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buts of wine, two hundred and fiftie barre … buts of wine, two hundred and fiftie barrells and foure hundred frailes<br />
of raisins all for account of the said Mr Tivell and Mr Page to be brought<br />
for England, all which hee knoweth<br />
because hee was master of the said shipp and went all the said voyage in<br />
her.
To the second hee saith that in or about the moneth of december last past<br />
the said shipp with the said wines and fruite aboard her came from<br />
Malaga, and prosecuting her homewards voyage there with, safely<br />
arived at Plimouth in January next following and there delivered thirtie of the said buts of<br />
wine, ninetie foure barrells of raisins and two hundred frailes of raisins,<br />
and there tooke in eight chests of sugar, and with the said eight chests<br />
of sugar and the rest of the wines and fruite soe taken in at Malaga<br />
and not delivered at Plimouth, shee departed from Plimouth in or<br />
about the twentieth of the said moneth of January last bound for this<br />
port of London, here to discharge, and comming off Dover shee was<br />
in or about the three and twentieth day of the said moneth of January<br />
Last met with sett upon and taken. and carried to Callice by a man<br />
of Warr of Callice of which one John Bonnard was captaine, and there<br />
upon her comming in this deponent her master and his company were<br />
all dispossessed and turned out of her, and all her goods were there<br />
unladen and taken ashore, and there the said shipp and goods were<br />
detained about seven weekes; which hee knoweth being master<br />
of her and carried thither in her.
To the third hee saith that when afterwards the said goods came to<br />
be restored, this deponent found wanting and with held or taken<br />
away (and which were never restored) tenn butts of the said wines<br />
twenty and one barrells of raisins and eighteene frailes of raisins,<br />
but the valew thereof hee cannot estimate. And saith that when<br />
the said shipp soe lay under the said seizure there was all the victualls,<br />
powder and shott taken away and a greate part of her cordage<br />
imbeazald. and the shipp her selfe much broken and hurt, having<br />
seaven or eight of her timbers in the [?X]uyt broken and much other<br />
dammage, and her imployment much hindered and retarded by the<br />
said seizure and keeping at Callice, besides hee saith that when<br />
the said goods that were restored aboard came to be dischardged here<br />
in this port they were found to be much hurt and damnified, which<br />
happened while they were soe taken ashore and under the said<br />
restraint at Callice, all which hee knoweth for the reasons<br />
aforesaid. And otherwise hee cannot depose.
To the fourth hee saith that the said shott and powder, victualls and<br />
cordage that was wanting and taken away at Callice were worth<br />
fiftie pounds sterling, and that the repaire of the said breaking and<br />
[?maimes] that the said shipp suffered at Callise came to and was<br />
worth (to be donne) one hundred pounds sterling, and soe much<br />
the said repaires have cost, and hee estimateth the dammage of the<br />
said shipps owners by the said retardament and hindereing of her<br />
imployment by the said seizure to amount to an hundred and fourtie<br />
pounds sterling, And otherwise hee cannot depose.
'''WD''' [HIS MARKE, RH SIDE]
Repeated before the two Judges in Court]
Repeated before the two Judges in Court +
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