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said recited Act, 11 Geo. 4. & 1 Will. 4. c. 58, who shall hereafter resign his office or situation, giving two months notice in writing of such resignation to the Lord Chief Justice of the said Court, shall be entitled to receive during his life such annual sum as the Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury shall think proper to fix and appoint, not exceeding in any case the net annual value of the office or situation formerly held by him, and not being less in any case than three fourths thereof; provided that such annual sum shall exceed the superannuation allowance, to be ascertained as hereinafter mentioned; and the said officers, and every person appointed or to be appointed to any situation as aforesaid under this Act, where such annual sum shall amount to a less sum than the superannuation allowance, to be ascertained as hereinafter mentioned, or who was not entitled to and has not received compensation in respect of any former office held by him under the provisions of the said Act, and who shall hereafter resign his office or situation with the sanction and under the authority of the Lord Chief Justice of the said Court, in consequence of his being incapable, from infirmity of mind or body, to discharge the duties thereof, shall be entitled to receive such superannuation allowance as the said Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury shall direct; and in ascertaining and awarding the amount of such superannuation allowance the said Commissioners shall take into consideration the whole period during which any such person shall have been permanently employed in any office or situation in the said Court, or in any other public office or situation, prior to the passing of this Act, and shall proceed according to the principles laid down by an Act, 4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 24, intituled 'An Act to alter, amend, and consolidate the Laws for regulating the Pensions, Compensations, and Allowances to be made to Persons in respect of their having held Civil Offices in His Majesty's Service; and all officers, clerks, and messengers who shall be newly appointed in the said office after the passing of this Act shall be subject to the deductions from their salaries imposed by the said Superannuation Act, and all such sums and allowances which shall be so awarded and granted by way of superannuation under the authority aforesaid shall be paid and payable and be charged and chargeable in the same way as is hereinbefore provided in respect of the salaries of the said officers, clerks, and messengers respectively as aforesaid, and the necessary expenses of the said office.

XIV. That the solicitors for the several public boards, and all persons admitted or admissible to practise as attornies in the Queen's Bench, shall be allowed in like manner to practise on the Crown side of the said Court, any law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding, upon payment nevertheless of such fees in respect of the business transacted by such attornies on the Crown side of the said Court as shall by the said Lord Chief Justice and Judges of the said Court be fixed and appointed under the provisions hereinafter expressed and declared in that behalf.

XV. That it shall and may be lawful for the Lord Chief Justice and the Judges of the said Court, or any three or more of them, and they are hereby required, on or before the 1st of January 1844, to establish and ordain at their discretion a table of fees to be thereafter taken by the said Queen's coroner and attorney, and master, and to vary and afterwards modify the same from time to time as they shall think fit; and the fees so established and ordained shall be deemed and taken to be the lawful fees of the Crown Office: Provided always, that no fees whatever shall be demanded or received by the said coroner and attorney, master or assistant master, or by any person employed by them in the said office, for or in respect of any act, duty, or service required to be done, performed, or rendered by them, or any of them, in the course of any proceedings carried on in the said office directly at Her Majesty's suit and charge; and the said coroner and attorney, master and assistant master, and the several persons employed by them in the said office, are hereby authorized and required to perform and render such acts, duties, and services as may be required in the course of such last-mentioned proceedings without payment of any fee whatsoever in respect thereof.

XVI. That it shall and may be lawful for the said Lord Chief Justice and the Judges of the said Court, or any three or more of them, to make such rules, orders, and regulations from time to time for the care and custody of the records and other proceedings on the Crown side of the said Court, and the enrolment thereof, and the issuing, returning, and filing of writs and other proceedings, and all other matters and things relating to the practice and the general business to be transacted on the Crown side of the said Court, as to them shall seem fit and proper.

XVII. That from and after the said 1st of January 1844 all acts, duties, and services, now done, performed, and rendered by the said officers abolished by this Act, or any of them, in their respective offices on the Crown side of the said court, except so far as the same may be altered or regulated in pursuance of this Act, shall continue to be done, performed, and rendered by the said Queen's coroner and attorney, and master and assistant master, or their successors, or by one of them, and such acts, duties, and services, when so done, performed, and rendered by the said officers or their successors or one of them, shall be good and valid in law to all intents and purposes: Provided always, that the several acts, duties, and services now and heretofore done, performed, and rendered by the clerks in court on the Crown side of the said court shall, from and after the said 1st of January 1844, be done, performed, and rendered by the solicitors for the several public boards and by the attornies of the said court in like manner as the business of the like descriptions is now transacted on the civil side of the said court: Provided also, that all monies paid into the said court for Her Majesty's use shall continue to be received as heretofore by the said Queen's coroner and attorney; and the several accounts of fines, issues, amerciaments, penalties, and recognizances, set, lost, imposed, or forfeited to or for the use of Her Majesty in the said court, required by any Act now in force to be rendered and made by the said coroner and attorney, and all other acts, duties and services now done, performed, and rendered by the said coroner and attorney touching the receipt and payment of monies to or for the use of Her Majesty, and the accounts to be rendered thereof, shall continue to be done, performed, and rendered as heretofore by the said Queen's coroner and attorney.

And after reciting that William Samuel Jones and John Oliver Jones have been admitted as clerks in court in the said office jointly and severally, and have been jointly compensated under and by virtue of an Act, 11 Geo. 4. & 1 Will. 4. c. 58, but, by an agreement entered into at the time of the admission of the said John Oliver Jones between the said William Samuel Jones and John Oliver Jones, it was agreed that the said William Samuel Jones should receive and take to his own use and benefit the whole of such compensation during his natural life, and should perform and execute all the duties incident to the said office of a clerk in court, and that the said John Oliver Jones should not interfere therewith, and that the said John Oliver Jones should after the decease of the said William Samuel Jones receive and take to his own use during his natural life such

compensation as aforesaid, and should perform all the duties of the said office: And that by virtue and in pursuance of this Act the said John Oliver Jones will be one of those officers whose office and duty will be abolished, and he will be thereby entitled to compensation by virtue of the said Act of Parliament, 11 Geo. 4. & 1 Will. 4. c. 58;—

It is Enacted,

XVIII. That the said John Oliver Jones shall be entitled to receive such compensation for the loss of his reversionary interest in the said office immediately after the passing of this Act as the Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury for the time being may adjudge to him, not being less than three-fourths of the value of such reversion, or he may receive such compensation at the time of the decease of the said William Samuel Jones as he would be entitled to receive by virtue of the said Act, 11 Geo. 4. & 1 Will. 4. c. 58, if the said office had not been abolished.

XIX. That this Act may be amended or repealed by any Act to be passed in the present session of Parliament.

CAP. XXI.-IRELAND.

AN ACT to continue until the Thirty-first Day of July One thousand eight hundred and forty-four, and to the End of the then Session of Parliament, the several Acts for regulating Turnpike Roads in Ireland. (31st May 1843.) By this Acr, the Acts for making or repairing turnpike roads in Ireland are further continued until the 31st of July 1844, or if Parliament be then sitting, until the end of the then session of Parliament.

CAP. XXII.

AN ACT to authorize the Legislatures of certain of Her Majesty's Colonies to pass Laws for the Admission, in certain Cases, of unsworn Testimony in Civil and Criminal Proceedings.

(31st May 1843.)

ABSTRACT OF THE ENACTMENTS.

1. Laws or ordinances made by the legislatures of British colonies for admission of the evidence of certain persons residing therein shall have the same effect as other colonial laws.

2. Act may be amended, &c.

By this ACT,

After reciting that there are resident within the limits of or in countries adjacent to divers of the British colonies and plantations abroad various tribes of barbarous and uncivilized people, who, being destitute of the knowledge of God and of any religious belief, are incapable of giving evidence on oath in any court of justice within such colonies or plantations: And that doubts have arisen whether any laws which have been or which might be made by the legislatures of such colonies respectively to provide for the admissibility in such courts of the evidence of such persons are not or would not be repugnant to the law of England, and therefore null and void, and it is expedient that such doubts should be removed :

It is Enacted,

1. That no law or ordinance made or to be made by the legislature of any British colony for the admission of the evidence of any such persons as aforesaid in any court or before any magistrate within any such colony shall be or be deemed to have been null and void or invalid by reason of any repugnancy or supposed repugnancy of any such enactment to the law of England, but that every law or ordinance made or to be made by any such legislature as aforesaid, for the admission before any such court or magistrate of the evidence of any such persons as aforesaid on any conditions thereby imposed, shall have such and the same effect, and shall be subject to the confirmation or disallowance of Her Majesty in such and the same manner, as any other law or ordinance enacted for any other purpose by any such colonial legislature.

II. That this Act may be amended or repealed by any Act to be passed in the present session of Parliament.

CAP. XXIII.

AN ACT to amend and explain an Act for the Commutation of certain Manorial Rights in respect of Lands of Copyhold and Customary Tenure, and in respect of other Lands subject to such Rights, and for facilitating the Enfranchisement of such Lands, and for the Improvement of such Tenure.

(27th June 1843.)

ABSTRACT OF THE ENACTMENTS.

1. Enfranchisement may be made in consideration of an annual rent, and commutation may be made in consideration of the conveyance of lands subject to the same uses as those commuted, or any right to mines or minerals.

2. Power to the person obtaining the enfranchisement of lands to grant an annual rent in consideration of such enfranchisement.

3. Power to the person obtaining the commutation or enfranchisement of lands to convey lands in consideration of such commutation or enfranchisement.

4. Power to the person having a particular estate in an annual rent to apportion the same.

5. Power to the person having a particular estate in lands charged with an annual rent to concur in the apportionment thereof.

6. No apportionment to be made without the consent of the person entitled to the lands.

7. Annual rents charged on lands under this Act to be first charges on such lands.

8. Sub-lessees not to be liable to the payment of a greater sum than they were before liable to.

9. If at the time of the conveyance of any lands in consideration of an enfranchisement there shall be a lease subsisting, the person to whom such lands shall be conveyed shall have the reversion on such lease, and may distrain for the rents and enforce the covenants, &c.

10. If at the time of the commutation or enfranchisement of any lands there shall be any lease subsisting therein, the person seised of or entitled to such lands shall have the reversion on that lease, and may distrain for the rents and enforce the covenants, &c. 11. A schedule of apportionment may be used where six tenants agree to enfranchise.

12. Part of the money received for enfranchisement may be applied in paying off any fee-farm rent or other charge.—Application of the remainder.-Commissioners may direct that any other security may be substituted for the payment of money into the Bank. 13. Altering provision in recited Act as to notice of person entitled to next estate of inheritance.

14. Payment of enfranchisement money when the lord of the manor has only a limited interest.

15. To what the Acts shall be construed to extend.

16. This Act a part of recited Act.

By this ACT,

After reciting the passing of 4 & 5 Vict. c. 35, and that it is expedient to amend and explain the said Act in certain respects: It is Enacted,

1. That, in addition and subject to the provisions contained in the said Act, any enfranchisement made under the same may be made either wholly or in part, for the consideration of a grant of an annual rent in fee to be thenceforth charged on and issuing out of the lands enfranchised, such annual rent to be valued in like manner and be subject to the like variation as the commutation rent-charge under the provisions of the said Act; and that, in addition and subject to the provisions contained in the said Act, any commutation or enfranchisement made under the same may be made either wholly or in part for the consideration of a conveyance of lands parcel of the same manor as the lands commuted or enfranchised, and subject to the same uses and trusts as the lands commuted or enfranchised shall be subject to at the time of such commutation or enfranchisement, or any right to mines or minerals in or under such lands, or any right to waste in lands belonging to such manor.

II. That if the consideration for the enfranchisement under the said Act shall be either wholly or in part the grant of an annual rent, then it shall be lawful for the person empowered by the said Act to obtain the enfranchisement of such lands to grant such annual rent to the person enfranchising such lands, and his heirs, to the uses and upon and for the trusts, intents, and purposes to, upon, and for which the manor of which such lands are parcel shall be subject and held at the time of such enfranchisement, and to charge such annual rent on all or such of the lands enfranchised as shall be fixed on, and to make the same payable by equal half-yearly payments; and the annual rent so granted shall be a rent service, and thenceforth parcel of and appendant and appurtenant to the same manor as the lands enfranchised; and such annual rent may be granted either by deed or by a schedule of appointment, to be made and signed pursuant to the directions of the said Act and of this Act. III. That if the consideration for the commutation or enfranchisement under the said Act shall be either wholly or in part the conveyance of lands, or a right to mines or minerals, or a right to waste in lands belonging to such manor as aforesaid, then it shall be lawful for the person empowered by the said Act to obtain such commutation or enfranchisement to convey the lands, or rights to mines or minerals, or rights to waste in lands belonging to such manor, fixed on as the consideration, either wholly or in part, for such commutation or enfranchisement, to the person commuting or enfranchising the lands proposed to be commuted or enfranchised, and his heirs, to the uses and upon and for the trusts, intents, and purposes to, upon, and for which the manor of which such lands are parcel shall be subject and held at the time of such commutation or enfranchisement.

IV. That if, at any time while an annual rent shall remain charged on any lands under this Act, the person for the time being seised in possession of such annual rent or entitled to the receipt thereof shall be so seised or entitled for a particular VOL. XXI.-STAT.

G

estate, (whether such estate shall have been subsisting at the time of the enfranchisement of such lands or not,) then it shall be lawful for such person, whether he shall be so seised or entitled in actual possession or in remainder or reversion expectant on the determination of any estate for a term of years, to divide and apportion such annual rent, and to declare what part and proportion thereof shall be thenceforth severally charged upon each of the respective parcels of such lands between which such apportionment is intended to be made; and after such apportionment such annual rent shall be chargeable upon and payable out of such lands only, and in such parts and proportions only as shall be so declared: Provided nevertheless, that it shall not be lawful for any person so seised or entitled as aforesaid in respect of an undivided share only of such annual rent to divide and apportion such annual rent, unless the person for the time being enabled either by this Act or otherwise to divide and apportion the same as respects the other undivided share thereof shall join in dividing and apportioning such annual rent. v. That if at any time while an annual rent shall remain charged on any lands under this Act the person seised of such lands in possession, or entitled to the receipt of the rents, issues, and profits thereof, shall be so seised or entitled for a particular estate, (whether such estate shall have been subsisting at the time of the enfranchisement of such lands or not,) then it shall be lawful for such person, whether he shall be so seised or entitled in actual possession or in remainder or reversion expectant on the determination of any estate for a term of years, and with the consent of the Copyhold Commissioners, to concur in any division or apportionment of such annual rent, and to agree what part and proportion thereof shall be thenceforth severally charged upon each of the respective parcels of such lands between which such apportionment is intended to be made: Provided nevertheless, that it shall not be lawful for any person so seised or entitled as aforesaid in respect of an undivided share only of such lands to concur in or agree to any such division or apportionment, unless the person for the time being enabled either by this Act or otherwise to concur in such division or apportionment as respects the other undivided share of such land shall concur in or agree to such apportionment.

VI. Provided and enacted, That no division or apportionment shall be made under this Act of an annual rent charged on any lands unless with the concurrence and agreement of the person seised of such lands or entitled to the receipt of the rents, issues, and profits thereof, for an estate in respect of which he is enabled either by this Act or otherwise to concur in or agree to such apportionment, so as to render the same permanent and effectual.

VII. That every annual rent which shall be charged on any lands under the authority of this Act shall be a first charge on such lands, and shall have priority over all mortgages, charges, and incumbrances whatsoever affecting such lands, tithe rentcharge excepted, notwithstanding such mortgages, charges, and incumbrances shall have been or shall be respectively made and created before such apportioned annual rent shall be charged on such lands.

VIII. Provided and enacted, That a sub-lessee under any sub-lease, his executors, administrators, or assigns, shall not, in consequence of any charge under this Act either with an annual rent, or in consequence of any apportionment under this Act, either of an apportioned annual rent or of any rent reserved in any lease, be liable to the payment of any greater sum of money than he would have been subject or liable to if such charge or apportionment had not been made.

IX. Provided and enacted, That if at the time of the conveyance under this Act, in consideration either wholly or in part of the commutation or enfranchisement of any lands held by copy of court roll, there shall be subsisting in the lands so conveyed any lease (not being an under-lease), then the lessee under such lease, his executors, administrators, and assigns, shall pay, observe, and keep to and with the person to whom such lands shall be so conveyed, or other the person for the time being seised of or entitled to such lands expectant on the determination of such lease, and his executors or administrators, the rent, reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements respectively reserved and contained in such lease, or such and so many or such part of the rent, reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements respectively reserved and contained in such lease as are or ought to be thenceforth respectively paid, observed, and kept in respect of the lands so conveyed; and the person to whom such lands shall be so conveyed, or other the person so for the time being seised of or entitled as aforesaid, shall and may from time to time make or bring all such distresses, actions, suits, or entries for non-payment of such rent or reservations, or for non-performance of the covenants, conditions, and agreements in such lease respectively reserved and contained, as could, in case such conveyance had not been made, have been made or brought by the person making such conveyance, or other the person for the time being seised of or entitled to the reversion expectant on the determination of such lease; and that in all such distresses, actions, suits, and entries the rent, reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements in such lease reserved and contained on the part of the lessee, his executors, administrators, or assigns, shall be deemed and taken to be annexed to an immediate reversion vested in the person to whom such lands shall be so conveyed, or other the person for the time being so seised of or entitled to such lands as aforesaid.

x. Provided and enacted, That if at the time of any commutation or enfranchisement under the said Act or under this Act of any lands there shall be subsisting in such lands any lease (not being an under-lease), then the lessee under such lease, his executors, administrators, and assigns, shall pay, observe, and keep to and with the person for the time being seised of or entitled to the lands so commuted or enfranchised, and his executors or administrators, the rent, reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements respectively reserved and contained in such lease, or such and so many or such part of the rent, reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements respectively reserved and contained in such lease, as are or ought to be thenceforth respectively paid, observed, and kept in respect of the lands so commuted or enfranchised; and the person for the time being seised of or entitled to the lands so commuted or enfranchised shall and may from time to time make or bring all such distresses, actions, suits, or entries for non-payment of such rent or reservations, or for non-performance of the covenants, conditions, and agreements in such lease respectively reserved and contained, as could have been made or brought by the person who would for the time being have been entitled to the lands so commuted or enfranchised in case such commutation or enfranchisement had not been made; and in all such distresses, actions, suits, and entries the rents or reservations, covenants, conditions, and agreements in such lease reserved and contained on the part of the lessee, his executors, administrators, or assigns, shall be deemed and taken to be annexed to an immediate reversion vested in the person for the time being seised of or entitled to the lands so commuted or enfranchised.

And after reciting that it is provided by the said Act that whenever so many as twelve persons being tenants or all the tenants of any manor shall agree with the lord for the commutation or enfranchisement of their lands, it shall be lawful to effect such commutation or enfranchisement by a schedule of apportionment; and that it is desirable to permit a schedule of apportionment to be adopted when a less number of tenants of any manor than twelve are desirous of effecting a commutation or enfranchisement;—

It is Enacted,

XI. That it shall be lawful to effect a commutation or enfranchisement by a schedule of apportionment, in the manner provided by the said Act, whenever so many as six persons being tenants of any manor shall at the same time agree with the lord for the commutation or enfranchisement of their lands.

XII. That if any manor, or any part thereof, shall be subject to the payment of any fee-farm rent or other charge not exceeding the amount of the annual quit rents payable to the lord of such manor, it shall be lawful for the said Commissioners to direct that so much of the money to be received for enfranchisement in any such manor under the provisions of the said recited Act or this Act, as they shall consider adequate, shall be paid into the Bank of England in the name and with the privity of the Accountant General of the Court of Chancery, to be placed to his account there ex parte the Copyhold Commissioners, and to be applied under the directions of the said Court of Chancery in paying or redeeming the said charge, and in exonerating therefrom the land which shall be enfranchised and indemnifying the owners of such land, and otherwise as the said Court shall direct, on petition in a summary way, as provided for in the case of other money to be paid into the Bank of England under the said Act; and every such fee-farm rent or other charge shall be paid to the person entitled thereto at the same time, and subject to the same deductions for land tax or otherwise, but to no others, as if no enfranchisement had taken place; and when provision shall have been so made for any such charge, it shall be lawful for the said Commissioners to direct that the remainder of the money to be paid for enfranchisement and the surplus income of the money so paid into the Bank of England, after payment of all expenses attending the payment of such fee-farm rent or other charge to the person entitled thereto, shall be applied in like manner as if no such charge had existed; and thenceforth no land which shall be enfranchised in such manor shall be chargeable with or liable to the payment of any greater part of the said fee-farm rent or other charge than the amount of the quit rent theretofore payable out of such land, but to that extent the said land shall continue and be chargeable with and liable to the payment of the said fee-farm rent or other charge, and shall be subject to the like remedies for the recovery thereof as if such quit rent continued payable; and the said Commissioners shall state in the deed, schedule, or other instrument of enfranchisement the amount of such quit rent or liability in every case, and such statement shall be conclusive against the owners of the said land: Provided nevertheless, that it shall be lawful for the said Commissioners, whatever may be the amount of such fee-farm rent or other charge, with the consent of the person entitled thereto, to direct, if they shall see fit, that any other security in land or money which they shall consider sufficient for the purpose, shall be substituted for the payment of money into the Bank of England in manner aforesaid, and in that case, or in any case, and whatever may be the amount of such fee-farm rent or other charge, with the consent of the person entitled as aforesaid, to direct that all or any part of the land to be enfranchised shall be entirely released from the payment of the said fee-farm rent or other charge, and the same land shall thenceforth be released accordingly.

And after reciting that it is provided by the said Act, that whenever the estate of any party to an enfranchisement under the said Act shall be less than an estate of fee simple in possession or corresponding copyhold or customary estate, notice in writing shall be given to the person entitled to the next estate of inheritance in remainder or reversion in the manor or land to be affected by such enfranchisement ;

It is Enacted,

XIII. That in case any tenant whose estate shall be less than an estate of fee simple as aforesaid shall be a party to an enfranchisement under the said Act or this Act, and shall pay the whole of the price of enfranchisement, so that no part thereof or of the expenses thereof shall be charged on the inheritance of the land to be enfranchised, it shall not be necessary that the person entitled to the next estate of inheritance or remainder or reversion shall have notice of such enfranchisement.

XIV. That when any lord of a manor shall be only entitled for a limited estate or interest therein, or shall be under any legal disability, any money to be paid under the said Act or under this Act for enfranchisement from the lord's rights shall at the option of the respective parties for the time being entitled to the said manor the rights of which shall be enfranchised, or of their respective husbands, guardians, or committees, in case of coverture, infancy, idiotcy, lunacy, or other incapacity, be paid into the Bank of England, in the name and with the privity of the said Accountant General, and be placed to his account, in order to be applied in manner as in the said Act directed, or otherwise the same may be paid, at the like option, to the trustees acting under the will, conveyance, or settlement under which such lord having such limited interest shall hold or be entitled to or interested in the said manor of which the lands so to be enfranchised shall be parcel, or if there are no such trustees, then into the hands of trustees to be nominated under the hands and seal of the said Commissioners; and the money, when so paid to such trustees, shall be applied by the said trustees, with the consent of the said Commissioners, in the manner directed and specified by the said Act of and concerning any money to be paid for enfranchisement under the said Act, into the Bank of England, in the name and with the privity of the said Accountant General; and upon every vacancy in the office of such trustee some other fit person shall be appointed by the said Commissioners in like manner.

xv. That the said recited Act and this Act shall be construed to extend to all lands holden by copy of court roll or by a custom of a manor for life or lives or for years, whether the tenant thereof have or have not a right of renewal; and that the words "land or lands" shall extend to all corporeal and incorporeal hereditaments whatsoever, whether subject to manorial rights or otherwise, or any undivided part or share therein.

XVI. That this Act shall be taken and construed to be a part of the said recited Act.

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