Non-Statutory Rates to 1601 25
scil., of every acre of marsh land 4d., and of every acre
of arable land 2d., to be paid by the occupiers of them
in Hailsham ;” and “all the said tax of the said town
did not exceed the sum of £50.” Now one William
Jeffrey, gentleman, who resided, not in Hailsham, but
in Chiddingley, some miles away, both owned and
occupied 30 acres of the marsh land and 100 acres of
the arable land so rated. He objected to pay his
26s. 8d., on tha ground that he ‘was not a parishioner
of Hailsham. Suffering defeat on this point before
the spiritual court, he invoked the civil, but met with
no better success. After taking the opinion of the
ecclesiastical lawyers, the court decided that he was a
parishioner and liable to be rated. “It was answered
and resolved, first, that although the house wherein
Jeffrey dwelt be in another parish, yet forasmuch as
he had lands in the parish of Hailsham in his proper
possession and manurance, he is in law parochianus
de Haylesham. For the place where he lies, sleeps,
or eats, doth not make him a parishioner only; but
also, forasmuch as he manures lands in Hailsham,
and by that is resident upon it, that makes him a
parishioner of Hailsham also as to this purpose. If”
continued the court—and here no doubt is the crucial
point—"in this case Jeffrey should not be charged to
the reparation of the church of Hailsham for those
lands which he himself occupies there, no person
would be charged for them, upon which great incon-
venience would ensue; for one who inhabits in the
next town may occupy the greatest part of the lands
in another town, and so churches in these days will
come to ruin.” One of Jeffrey's complaints was that
the churchwardens had said that he “occupied or