereof the said judge declared himself much dissatisfied with the said verdict and that there was not sufficient evidence for the same and so certified into the said Court of Chancery to the said Lord Chancellor who thereupon and upon mocion made on the 2d day of May next after such tryall by your petitioners said mother and brother for a new tryall did then accordingly order the same and to be had at the then next assizes at Hereford on the said issues.

That soon after before the time for such new tryall was come the said Thomas Berrington petitioned for and obtained the said cause to be set down for his lordshipps finall judgment on the equity reserved without such new tryall and thereupon on the 7th day of July vicesimo octavo Caroli 2di his lordshipp did order and decree your petitioners said mother and brother to account before a master of the said court for the rents and profitts of the said lands in question and also to reconvey and reassigne the same to the said Thomas Berrington or whom he should think fit discharged of incumbrance as by the said decree may appear

That the said Thomas Berrington soon after by vertue of the said decree gott the possession of the premisses and hath ever since held the same.

That your petitioners said mother and brother being dissatisfyed with and conceiving themselves [illegible] injured by the said decree [illegible] the same being [illegible] such as ought not to have been made there not being sufficient proof in the said cause without the said verdict (which ought not to have been regarded or of any weight [illegible] as humbly [illegible] to warrant such decree and on the contrary [illegible] sufficient proof on your petitioners said mothers and brothers parts and behalfs to [illegible] [evidence?] the said deed of the 12th day of February aforesaid to have been an absolute conveyance without any such pretended trust as aforesaid they your petitioners said mother and brother did never submit to or comply with the said decree and reconvey or reassigne the premisses pursuant to the same:

That your petitioners said mother and brother did not nevertheless at any time contest the said decree and costs that they were ordered to pay for such new tryall being very excessive and she your petitioners said mother then having severall young children to maintain and she and your petitioners said brother by the said suit and loss of the said estate and other misfortunes that befell them in the world being reduced to low and straighened condicions and so utterly incapacitated to do the same and so that your petitioners said brother was soon after necesitated to go and try his fortune in the West Indies where he continued to the time of his death which happened about 8 or 9 years agoe and your petitioners said mother continued in such condicion and incapacity to the time of her death which happened in the moneth of December last past.

That although your petitioner by the death of his said mother and brother as aforesaid is become intitled unto and ought to have and enjoy the said mannors of Pixley and Catley and the said impropriate tythes and wood as aforesaid yet he or his trustees (although they have all the deeds and evidences of and belonging and which make out your petitioners said right and title to and would enable him at law to recover the same) cannot take any effectuall course at law for such recovery while the said decree (which is enrolled) doth stand in force and in his way and may be sett up against your petitioner and his said just right and title at law.

Therefore and forasmuch as the said decree is erronious and [illegible] inequitable and such as ought not to have been made or to stand in your petitioners way but ought for the reasons aforesaid to be reviewed [illegible] or reversed your petitioner doth humbly pray releif in the premisses from your lordshipps in this his appeale according to equity and justice after the usuall method and course of proceedings in appeals in this most supream court of judicature and that the said decree may be reversed and sett aside and your petitioner restored to the premisses and to that end that your lordshipps will be pleased to order the usuall summons to the said Thomas Berrington to appear before your lordshipps and putt in his answer hereunto

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc.

Dodington Mason

paratext
  • [illegible] Wi Williams
  • William Dobyns

Dodington Masons petition versus Thomas Berrington reade 2o Martii 1695 ordered an answere this day month

November 23th 1696 the appeale was agreed and the councell declared the agreement at the barr and soe the decree was affirmed by consent

Dodington Mason. HL/PO/JO/10/1/483/1029 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of Dodington Mason apellant in a cause now depending in this honourable house against Thomas Berrington esquire respondent

Humbly sheweth

That your petitioner exhibited his appeale in the sayd cause the last session and had an answer thereunto and by order the same was to have been heard towards the end of the sayd session but the sayd session was concluded before the sayd cause could be brought to a hearing

Your petitioner therefore humbly prays your lordshipps to appoint such time for the hearing of the sayd cause as to your lordshipps shall seeme meet

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

  • Dodington Mason

Robert Lucy, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/483/1035 (1696)

paratext

7 pence per quire

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of Robert Lucy esquire

Most humbly sheweth

That your peticioner hath exhibited to his grace the Archbishop of Canterbury many articles against Thomas Lord Bishop of Saint Davids for sundry notorious crimes and misdea= =meanors and particularly

For symoniacall compacts and agreements, for exacting extra= =ordinary fees rewards and gratuityes for procurations collations institutions ordeining of priests and deacons and for doeing of other parts of his episcopall function.

And likewise for not tendring the oath of fidelity to severall priestes and deacons who were ordeined by him, and yett certifyeing for some of them that they had taken the oath of fidelity, though neither tendred or taken by them

And alsoe for takeing away the revenue of severall churches and the profitts of severall antient officers and applying them to his own private use to the ruining of many persons, and the overthrow of the charitable constitutions of those churches.

For the getting of the charters and evydences of the churches of Saint Davids and Brecon into his hands, which belong to the chapter to keep, and refuseing to redeliver them.

For pomoteing of ignorant and infamous men in the church all which and much more are conteined in the said articles

The said Lord Bishop of Saint Davids was summoned to attend his grace the Archbishop of Canterbury in order to answer the said articles, and your peticioner camme from the towne of Brecon being six score miles off, to the citty of London to prove the trueth of the said articles, butt the said Bishop of Saint Davids insisted upon his priviledge as a peer of the realme declareing that he was advised by some great lords that he could not wave his priviledge without offending this honourable house, and thereby hath retarded your peticioner's further prosecution of him to his great trouble and charge to the ruine of severall persons whose just rights he deteines, and to the unspeakable scandall of the church and ecclesiasticall con= stitution.

Your peticoner therefore humbly prayes that your lordshipps will order the said Bishop of Saint David's to wave his priviledge and permitt your peticioner to proceed against the said Bishopp upon the said articles

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc

Robert Lucy

paratext

Reade 7 Martii 1695

March 20th 1695 after debate ordered that the peticion be dismissed the bishop declareing he would wave his priviledge

Bennett Swaine. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1038 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall, and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of Bennett Swaine.

Sheweth

That Benjamin Middleton did heretofore commence and prosecute an action upon the case against your petitioner in the Court of Kings Bench upon which a speciall verdict was found and thereupon the Court of Kings Bench gave judgement for the said Benjamin Middleton against your petitioner upon which judgement your petitioner hath brought a writt of error retornable in Parliament before your lordships whereby the record of the said judgement is now removed before your lordships, and your petitioner hath assigned errors upon the said record

That the said Benjamin Middleton is lately dead haveing made his will, and thereof William Fawkener and John Lane executors, who have duely proved the said will.

Your petitioner therefore humbly prays your lordships to order the said William Fawkner and John Lane to appear before your lordships, and to joyne in the said errors.

And your petitioner shall pray etc:

  • Bennet Swayne

William Fawkener and John Lane. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1038 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of William Fawkener and John Lane

Humbly sheweth

That Benjamin Middleton your peticioners testator did bring his accion in the Kings Bench Courte att Westminster by bill and not by originall against Bennet Swaine the now plainant in the writt of error and did obtaine judgment 3 yeares since. That the said Bennett Swaine hath brought his writt of error upon the said judgment before your lordshipps and did 19th of this instant March serve your peticioners as executors of the said Benjamin Middleton with an order from this honourable house beareing date the 16th instant whereby your peticioners were required on Fryday the 20th of this instant March to joine issue in the errors att 10 of the clocke in the forenoone.

Your peticioners not haveing had time yet to gett a coppy of the errors assigned or to advise with councell humbly pray your honours to grant your peticioners a few dayes time to get a coppy of the errors assigned and to joyne issue therein as they shall bee advised by their councell.

And your peticioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etc

paratext

Fawkner and Lanes peticion versus Swayne reade 20 Martii 1695

Bennett Swayne. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1038 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Bennett Swayne

Sheweth that your peticioner hath lately brought a writt of error before your lordships upon a judgment given in the Kings Bench for Benjamin Middleton against your petitioner and the matter being now at issue upon the said writt of error before your lordships

Your petitioner humbly prays your lordships to appoint a day for the hearing of the said cause

And your shall ever pray etc

  • Bennet Swaine

Thomas Davis. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1039 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Thomas Davis

Sheweth

That your petitioner is servant and one of the messengers to his majestie and employed in his majesties affaires both at home and abroad, more particularly at this juncture, in the serving divers warrants against severall persons in case of high treason.

That one Joseph Whiston and John Benn his attorney well knowing your petitioner to be his majesties servant, and his said employment, notwithstanding have taken out a writt and warrant against your petitioner directed to one Edward Boyce a bayliff, whom your petitioner informed that he was a messenger, and then actually upon his duty in serving one of the said warrants for high treason; yet the said bayliff and his followers did on Munday the 9th of this instant March 1695 arrest and carry him to Newgate whence he hath been forced to remove himself by habeas corpus to the Fleet where he now remaines for want of room to lodge in Newgate it being so full and his health in danger, by which meanes your petitioner was then and is now hindered in performing his duty and service to his majestie.

That although the right honourable the Lord Chamberlain did [issue?] [illegible] [his?] warrant on your petitioners behalfe yet the parties [concerned?] brought a habeas corpus and have still proceeded against your petitioner

Your petitioner most humbly prayes your lordships to take his case into consideration, and to give such orders therein for your petitioners releif and discharge as to your lordships shall seem most meet.

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc.

  • Thomas Davis

The peticion of Thomas Davis

Rupert Browne. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1040 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of Rupert Browne

Sheweth

That a bill haveing been sent from the House of Commons to your lordships for the vacating certain letters patents of the honor of Tutbury and Forrest of Needwood and other things therein specified

And your petitioner haveing severall demands upon the premisses, and severall legall securities for the payment of great summes of money by him advanced and lent by and under the said letters patents, which said securities will be all avoided, and your petitioners money lost in case the said bill, as it is now brought up to your lordships (should pass into a law) to the almost utter ruin of your petitioner

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prays your lordships that he may be heard by his councill against to the said bill

Rupert Browne

paratext

Rupert Browns petition versus Tutbury bill reade 12 March 1695

Sir Edward Smyth, baronet. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1040 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall assembled in Parliament

The humble peticion of Sir Edward Smyth barronet

Sheweth

That Colonell Edward Vernon deceased in the yeare 1683 did borrow of the peticioner 300 pounds for the secureing the repayment thereof with interest; made a mortgage to the peticioner of the castle and scite of the castle of Tutbury and other lands therein specifyed in the county of Stafford; which were leased to the said Collonel Vernon or his trustee severall yeares before by his late majestie King Charles the second for a terme of yeares yett in being

That neither principall nor interest being paid the peticioner about the yeare 1687 brought an ejectment and recovered the possession; and hath ever since continued in the possession thereof, being of the yearely value of 10 pounds

That a bill being sent to your lordshipps from the House of Commons for the vacateing certaine letters patentes of the honour of Tutbury Forrest of Needwood and other lands made to Browne and Boheine, under which your peticioner doth not clayme, yett by the generall words in the said bill, your peticioneres interest (as hee is advised) will bee concluded; the saveing in the said bill not being large enough to secure your peticioner.

Your peticioner therefore humbly prayes your lordshipps that hee may bee heard by his counsell for his interest before the said bill doe passe

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc.

Edward Smyth

paratext

Sir Edward Smiths peticion versus Tutbury bill reade 13o Martii 1695

Several merchants and owners of ships trading to the plantations. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1047 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of severall merchants and owners of ships trading to the plantations.

Sheweth

That the ingrossed bill for preventing frauds and regulating abuses in the plantation trade now before your lordships (if passed into a law) will restrain the subjects of England to trade in English shipping forreign built directly to and from the plantations, which will greatly tend to the prejudice of your petitioners who are the real owners of severall forreign built ships, which by the Acts of Navigation and Frauds were not debarred tradeing thither, paying aliens customs for the goods imported in such as are not made free.

That the present want of ships to bring off the yearly product of the plantations, occasions high freights and few goods, and if such forreign built ships should be prohibited the said trade, it would be very much to the prejudice of this kingdome for want of the plantation goods which already are so scarce and dear.

May it therefore please your lordships to take the same into your consideration that such forreign built ships which at this time are possessed by English owners may be made free or else that forreign built ships so owned, may have the liberty to trade to and from the plantations directly paying aliens dutys, as to your lordships in your great wisdom shall seem fitt.

And your petitioners will pray etca.

  • John Couleir
  • [illegible] Woolfe
  • [Joseph?] Woolfe
  • Joseph Martin
  • Samuel Eyre
  • James Clarke

Several graziers and many dealers in cattle at West Smithfield. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1048 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of severall grasiers renting severall farmes under large rents per annum, and many others who are traders and dealers in cattle bought and sold in the markett of Westsmithfeild, London, and of severall talesmen and factors, who receive and pay moneys for cattle bought and sold in the said markett

Humbly sheweth, that Westsmithfeild is the onely markett for buying and selling of live cattle for the support of the inhabitants of the citty of London and parts adjacent thereto, in which markett is returned about fifty thousand pounds weekly in that commodity

That for want of lawfull sylver, the onely coyne they have traded with, hath been and is guineas received and paid att thirty shillings each guinea for about a yeare past, and guineas received att the price aforesaid are the onely moneys remaineing in the hands of themselves their factors and agents in London and most parts of this kingdom

That in most faires and marketts in England, cattle can not be bought or sold but for guineas there being not sylver sufficient to trade with, and that which is being very small and badd, should guineas by a law be reduced to two and twenty shillings it would tend to the utter ruin of your peticioners and theirs and thousands of familys in this kingdom.

That this is the season of the yeare for severall of your peticioners to stock their lands and they can not buy any cattle but with guineas not haveing sylver, and should they sustayne soe greate a loss thereby as eight shillings in every guinea, it would totally render them uncapable of paying their rents and oblige them to surrender their farmes into their landlords possession, notwithstanding the consequences will tend to the undoing of them and their familys

Your peticioners therefore humbly pray your lordships to take the case of your peticioners into consideracion and to help them by such methods as to your lordshipps shall seeme just and reasonable and your peticioners shall etc

  • William [Slimpson?]
  • John Dewks
  • James Hubbard
  • Thomas Woodward
  • Thomas Recklis
  • Thomas Ellis
  • Henry Hubbard
  • Thomas Burdikin
  • [Tym?] Ellis
  • Fran: Grantham
  • Edward [Sh...er?]
  • John Clarke
  • Thomas Mottrum
  • William Blaikley
  • Richard Filkin
  • John Gedney
  • Richard Stevens
  • Robert [Stinnitt?]
  • William Gibson
  • Knightley Harrison
  • William Grant
  • Daniell [Howett?]
  • Roger Ubancke
  • Henry Higley
  • Thomas Wage
  • William Bostons
  • John Harrod
  • John Clarke
  • John [Harding?]
  • Charles Carter
  • Thomas Cannon
  • John Mane
  • Samuel Searl
  • John Sharp
  • Richard Gawton
  • Joseph Booth
  • John Highlord
  • George Crips
  • Joseph Crips
  • James Bissell
  • John [Dunfal?]
  • the mark of John Wynne
  • Henry Boone
  • John Broune
  • the mark of Morrise Holt
  • the marke of Edward Burton
  • Richard Hatton
  • Thomas Chamber
  • Samuell [Trowell?]
  • George Newland
  • John Wynd
  • Thomas Vaughan
  • The marke of Anthony Bunn
  • Charles Hatton
  • Edward Greenberry
  • George Clarke
  • Simon Beckley
  • Jaspar Harmar
  • [Henry?] Frances
  • Richard Tart
  • Moses Boddicott
  • Samuell Neill
  • John Davis
  • Robert Stevenson
  • Richard [Wellear?]
  • Edward Yardley
  • John West
  • Edmond Cottnam
  • Richard [Badham?]
  • Hugh Jones
  • [illegible] [.anmer?]
  • Richard Grover
  • William Thomas
  • Andrew Davies
  • John Willis
  • Philip Watkins
  • John Bassett
  • Robert Anthone
  • Simon Applebee
  • John [Shulleworth?]
  • George Mawer
  • Samuel Deane
  • Joseph Cash
  • John [illegible]

The calico printers. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of the callicoe printers on behalf of themselves and a great number of people imployed in that trade.

Sheweth

That whereas there is a clause added to the bill for restraining the wearing of all wrought silks, Bengalls, and dyed printed or stained callicoes imported in these words, videlicet or, that are or shall be printed in this kingdome; or else where. Which clause doth not only tend to the ruine of your petitioners, but also to the utter destruction of a trade which by reason of its usefullness and cheapness is very beneficiall to the publick

Therefore your petitioners humbly pray to be heard by their councell att the barr of this most honourable house in relation to the said clause before the bill doe pass.

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc.

  • William Sherwin
  • John Spencer
  • Benjamin Naylor
  • Harmon [Mackillcin?]
  • John Hopkins
  • Louis Rossiere
  • John Edwards
  • John [Line?]
  • Edward Allin
  • James Merick
  • John Coleman
  • Jobe Brocos
  • John [Meck?]
  • Georg Powell
  • Richard Payne
  • George Briggs
  • Joseph Bundy
  • William Hamand
  • David Pechell
  • [Ca... Memygantie?]
  • Robert Smith
  • John Morris
  • John Taylor
  • John Lee
  • Richard Langly
  • Christopher Needle
  • Charles Hunt
  • John Briggs
  • Samuel Burroughs
  • John [Peasley?]
  • James Watson
  • Charles Hill
  • Henry Ayscough
  • Richard Lewis
  • James Parbery
  • John Woodfild
  • Henry Harding
  • Richard Boyfeild
  • Joseph Mobs
  • Joseph Dumbleton
  • D Richards
  • Nicholas Dean
  • [Pr?] Mauvillain
  • Thomas Steed
  • Thomas Gibbons
  • Joseph Hull
  • John Hutton
  • John Parbery
  • J Dombleton
  • William [Levis?]
paratext

Callicoe printers peticion reade 3o Aprilis 1696. Rejected.

Several silk dyers, on behalf of themselves and many others. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of severall dyers of wrought silkes, whose names are hereunto subscribed, in behalfe of themselves and many others of the same trade.

Most humbly sheweth.

That whereas we understand to our unspeakable trouble a bill prohibiting the wearing of wrought silks from India and Persia hath passed the honourable House of Commons and now lyes before your lordships: we do with all humility beg your lordships to lay to heart how fatall the consequence of that bill will be to your poor peticioners for our trade which consists wholly in dying such silks, will be thereby utterly destroyed; and our selves, apprentices and families, ruined; being left destitute of any honest meanes by which we may gett our bread, so that if we will live, we must be forced to that which to a freeborne subject of England lookes as the last and most dreadfull of all callamityes, to quitt our native country and transport our selves and families to some forreigne one, where encouragement is given to that trade which we have been brought up to.

Wherefore we most earnestly beseech your lordships to have compassi= =on upon us, and our families, and not suffer us, who now live comfortably by our honest labour, to be reduced to so deplorable a condition.

And your peticioners shall ever pray etc.

  • George Fry
  • Thomas [Hagger?]
  • Olliver Gennitt
  • Danill Feilde
  • Richard [Hanchett?]
  • James Gunnell
  • John Barton
  • Jos: Frampton
  • Thomas [Mellencon?]
  • George Killingly
  • William Whitehead
  • Samuel Phillebrone
  • John Maning
  • Timothy Sharp
  • Jose Abbats
  • John Crowter
  • John Weekes
  • Thomas Orton
  • William Bland
  • Samuell [Watom?]
  • Ralp Raullins
  • John Booth
  • John [Orton?]
  • John Shaw
  • Charles Cope
  • Gideon Jordaine
  • Henry Bryerley
  • Richard Lindsey
  • Sabastian Lee
  • [Allutharus?] Foskey
  • John [Greys?]
  • John Hale
  • Edward Godson
  • Ambrose Vincent
  • James Swain
  • Joseph Dowell
  • John Crary
  • Leonard Jenner
  • James Royce
  • Thomas Church
  • Lewiss White
  • Samuell Hunt
  • Thomas Wise
  • Thomas Mould
  • John Piggitt
  • Joseph [Pickmor?]
  • Henry Compart
  • Charls Monk
  • Samuell Tayler
  • John Lord
  • William [Pettit?]
  • Samuell Brandis
  • William Jackson
  • Thomas Sands
  • Eli: Weblin
  • Jon: Jonson
  • [Jean?] Lake
  • Jon: [Hearres?]
  • John Searle
  • John [Donenton?]
  • Isak Pullen
  • Thomas Davall
  • Joseph Whiston
  • Joseph Hagger
  • Joseph Nun
  • [Hunp Sittliffe?]
  • Mary Orme
  • Ephraim Styles
  • William Hicocke
  • Edward Smith
  • Thomas Mitchell
  • Ann [Baker?]
  • Thomas Broumfeild
  • William Clarkson
  • John Balldwin
  • John Walker
  • Thomas Scholay
  • Ralph Walker
  • George Lawrence
  • Matthew Goodred
  • [William?] Biggs
  • Henry Cole
  • Joseph Weekes
  • Jon Porter
  • Peirce Orton
  • William Baynam
  • Edward Gardyner
  • James Cooper
  • John Leigh
  • John Thacker
  • William [Huet?]
  • Richard Grundey
  • John Child
  • Thomas Wells
  • Thomas Pilkington
  • Richard Irons
  • Robert Burtin
  • Jon [...ter?]
  • John Watson
  • Thomas Smith
  • Mary Graye
  • John Honeyman
  • Margaratt Danily
  • Fr Cartwright
  • Jonas Foster
  • Samuell Steell
  • Richard Andrews
  • Giles Barlow
  • Chearles [illegible]
  • Edmond Cantrell
  • Richard Preston
  • Peter Williams
  • John Collins
  • John Knight
  • Hugh Davenport
  • Williams Collins
  • Matthew Willkinson
  • John Reeve
  • Charls Brag
  • John [Petty?]
  • Thomas Cole
  • James Smith
  • Robort Smith
  • Anne Briges
  • Jon: Chearle
  • Samuel Tuck
  • Danill Reeve
  • William Woodard
  • Ann Cunstable
  • Brian Tillford
  • Richard Munke
  • Cristofor Parot
  • William Lamboth
  • Mary West
  • Roger Pewe
  • Charlls Smith
  • John Grundy
  • Robert Smith
  • Francis Chapman
  • Steven Grene
  • John [Thomoll?]

Several gentlemen's sons, apprenticed to linen drapers. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parlement assembled.

The humble peticion of severall gentlemen's sonn's being apprentices to linnen drapers:

Sheweth

That whereas a bill for restraining of the wearing of East India wrought silks, Bengalls, printed, and dyed callicoes, is now depending before this most honourable house.

And whereas the said bill concernes the trade of the linen drapers, and tends to the great detriment of your petitioners in particular, whose freinds have given considerable summs of mony to our masters to instruct us in the said trade, the greatest part of which will be lost if this prohibition should pass into an act.

Your petitioners most humbly pray that your honours will take our case into your serious consideration

And your petitioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etc

  • William Belfield
  • Richard Arnald
  • George Lovell
  • Arnold Warren
  • John Elson
  • Richard Hammond
  • Nicolas Clegg
  • Thomas Bainbrigge
  • Thomas Stone
  • Pyers Williams
  • Robert Brooke
  • Callow Cary
  • John Higdon
  • Samuel Davis
  • Daniell Binckes
  • Thomas de La Bere
  • Joseph Frost
  • Jeremy Lister
  • Thomas Cromwell
  • William Hyett
  • Ambrose Birch
  • Thomas Jackson
  • Law Hill
  • Humphrey Rogers
  • John Cuttler
  • [Rice Herbert?]
  • Richard Dolphin
  • Giles Sadleir
  • Peter Tickle
  • William Fazakerley
  • John Browne
  • Edward Fazakerley
  • Henry Child
  • Edward [Swanne?]
  • Gilbert Lacy
  • John Cales
  • Henry Fanshaw
  • Michaell Colley
  • Isaack Parish
  • Miles Barne
  • Charles Hickes
  • Jacob Wilmer
  • Thomas Goodall
  • [illegible]
  • Benjamin Dod
  • Thomas Chester
  • Thomas Hughes
  • Philip Wells
  • John [Siar?]
  • Thomas Wallis
  • Thomas Phipps junior
  • Robert Salter
  • Thomas Wyse
  • Richard Aston
  • William [Lane?]
  • Roger Gathorne
  • Henry Savage
  • Andrew Pitt
  • Robert Sedgwicke
  • Michaell Brixey
  • A Caerlyle
  • Lawrence Andrewes
  • Thomas Barnard
  • Adam Gouldney
  • John Osgood
  • Thomas Shaw
  • Clement Buckby
  • George Turner
  • Henry Lovell
  • Edward Stanley
  • John Walker
  • Richard Raynsford
  • John Grundy
  • Henry Nicholls
  • Benjamin Higham
  • Edward Fenwick
  • Steven Cross
  • William [Cupper?]
  • Samuell Papillon
  • Nathaniell Maidstone
  • John Coxe
  • Thomas Bowater
  • James Donaldson
  • Laurence Fashion
  • Benjamin Shute
  • John Papillon
  • John Frampton
  • Thomas Karver
  • Joshua Reynolds
  • St John Bennett
  • Richard Garbrand
  • John [Rosher?]
  • Const Vernatti
  • Henry Pennyman
  • Thomas Garbrand
  • John Nurse
  • Thomas Woolley
  • Robert Wright
  • Samuell Fowler
  • John Whitworth
  • George Sibley
  • Valen: [illegible]
  • Thomas Kent
  • Samuell Pratt
  • William Moseley
  • William [Wouster?]
  • [Henry?] Payler
  • William Read
  • Thomas Byrd
  • Mathew Snablin
  • Edward Howel
  • Anthony Mountague
  • Bulstrode Peachey
  • William Eaton
  • George Shortridge
  • Hugh Bonfoy
  • Charles Buckingham
  • Henry Bownter
  • Thomas Treebody
  • Robert Atkins
  • William Wood
  • John Barnard
  • John Dee
  • Walter Acton
  • Samuell Pindar
  • William Twigger
  • Anthony Arrowsmith
  • John Markham
  • John Barnard
  • David Welldish
  • Walter Lukin
  • Jasper Cullum
  • [Pers: Cocks?]
  • John Daye
  • Samuell Tomlyns
  • Thomas Skinner
  • Richard Moreton
  • John Eston
  • Samuel Stable
  • Isaac Grey
  • John [Pistor?]
  • Simon Wallis
  • John Smith
  • Jos: Paris
  • Jos: Edmonds
  • Richard Eyton
  • Christopher Michell
  • Richard Watts
  • William [Voyce?]
  • Richard Baron
  • Robert Brooke
  • John Spillett
  • Arnold Beebey
  • Richard Slater
  • Daniel Vandewall
  • Joseph Antrobus
  • Matthias Morton
  • [Benjamin?] du Bois
  • Fra: Whaley
  • Benjamin Roberts
  • Samuell [Elyatt?]
  • John [...brell?]
  • John Crook
  • Barnard Whalley
  • Thomas Relch
  • Richard Bridgman
  • Job: Willcocks
  • Samuel Boys
  • Jason Withers
  • Stephen Harvey
  • John Haskins
  • Edward Fane
  • John Clarke
  • William Vinall
  • Thomas [Nood?]
  • Thomas Briscoe
  • Anthony Goddard
  • John Arnald
  • John Coxe
  • James Watts
  • John Freeman
  • Robert Shard
  • Benjamin Skutt
  • Richard Hodgkinson
  • John Starkey
  • George Reynolds
  • James [Allin?]
  • Thomas Tracy
  • George Langmore
  • John Goddard
  • James Browne
  • Richard Meynell
  • Peter Burnett
  • Pole Bereresford
  • William Luce
  • Thomas Opie
  • Henry Lambe
  • Thomas Needham
  • Ralph Street
  • Edward Farmer
  • John Payne
  • Zac: Newberry
  • George Woolley
  • John Toovey
  • James Sale
  • Cesar Chester
  • John Brome
  • Thomas Woodroffe
  • Stephen Ashby
  • Walter Combes
  • William Theed
  • John Wells
  • Nevill Parker
  • John Parker
  • William Hamond
  • Daniel Cole
  • Samuel Symonds
  • Percivall Chandler
  • Hastings [Heyte?]
  • George [Sleighton?]
  • Samuell Rawling
  • Adam [Smart?]
  • Thomas Miller
  • Robert Newham
  • Bernard Bolen
  • John Ellis
  • John Cowan
  • Thomas [Coman?]
  • Simeon Guidott
  • John Lupton
  • John Taylor
  • John Dolphin
  • Nathaniell Hale
  • Robert Atkyns
  • John Stanley
  • Simon Mayne
  • Thomas Hayward
  • William Henley
  • Nicolas Bigsby
  • Willim Man
  • James Astry
  • Charles Manjoy
  • J Grinley
  • Walsingham Candler
  • Samuel [Gannel?]
  • Ralph Harrison
  • Charles Packe
  • John Mason
  • Richard Fouke
  • Samuel Amery
  • William Peele
  • John Birkhead
  • Thomas Mott
  • John Thorpe
  • Charles Layng
  • Charles Mandon
  • Jacob Hugon
  • John Kent
  • Andre Vedeau
  • John Vedeau
  • William Vickery
  • Phillip Haynes
  • John Smyth
  • Caeser Giffard
  • Benjamin Stroude
  • Thomas Carruthers
  • James Alkins
  • Thomas Harrington
  • John Irving
  • Archibald Cunningham
  • William Moorhead
  • Thomas [Hopton?]
  • Hugh Crawford
  • William Houston
  • Anthony [Stewart?]
  • Francis Grunwin
  • James Child
  • Lister [Tigh?]
  • Joseph Speed
  • John Baker
  • John Richardson

The governor and company of merchants trading into the East Indies. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the governour and company of merchants of London trading into the East Indies.

Humbly sheweth

That the petitioners do humbly apprehend that the bill intituled An Act for Restraining the Wearing of All Wrought Silks Bengalls Printed or Stained Callicoes Imported into the Kingdom of England of the Product and Manufacture of Persia and the East Indies now lyeing before your lordships is very prejudiciall to the interest of the trade of this kingdom in generall and particularly to the East India trade.

The peticioners therefore do most humbly pray that they may be heard by their councill before the passing of the said bill.

And the peticioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etca:

Signed by order of the governor and company

Robert Blackborne [ser?]

paratext

A peticion of East India Company reade 4o Aprilis 1696 3.

People who have lent money on the customs arising from various goods. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of divers persons in behalf of themselves and others who have lent moneys on the customes arising from wines, vinegar, tobacco, and East India goods.

Humbly sheweth

That the petitioners have advanced severall great sums of money on the publick faith of the kingdom to [illegible] majestie and the nations occasions: for repayment whereof they have talleys struck on the said funds.

That the petitioners were fully perswaded when they advanced their moneys that they should have had the whole custome of those goods as it then stood for their security.

That the petitioners are informed there is a bill depending before this most honourable house prohibiting the wearing of East India silks, Bengalls, and [printed?] callicoes whereby the custome of those goods which is between twenty and thirty per cent of their whole value will abate and the security for their money be much lessened.

The petitioners do therefore most humbly pray that they may be heard by their councill at the bar of this most honourable house against passing the said bill.

And the petitioners as in duty bound shall pray etca.

  • Peter Godfrey
  • Samuel Lethieullier
  • [illegible]
  • W. Gore
  • [illegible]
  • A. Houblon
  • Thomas Goddard
  • R [Raworthe?]
  • Nathaniell [Te...?]
  • Ambrose Asty
  • [illegible]
  • Anthony Burren
  • Edward Whitehall
  • Thomas Philp
  • William [Stonehener?]
  • James Whitchurch
  • Richard Bowater

Several upholsterers, on behalf of themselves and many others. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parlement assembled

The humble peticion of severall upholsters in behalf of themselves and many other

Humbly sheweth

That whereas a bill for restraning of the wearing of East India wrought silks, printed and dyed callicoes, is now depending before this most honourable house.

Which restriction tends to the great detriment of trade in generall and more perticuler to your petitioners

Therefore your petitioners humbly pray to be heard by their councell at the barr of this most honorable house before the bill do pass into an act

Your petitioners shall ever pray as in duty bound

  • Thomas Pain
  • Thomas Ketterich
  • John Reynolds
  • James Rowe
  • Christopher Redknap
  • Richard Crane
  • Thomas Rudden
  • Reuben Parke
  • Joathan Wells
  • Henry Heasman
  • John Alder
  • William Harvy
  • Nathaniel Carpenter
  • Joseph Bellamy
  • Samuell Rolfe
  • John Scott
  • George Darby
  • Arthur Calcott
  • Jonathan [Halley?]
  • Francis Righton
  • William Morgan
  • Josiah Casimire
  • Edward Wood
  • Joseph Devenish
  • Thomas Johnson
  • Thomas Grosvener
  • Samuel Cookman
  • William Cocke
  • Robert Long
  • John Watson
  • Nathaniell Troughton
  • [Lascells?] Metcalfe
  • John Cowper
  • John Hoole
  • John Oakes
  • John Pinckard
  • Richard King
  • Francis Delapre
  • Seth Spinckes
  • William Langmore
  • Edward Fenwick
  • John Ellis
  • Samuel Grosvenor
  • Samuel Hooker
  • John Cox
  • Thomas Hearne
  • John Harris
  • George Smith
  • Thomas Dixon
  • Nathaniell Hunt
  • Thomas Ferrers
  • Robert Gamlyn
  • Michael Brett
  • Robert Seale
  • Charles Blunt
  • Joseph Richardson
  • William Barbon
  • Thomas Freeman
  • Michael Miles
  • Thomas Crosse
  • Stephen Langley
  • Timothy Rutter
  • John Bernard
  • Samuel Metcalfe
  • James Simes
  • Richard Woodyeare
  • Benjamin Powell
  • Joseph Howes
  • Edmond Caper
  • Lyonell Bristow
  • John Ward
  • William Humphreys
  • [Daniell?] Woodrooff
  • Richard Sleeford
  • Richard Harris
  • John Parker
  • Matthew Wing
  • Ezekiell Rickards
  • John Mathews
  • William Ackland
  • William Peirce
  • Richard Page
  • Thomas Lyon

Packers, clothworkers and clothiers of Gloucestershire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of severall packers and clothworkers in behalf of themselves and the clothiers of Gloucestershire Wiltshire and Worcestershire

Humbly sheweth

That your peticioners have of late years provided for the East India trade very great quantity's of the woollen manufactures whereby some thousand family's have been sett on work which before were reduced to great necessity's for want thereof that the peticioners are informed there is a bill depending before your lordships for prohibiting the consumption of severall sorts of East India goods in this kingdom great part whereof are purchased with the said English commodity's. Which bill as the petitioners humbly conceive tends to the diminution of the said trade and consequently will lessen if not wholly prevent the exportation of English manufactures thither whereby your petitioners will be very great sufferers together with many thousand familys depending on them

Your peticioners therefore do most humbly beseech your lordshipps to take the premisses into your compassionate consideration and to doe therein for their relief as to your lordshipps great wisdom shall seem meet

And your peticioners as in duty bound shall pray etca.

  • William Barnsley
  • Thomas Williams
  • Edward Eaton
  • Thomas Andrews
  • [Lawe?] Cheffinch
  • Thomas Allen
  • Richard Hunt
  • Simon Lloyd
  • William [Loalbrey?]
  • William Roberts
  • Robert Hollis
  • Richard [Routlidg?]
  • Isaac [Loiffe?]
  • James Boddington
  • Henry King
  • Thomas Pattinson
  • George Benton
  • John Eakins
  • John Blake
  • Henry Barnesly
  • Edward Ebbitt
  • Thomas Baker
  • John Roberts
  • Richard Saunders
  • Josiah Bayfeild
  • Thomas Hazell
  • Richard Hazell
  • Samuel Bowes
  • Robart Lee
  • Robert Beachcroft
  • Richard Greenaway
  • Robert [Tredd?]
  • Lewis Jones
  • Edward Brailsford
  • Mathew Hebert
  • John Young
  • Thomas Clare
  • John Coleman
  • Richard Davies
  • James Fage
  • Roger Darby
  • Charles Great
  • Thomas Bayly
  • Edward Holmes
  • Giles Aynsworth
  • Paul Darby
  • Edward Gilbirt

The calico and linen dyers. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the callicoe and linnen dyers on behalf of themselves, and all the callicoe dyers in England.

Sheweth.

That whereas there is a clause added to the bill for restraining the wearing of all wrought silks, Bengalls, and dyed printed or stained calicoes imported in these words videlicet or that are or shall be dyed in this kingdom or else where, which clause tend to the ruine of your petitioners and familyes and a great many that have served apprenticeshipps to the said trade.

Therefore your petitioners humbly pray your honours that the said restriction may extend only to dyed callicoes imported.

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc.

  • John Evans
  • [illegible]
  • Henry Symonds
  • John Battin
  • Peter Sand
  • Bernerd Stanstoll
  • William Cowley
  • Bernard Noble
  • Stephen Cleeve
  • James [Shuter?]
  • William Toone
  • John Granshaw
  • Thomas Reynolds
  • Thomas Brown
  • [...ng Meredith?]
  • Ann [Baten?]
  • [Isa: Franshaw?]
  • Benjamin Ollive
  • John Grandy
  • William [Phillups?]
  • Ralph Toone
  • Jos. Robinson
  • Petter Flavill
  • James [illegible]
  • Benjamin Noble
  • Francis Knight
  • Thomas Owen
  • Thomas Roadley
  • William Willis
  • Nicholas Darke
  • Thomas Phillips
  • William Rogers
  • John Dolton
  • Hugh Noden
  • John Arsby
  • William Rogers
  • Richard Catrick
  • Henry Rose
  • Jonathan [Foolow?]
  • John Rose
  • John Earsby
  • Edward Bushell
  • James [illegible] Simones
  • Luke Reynolds
  • William Cooke
  • Thomas Hughs
  • Edward Fox
  • Thomas Bellsted
  • Robert Tyler
  • William Mumford
  • William Ewen
  • Nicholas Mabank
  • Thomas Cliffe
  • John Conham
  • John Staines
  • Joseph Hackney
  • Thomas Rittleby
  • Richard Nedwell
  • Silvester Cobery
  • Joseph Long
  • Thomas Cowley
  • Thomas Moris
  • William Moullder
  • Stephen Cleeve
  • John Wontley
  • Robert Stephens
  • Heugh Whit
  • John Hill
  • Edward Crabb
  • Moses Bright
  • Samuell [Abbutt?]
  • William [Stevven?]
  • Anderew Hiddon
  • Robert [Jocelder?]
  • Richard Styller
  • William [Cr...?]
  • Robert Person
  • John Hill
  • [Vinciet?] Andrewes
  • John Winington
  • Richard Carton
  • Thomas Hill
  • Samull Parsons
  • Richard [Boneiter?]
  • John Chaplin
  • John Sumnor
  • Nathaniel Wiyatt
  • Robert Bilton
  • John Mitchell
  • John Harris
  • John Joanes
  • [illegible] Evans
  • Danell Watts
  • Edward Bond
  • William Farmer
  • Samuell Farmar
  • Thomas Buswell
  • Gabrill Kent
  • Richard [illegible]
  • Nathell Wilkes
  • Amboos [.aranb..?]
  • John Jarratt
  • Robert Bladon
  • Andrew Halford
  • John Robinson
  • Nathan [Payn?]
  • John [E..ll?]
  • Philip Barret
  • [Lar?] Gooding
  • John [Fox?]
  • Thomas Jones
  • [Lar?] [illegible]
  • John Haris
  • John [Hadland?]
  • John Hill
  • John [illegible]
  • John Marshall
  • [Simon?] [illegible]
  • Thomas [Branes?]
  • John [Simons?]
  • Robert [Janson?]
  • James [illegible]
  • William [Sam?]
  • John [Shalle?]
  • William [illegible]
  • Thomas Matthews
  • [Roberd Hatton?]
  • Jane Guy
  • Ann Haris
  • Charles Conham
  • George [Griffen?]
  • Michael [Br...?]
  • Henry [Hine?]
  • George Shepard
  • Edward Jackson
  • John Hill
  • Edward Cooke
  • John [Pery?]
  • Thomas Wheler
  • John Allin
  • John Moris

The callenders in the City of London. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of the callenders in about the Citty of London

Sheweth

That whereas, there is a bill in this most honourable house for restraining the wearing of all wrought silks, Bengalls, and dyed printed or stained callicoes, imported, which tend to the ruine of your petitioners and familyes and a great number who have served apprenticeshipps to the said trade

Therefore your petitioners most humbly prayes your honours, in pitty and compassion to your petitioners and the distressed circumstances of their familyes, that the said bill may not pass.

And your petitioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etc.

  • Richard Farmer
  • John Parsons
  • John Poxon
  • Plowman Bostock
  • James Lloyd
  • Jonathan Brittell
  • John Whitecake
  • Richard Pider
  • Richard Jaye
  • Robert Dennison
  • Walter Rigbuy
  • Frances Carter
  • John Anderson
  • Thomas [Forafin?]
  • John Whood
  • [Chales Fommin?]
  • William Marshall
  • Thomas Jakes
  • Francis Truss
  • John Pickle
  • Willim Mountfort
  • Edward Lamming
  • John Tombe
  • William Ward
  • John Powell
  • [Tob Harbord?]
  • Samuell Leadbeter
  • John [Suley?]
  • Thomas Coles
  • Joseph Hookes
  • Mathew Bibye
  • Nicholas Bennett
  • Thomas Newton
  • Robert Wheable
  • Benjamin Hickman
  • Robert Browne
  • William Burdett
  • Benjaman Pixley
  • Isaack [Troute?]
  • Richard Daviss
  • John [Mommey?]
  • John Webb
  • John [Cromp?]
  • Thomas Bull
  • Anthony Danser

The glazers and buckerum stiffeners in the Citty of London. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of the glazers and buckerum stifners in and about the Citty of London on behalf of themselves and a great number of people employed in the said trade.

Sheweth

That whereas there is a clause added to the bill for restraining the wearing of all wrought silks Bengalls and dyed printed or stained calicoes imported in these words videlicet or that are or shall be dyed in this kingdom, or else where - which clause tend to the ruine of their trade of glazing and stifning of callicoes.

Therefore your petitioners humbly pray your honours that the said restriction may extend only to dyed and printed callicoes imported

And your petitioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etc.

  • Isaac I S Savage
  • Matthew Rosecroft
  • Samuel [Thonasman?]
  • Thomas Stephens
  • William Toone
  • John Johnson
  • Ralph Turner
  • John Stone
  • William [Annos?]
  • Thomas Pendleton
  • William Amos
  • Richard Foy
  • John Eaton
  • Robert Newton
  • George Marshall
  • [Jamor?] Crawfor
  • [Ben?] Thwaites
  • Edmond Kirkman

Shopkeepers and warehouse keepers trading in silks and painted calicos. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of divers shopkeepers and warehouse keepers trading [in East?] India Persia and China silks Bengalls and painted callicoes in and about the City of London

Humbly sheweth

That your peticioners have been bred in the said trade and thereby provided for themselves and families that they doe understand a bill is now lying before your lordshipps for prohibiting the retailing and wearing East India Persia and China wrought silks Bengalls and painted callicoes in this nation, which if past into an act would utterly deprive your peticioners of the greatest part of their livelyhood and render them uncapable of maintaining their family's

Your peticioners do therefore most humbly intreat that they may be heard by their council at the bar of your lordshipps house before the said bill doe pass

And they as in duty bound shall ever pray etca.

  • Mary Pyke
  • Samuell Dudly
  • [Pell?] Jones
  • John Cutts
  • William Woolfe
  • Isaac Knight
  • William Cartwright
  • Ann Yalden
  • Evan Mackpherson
  • Margarett Kidd
  • Jane Deards
  • Elizabeth Crouch
  • Samuell Dunklyn
  • John Bell
  • Dellepoole Corbet
  • Barnabas Browne
  • Charles Bolder
  • William Barne
  • Edmond Harvey
  • Elizabeth Barne
  • John Rudyerd
  • James Maskall
  • Andrew Mason
  • Jeremiah Smart
  • John Anderton
  • William Grover
  • James Alehorne
  • John Gess
  • George Bingley
  • John Barne
  • George Noble
  • Elizabeth Casstillion
  • Mary Browster
  • Daniel Bowman
  • John Clarke
  • Alice Barne
  • Edward Fairbarne
  • John Andrewes
  • Mary Dyer
  • Ann Worlock
  • Thomas Hutchinson
  • William Higgs
  • Anne Bowdler
  • Anne Acton
  • Mary Dowdeswell
  • Samuell Bolingham

Several merchants of London trading into foreign parts. HL/PO/JO/10/1/484/1051 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of severall merchants of London tradeing into forreign parts.

Sheweth.

That your petitioners trading into his majesties plantations in the West Indies and other parts beyond the seas have frequent occasion to buy parcells of Persians and other East India silkes and callicoes.

That your petitioners understand a bill is now depending in this honourable house for prohibit= =ing the retailing and wearing of East India and Persian silkes Bengalls and painted callicoes in this nation wherein there is a clause that no quantity of the said goods of less value than fifty pounds shall be sold in this kingdom whereby your petitioners haveing frequent occasions to buy severall quantityes of the said goods for forreign exportation of much less value than fifty pounds will be very much prejudiced in their respective trades

Your petitioners therefore do most humbly pray your lordships that they may be heard to the said bill so far as relates to the said clause before the same be past into an act.

And your peticioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etca:

  • Walter Kent
  • Benjamin Scott
  • [Mel?] Holder
  • Thomas Peach
  • W Morgan
  • John Gellatlay
  • John [Fentrell?]
  • William Fisher
  • John Cooper
  • Isaac Millner
  • [illegible] Corbin
  • Andrew Crauford
  • John Browne
  • Richard Mead
  • Abraham Beake
  • Samuel Winder
  • Robert Heysham
paratext

Merchants London trading to forreigne parts reade 7o April 1696

The merchants, clothiers and others in woollen manufacture in Exeter. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1054 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of the merchants, clothiers, fullers, tallow- [chandlers?] and others concerned in the woollen manufacture in the city and county of Exon

Sheweth

That the said city (being anciently a free port) did yearly in wooll and other commodityes from Ireland import more than the value of forty thousand pounds, most of which was wrought up in this city but it being enacted in the fowerth and fifth yeares of the reigne of his present majesty King William and the late Queen Mary that no wooll should thence be imported from Ireland into our said port of Exon wee thereby sustaine extraordinary prejudice and disappointment in our said trades: for that those commodityes being brought into none but the northern ports (which are remote from us) are there bought up before we know of their arrivall, and carryed to other marketts; so that since the said act, they are advanced with us more than twenty pounds per centum, and a sufficiency of them cannot be procured at any price to imploy our multitudes of poore that wholy depend upon the woollen manufacture

Wee therefore humbly pray your lordships to take the premisses into consideration and redresse this our great grievance, by allowing us the same freedome of trade with Ireland, as we had before the commencement of the said act.

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc.

  • William Mauduit
  • John Keese senior
  • John Crosse
  • Elias Skibbone
  • Richard Warren
  • Thomas Foxwell
  • William Clarke
  • Ezekill Stevens
  • Roger Cheeke
  • John Lavers
  • John [Heald?]
  • John [Aymors?]
  • John Ellery
  • Joseph Hooper
  • John Eastabrooke
  • John Dell
  • Nicholas Seaward
  • William Staplehill
  • John Salter
  • Thomas Wood
  • Edward Edmonds
  • Richard Atwill
  • Josiah Sealy
  • Edward Spicer
  • Christopher Taylor
  • Matthias Coombe
  • John Harris
  • John Freke
  • Henry Cudmore
  • John Norton
  • Francis Bidwell
  • John Heath
  • Peter Prew
  • Thomas Atherton
  • Benjamin Conway
  • George Brelland
  • Henry [illegible]
  • William Lobb
  • Philip Tamlyn
  • John Starr
  • Nicholas Purchase
  • Henry Harris
  • Abraham Page
  • John Dowler
  • Hugh Knowlton
  • John Philleps
  • Thomas Atkey
  • Thomas Townsend
  • John Bingham junior
  • Roger Browne
  • Clement Weekes
  • Roger Prowse
  • John Minterne
  • [Peter Battithill?]
  • Thomas Whithson
  • William Spiller
  • William Arnold
  • Thomas Sampson
  • [illegible]
  • William Atkins
  • Thomas Jefferey
  • Thomas Sommers
  • William Sanford
  • Tristram Whitter
  • Jos Cheeke
  • John Rowe
  • Richard Hobitch
  • Thomas [Treharne?]
  • [illegible] Pym
  • [Edward Pierce?]
  • Richard Hooke junior
  • Alexander Bennett
  • Henry Hugh
  • Robert Luke
  • James White
  • Francis Lydston
  • Henry Arthur
  • Abraham Trowte
  • Benjamin Hawkins
  • Benjamin Brimley
  • James Gould
  • [illegible]
  • John Mortimer
  • Jacob Rowe
  • Joseph Mauduit junior
  • [Be... Sampson?]
  • Nicholas Munckley
  • Samuell Munckley
  • John Carne
  • Benjamin Bake
  • Thomas Turner
  • [Jonathan J...?]
  • Jos Marshall
  • William Carthew
  • John Newcombe
  • Bartholemew Parr senior
  • Nicholas Row
  • Aaron Atkins
  • Thomas [illegible]
  • Walter Dight
  • Anthony [illegible]
  • William [illegible]
  • John Poole
  • John Goswell
  • James Tucker
  • Richard [White?]
  • [Jona: Lavington?]
  • John Atken
  • George Manning
  • Samuel Mathew
  • Henry Harris
  • George Stoning
  • Richard White junior
  • John [Hard...?]
  • John Hayne
  • John Shukburgh
  • Richard Dawkins
  • [John?] Lethbridge

The Company of Distillers of London. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1056 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of the Company of Distillers of London.

Sheweth.

That a bill is passed the honourable House of Commons and brought upp to your lordshipps for a duty of two pence per gallon to be laid upon low wines which is a comodity not drinckable nor worth above five pence per gallon to be sold in which bill there are severall clauses and provisions that tend to the ruein of many hundred famelyes of the distillers in England and to carry the trade into forreigne parts to the hindrance of the consumpcion of corne and fruite of the growth of this kingdome.

Your petitioners doe therefore most humbly pray your honours to take the said bill into consideracion and to heare your petitioners by theire councill to severall clauses therein whereunto as they humbly conceive there is most just excepcions as upon readeing thereof will plainely appere.

And your petitioners shall ever pray etc.

  • Francis Heath
  • John Heath
  • John Elwycke
  • Edward Shaller
  • George Clarke
  • Thomas Fountaine
  • Thomas Read
  • Robert Taylor master
  • John [Russonn?]
  • Thomas Rawlinson wardens
  • Richard Wilcox
  • Mark Jarvis
  • John [Elvyoke?]
  • Thomas Willes
  • Thomas Stagg

Roger Sawrey, esquire, and Jeremiah Sawrey, his son. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1065 (1696)

To the right honourable the lordes spirituall and temporall in Parlament assembled

The humble peticion of Roger Sawrey esquire and Jeremiah Sawrey his son

Humbly sheweth

That at the last assizes held for the county palatine of Lancaster a tryall was had in an accion of ejectment comenced in the office of pleas of his majesties Court of Exchequer at Westminster brought by Robert Spenser upon the demise of the right honourable the Earle of Derby against your petitioner for the manour of Broughton and other landes in the said county whereof your petitioneres or one of them have had near 40 years quiett possession and upon the said tryall a verdict passed for the said Earles lessee against your petitioneres for that your petitioneres defence in greate measure depended upon a private act of Parliament of 4o Jacobi 1mi which was not admitted to be read at the tryall because itt was not written upon stampt paper notwithstanding the order made by your lordshipps the 22d of November 1694 that such coppyes shall be authentick

That your petitioneres by the rules of the said court have 4 dayes within this present Michaelmas terme to move to stay judgment and for a new tryall and have as they are advised by their councell good groundes to make such mocion in the said cause and for that purpose your petitioneres caused notice to be given to the agents for the said plainant Spencer that the said court wold be moved on Saturday last to stay judgment and that your petitioneres might have a new tryall and your petitioneres had retained and instructed councell accordingly. But some persones agents or pretending to be soe for the plainant gave your petitioneres councell and solliciters severally notice that the said Earle did insist upon his priviledge and that in case your petitioneres councell moved the said court, the said Earle wold complaine to this honourable house for a breach of priviledge

And your petitioneres further humbly shew that after the said 4 dayes expird the said plainant may by the rules of the said court enter upp judgment and take out execucion and turne your petitioneres out of possession in case in the meane time the said court be not moved, which your petitioneres have not presumed to doe before humble applicacion made to this honourable house

Wherefore and inasmuch as your petitioneres whole fortune lyes at stake and to move the said court is only in your petitioneres owne defence, your petitioneres humbly pray liberty for their councell to move the said court for the purpose aforesaid and that the entring of judgment in the said court may be in the meane time stayed

And your petitioneres shall ever pray etc

Jeremiah Sawrey

paratext

Master Sawrey's petition

William George Richard, Earl of Derby. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1065 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of William George Richard Earl of Derby.

Sheweth

That att last summer assizes att Lancaster a verdict was had in favour of your petitioner against Roger and Jeremiah Sawrey esquires for the mannour of Broughton etc upon the obtaineing of which verdict your petitioner authorized his steward one Edmond Gibson a person altogeather unconcerned in the said suite to repaire to the said mannour and call a court and take the attornments of such of the customary tennants as would be then willing and ready to attorne which accordingly the said Gibson did by vertue of the said authority and to the number of about eighty two did attorne and on the twenty sixth of October last your lordshipps were pleased upon the peticion of the defendants setting forth amongst other things that they were deprived of the benefitt of their best defence the court not admitting an act of Parliament to be read att the tryall it not being upon stampt paper and the Lord Cheife Baron and Master Justice Turton were then of opinion that it was not evidence or could be ready whereupon your lordshipps were pleased then to order that in case the petitioners or their councell should move the Court of Exchequer for a new tryall or in arrest of judgment it should not be interpreted to be a breach of priveledge of Parliament upon which order the defendants did not onely move the said court for a new tryall which was granted them but did by their councell move for a rule for your petitioners steward to come two hundred miles to attend the said court that terme which accordingly he did and afterwards the court bound the said Master Gibson to appear the first day of Hillary terme last which he did and att the last ordered him to be examined upon interrogatories and the last day of the said Hillary terme, the court committed the said Gibson to the prison of the Fleete where he still remaines for refuseing to deliver up the said attornments whereas it did appear by severall affidavits of the tennants themselves and of the said Gibson that the said attornments were free and voluntary and noe threats or promise of reward made them all which actings and doeings exceed your lordshipps said order as your petitioner humbly conceives and noe way relateing towards a new tryall but tend very much to your petitioners prejudice in the recovery of the just right and possession of his estate which for one hundred and fifty years and upwards were in his ancestours possession all which your petitioner doth humbly offer to your lordshipps consideracions as a high violacion of your petitioners priveledge as well as to the commitment of his servant without just cause.

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prayeth your lordshipps would be pleased to sett att libertie and discharge the said Master Gibson and that the defendants and their councell may be dealt withall as your lordshipps shall think fit for the breach of your petitioners priveledge.

  • Derby

The Earl of Derby's peticion versus Sawrey

paratext

Reade 2o Martii 1696

Roger Sawrey, esquire, and Jeremiah Sawrey, his son. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1065 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Roger Sawrey esquire and Jeremiah Sawrey his son.

Sheweth

That your petitioner Roger Sawrey by and with the full consent of Charles then Earl of Derby the father of the present Earl did above 40 years ago bona fide purchase the [illegible] manor and lands in [question?] called Broughton in the county of Lancaster of one Master Lee and really paid about 4300 pounds for the same although the said estate is only worth about 200 pounds per annum. And your said petitioner haveing had a long and quiet enjoyment did some years since upon his said son's marriage settle the said estate upon him and the issue of that marriage with a reservacion of a moiety to himselfe and his wife for their lives.

That the present Earl of Derby did at the last Lancaster assizes proceed to a tryall in ejectment for the recovery of the said estate and by a surprize upon your petitioners obtained a verdict which verdict was set aside in the last Michaelmas terme and a new tryall directed

That in September last one Edmond Gibson an attorney at law in the name of the said Earl and under pretence of an authority from him called a court within the said manor and perswaded and invited the tenants to attorne to the said Earl but not being able by fair meanes to effect his ends he threatened that the said Earl would sue them for 18 years rent of their severall tenements and also made and executed a covenant to save the tenants harmless in case they would so attorne, and thereby prevailed on 82 of the said tenants to signe an instrument of attornment to the said Earl which (as your petitioners are advised) is in effect a change of the possession as to those tenants from whom your petitioners have not since been able to receive any rents or fines

That the Court of Exchequer (where the accion doth depend) did in the last Hillary terme thinke fitt to committ the said Gibson to the Fleet for the contempt and abuse by him comitted as aforesaid.

That your lordships being moved on the 2d day of March last and informed that the said Gibson was steward or servant to the said Earl did thinke fitt to sett the said Gibson at liberty and to referr the matter of the said comittment to the lords comittees for priviledges.

That in truth the said Gibson is a common attorney at law as well as a sollicitor in Chancery and has thereby gained a considerable estate and never claimed any priviledge under the said Earl from whom he lives above 50 miles distant nor did he ever any business or service for his lordship save as aforesaid wherein and especially in giving the said covenant of indemnity he exceeded all colour of authority from the said Earl as your petitioners are advised

That it being contrary to your lordships order of the 7th of November 1691 to allow any priviledge to attorneys or sollicitors and your petitioners being by unjust and illegall meanes stripped of the possession of a great part of their said estate which is all they have in the world, and your petitioner Roger Sawrey and his wife being each of them about 80 years old and haveing only an estate for lives as aforesaid their loss of possession is and will be irreparable without speedy releife.

Your petitioners therefore most humbly pray your lordships that all attornments gained from their tenants since the said tryall may be vacated and that they may be put in the same state and condicion they were at the time of the said tryall, or at least that your petitioners may without incurring your lordship's displeasure be at liberty to proceed at law as they shall be advised, against the said Gibson and the severall tenants who have signed attornments to the said Earl.

And your petitioners shall pray etc.

  • Robert Sawrey
  • Jeremiah Sawrey
paratext

Peticion of Master Sawrey versus Earl Derby reade 16 Martii 1696

March 24th 1696 the Earl Derby declared that the attornments since the tryall shalbe delivered up and vacated and possession as it was at the [verdit?] and that he waved his priviledge.

Ralph, Earl Montagu. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1066 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The peticion of the right honourable Ralph Earle Montagu.

Sheweth.

That the right honourable John Earle of Bath and your peticioner the twenty eighth day of November one thousand six hundred ninety and three did under their hands declare and agree that they and each of them would at all times there after and in all courts causes and places waive their priviledge and would never at any time or in any cause claime or insist on their priviledge for themselves or their servants touching any matter in question then depending or thereafter to depend relateing to the estate reall or personall of the late Duke of Albemarle.

That there have been severall accions brought by the said Earle of Bath against your peticioner or his tenants and also by your peticioner against the said Earle of Bath or his pretended tenants for severall lands which were formerly the lands of the late Duke of Albemarle and more particularly one of the said causes wherein Robert Rickards one of the pretended tenants of the Earle of Bath was plainant and Henry Corneforth bayliffe to your peticioner defendant for a distresse taken upon the lands of the said late Duke came to be tryed in his majesties Court of Common Pleas in Trinity terme last at the prosecucion of the said Earle and after a long tryall a verdict was given for the defendant against the Earle of Bath's pretended tenant.

That your peticioner expecting to goe on to enter judgment for the defendant upon the said verdict as by law he ought to have done the said Earle of Bath notwithstanding the abovesaid agreement did under his hand and seale the three and twentieth day of June last signify to the prothonotarys and other officers of the said Court of Common Pleas and to your peticioners councell agents sollicitors and attorneys that he the said Earle of Bath did insist on his priviledge of Parliament as a peer of this realme and did forbid all and every the prothonotary's and other ministers and officers of the said Court of Common Pleas to signe any judgment or tax any costs on the said verdict during the time of priviledge of Parliament.

And also whereas there were severall other accions brought by the Earle of Bath's pretended tenants and at the said Earles prosecucion in his majesties Court of Kings Bench against your peticioners servants for taking distresses upon the lands of the said late Duke two whereof were ready for tryall and two jury's ready in the hall to try the same the last terme but the said Earle of Bath as the jury were calling and going to the barr then came by himself and his agents and did signify as before that he did insist upon his priviledge of Parliament and thereby did deterr your peticioners councell attorney's and sollicitors from going on with the said causes.

Your peticioner therefore hopes that this honourable house considering the agreement above mencioned will not suffer the said Earle of Bath to reassume his priviledge but suffer your peticioner to proceed notwithstanding the same in any cause or causes brought or to be brought by your peticioner relating to the estate reall or personall of the late Duke of Albemarle.

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc

Montagu

paratext

The Earl of Montagus peticion versus Earl Baths priviledge reade 30o Octobris 1696

November 6th 1696 noe order made this day the Earl of Montagu upon the [depate?] proposeing that the judgment upon the verdict obtained against the Earl of Bath shall not be Entred for 6 months provided he prosecute within that time the witnesses he hath brought informacions against and to pay the costs of those that shall not be convicted as the court shall adjudg to which the Earl of Bath agred and declared he would not insist on priviledge after that time.

John, earl of Bath. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1066 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of John Earle of Bathe.

Sheweth.

That upon the late debate of this most honourable hous touching your petitioners insisting on his priviledge in certain actions by him contested with the right honourable Ralph Earle of Montague on your petitioners title to the estate of the late Duke of Albemarle, your peticioner declared he intended to insist on his priviledge noe longer then untill he could procure certain informations to be tryed, which he had exhibited for perjury in the King's Bench against severall witnesses produced as evidences on the behalfe of the said Earle of Montague at a tryall in the Court of Common Pleas in Trinity terme last; the said Earle of Montague having declared before your lordshipps, that he would defend his said witnesses, and that there should be noe obstruction on that side from having the said informations speedily tryed, and withall proposed six monthes for your petitioner to bring on the same, which your petitioner declared his acceptance of, being well assured, that if the said Earle of Montagues agents should act conformably to his lordships proposall, that your peticioner should then be able to bring on the said tryalls in the next terme at farthest, your peticioner being well content to insist noe longer on his priviledge then the said tryalls.

That your peticioner rested under these apprehensions without any distrust of having the tryalls against the said witnesses, either delayed or obstructed.

But your petitioner is now informed by his attorneys, that the said Earle of Montagues agents doe not only obstruct the said causes from being brought to tryall the next terme, by refusing to plead to the said informations this terme, but doe alsoe refuse to agree, that the tryall in the Court of Common Pleas wherein the perjury was committed should be entered up of record, without which they very well know your peticioner cannot proceed to tryall against the said criminalls, the said record being most necessarily referred unto by the said informations, and must be given in evidence.

Your petitioner alsoe sheweth, that the said Earle of Montague having on his promise aforesaid (and your petitioners beleife that the said tryalls should be determined the next terme) drawne your petitioner to declare that he would not insist on his priviledge longer then six monthes; your peticioner is by the contrivance of the said agents (to protract the said tryalls above six monthes) likely to be defeated of the justice intended your peticioner by this most honourable house.

And your petitioner further sheweth, that the said Earle of Mountagues agents have taken upon them in his lordships name to insist on his priviledge without limittation, in all causes relating to the late Duke of Albemarle's estate, as by the annexed copy appeares.

Your petitioner therefore humbly prays, that the said right honourable the Earle of Montague may as he hath solemnly declared before your lordships his readinesse to expedite the said tryalls, direct his attorneys to plead to the said informations this present terme, and not to obstruct by pretence of priviledge the entering up of record the said late tryall in the Court of Common Pleas, soe that your petitioner may bring on the same next terme; or otherwise that your petitioner may have his time of priviledge enlarged untill some reasonable time after your peticioner shall by the ordinary rules of law, be able to compell the said criminalls to tryalls for their notorious perjuryes.

And that the said Earle of Montague may not reassume his priviledge indefinitely, when your petitioners stands restrayned to a limitted time

And your petitioner shall pray etc

  • Bathe

Petition.

Earl of Bathe

paratext

versus Earl Montagu reade 19o November 1696.

November 26th 1696. After heareing councell at the barr the Earl of Bath and Earl Montagu came to an agreement which was drawne into writeing and signed by them and put into the Lord Keepers hand to be kept

Ralph, Earl of Mountagu. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1066 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled:

The humble petition of Ralph Earle of Mountagu:

Sheweth

That the first day of the last term when a jury in Westminster Hall was ready according to the usuall course of that place to have tryed the cause between the Earle of Bath and your petitioner upon the meritts thereof, the Earle of Bath then reassumed his privilege contrary to his agreements in writing and to his protestation in this most honourable house before your lordshipps for waiving the same, and contrary (as your petitioner humbly insisteth) to the rules of this honourable house to your petitioners great losse and damage and to the obstruction of common justice; some of your petitioners materiall witnesses being now dead:

Your petitioner therefore humbly prayes your lordshipps that he may not incurr the censure of this honourable house by proceeding in such accions and suites as he shall be advised against the said Earle of Bath according to his said agreements to waive his privilege; and humbly insisteth it to be no breach of priviledge that he should so do:

And your peticioner shall pray etc.

Montagu

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Earl Montagus petition versus Earl Bath reade 3o January 97.

January 26th 1697 councell heard on either side and order made by consent.

John, Marquess of Normanby. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1067 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of John Marquess of Normanby.

That in Aprill last your petitioner exhibited his bill in the Court of Chancery against against John Lord Berkley of Stratton, and William Duke of Devonshire, to have an execution of an agreement in writing made on the 21th day of February by and between your petitioner and the Lord Berkley, and mutually signed by them for your petitioner's purchasing of Berkley House; for which it was given out since the said agreement that the Duke of Devonshire pretended to have also contracted.

That the Lord Berkley waved his priviledg, and put in an answer, but the Duke of Devonshire insisted on his priviledg for some time, so that a stop was put thereby to the said sute. But at last the Duke of Devonshire came to your petitioner one day at Master Davis's house in Saint Alban Street, and there assured him he did wave his priviledg, which your petitioner accepted of and told severall persons of it, as hoping to come to an end of the suit speedily, and depending intirely on the said Duke's waver. That accordingly the Duke of Devonshire appeared to your petitioner's suit, and put in his answer; but your petitioner being lately informed by accident that the Lord Berkley was intending to put the Duke of Devonshire into possession of the said house, pending the suit, notwithstanding that your petitioner had sent long before a proposall to both the said lords that he would join issue and go to a summary tryall at any time within three weeks after the Lord Berkley would put in a full answer, your petitioner was advised to move the Lord Keeper that the possession of the said house might not be changed; but that all things might remain as they were at the exhibiting of the bill till the hearing of the cause, and also that the Lord Berkley might shew cause why a sequestration should not go out against him for not obeying the order of the court by putting in a better answer, and that the hearing of the cause might be speeded. Upon which the Lord Keeper having ordered all partyes to attend on the matter of the said petition, and councell for your petitioner, for the Lord Berkley, and for the Duke of Devonshire attending accordingly on the 18th of September last, the defendant's councell alledged that in June last the Lord Berkley had conveyed Berkley House to the Duke of Devonshire, and that he was making some alterations therein, but no wayes prejudiciall to the said house, whosoever should prove to be the purchaser: and that the defendants were as desirous as the petitioner to have the cause heard; whereto your petitioner's councell agreed that, in case there were any conveyances executed or possession delivered, the same was done since the answers of both the defendants, and so could no wayes alter the right of the purchaser; but yet, if the Duke should thinck to resume his priviledg (which they had not feared if he had not intimated so much in a letter) then the hearing of the cause might be obstructed; and therefore they desired to know of the Duke's councell if the Duke would not endeavour to resume his priviledg; and the Duke's councell Master Dobbins there declared he did not doubt of the Duke's signing any paper to that effect, desiring only time to attend on the Duke for it, but on condition, if the Duke did sign such a paper, that then your petitioner would accept of the Lord Berkley's last answer put in the day before, and reply, and also consent that Sir Cloudesly Shovell should be examined forthwith as a witness for the defendants: so it was ordered by the Lord Keeper that both sides should give each other their answer in three dayes to the respective proposalls, and after such answers given, the court would make such order as should be just; as by the said order annext appears.

That the next day after your petitioner's agent attended on the Duke's councell for the Duke's confirmation of what his councell had engaged for, to whome the said councell owned they had since been with the Duke, and knew his mind therein, but would not declare it till your petitioner had first given his answer as to the proposalls on their side; upon which your petitioner, being informed of that by his agent, sent him back immediately to the Duke's [councell?] to tell him and accordingly the said agent did tell him from your petitioner that he consented to both their said proposalls on condition the Duke made good theirs upon which the Duke's councell then declared that he had been with the Duke since the said hearing, that the Duke did wave his priviledg, and that a paper should be signed for that purpose, but said it was too late that night to do it, and accordingly your petitioner and the Lord Berkley have signed such papers to that purpose as were agreed by the said councell to be signed.

That your petitioner relying thereon, accepted the said further answer of the Lord Berkley and replyed thereto, and the defendants also have examined Sir Cloudesly Shovell against your petitioner, and yet his agent has attended the Duke's agent for that paper the Duke was to sign, which was promised for severall dayes after, but to this day there is none signed; on the contrary, your petitioner is at last positively assured by the Duke's agents that he resumes and stands on his priviledg, whereby all proceedings are stopped and the Duke is making alterations in the said house as if it were his own, while himself only only is thus pleased to obstruct the having it judged whether it ought to be his or no.

That in as much as the Duke of Devonshire did many months ago wave his priviledg, appear to the suit, and put in his answer accordingly; and whereas by these last proceedings also the defendants have had the fruit of their own proposalls by your petitioner's complying therewith on that express condition alledged your petitioner humbly hopeth the great honour and justice of this house will not suffer him to be prejudiced in so unusuall a manner by his consenting to what the defendants themselves proposed in open court before the Lord Keeper and confirmed so solemnly afterwards; and prayeth that your lordships will be pleased to direct that the Duke of Devonshire shall not resume his priviledg in order to protect such a sort of possession and conveyance made pendente lite, by which all further proceedings in Chancery will be obstructed, where the cause is now depending, and ready to be decided, and where by all partyes it was solemnly agreed to be determined.

  • Normanby

Sir Edward Baesh, knight, and Dame Anne his wife. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1072 (1696)

Waad vid versus Heath

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Sir Edward Baesh knight and Dame Anne his wife

Sheweth

That your petitioners in the name of Charles Heath their lessee have recorded a verdict and judgment in ejectment upon a triall had att the Kings Bench barr in Easter terme last for the mannour of Battleshall and other lands and tenements in the county of Essex and the said Anne Waad for delay and only to prevent your petitioners from takeing out a writt of possession on the said judgment hath brought a writt of errour before your lordshipps which hath beene returned before your lordshipps above a fortnight since and the said Anne Waad the plainant in the said writt of errour hath not yett assigned errour therein

Your petitioners therefore humbly [pray?] your lordshipps to appoint a day to the said Anne Waad to assigne errours in the record of the said judgment now before your lordshipps or in default thereof that the record of the said judgment may be remitted to the said Court of Kings Bench

And your petitioners shall pray etc

  • Edward Baesh
  • Anne Baesh
paratext

Brought in 26th October

Sir Edward Bash versus Wade reade 16o November 1696. Ordered errors to be assigned this day fortnight or record remitted

Sir Edward Bash, knight, and Dame Ann his wife. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1072 (1696)

Heath versus Wade in a writt of error

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of Sir Edward Bash knight and Dame Ann his wife

Sheweth

That your peticioners caused a copy of your lordshipps order hereunto annexed to be served on Master Turner the defendant Ann Wade's attorney on Thursday the nineteenth day of November instant whereby the said Ann Wade was ordered peremptorily to assigne errors in this cause on or before Monday the three and twentieth day of this instant November and in default thereof the record to be remitted to the Court of King's Bench

That the said Ann Wade hath not hitherto assigned errors by which it plainely appeares the writt of error was brought into this most honorable house meerly for delay she haveing since brought a bill in Chancery

Your peticioners therefore most humbly pray your lordshipps will please to order the said record to be remitted to the Court of King's Bench

And your peticioners shall ever pray

  • Edward Baesh
  • Anne Baesh
paratext

Sir Edward Bash peticon for remitting the writt error of Heath versus Wade reade 28 November 1696 ordered that the record shalbe remitted.

Henry Winchester and Ann his wife. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1074 (1696)

To the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Henry Winchester and Ann his wife

Sheweth

That your peticoners have exhibited their peticion of appeale before your lordshipps and that the respondent Elizabeth Fowke hath putt in her answer thereto and the cause is now ready for your lordshipps judgment

Your peticioners therefore humbly pray your lordshipps to be pleased to appoint a speedy day to heare the said appeale all partyes being in towne

And your peticioners as in duty bound shall ever pray etc.

  • Henry Winchester
  • Anne Winchester
paratext

Winchester et ux + Fooke vid petition reade 14th December 1696.

Izabella Dillon, widow of Wentworth Dillon, late Earl of Roscomon. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1075 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Izabella Dillon widow Countess of Roscomon relict of Wentworth late Earl of Roscomon in the kingdom of Ireland

Sheweth

That your petitioner having obtained a writ of error retornable into Parliament upon a judgement in the King's Bench for the reversal of a judgement against Thomas Walcott deceased who had been attainted of high treason. The said writ of error is lodged before your lordshipps and the attorney general has assigned errors and particularly that whereas it is supposed by the said record that John Walcott the son of the said Thomas put in his stead one Benedict Browne his attorney to prosecute the first writ of error yet the said Benedict Browne had no warrant of attorney filed of record which allegation being grounded upon matter dehors or not appearing within the record now before your lordshipps.

May it please your lordshipps to order the cursitors of London and Middlesex to make out a certiorari to the Lord Cheif Justice of the King's Bench to certify whether any warrant of attorney be upon record to authorize the said Benedict Browne to prosecute the said first writ of error or to enquire into the said matter in such manner as your lordshipps in your great wisdom shall think fitt.

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc.

I Roscomon

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Lady Roscomons petition for a certiorary whither a warrant of attorney be upon record reade 23o November 1696. Ordered as desired.

Isabella Dillon, widow, relict of Wentworth Dillon, late Earl of Roscomon. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1075 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of Isabella Dillon widow Countess of Roscomon relict of Wentworth Dillon esquire late Earl of Roscomon in the kingdom of Ireland:

Sheweth

That a judgement haveing passed in the Kings Bench to reverse the attainder of Thomas Walcott esquire who had been executed for high treason your peticioner who claims the estate of the said Thomas Walcott under a grant thereof to her said husband being advised that there is manifest error in the said judgement of reversal has obtained his majesties writ of error which is brought up before your lordshipps. And the Attorney General has assigned errors thereupon.

May it therefore please your lordshipps to appoint a short day for John Walcott gentleman son of the said Thomas to joyne issue or reply as he shall think fitt

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc.

I Roscomon

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Lady Roscomons petition versus John Walcott for joyneing issue reade 30o November 1696.

Isabella Dillon, widow, relict of Wentworth Dillon, late Earl of Roscomon. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1075 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition of Isabella Dillon widow Countess of Roscomon relict of Wentworth Dillon late Earl of Roscommon in the kingdom of Ireland.

Sheweth

That your petitioner having lodged before your lordshipps a writ of error upon a judgment of the Court of King's Bench for reversing the attainder of Thomas Walcott esquire who had been attainted of high treason against the life of King Charles the second. The Attorney General has assigned errors to which Master John Walcott son of the said Thomas has rejoyned. Your peticioner also sheweth that while the matter was depending in the King's Bench upon a writ of error brought by the said John Walcott the said court for their farther information ordered one Master Tanner to attend with the original indictment and original record of the judgement against the said Thomas Walcott which had not been removed by the writ of error before them, as may appear by the rule of that court hereunto annexed.

May it therefore please your lordshipps to appoint a short day for hearing the cause now before your lordshipps upon the writ of error for reversing the said judgment of the Court of King's Bench and to order Master Tanner who hath the custody of the said original indictment and original record of the said judgment to attend your lordshipps with the same at the arguing of the said cause now depending before your lordshipps

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc.

  • I Roscomon

The Countess of Roscomon's petition.

paratext

Reade 14o December 96 for day heareing ordred 21th

John Browne and Thomas Sands. HL/PO/JO/10/1/485/1078 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion and appeale of John Browne and Thomas Sands from a dismission made in the High Court of Chancery wherein the said John Browne and Thomas Sands were plainants against Sir Robert Dashwood John Perry esquire Sir Samuell Dashwood Edward Noell executours of George Dashwood esquire deceased Edward Buckley and others defendants

Sheweth

That John Hind late of London goldsmith being concerned with the defendants in the farme of the duty ariseing by hearth money itt was agreed Hind should have accesse constantly to the bookes of account and once ayeare the account to be audited

But the defendants the farmers (expecting an oppertunity of getting Hinds interest whilst Hinds creditours sett upon him) did prevaile with him to [transferr?] his interest in the farme to the said George Dashwood deceased and thereupon to take upp of him att interest upon the same 24000 pounds which being afterwards [satisfied?] Hind demanded an account of the farme and sight of the bookes but was denied the same nor could he gett anymore money unlesse he would give them a generall release and then they promised they woud pay him 32000 pounds which they affirmed was all that was due to him which hee being then under greate pressures was forct to take and give releases accordingly without seeing the bookes

That after the releases given Hind discovered there was a dividend made unknowne to him of 4543 pounds: 5 shillings: 9 pence whereof a 3d parte being 1514 pounds: 8 shillings: 7 pence belonged to Hind besides the 32000 pounds and if the bookes were producet itt would appeare that when Hind gave the said releases there was justly due to him more then the 32000 pounds att least 15000 pounds besides the 1514 pounds: 8 shillings: 7 pence concealed from him as aforesaid.

And to discover soe manifest a fraud and have the bookes produced and the releases set aside and to be lett into the account Hind in Michaelmas terme 1680 exhibited his bill in the High Court of Chancery.

But before the cause was heard Hind became insolvent and a comicion of banckrupt being awarded against him and the appellants assignees of the said comicion and Hind being dead the appellants did exhibite theire bill of revivor praying they might bee lett into the account and stand in Hinds place and the cause comeing to heareing the 28th of January 1689 before the late lords commissioners itt was decreed the defendants should produce theire bookes before Master Samuel Terrell and hee to inspect the account and report the matter to the court and then the court would give further judgement.

But the defendants being then members of Parliament the appellants could not compell them to produce the bookes but was forct to wave the benefitt of the said decree and consent to have the cause heard before the right honourable the now Lord Keeper.

That the cause in the absence of the Lord Keeper comeing to be heard before the late Master Justice Giles Eyres the 23d of February 1693 he dismist your peticoners bill without releiveing the appellants against the said releases

That in Easter and Trinity terme 1695 the appellants obtained severall orders to reheare the cause before the right honourable the Lord Keeper but the defendants haveing unknowne to the appellants inrolled the said dismission his lordshipp was opinion he could not by the strict rules of the court lett the appellants into a reheareing of the cause

That the appellants though they could not for the reasons aforesaid obtaine a reheareing in the Court of Chancery yett are advised that the said dismission made by the said Master Justice Eyre is erroneous and that your peticoners ought to have been releived against the said releases.

Wherefore your peticioners doe humbly appeale to your lordshipps from the said dismission and pray the same may be reversed and that your peticoners may be releived

And your petitioners shall pray etc.

  • John Browne
  • Thomas Sandes
paratext

Thomas PowysP Bowes

John Browne and Thomas Sands petition versus Sir Robert Dashwood etc reade 25th November 1696.

December 14th 1696 heard and the peticion dismissed and decree of dismission affirmed

William Fuller. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1080 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal; and to the honorable the commons of England in Parliament assembled:

The humble petition of William Fuller.

Sheweth

That your peticioner hath long groaned under intollerable misfortues, occasioned through the immaturity of his judgement, which was too easily imposed on, by the perfidiousness of Collonel Thomas Dalleval, and Master George Hayes; for whose appearance your petitioner engaged to the honourable House of Commons, (intentionally for the nation's service, though the event proved contrary,) and for their failure, incurred the displeasure of the same.

Your petitioner humbly presumes, that most in the House of Commons were present, when his information was read; as also, the Lord Preston's, and Master Crone's confessions, which did both confirm, what your petitioner affirmed; particularly, Master Crone asserts it upon oath.

Your petitioner submissively flings himself on the justice and wisdom of both houses, now assembled in Parliament humbly conceiving, that he can have no redress from the wrongs he suffers, but by your wise examinacion of the whole management of the affair; into which your petitioner was so cunningly ensnared, by the artifices of the French court, and their private adherents in this kingdom; by whose subtle device, the honourable House of Commons (as well as your petitioner) was abused; it being, at that time, the greatest design, and for the interest of the French court, and their friends in England, to stifle what ever discovery should be then made: for, the April following, they purposed an invasion; and accordingly provided all necessary provisions at La Hogue etc.

And, for as much as your petitioner can plainly prove, that Dalleval and Hayes did come over; and the method of their whole intriegue in this base designe, in which they had great assistance in this kingdom; as also, the manner of their going off;

Your petitioner, with entire submission, most heartily wishes, for the nations present, as well as future security) that of your great wisdom, you shall examine into the management of the whole intriegue; which cost the French court so much pains and money.

By this inspection, it will be plainly proved, who they are that have so long betrayed, and part of them yet continue to betray his present majesties council, and this kingdom in general.

That your petitioner was the first, which discovered to King William Collonel Parker's and Chevalier Granvils design of assassinating his most sacred majestie, your petitioner can fully prove.

And that his former informations were a true narrative, even of the last intended invasion and conspiracy, in most particulars: and, that those former, and these latter designes, were much alike managed by the same conspiring hands and hearts; will plainly appear, on the perusal of the said information.

Your petitioner, after all this, has been reduced to the most extream miseries, and suffered publick disgrace, occasioned by other's villanies; and has also been exposed to several hard shifts, and extremities

Your petitioner therefore humbly prayes.

That (for the nation's good, as well as for his vindication from the intollerable injuries your said petitioner has so long groaned under) he, your petitioner, may have some redress, by your mature consideration of his unhappy case; that justice, and truth, may appear on every side, and, that such necessary provision may be made for your petitioner (who left his friends, interest, and imploy in France, to serve this present governmen) as to your highly judicious wisdoms shall seem expedient: your petitioner further prays, that he may have leave to publish a full and perfect account of all he knows, relateing to the former conspiracies against the present government.

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

James Fell. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of James Fell

Most humbly sheweth

That your peticioner having your lordshipps order whereby he was directed that Sir John Fenwick should bee allowed pen, inke, and paper, to bee used only in the presence of your petitioner and such other person as the Secretary of State should thinke fitt your petitioner through inadvertency did permit the said Sir John Fenwick to have pen, inke and paper in your petitioners presence only, to write a letter to the Lord Keeper for his applicacion to your lordships, for which your petitioner hath incurred your lordships displeasure, and is now prisoner in the Gatehouse for the said offence.

That your petitioner is very sensible of his offence, and most humbly begs your lordships pardon for the same, and the sessions beginning at the Old Bayly on Wednesday the ninth instant, your petitioners presence will bee required there to officiate the duty of his place.

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prays your lordships that you will bee pleased to order that your petitioner may bee discharged from his confinement

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

James Fell

paratext

James Fells petition reade 8o December 96 nothing done on it.

James Fell. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of James Fell

Most humbly sheweth

That your petitioner receiving the order of this most honourable house whereby he was directed that Sir John Fenwick should be allowed pen ink and paper onely in the presence of your petitioner and such other person as the Secretary of State should think fitt, your petitioner through inadvertency did permitt the said Sir John Fenwick to have pen ink and paper only to write a letter to the Lord Keeper for his application to your lordshipps which letter your petitioner saw sealed up and was put into the petitioners own hand who delivered itt to Sir Fleetwood Sheppard who imediately delivered the same to the Lord Keeper to be presented to this house, for which your petitioner has incurred your lordshipps displeasure and remains now a prisoner in the Gatehouse for his said offence for which he is really and heartily sorry and most humbly begs pardon of this most honourable house. And

Your peticoner most humbly prays your lordshipps that you will be pleased to order your peticoner may be discharged from his confinement which otherwise will be to his utter ruine.

And your peticoner shall ever pray etc

  • James Fell

Sir John Fenwick, baronet. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Sir John Fenwick baronett

Sheweth

That by your lordshipps order dated the 1st of this instant December your lordshipps were pleased to order that you would hear councell for and against the bill now before your lordshipps intituled An Act to Attaint Your Peticioner of High Treason.

And on Thursday the 3d of this instant December there was another order left with your peticioners sollicitor whereby your lordships are pleased to give leave that witnesses may be produced on either side

That your peticioner (perceiving by your lordships first order that your intencions were onely to hear councell for and against the said bill) has not provided his witnesses against this day and having two materiall witnesses that live neer one hundred miles distant from this towne and which he could not have here in soe short a time.

Your peticioner therefore most humbly prayes your lordshipps that you would be pleased to give your peticioner a convenient time to send for his said witnesses and to prepare himselfe for his defence against the said bill.

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc.

John Fenwicke

paratext

The humble peticion of Sir John Fenwicke

Reade 8o December 1696

Lady Mary Fenwick. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticon of the Lady Mary Fenwick:

Sheweth

That heretofore your peticoner had free access to her husband who is now a prisoner in Newgate but of late is debarred from seeing him; and there being now a bill of attainder passing before your lordshipps for the attaintinge of your peticoners said husband:

That there being many things your peticoner might assist her said husband in, which might enable him to make his defence against the said bill of attainder if your peticoner had liberty to goe to her said husband

Your peticioner therefore most humbly prayes your lordships that you would vouchsafe to grant your peticoner liberty of goeing to her said husband, and being with him in private

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc

  • Mary Fenwicke

Peticon Lady Mary Fenwicke

paratext

Reade 9o December 1696 [and?] her request

Sir John Fenwicke. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Sir John Fenwick baronet

Sheweth

Whereas Master Porter hath given evidence as against your peticioner that one Master Clancy did endeavour to disswade him from appeareing as a witnesse against your peticioner which was urged by the counsell on the behalfe of the King as evidence against your peticioner.

And whereas the said Master Clancy is now in execucion whereby your peticioner cannot produce him without the order of this honourable house.

Your peticioner therefore most humbly prayes your lordshipps order for the bringing the said Master Clancy to the barr of this most honourable house to give evidence on the behalfe of your peticioner.

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc.

  • John Fenwicke

The peticion of Sir John Fenwicke

paratext

Reade 16o December 1696

Sir John Fenwicke. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Sir John Fenwick baronett

Sheweth

That by your lordshipps order dated the 18th of this instant December your lordshipps are pleased to order that your petitioner shall have notice that the bill before your lordshipps for attainting your peticioner of high treason was read a 2d time that day and is ordered to be read a third time as this day.

Your peticioner therefore most humbly prayes your lordshipps that you would be pleased to hear your peticioner at the barr of this honourable house before the said bill be read a third time.

And your peticioner shall ever pray etc

  • John Fenwicke

The peticion of Sir John Fenwicke

paratext

Reade 22o December 1696

Mary, Duchess of Norfolk. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parlement assembled

The humble petition of Mary Dutchess of Norfolke

Sheweth

That your petitioner is enformed that severall wittnesses have bin produced by the Earle of Mounmouth and examined before your lordships with intention to defame your petitioner, and if any impression remaines upon any one of your lordships your petitioner humbley prays she may be admitted before your lordships to vindicate hir selfe from thar reflections

And your petitioner shall ever pray

  • Mary Norfolke

Lady Mary Fenwicke. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of the Lady Mary Fenwicke.

Humbly sheweth

That whereas your wretched petitioner's unfortunate husband stands condemned by a bill of attainder and that the King has thought fitt to sign a warrant for the execucion of the fatall penalty annexed to the said bill whereby your peticioner is seized with the utmost disorder and distraccion of mind! She has made applicacions to his majesty whose royall clemency she hopes may incline (as his power does enable him) to releive the afflicted; but there is nothing could give your distressed peticioner greater incouragement for successe than the intercession of your lordshipps, and since mercy is as inherent and inseperable to your lordshipps, as justice, she humbly implores your lordshipps powerfull mediation, (there being severall instances of those who have fallen under the weight of a bill of attainder without experimenting the utmost severity of it.)

The greatest motive your peticioner can lay before your lordshipps is the happinesse Sir John Fenwicke had (neer two yeares since) both as a Christian and as a man of honour to prevent a base and villanous design against his majesties person the perticulers whereof have beene communicated to some noble peeres and a more exact account annexed hereunto which she humbly desires may be taken as a part of this peticion, the truth of which your peticioner has witnesses to manifest (if they may be indempnified for soe doeinge.)

May the merritt of this action soe farre prevaile upon your lordshipps as to importune and sollicite his majesty out of his great clemency and tendernesse to spare the life of your peticioners most unfortunate husband and in the meane time your peticioner most humbly begs your lordshipps to intercede with his majesty to grant a repreive for a weeke by reason your petitioners husband has not had any divine with him till three of the clock yesterday, nor have any of his freinds or relacions yet beene suffered to goe to him.

May all the blessings of the mercifull attend your lordshipps and your noble familyes and may your peticioner all her life time acknowledge with all possible respect and gratitude the unspeakeable favours that your lordshipps shall conferre upon.

Your most humble and most afflicted petitioner.

  • Mary Fenwicke

The humble peticion of the Lady Mary Fenwicke.

paratext

Lady Mary Fenwicks peticion for repreive for her [husband?] for a weeke reade 22o January 1696. An addresse made upon it.

Lady Mary Fenwicke. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of the Lady Mary Fenwicke.

Humbly sheweth.

Whereas your distressed petitioner has made her most humble acknowledgments to his majesty for his great grace and favour in deferring the execution of her unfortunate husband, she thinks herself also obliged to return her most humble thanks to your lordshipps who were pleased to intercede with his majesty on his behalf.

Your most afflicted petitioner does moreover lay before your lordshipps the merrit of that action, which is attested under Sir John Fenwick's own hand, whereby he had the happiness to save the King's life; all which your petitioner's husband is ready to make out, if the witnesses may be indemnified for such misprision.

And if your petitioner's husband had noe such merrit, as is thereby represented to your lordshipps yet the condicion of a condemned person is such; that (by perpetual imprisonment or banishment) all future dangers to his majesties person and government may be as effectually prevented, (as by his death).

And therefore your petitioner humbly prayes your lordshipps to intercede with his majesty to spare his life.

Wich shall ever be acknowledged with all dutyfull respect, and gratitude by your most afflicted petitioner

  • Mary Fenwicke

The humble petition of the Lady Mary Fenwicke.

paratext

A peticion of the Lady Mary Fenwicke for banishment of her husband reade 26o January 96 nothing done on it upon the [illegible] for [ad?]

Charles, earl of Monmouth. HL/PO/JO/10/1/486/1081 (1696)

The humble petition of Charles Earle of Monmouth. To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parlament assembled.

Sheweth.

That your petitioner hath for ten weeks last past been a prisoner in the Tower, and still continues under comittment there, by vertue of an order of this most honourable house, and your petitioner humbly sub= =mitting to your lords pleasure therein, is extreamly concerned he should in any wise encurr your lords disfavour.

May it therefore please your lords (by reason of his long emprisonement, his indisposition att presant, and some particular affaires that necessarily require his looking after them) [illegible] [illegible] to take [what methods?] your lords shall think proper in order [to?] his dis= =charge from his [confinement?], as soon as your lords in your great wisdome shall think fitt:

Monmouth

paratext

Earle Monmouths peticion to be discharged reade 30o Martii 1697 and he discharged

Elizabeth Kettle. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1087 (1696)

Elizabeth Kettle and Joseph Kettle her son an infant appellants

Edward Townshend respondent

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of the appellant Elizabeth Kettle

Humbly sheweth

That by reason your peticioner is now liveing in Cambridge, and not in a condition to travell to London she cannot enter into a recognizance to answere costs (in case your lordshipps shall think fitt at the hearing of the appeale to order her to pay any

Wherefore she humbly prays your lordshipps will be pleased to order that Joseph White of Drury Lane turner may enter into a recognizance for the purpose aforesaid in her stead

And your peticioner will ever pray etc

Elizabeth Kettle

paratext

Elizabeth Kettles peticion versus Towshend reade 7o January 1696. Ordred White to enter into recognizance for her

Edward Townsend of Highgate in Middlesex, brewer. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1087 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble peticion of Edward Townsend of Highgate in the county of Middlesex brewer

Humbly sheweth.

That about a month ago one Elizabeth Kettle widow and Joseph Kettle her son exhibited their peticion of appeal into this most honourable house against your petitioner in order to reverse a decree made by the late lords commissioners in February 1691 and diverse proceedings subsequent thereunto.

That your petitioner (pursuant to your lordships order for that purpose) did put in his answer to the said appeal on the 21st of December last

Wherefore and for that the said appellants have no just cause to complaine of the said proceedings but the said appeal was lodged merely for delay, your petitioner most humbly prays your lordships to appoint a short day for hearing and determining the matter of the said appeal.

And your petitioner shall pray etc.

Edward Townsend

paratext

Master Townsend's petition versus Kettle reade 9o January 1696. Ordred to be heard 23th instant.

John Tilly, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1090 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled.

The humble petition and appeal of John Tilly esquire.

Sheweth

That in 1692 there was a bill brought in this most honourable house (which afterwards passed the royall assent) to enable Thomas Bromhall an infant (inter alia) to sell his interest in the office of warden of the Fleet with the appurtenances for payment of debts chargeable thereon and the residue to be imployed for his beneffitt.

That when the said bill was refferred to a comittee of your lordshipps one Thomas Richardson prefferred a petition in the names and (as he thereby pretended) on behalfe of himselfe and severall others who lived above one hundred and twenty miles distante (and as since appeares without there privity) praying to be heard before the said bill passed

That your petitioner being concerned to transact the passing the said bill and the then sessions of Parliament drawing to a close and your petitioner foreseing that the said infant who was seized of the premisses in fee would have been ruined if the said bill had not passed was necessitated to give the said Richardson a bond of one thousand pounds penalty for payment of five hundred pounds if the said bill should passe that session.

That your petitioner brought his bill in Chancery to be releived against the said bond as being made unduely and without valueable consideracion obtained and the cause comeing to be heard before the Master of the Rolls in July 1695 his honour decreed your petitioner to pay the principall mony due on the said bond by installements without interest or [illegible] costs in this court, but in default of payment the bill to be dismissed from which decree your petitioner haveing exhibited a supplementall bill)

Appealled to the right honourable the Lord Keeper of the great seale of England who in November last confirmed the same.

From which decree your petitioner humbly appeals to your lordshipps in regard the said bond was obtained without any valueable consideracion and the said petition (which was the artiffice made use of to procure the same) founded upon untrue suggestions and insinuacions, and prefferred without the privity of the persons mencioned therein on purpose to bring about the said Richardsons own sinister ends

And humble prays your lordshipps order that the said Richardson may answer the premisses, and that your lordshipps will be pleased to hear the said cause upon the pleadings and proccedings therein and thereupon to releive your petitioner as to your lordshipps wisedom and justice shall seem meet.

And your petitioner as in duty bound shall ever pray:

John Tilly [appellant?]

paratext

We humbly conceive there is just ground for this appeal

  • Francis Winnington
  • [Caven?] Weedon

John Tillys peticion versus Thomas Richardson reade [24o?] December 1696

February 8: 1696 heard and peticion dismissed and decree affirmed and twenty pounds costs

John Tilly, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1090 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporal in Parliament assembled

The humble petition of John Tilly esquire

Sheweth

That your petitioner having a petition of appeal depending in this honourable house wherin Thomas Richardson is respondent and your petitioner having the misfortune to fall under the displeasure of the honourable House of Commons and now actually in custody of the sarjant at armes attending that house;

Your petitioner most humbly pray's your lordships will be pleased to put of the hearing of the said cause to a farther day and your petitioner shall ever pray:

John Tilly

paratext

John Tillys petition versus Richardson to put off cause reade 25 January 96

John Tilly, esquire. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1090 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of John Tilly esquire

Sheweth

That your petitioner [unfortunately?] falling under the displeasure of the honourable House of Commons [illegible] [custody?] of the serjeant at armes the 25o January last obteyned your [illegible] order to adjourne the hearing of his appeale [depending?] [illegible] your lordshipps against one Richardson to the 4th of February instant on condicion your petitioner should enter into a recognizance to answer costs as is usuall in like cases.

That your petitioner being this day discharged from his said confinement hath in obedience to the said order entred into a recognizance but is by meanes thereof rendred alltogether unable in soe short time to be prepared to prosecute his said appeale with effect

Your petitioner therefore most humbly prayes your lordshipps will be pleased to adjourne the heareing of his said appeale to a further day

And your petitioner shall pray etc

  • John Tilly

George Hastings, son and heir apparent of the Earl of Huntington. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1091 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spiritual and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of George Hastings commonly called Lord Hastings son and heire apparent of the right honourable the Earle of Huntington.

Sheweth

That your peticioner is tenant in taile of the mannor or barony of Bradley and Collingham the rectories of Bradley and Collingham and of all other hereditaments in Bradley Collingham Wyke Bowley Rigton Micklethwaite Compton Clifford and elsewhere in the county of Yorke which were formerly the inheritance of his mother Elizabeth Countes of Huntington and from and after the decease of the said Countess your peticioner became intitled to the imediate possession of such parts thereof as the Lady Sarah Lewis his grandmother doth not hold for her life for her joynture

That imediately after the death of the said Countess (who dyed about the four and twentieth of December one thousand six hundred eighty and eight the said Earle as guardian to your peticioner being then about eleaven yeares old tooke upon him to receive the rents and profitts of the said estate of the yearely value of six hundred pounds or thereabouts and continues still so to doe, and hath gott into his power and custody the deeds of settlement and other writings which should manifest your peticioners title to the said lands.

That your peticioner having no allowance from the said Earle for his maintenance or other provision for his support applyed himself to the tenants of the said lands and required them to pay their rents to him but by reason the said Earle insists upon his priviledge as a peer of Parliament and by himself or agents hath threatned the said tenants with breach of priviledge they dare not pay their rents unto your peticioner nor can your peticioner take any course att law or otherwise against the said tenants or for recovery of the possession of the said lands without incurring the breach of priviledge whereby your peticioner is utterly deprived of any meanes for his support

And there being a long terme of yeares created of some part of the premisses for the enabling the said Earle to borrow and take up the summe of four thousand five hundred pounds or some such summe for his then present occasions upon agreement that the said Earle should repay the same and discharge your peticioners estate thereof and which hath accordingly been repaid by him and the said terme ought to have been surrendred and if the same be continued on foot itt ought to be in trust for your peticioner yet the said Earle and his agents give out that the said terme is assigned to freinds of the said Earle to be made use of against your peticioner and his title to the said lands.

And although your peticioner is not conscious to himself of having given any just occasion of offence to his father yett itt greivously afflicts him to have any contest with him and nothing but absolute necessity and his present insupportable condicion could inforce him thereunto and hopes your lordshipps will putt a favourable construccion upon this his proceeding

And therefore forasmuch as the said Earle hath been onely concerned in the management of this estate as guardian and trustee for your peticioner your peticioner humbly praies your lordshipps to give him liberty to proceed in any court of law or equity as he shall be advised for the discovering and obtaining the said deeds of settlement and gaining the possession of the said lands and procuring the said tenants to pay their rents to your peticioner without incurring any breach of priviledge claimed by the said Earle

And your petitioner shall ever pray etc

Hastings

paratext

Lord Hasting petition versus Earl Huntingdon his father reade 14o December 1696 ordred an answere 29 instant

Sarah Shoebridge, John Berryman, Robert Cock, Francis Asplin and others. HL/PO/JO/10/1/487/1092 (1696)

To the right honourable the lords spirituall and temporall in Parliament assembled

The humble peticion of Sarah Shoebridge (the poor widdow of Thomas Shoebridge deceased) John Berryman, Robert Cock, Francis Asplin, James Allison, John Byatt, and Richard Neale

Most humbly sheweth

That the right honourable the Earle of Nottingham has been (for near six years last past) indebted to the estate of the said Thomas Shoebridge, and to your petitioners John Berryman, Robert Cock, Francis Asplin, James Allison John Byatt, Richard Neale

(severally) in severall considerable summes of money, for work done and materialls found, goods sold and delivered, and moneys laid out to and for the use of his lordshipp.

That your petitioners have often (not without much pains, expence, difficulty, and loss of time) made humble applicacion to his lordshipp and his agents for payment of the said debts; but his lordshipp has been pleased to refuse or delay the payment thereof; although your petitioners doubt not to make out the justice of their severall demands against his lordshipp, if they might but be permitted to have fair tryalls at law for that purpose

But the sessions of Parliament have (for more then six years last past) been so frequent and long, that there has not been any intervall of priviledge (dureing that time) long enough to commence suits and have such tryalls; and your petitioners were willing to wait a long time, in hopes his lordshipps goodness would at lenght extend so far as to satisfy the said debts, and being willing to shew as much humble duty and respect to his quality as could in any reason be expected

That most of your petitioners are reduced to great streights (and some of them to extream poverty) for want of the moneys oweing to and deteyned from them respectively by his lordshipp.

That your petitioners are advised (if speedy remedy be not had) their severall debts may be rendred utterly irrecoverable by vertue of the statute for limitacions; the same haveing been now due very neer six years

Your petitioners therefore humbly implore your lordshipps commiseration of their case, and that your lordshipps would (now) be pleased to grant them leave (severally) to commence and prosecute their severall accions at law against the said Earle for obtaining their said severall debts or at least to sue out originalls and sumon his lordshipp thereon and procure a return thereof or otherwise to order for your petitioners releif as to your lordshipps in your great wisdom shall seem meet

And your petitioners (as in duty bound) shall ever pray etc.

  • John Berryman
  • James Allyson
  • Robert Cock
  • Richard Nealle
  • the mark of John Byett
  • The marke of Sarah Shoebridge

Sign Francis F Asplin

paratext

A peticion of Sarah Shewbridge and others prayeing leave to file originalls against the Earl of Nottingham reade 14o December 1696. The following order was ordred that the fileing of an originall against any lord of this house shall not be taken to be a breach of priviledge.