1722: 9 George 1 c.7: An act for amending the laws relating to the settlement, imployment and relief of the poor.
Whereas by an act of parliament, made and passed in the third and fourth reign of their late majesties King William and Queen Mary, it was provided, That in every parish a book or books should be kept, wherein the names of all persons who did or might receive collections should be registered, with the time when they were first admitted to such relief, and the occasion which brought them under that necessity; and that no such parish should be allowed to have or receive collections at the charge of the parish, but by authority, or under the hand of one justice of peace residing in such parish, or if none there dwelling, in the parts near or next adjoining or by order of the justices at their quarter-sessions, except in case of pestilential diseases, plague or small pox: and whereas under colour of the proviso in the said act, many persons have applied to some justices of peace, without the knowledge of any officers of the parish and thereby, upon untrue suggestions, and sometimes upon false or frivolous pretences, have obtained relied, which hath greatly contributed to to the the increase of the parish-rates: for remedy whereof, be it enacted by the Kings most excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the lords spiritual and temporal and commons, in this present parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, That from and after the twenty fifth day of March which shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twenty three, no justice of peace shall order relief to any poor person dwelling in any parish, until oath be made before such justice of some matter which he shall judge to be a reasonable cause or ground for having such relief, and that the same person had by himself, herself or some other, applied for relief to the parishioners of the parish, at some vestry or other publick meeting of the said parishioners, or to two of the overseers of the poor of such parish, and was by them refused to be relieved, and until such justice hath summoned two of the overseers of the poor to shew cause why such relief should not be given, and the person so summoned hath been heard or made default to appear before such justice; any thing in the said proviso, or any law to the contrary notwithstanding.
II. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the person whom such Justices of peace shall think so to order be relived, shall be entred in such book or books so to be kept by the parish, as one of those who is to receive collection, as long as the cause for such relief continues, and no longer; and that no officer of any parish shall (except upon sudden and emergent occasions) bring to the account of the parish any monies he shall give to any poor person of the same parish, who is not registered in such book or book to be kept by the said parish, as a person entitled to receive collection, on pain of forfeiting the sum of five pounds, to be levied by distress and sale, warrant of any two or more justices of the peace of the same county, who shall have examined into and found him guilty of the offence; which said sum shall be applied to and for the use of the poor of the said parish, by direction of the said justice or justices of the peace.
III. And for the greater ease of justices of the peace, who his Majesty or his successor hath or shall by commission authorize to act as a justice of the peace for any county of this realm; be it enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any such justice of peace shall happen to dwell in any city, or other precinct that is a county of itself, situate within the county at large, for which he shall be appointed justice of the peace, although not within the county, it shall and may be lawful for any such justice of peace to grant warrants, take examinations, and make orders for any matters, which any one or more justice or justices of the peace may act in, at his own dwelling house, altho’ such dwelling house may be out of the county where he is authorized to act as justice of the peace, and in some city or other precinct adjoining, that is a county of itself; and that all such warrants, orders and other act or acts of any justice of peace, and the act or acts of any constable, tithingman, headborough, overseer of the poor, surveyor of the highways or other officer, in obedience to any such warrant or order, shall be as valid, good and effectual in law, though it happen to be out of the limits of the proper precinct or authority: provided always, That nothing in this act contained shall extend to give power to the justices of peace for the counties at large, to hold their general quarter-sessions of the peace in the cities or towns which are counties of themselves, nor to impower the justices of peace, sheriffs, bailiffs, constables, headboroughs, tithingmen, borsholders or any other peace officers of the counties at large, to act or intermeddle in any matter or thing arising within the cites or towns which are counties of themselves, but that all such actings and doings shall be of the same force and effect in law, and none other, as if this act had never been made.
IV. And for the greater ease or parishes in the relief of the poor, be it enacted by the authority aforesaid, That it shall and may be lawful for the churchwardens and overseers of the poor in any parish, town, township or place with the consent of the major part of the parishioners or inhabitants of the the same parish town, township or place in vestry or other parish or publick meeting for that purpose assembled, or of so many of them as shall be so assembled, upon usual notice thereof first given, to purchase or hire any house or houses in the same parish, township or place, and to contract with any person or persons for the lodging, keeping, maintaining and employing any or all such poor in their respective parishes, townships or places, as shall desire to receive relief or collection from the same parish, and there to keep, maintain and employ all such poor persons, and take the benefit of the work, labour and service of any such poor person or persons, who shall be kept or maintained in any such house or houses, for the better maintenance and relief of such poor person or persons, who shall be there kept or maintained; and in case any poor person or persons of any parish, town, township or place, where such house or houses shall be so purchased or hired, shall refuse to be lodged, kept or maintained in such house or houses, such poor person or persons so refusing shall be put out of the book or books where the names of the persons, who ought to receive collection in the said parish, town, township or place, are to be registred, and shall not be entitled to ask or receive collection or relief from the churchwardens and overseers of the poor of the same parish, town or township; and where any parish, town or township shall be too small to purchase or hire such house or houses for the poor of their own parish only, it shall and may be lawful for two or more such parishes, towns or townships or places, with the consent of the major part of the parishioners or inhabitants of their respective parishes, town, township or places, in vestry or other parish or publick meeting for that purpose assembled, or of so many of them as shall be so assembled, upon usual notice thereof first given, and with the approbation of any justice of peace dwelling in or near any such parish, town or place, signified under his hand and seal, to unite in purchasing, hiring, or taking such house, for the lodging, keeping and maintaining or the poor of the several parishes, townships or places so uniting, and there to keep, maintain and employ the poor of the respective parishes so uniting, and to take and have the benefit of the work, labour or service of any poor there kept and maintained, for the better maintenance and relief of the poor there kept, maintained and employed; and that if any poor person or persons in the respective parishes, townships or places so uniting, shall refuse to be lodged, kept and maintained in the house, hired or taken for such uniting parishes, townships or places, he, she or they so refusing, shall be put out of the collection-book, where his, her or their names were registred, and shall not be entitled to ask or demand relief or collection from the church-wardens and overseers of the poor in their respective parishes, townships or places; and that it shall and may be lawful for the churchwardens and overseers of the poor of any parish, township or place, with the consent of the major part of the parishioners or inhabitants of the said parish, township or place where such house or houses is, are, or shall be purchased or hired for the purposes aforesaid in vestry, or other parish or publick meeting, for that purpose assembled, or of so many of them as shall be so assembled, upon usual notice thereof first given, to contract with the church-wardens and overseers of the poor of any other parish, township or place, for the lodging, maintaining or employing, of any poor person or persons of such other parish, township or place, as to them shall seem meet; and in case any poor person or persons of such other parish, township or place, shall refuse to be lodged, maintained and employed in such house or houses, he, she or they so refusing, shall be put out of the collection-book of such other parish, township or place, where his, her or their names were registred, and shall not be entitled to ask, demand or receive any relief or collection from the church-wardens and overseers of the poor of his, her or their respective parish, township or place: provided always, That no poor person or persons, his, her or their apprentice, be as before child or children, shall acquire a settlement in the parish, town removal, or place, to which he, (he or they are removed by virtue of this a&, but that his, her or their settlement, shall be and remain in such parish, town or place, as it was before such removal; any thing in this act to the contrary notwithstanding.
V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and after the twenty fifth day of March which shall be in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twenty three, no person or persons shall be deemed, adjudged or taken, to acquire or gain any settlement in any parish or place, for or by virtue of any purchase of any estate of interest in such parish or place, whereof the consideration for such purchase doth not amount to the sum of thirty pounds, bona fide paid, for any longer or further time than such person or persons shall inhabit in such estate, and shall then be liable to be removed to such parish or place, where such person or persons were last legally settled, before the said purchase and inhabitancy therein.
VI. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That no person or persons whatsoever, who from and after the twenty fifth day of March in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twenty three, shall be taxed, rated or assessed paying taxes to the scavenger or repairs of the highway, and shall duly pay the to the same, shall be deemed or taken to have any legal settlement in any city, parish, town or hamlet, for or by reason of his, her or their paying to such scavenger’s rate or repairs of the highway as aforesaid; any law to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding.
VII. And whereas there was a clause in the statute made in the eighth and ninth years of bis late majesty King William the Third, intituled, An act for the supplying some defects in the law for the relief of the poor of this kingdom, whereby it was enacted, That after the first day of May one thousand six hundred ninety seven, all appeals against any order for the removing of any poor persons, should be heard at the quarter-sessions of the county or division, wherein the parish or place, from whence such person should be removed, doth lie, and not elsewhere, except the liberty of Saint Albans; be it enacted by the authority aforesaid. That it shall and may be lawful for the justices of the peace, within the liberty of the borough of Saint Peter and hundred of Nassaborough in the county of Northampton, to hear and determine all appeals to them made, against any order made for removal of any poor person, in their quarter-sessions, as they might have done before the making of the said last mentioned act; any thing therein or in this present act contained to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding.
VIII. And whereas several disputes and controversies have arisen and been concerning the time of notice to be given of appeals from orders of removals of poor persons, to prevent the same, as much as may be for the future, be it enacted by the authority aforesaid, That from and after the said twenty fifth day of March one thousand seven hundred and twenty three, no appeal or appeals from any order or orders of removal of any poor person or persons whatsoever from any parish or place to another, shall be proceeded upon in any court or quarter-sessions, unless reasonable notice be given by the church-wardens or overseers of the poor of such parish or place, who shall make such appeal, unto the church-wardens or overseers of the poor of such parish or place, from which such poor person or persons shall be removed, the reasonableness of which notice shall be determined by the justices of the peace at the quarter-sessions, to which the appeal is made; and if it shall appear to them that reasonable time of notice was not given, then they shall adjourn the said appeal to the next quarter-sessions, and then and there finally hear and determine the same.
IX. And for the preventing vexatious removals, be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid. That from and after the twenty fourth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and twenty three, if the justices of the peace shall, at their quarter-sessions, upon an appeal before them there had concerning the settlement of any poor person, determine in favour of the appellant, that such poor person or persons was or were unduly removed, that then the said justices shall, at the same quarter-sessions, order and award to such appellant so much money, as shall appear to the said justices to have been reasonably paid by the parish, or other place, on whose behalf such appeal was made for or towards the relief of such poor person or persons, between the time of such undue removal, and the determination of such appeal; the said money so awarded to be recovered in the same manner, as costs and charges upon an appeal are prescribed to be recovered by the said statute made in the ninth year of his late majesty King William the Third, intituled, An act for supplying some defects in the laws for the relief of the poor of this Kingdom.
Source: Pickering, Statutes at Large, vol. 15.
Further reading: Wikipedia.