[001] of which church, in our court etc. B. recently acknowledged and granted to the [002] same A. in maritagium with such a one, his daughter, as appurtenant to such a [003] manor which the same B. gave to the same A. before B. had presented his clerk to [004] the same church, because1 of which presentation the same bishop delays admitting [005] the clerk of the same A. to the same church, as the said A. asserts. And have there the [006] summoners etc. Witness etc. The bishop when he has been summoned, either appears [007] or does not. If he essoins himself, the essoin lies.2 [If he does not appear] in [008] person and excuses himself neither by a messenger nor by an essoiner, let the matter [009] then proceed to default and let the bishop be attached, as below [in the portion on] [010] attachments.3 And let all the solemn order of attachments be observed, for delay, [011] though it may be costly, will not be dangerous to the presentee or the presentor, [012] since after judgment given in the court of the lord king the six months does not run.
When the bishop appears.
[014] When the bishop appears, he either offers a sufficient reason as to why he did not [015] admit the presentee, in which case he will remain unpunished, [or an insufficient one]. [016] If it is insufficient, or one that is wholly bad, he will remain in the mercy of the lord [017] king. An insufficient reason, as where he says that he could not admit the presentee [018] because of an appeal sued by the clerk of him who lost. It is insufficient for this reason, [019] because it would be clear to the bishop from the letters of the lord king that he who [020] presented the appellant had no right in the presentation. It seems a sufficient reason, [021] however, if the bishop says that it was not his fault that he did not admit the clerk4 [022] but that of the presentor, because he first presented A. and afterwards, having [023] changed his mind, presented B. against whom the same A. appealed and prosecuted [024] his appeal, and in the face of such an appeal he could not admit the aforesaid B., [025] the second presentee. He may also say that the church is not vacant, [or] that it was [026] vacant for so long a time [that he filled it at his own presentation, or that it ought [027] not to be filled] on the presentation of such a one because if an assise was taken it [028] was taken by default and5 in the absence of the true patron, who [thus] could say [029] nothing against the assise. He could admit that it was vacant and that someone [030] presented publicly and that, after a long interval, an inquest having been held with [031] due ceremony, there was no one who opposed the presentation, by presenting or [032] appealing, either at the presentation, or at the inquest or at the institution. In that [033] case let the plaintiff show