Highways Act 1562
The Highways Act 1562 (5 Eliz.1 c.13), sometimes the Second Statute of Highways, was an Act of Parliament of the Parliament of England passed in 1563. The Act extended the provisions of the Highways Act 1555, by which every householder of a parish had to provide four days labour in a year on the highways, for a further twenty years, and made the requirement six days labour rather than four. Supervisors of highway work were empowered to take debris from quarries and dig for gravel without permission of the landowners. The Act also empowered Justices of the Peace at Quarter Sessions to investigate and punish supervisors in cases where they were in dereliction of their duties, imposing "such fines ... as shall be thought meet".
It was repealed by section 57 of the Act 7 Geo.3 c.42.
References[]
- Tanner, J. R. Tudor Constitutional Documents, AD 1485-1603. Cambridge University Press, 1951. p. 499.
- 1563 in law
- 1563 in England
- Acts of the Parliament of England (1485–1603)
- Roads in England
- Transport policy in the United Kingdom
- Transport legislation
- History of transport in England