The CASE Relating to the BILL for Preventing Multiplicity of Vexatious Suits, and for Ascertaining a certain ancient Customary Tithe in the County of Derby. according to the Tenor of certain Decrees in Chancery grounded on divers Trials all Common Law THE Payment of a Tithe or Tenth of Lead-Oar, or other Metals in general, is not a Novel or unknown Duty: For although it be not found in the ordinary Tything Tables, nor due of Common Right, yet many of the Ancient Kings of this Realm, in granting their Mines to several Persons in divers parts of this Kingdom, did (besides a certain part to themselves and their own Exchequer) usually reserve and provide a Tenth to be paid to Holy Church, as may appear by Grants of Mines made 11 Jun. 8 Ric. 2d; 9 Feb. 7. Hen. 4. 24 Feb. 5 Hen. 6. 23 Mar. 15 Edw. 4. etc. From such Grants, the particular Customary Tithe or Tenth of Lead Oar, paid to the Church in all Mineral Parishes of Derbyshire, did undoubtedly at first arise, since the Mines there were anciently in the King's own Hands. And it is most equitable for the Miners to pay a Tithe of their Lead Oar, because they (or any Subject of England) have the Privilege to dig and turn up any Man's Ground, in searching for Led Oar there, whereby vast quantities both of Pasture, Meadow, and Arable Land, are turned into heaps, and made Barren, which would otherwise yield a good Tithe in another kind. The Miners themselves, upon their Oaths, have more than once acknowledged a Duty of Tithe, payable to the Church as well as other Duties (called Lott and Cope) payable to the King or his Farmer, and this they have Entered and Recorded in the Ancient Articles of their Liberties and Customs, as a necessary Condition of some of their Privileges, as may be seen by two Inquisitions, concerning the Liberties and Customs of the Lead-Mines in Derbyshire, taken by special Commission, or Quo Warranto, from the Crown, upon the Oaths of 24 Jurors, or the Body of the Mine (as they are called) the one Inquis. Sept. 20. 3 Edw. 6th, Article 4. the other May 3d, in 3 & 4 Phil. & Mary, Article 6. both taken at Wirksworth. No less than Twenty thousand Miners, from all Mineral places in Derbyshire, whose Names, including their Wives, Servants and Children, are Subscribed to a Petition which was presented to the Parliament in the Reign of Cham I do all of them acknowledge the payment of this Tithe to the Church, and pleaded in that their Petition, that for paying this Tithe (and the Duty of Lott and Cope to the King) they ought to be discharged of some other Payments and Impositions which Q. Eliz first of all, and after her K. Ja. I. & Ch. I. had successively and gradually laid upon Lead (to the value of 48 s. per Fudder of Tun) from which Impositions they were and are at this day discharged, upon that their Petition. Decrees, Orders and Verdicts, in all the Courts of Law or Equity have passed, and Orders of the S●ar-Chambers, and Council-Board have been made in favour of the Proprietors of this Tithe and for settling and recovering their Right when it has been denied. Only the Plaintiffs in those Suits having multitudes of Adversaries, and some of them Rich, were put to vast Expenses and Charges in those Suits (one of them only expending above 1500 l. in recovering his 3d part of this Tithe in three Parishes) which being wholly insupportable to four or five poor Parsons and Proprietors of Tithe (who only (in all the County of Derby) are now denied this Duty, although their Predecessors, not only at the time of those great Suits, but for many Years since, even till very lately, did receive and quietly enjoy the said Tithe. They therefore solicit this Bill in Parliament, to prevent such Vexatious Suits, and to enforce the Execution, and to make the Benefit of those Decrees as general and extensive to the whole County of Derby (where Lead-Oar is got and digged) as the Issues, Verdicts, and Evidences given at the Common-Pleas-Bar were, on which those Decrees were Founded. The Parsons and Vicars in the Mineral Parishes of Derbyshire, pay First-fruits and Yearly Tenths to the King expressly, for their Tithe of Lead-Oar, as appears in all or most of their Endowments upon Record, in the First-fruits Office. And they are Rated as high in public Taxes, as when their Predecessors received this Duty. Lastly, A Bill was once offered in Parliament, against Tyth-Oar, but was rejected, upon Reasons given by the Ministers and Proprietors of Tithe, wherein they made appear their Right, from many ancient Deeds, Accounts, Leases and other Records in the Reigns of Ed. II Ed. III Ric. II Hen. VI Ed. IV. Hen. VII. Hen. VIII. Ed. VI And the present Suitors for this Bill, can show divers Accounts, Leases and Compositions and Receipts of this Tithe by their Predecessors. Appendix. The Petitioners Right to his Tithe appearing by this Case and Decree to be so plain and evident, that it seems Recoverable at Law: It may be asked, why we trouble the Parliament with it. To which we Humbly Answer: I BEcause notwithstanding the clearness of our Title in Law, yet the Litigiousness of our Opponents hath kept us out of Possession for above Twenty Five Years; by which means we cannot now have those general Issues upon which this Tithe was formerly Established (as may be seen in the Decree) nor yet those Living Witnesses, and Evidence Viva Voce which our Predecessors had upon their particular and local Issues. II Because by withholding so considerable a part of our Maintenance, we are totally disabled to follow so many tedious and chargeable Suits at Law, as by the sad experience of some of our Predecessors, we certainly know the opponents of this Tithe will put us upon: It not being to be supposed, that a Clergyman whose Benefice is but 50, 60, or 70 Pounds per Annum, should expend 600 or 800 Pounds (as some of our Predecessors who had great temporal Estates, besides their Benefices, have done) in vindicating this Right of his Church in which he has yet no Estate of Inheritance, nor perhaps, much probability of seeing the Suit ended during his Life. III Our Right and Title (as appears by the Decree) having been fully tried and cleared in all the Courts of Law and Equity upon general Issues for the whole County, and those directed by special Order of the Privy-Counsel, on purpose to avoid multiplicity of Suits: We humbly conceive it need not be sent back again to the Law upon Local and particular Issues, which are only a late Invention and Design of some Persons Cunning in the Law, to defeat the intent of those former general Issues and the Verdicts given upon 'em, and to multiply as many Suits as there are Parishes, Places, or Proprietors who claim this Tithe. IV. If we were able to follow so many several Suits at Law, and should prevail in 'em all; yet would not this secure us or our Successors in the quiet possession of this Tithe, without an Establishment of the general Right for the whole County of Derby; because the multitude of our Opponents are on all occasions ready to renew their Suits, to seize the Tithe to themselves for Maintenance of Suit against the Parson, and upon the Death, Change, or Poverty of any Incumbent, to deny former Decrees, and take advantage of the Clemency of our Predecessors in not always exacting a constant Tenth, thereby to destroy or avoid our Right upon strict Local and particular Issues at Common Law. V The Opponents of this Duty having formerly followed this Cause through all the Courts of Law and Equity, and before the Privy-Councel, and being Cast and Condemned in all, did themselves bring this Matter into the Parliament, where the general Right to this Tithe (being acknowledged on all sides to be one and the same in all Parishes within the County of Derby) was upon solemn Examination and Debate so far approved in Parliament, as to reject and cast out a Bill brought against this Tithe; which gives us hopes, that as the Honourable House did once receive and debate the Reasons of a Bill brought against us; so they will not now reject the Consideration of a Bill brought for the quiet Establishment of Us in the possession of that Right which has been by them so far approved. But especially the poor Clergy-Petitioners who only (of almost all others) are now denied and kept out of this Tithe; do therefore humbly apply themselves for Relief to the two most Honourable Houses of Parliament, as the Common Patrons of their injured and despoiled Churches, which for the Reason's aforesaid, cannot Relieve themselves by any other way. The CASE Relating to the BILL for Preventing Vexations Suits, and Ascertaining γ€ˆβ—Šγ€‰ certain Customary TITHE in the County of DERBY.