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A42889 Reports of certain cases arising in the severall courts of record at Westminster in the raignes of Q. Elizabeth, K. James, and the late King Charles with the resolutions of the judges of the said courts upon debate and solemn arguments / collected by very good hands, and lately re-viewed, examined, and approved by Justice Godbolt ; and now published by W. Hughes. Godbolt, John, d. 1648.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1652 (1652) Wing G911; Wing H3330_CANCELLED; ESTC R24389 404,377 461

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6. 30. 18 E. 4. 2. 36 H. 6. 7. Also he said When a Declaration is general the Defendant need not traverse 1 E. 4. 9. 2 E. 4. 28. And further he said That the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 5. of Demurs helped that defect for that it is but only in matter of form But the Justices did not argue that point But the Question which they made was Whether the Constitution or Ordinance were lawful or not And as to that it was holden by the whole Court That the said Ordinance was unlawful And it was agreed by the Court That the King might make Corporations and grant to them that they may make Ordinances for the ordering and government of any Trade but thereby they cannot make a Monopoly for that is to take away Free-trade which is the birthright of every Subject And therefore the Case was in 2 H. 5. 5. in Debt upon a Bond upon Condition That one should not use his Trade of a Dyer in the Town where the Plaintiffe did inhabit for one year And there said That the Obligation was void because the Condition was against the Law And he swore by God if the Plaintiffe were present that he should go to prison till he had paid a Fine to the King Yet regularly Modus Conventio vincunt legem 2. It was resolved That although such Clause was contained in the Kings Letters Patents yet it was void But where it is either by Prescription or by Custome confirmed by Parliament there such an Ordinance may be good Quia Consuetudo Legalis plus valet quam Concessio Regalis The King granted unto the Abbot of Whitny the Custody of a Port which is as it were a Key of the Kingdom and therefore the Grant was void and so adjudged And such Grants are expresly against the Statute of 9 E 3. cap. 1. And the Charter granted by King Henry the 8. to the Physitians of London hath the same Clause in it But if it had not been confirmed by Act of Parliament made 33 H. 8. it had been void The King granted unto B. that none besides himself should make Ordnances for Battery in the time of war Such Grant was adjudged void But if a man hath brought in a new Invention and a new Trade within the Kingdom in peril of his life and consumption of his estate or stock c. or if a man hath made a new Discovery of any thing In such Cases the King of his grace and favour in recompence of his costs and travail may grant by Charter unto him That he only shall use such a Trade or Trafique for a certain time because at first the people of the Kingdom are ignorant and have not the knowledge or skill to use it But when that Patent is expired the King cannot make a new Grant thereof For when the Trade is become common and others have been bound Apprentices in the same Trade there is no reason that such should be forbidden to use it And Cook Chief Justice put this Case The King granted to B. That he solely should make and carry Kersies out of the Realm and the Grant was adjudged void which Crook concessit 3. It was resolved That this Charter was void because of the words viz. Nisi ante eos vel duos eorum probationem fecerit c. And therefore it was considered what proof should be sufficient for the party And as to that it was agreed That the proof cannot be upon Oath for such a Corporation cannot admidister an Oath unto the party And then the proof must be by his Indentures and Witnesses and perhaps the Corporation will not allow of any of them For which the party hath no remedy against the said Corporation but by his Action at the Common Law and in the mean time he should be barred of his Trade which is all his living and maintenance and to which he had been Apprentice for seven years Another reason was given because that by this way they should be Judges in their own cause which is against the Law And the King cannot grant unto another to do a thing which is against the Law And afterwards Trin. 12 Jacobi Judgment was entred Quod Querentes nihil capiant per Billam And Judgment was then given for the Defendant Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 352. LINSEY and ASHTON's Case LInsey brought an Action of Debt against Ashton upon a Bond the Condition of which was to perform an Award The Defendant said that the Award was That the Defendant should surcease all suits depending betwixt them which he had done The Plaintiffe in his Replication said That the Arbitrators made such Award ut supra and also that the Defendant should pay unto the Plaintiffe 25l. at the house of J. S. absque hoc that they made the other Award only Upon which the Defendant did rejoyn and said That well and true it is that they made those Awards c. But they further awarded that the Plaintiffe should release unto the Defendant which he had not done And upon the Rejoynder the Plaintiffe did demur in Law And the opinion of the Court was without question That the Plea was a departure 19 H. 6. 19. But it was argued by Finch That the Replication was insufficient For the Plaintiffe ought not to have traversed as this Case is because that a man ought not to traverse a thing alleadged by Implication but ought to traverse that which is alleadged de facto upon which there may be an issue joyned And to prove the Traverse void the Case in 11 H. 6. 50. was put But the Exception was not allowed by the Court Another Exception was taken because the Award it self was void because it was to do a thing upon the Land of another man which he might not lawfully do And although the Arbitrators might award him to do the thing which is inconvenient yet they cannot award him to do a thing which is impossible and against the Law as in 17 E. 4 5. Two were bound to stand to the Arbitrement of J. S. of all Trespasses who awarded that the one should pay unto the other 40. and that he find Sureties to be bounden for the payment of it And by the opinion of the Justices the Award was void because he could not award a man to do that which did not lie in his power and he hath no means to compel the stranger to be bound for him But the opinion of the whole Court was against Finch For first the mony is to be paid apud domum J. S. and not in domo And it might be for any thing that appeareth that the said House is adjoyning to the High-way so as every Stranger might lawfully come unto it although he might not come into it without being a Trespassor But admit it be not adjoyning to the High-way yet he might come as neer unto the house as he could or he might get leave to come thither Secondly It was
removed but if the VVrit of Error want only form but is sufficient for the matter in substance the VVrit shall not abate but the partie may have a new VVrit of Error coram vobis residet c. Trin. 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 464. MILL's Case ACtion upon the Case for these words Thou hast Coyned Gold and art a Coyner of Gold Adjudged the Action will not lie for it may be he had Authority to Coyn and words shall be taken in mitiori sensu Pasch 3 Car in the Kings Bench. 465. BROOKER's Case THe question was VVhether the Feoffee of the Land might maintain a VVrit of Error to reverse an Attaindor by Vtglary and the Case was this William Isley seised in Fee of the Mannor of Sundridge in Kent had issue Henry Isley who was Indicted of Felony 18 Eliz. and 19. Eliz. the Record of the Indictment was brought into this Court and thereupon 20 Eliz. Henry Isley was outlawed William Isley died seised Henry Isley entred into the Mannor and Land as son and heir and being seised of the same devised the Mannor and Lands to C. in Fee who conveyed the same to Brooker and Brooker brought a Writ of Error to reverse the Outlawry against Henry Isley Holborn argued for the King and said that Brooker was no way privy to the attaindor of Henry Isley but a meer stranger and therefore could not maintain a Writ of Error And first he said and took exception that he had not set himself down Terre-Tenant in possession Secondly he saith in his Writ of Error That the Mannor and Lands descended to Henry Isley as son and heir when as he was attainted The third exception was That he saith that Henry Isley did devise the Lands and that he could not do because he was a person Attainted Fourthly he said that Brooker was not Tenant so much as in posse 4 H. 7. 11. If it were not for the words of Restitution the partie could not have the mean profits after the Judgment reversed 16 Ass 16. Lessee for years pleaded to a Precipe and reversed it the question was whether he should be in statu quo vi Librum for it is obscure If this Attaindor of Henry Isley were reversed yet it cannot make the devise good For there is a difference betwixt Relations by Parliament which nullifie Acts and other Relations Vi. 3 H. 7. Sentlegers Case Petition 18. The violent Relation of Acts of Parliament If a Bargain and Sale be the Inrollment after will make Acts before good but a Relation by Common Law will not make an Act good which was before void C. 3. part Butler and Bakers Case A gift is made to the King by Deed enrolled and before the enrollment the King granteth away the Land the Grant is void yet the enrollment by Relation makes the Lands to pass to the King from the beginning Admit in this Case that Brooker were Terre-Tenant yet he is not a party privy to bring a Writ of Error to reverse the Attaindor of him who was Tenant of the Land and I have proved That although the Attaindor were reversed yet he hath nothing because the Devise was void and is not made good by Relation It is a rule in our Books that no man can bring a VVrit of Error but a partie or privy 9 E. 4. 13. 22 E. 4. 31 32. 9 H. 6. 46. b. Ass 6 C. 3. part in the Marquiss of Winchesters Case The heir of the part of the mother cannot have the VVrit of Error but the heir of the part of the father may So if erronious Judgment be given in the time of profession of the eldest son and afterwards he is dereigned he shall have the Writ of Error In 22 H. 6. 28. The heir in special taile or by Custom cannot have Error But yet M. 18 Eliz. in Sir Arthur Henninghams Case it was adjudged That the special heir in tail might have a Writ of Error The Baile cannot maintain a Writ of Error upon a Judgment given against the Principal because he was not privy unto the Judgment therefore it shall be allowed him by way of plea in a Scire facias I never find that an Executor can have Error to reverse an Attaindor but for the misawarding of the Exigent Marshes Case was cited C. 5. part 111. Fitz 104. Feoffee at the Common Law could not have an Audita Quaerela in regard he was not privy 12 Ass 8. 41. Ke●laway 193. There the Terre-Tenant brought a Writ of Error in the name of the heir and not in his own name 24 H. 8. Dyer 1. There it is said That he who is a stranger to the Record shall have Error To that I answer That he in the Reversion and the particular Tenant are but one Tenant for the Fee is demanded and drawn out of him But in the principal Case at Barr no Land is demanded but a personal Attaindor is to be reversed Also there it is put That if the Conusee extend before the day there it is said that the Feoffee may have Error 17 Ass 24. 18 E. 3. 25. Fitz. 22. To that I answer That the Feoffee is privy to that which chargeth him for the Land is extended in his hands and if the Feoffee there should not have a Writ of Error the Law should give him no manner of remedy for there the Conusor himself cannot have Error because the Lands are not extended in his hands Also it is there said that the Feoffee brought a Scirefacias against him who had execution of the Land To that I answer That that is by special Act of Parliament Also there it is said That if the Parson of a Church hath an Annuity and recovereth and afterwards the Benefice is appropriated to a Religious house the Soveraign of the house shall have a Scirefacias I answer That in that Case he is no stranger for that he is perpetual Parson and so the Successor of the Parson who recovered 12 H. 8. 8. There a Recovery was against a Parson and there Pollard said that the Patron might have Error I answer That Pollard was deceived there for it is said before that the Parson hath but an Estate for life and then he viz. the Patron is as a Recoverer who shall have a Writ of Error Dyer 1. But the Parson hath the Fee and therefore Pollard was mistaken as it appeareth by Brook Fauxi fier de Recovery 51. 19 H. 6. 57 Newton A false verdict is had against a Parson the Patron cannot have an Attaint There is a difference if one be partie to the Writ although not partie to the Judgment Error 72. A Quare Impedit was brought by the King against the Patron and the Incumbent and Judgment only was had against the Patron and the Incumbent Parson brought a Writ of Error but if he had not been partie to the Writ he could not have maintained Error So in Attaint the partie to the Writ though not to the Judgment shall
said Statute of 31 H. 8. And I conceive that they are not It doth not appear in the pleading that the Priory of St John was an Ecclesiastical House therefore it ought to have been averred It is true to plead that such a man hath entred into Religion is intended that he is a person dead in Law They were never Ecclesiastical nor so accounted they must be both Religious and Ecclesiastical who are within the Statute of 31 H. 8. For the said Statute doth not extend to Religious houses unless they be Ecclesiastical Tryal 99. proves that they were Religious 21 H. 7. 7. And the Statute of Templers 17 E. 2. do shew that they were Canonized which is admitted unto a Rule of their own Law and not that they were made Saints or that they were Ecclesiastical 1 E. 3. 7. Nonability 4. They were dead persons in Law Feoffments 68. proves that they were religious but whether they were Lay or Ecclesiastical I have not read In the difference of Summons to Parliaments unto the Templers the Summons is Vobis mandamus in fide legeanti●s but the Summons to a Spiritual Lord is in fide electione and so was the Summons to the Prior of St Johns of Jerusalem but that was because he held in Frankalmoign but that doth not prove him to be Ecclesiastical for first they exercised themselves in Arms It was part of their Order armis se exercere and that is against the Rule of the Common Law to meddle with blood Secondly They used no Imposition of hands but only a Robe nor had they so much Ceremony as a Knight of the Bath and yet the Knights of the Bath are not Ecclesiasticall So there is nothing in their Creation or Order that makes them Ecclesiastical For they were Lay-Monks of the Order of St Anthony The Jesuites have Lay-Brethren and not Ecclesiastical 44. Ass 9. There the Defendant pleaded in barr That the Prior was a Lay-man and so not under any Rule and it is there admitted that he was a Lay-man and yet that he might be Prior and bring the Action in his own name and not as Prior with his brethren which proves that the residue were dead persons in Law If there be professions alledged in one of the Hospitals of St John of Jerusalem how shall it be tryed By the Country Tryal 99. Profession was alleadged in the Plaintiff who was a Knight of the Order of the Templers and it was commanded to certifie it And the Bishop could not enquire of it because the Order of a Knight Templer was exempted by the Pope But Tryal 98. there it was certified by the Bishop yet all our books are contrary to it 2. R. 3. 4. Si profissio allegata sit in quodam militi Sancti Johannis Jerusalem quia immediate sub Papa sunt non habere cuiscribere possunt c. 21 H. 7. 7. Selden 1 21. in his History of Tythes that they were accounted no part of the Clergy but meerly Lay. With us they were accounted Lay and therefore it is not material what they were accounted of in other places A Colledg is a Lay Corporation If they be disseised an Assise must be brought The Statute of 1. and 2. Philip and Mary is That men might devise to spiritual Corporations notwithstanding the Statute de terris ad manum mortuum nonpo●●nd 〈◊〉 or any other Statute to the contrary Dyer 254. There a Devise was unto a Colledg and Grammar-School and holden a good Devise because the Statute of Philip and Mary ought to be favourably expounded being for the benefit of the Corporation I take another reason from the manner of payment of Tythes Ecclesiastical persons payed Tythes but no Tythes were paid by the Hospitalers of St Johns of Jerusalem The Statute of 27 H. 8. dissolves Abbies c. but doth not relate to any formerly given up c. and the reason was because they were but petty Abbies The Statute of 31 H. 8. dissolves none but recites that whereas divers have given up c. or were to be given up but shews no reason for divers inquisitions issued forth to enquire of their Lands but the Statute of 32 H. 8. doth not shew any such reasons but other reasons because that Rodes was taken away and that they held of the Pope And if they were dissolved by the Statute of 31 H. 8. then what need a Statute the next year after viz 32 H. 8. to dissolve the Corporation By the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 3. the King hath the first Fruits and Tenths of all that shall be promoted to any Benefice or promotion spiritual This doth not extend to St John of Jerusalem and therefore afterwards in the same Statute it is Enacted That every one which shall be elected or by other means appointed to the Dignity of the Prior of St Johns of Jerusalem shall before their real and actual entrie into the Dignity or medling with the profits satisfie the King c. Now if they were intended in the words Spiritual promotion it was in vain a new to enact for them The Act of 32. H. 8. extends to Ireland and so doth not the Statute of 31 H. 8. the Statute of 31 H. 8. extends only to Eccelesiastical and Religious so they were not intended within the Statute of 31 H. 8. Next If they were intended within the Statute of 31 H. ● then the Statute of 32 H. 8. gives them absolutely by name to the King The Statute of 31 H. 8. gives nothing to the King but those that are or were to be given up forfeited surrendred or otherwise given up but gives nothing to the King but by the help of some other Act viz. forfeiture surrender or otherwise given up The word Otherwise never intended Dissolution by Act of Parliament for that is paramount the particulars recited The Statute of Malebridg cap. 30. n. Provisum est quod si depredationes vel rapini aliqui fi●nt Abbatibus c. vel aliis Prelatis Ecclesiasticis c. That Statute never intended to extend to Bishops who are paramount and superior to Abbots The word aliis will bear no such sense to make the superior to be intended when as the inferior is recited The Statute of 13 Eliz. recites That no Colledg Dean and Chapter Parsons Vicars c. may make a new Lease unless within a year of the end of the Lease in being Now a Bishop is superior and above these particularly named and may make concurrant Leases so here the word Otherwise doth not intend that Otherwise to be by Act of Parliament and to extend to greater then the particulars recited The Statute of 32 H. 8. sayes that the Corporation shall be dissolved and void but the Statute of 31 H. 8. doth not say that the Corporation shall be dissolved and void The Statute of 32 H. 8. sayes that the Corporation and possessions shall be in the King by vertue of that Act then not in the King
then the Court is to abate the Petition but after Judgment to find such a fault he must have a Scire facias and not a new Petition and in our Case there was none who gave in such matter for the King Now I come to the Statute of 31. H. 8. The particular Act for the Attainder of Francis Bigot and that he should forfeit all such Lands c. Conditions Rights c. in Fee and Fee tail saving c. and as the lands of Francis Bigott stood stated at the time of the making of this Act of 3. H. 8. the Statute did not extend to him to make him forfeit any thing In the Statute of 33. H. 8. Cap. 20. there were as many words as in this Statute of 31. H. 8. and many Cases upon the Statute of 33. H. 8. are adjudged upon the words shall lose and forfeit There is a difference betwixt an Act of Assurance and an Act of Forfeiture If the words be That the King shall enjoy and have it is then an Act of Assurance and the lands are given to the King without Office but by an Act of Forfeiture the Lands are not in the King without Office found Exceptio firmat regulam but our Case is out of the Rule Savings in Acts of Parliaments were but of late days 1. E. 4. there was a private Act A Petition was preferred against divers in Parliament for sundry misdemeanours and it was Enacted that they should forfeit unto the King and his heirs c. in that Act there was no exception of saving for it was but a forfeiture of their Rights and Savings were but of late times Trin. 8. H. 8. Rot. 4. A Petition of Right in the Chancery upon that was a plea which was after the Attainder of the Duke of Suffolk That the Duke did disseise him it was shewed that the Attainder was by Parliament and he shewed no saving to be in the Statute in the Petition and yet it was well enough Com. 552. Wyat Tenant in tail of the Gift of the King made a Feoffment and by Act of Parliament 2 Mariae was attainted of Treason by which he was to forfeit c. as in our Case I answer That within two years after that Judgment upon solemn argument it was adjudged contrarie Com. 562. It was objected that in that Case a Writ of Error was brought Com. 562. and that the Judgement was affirmed in the Case of Walsingham I answer that the same was by reason of the Plea in Barr And Com 565. there Plowden confesseth that the Judges were not agreed of the matter in Law and the Lands in question in Walsingams Case do remain with Moulton and at this day are enjoy'd contrary to the Judgment given in Walsinghams Case It was objected That although this Act of 31. H. 8. was made after the Attainder yet that it should relate to all the Lands which Francis Bigot had at the time of the Treason committed I answer That this Act of 31. H. 8 is but a description what Lands he shall forfeit viz. all the Lands which he had at the time of the Treason committed The second Point is upon the Remitter of Roger Ratcliff before the Inquisition for there was a discent to Roger Ratcliff When Tenant in Tail is attainted of Treason his blood is not corrupted C. 9. part 10. Lumleys Case And the Statute of 33. H. 8. is the first Statute which vests Lands forfeit for Treason in the King without Office found So as according to the Lord Lumley's Case C. 3. part 10. before this Statute of 33 H. 8. the Land did discend to the issue in tail The Rule of Nullum tempus occurrit Regi is to be meant for the preserving of the Kings Right but not to make the King to do wrong Com. 488. there the Remitter is preferred before the King 49. E. 3. 16. there the Devise of a Common person was preferred before the Right of the King 3. H. 7. 2. the Lord Greistock's Case The Dean of York did recover against him and before Execution the Lord died his heir within age the Dean shall have his Execution notwithstanding that the King hath right to have the Ward A fortiori a Remitter shall be preferred before the Kings Title C. 7. part 28. The Rule Nullum tempus occurrit Regi is to be intended when the King hath an Estate or Interest certain and permanent and not when his Interest is specially limited when and how he shall take it and not otherwise The third Point was Whether Ratcliff hath brought his proper Action The words of the Act of 2 E. 6. cap. 8. which giveth the Monstrans de Droit are to be considered A Remitter is within the words of the Act. Divers Errors were assigned by the other side for matter of Form 1. Because the Venire facias want these words tam milites quam alios Sheffield being a Noble man and a Peer of the Realm It appeareth by the Register 7. that the same was the ancient Form in every common persons Case but of late that Form was left 2. Admit that it were a good Exception then it ought to have been taken by way of Challenge as it appeareth 13. E. 3. Challenge 115. Dyer 107. 208. 3. The Statute of 35. H. 8. Cap. 6. makes a new Law and prescribes a Form Precipimus c. quod Venire facias coram c. 12 Liberos Legales homines c. and then if it ought to be by the Register tam milites quam alios yet here is a new Statute against it And by the Statute of 2. E. 6. Cap. 32. this Statute of 35 H. 8. is made perpetual And by the Statute of 27. Eliz. Cap. 6. the Statute of 35. H. 8. is altered in parvo and augmented in the worth of the Jurors and by the Statute of 18. Eliz. Cap. 14. It is Enacted That after Verdict c. the Judgment thereupon shall not be stayed or reversed by reason of any default in Form or lack of Form or variance from the Register The second Error assigned was because that there are two Venire facias and two Distringas after that Issue was joyned The Lord Sheffield sueth unto the King to have the first Venire facias and first Distringas quashed and it was quashed with Ratcliff's consent Secondly admit there were two Venire facias yet it ought to be intended that the proceedings was but upon one of them and that the best M. 17. Jacobi in the Common Pleas Bowen and Jones's Case In Error upon a Recovery in Debt there were two Originals certified and there the one was good and the other naught the Judges did take it that the Judgment and proceedings were upon the good Original and the Judgment was affirmed in the Kings Bench M. 15 H. 8. Rott 20. the same Case Two Originals one bearing date after the Judgment the other before the Judgment and upon a Writ of Error brought the
in tail may have a Formedon against the Bishop But in our Case it is otherwise Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment and takes back an estate unto himself in tail the remainder in Fee to his right heirs The Bishop in such case shall not have the land forfeited for Treason because that the Bishop cannot have the estate tail but in such case the King shall have the Land by the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. And the Bishop in such case shall not have the Fee because it is one estate and the King shall not wait upon the Subject viz the Bishop The Right waits upon the possession For 11 H. 7. 12. If the son and a stranger disseiseth the father and the father dyeth this right infuseth it self into the possession and changeth the possession And it is a Release in fact by the father to the son 9 H. 7. 25. Br ' Droit 57. A Disseisor dyeth seised and his heir enters and is disseised by A. The first Disseisee doth release unto A. all his right All the right is now in the second Disseisor viz. A. because the right and the possession meet together in A. 40 E. 3. 18. b. Tenant in tail makes a Lease for life with warranty If Tenant for life be impleaded by the heir to whom the warranty doth discend he shall rebut the right in tail being annexed with the possession for that is in case of a saving of the land by that right But where one demands land there all the Right ought to be shewed 11 H. 4 37. If a man be to bring an Action to recover then he ought to make a good title by his best right if he hath many rights But if a man be in possession and an Action be brought against him then he may defend himself by any of his rights or by all his rights 11 H. 7. 21. Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment to his use upon Condition and afterwards upon his Recognisance the land is extended and afterwards the Condition is performed yet the interest of the Conusee shall not be avoided For although the Extent come upon the Fee and not upon the Tail yet when the Extent was it was extracted out of all the rights C. 7. part 41. A Tenant in tail makes a Lease for life now he hath gained a new Fee by wrong and afterwards he makes a Lease for years and Tenant for life dyeth He shall not avoid his Lease for years although he be in of another estate because he had a defeicible title and an ancient right the which if they were in several hands shall be good as the Lease of the one and the Confirmation of the other And being in one hand it shall be as much in Law as a saving of the Right In our Case the Right and Possession both were in Francis Bigot And Ratcliffe is entitled to the old estate tail and to the new also There is a difference betwixt him who claims the land so forfeited to the King and the heir of the body of the person attainted Litt●719 Land is given to A and the issue males of his body the remainder to the heirs females of his body If the Father commit Treason both heir male and female are barred for they both claim by the Father but if the heir male after the death of his Father be attainted of Treason the King shall have the lands as long as he hath issue male of his body and then the heir female shall have the lands for she shall not forfeit them because she claimeth not by the brother but by the father Com. in Manxels case A man hath three several rights of estate tails and comes in as Vouchee If the Recovery pass it shall bar all his Rights for one Recompence and they shall be all bound by one possession There is a difference where the Kings title is by Conveyance of the party and where for forfeiture for Treason by this Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. v. the Abbot of Colchesters Case The Abbot seised in the right of his house did commit Treason and made a Lease for years and then surrendred his house to the King after the Statute of 26 H. 8. The question was whether the King should avoid the Lease It was adjudged That the King was in by the surrender and should not avoid the Lease and not by the Statute of 26 H. 8. But if the King had had it by force of the Statute then the King should have avoided the Lease Com. 560. Tenant in tail the reversion to the King Tenant in tail maketh a Lease for years and is attainted of Treason The King shall avoid the Lease upon the construction of the Statute of 26 H. 8. which gives the lands unto the King for ever The third point is upon the Remitter This point had been argued by way of Admittance For as I have argued The ancient right is given away unto the King and then there is no ancient right and so no Remitter There is a difference where the issue in tail is forced to make a Title and where not In point of defence he is not so precisely forced to make his Title as he is in case of demand Whereas the Defendant demands the lands from the King the Discent will not help him because the Attaindor of the Ancestor of Ratcliffe hinders him in point of title to make a demand Dyer 332 b. In this case he ought to make himself heir of the body of Francis Bigot and Katharine C. 8. part 72. C. 9. part 139 140. There Cook couples the Case of Fine levied and the Case of Attaindor together C. 8. part 72. Land is given to husband and wife and to the heirs of their two bodies The husband alone levies a Fine with proclamations Or is attainted of Treason and dyeth The wife before Entry dyeth The issue is barred and the Conusee or King hath right unto the land because the issue cannot claim as heir to them both viz. father and mother for by the father he is barred 5 H. 7. 32 33. C. 9. part 140. Husband and wife Tenants in tail If one of them be attainted of Treason as it was in our Case the lands shall not discend to the issue because he cannot make title And there Cook puts the Case That if lands be given to an Alien and his wife they have a good estate tail and yet it is not discendable to the issue The Consequence then of all this is That if Ratcliffe cannot take advantage of the discent by reason of the disability by Attaindor à fortiori he shall not be remitted And yet I confess that in some Cases one may be remitted against the King Com. 488 489 553. But that is where the King is in by matter of Law by Conveyance but in this Case the King is in by an Act of Parliament and there shall be no Remitter against a matter of Record Another reason is because that
the possession is bound by the Judgment of Attaindor and the Act of Parliament 5 H. 7. 31. 7 H. 7. 15. 16 H. 7. 8. A discent of land shall not make a title against the King or any other who hath the land by an Act of Parliament But then in our Case If there should be a Remitter yet the same is overreached by the Office 〈◊〉 part 10. before the Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 20. there ought to have been an Office found in the Case of Attaindor of Treason Br. Cases 103. Brook Office Devant c. 17. I do not mean an Office of intitling but an Office declaratory of a conspicuous title C. 5. part 52. There are two manner of Offices One which vesteth the estate and possession of the land c. in the King Another which is an Office of Instruction and that is when the estate of the land is lawfully in the King but the particularity thereof doth not appear upon record And the Office of Instruction shall relate to the time of the Attaindor not to make Queen Elizabeth in our Case in by discent but to avoid all me●ne Incombrances And is not this Remitter an Incombrance And for that purpose the Office shall relate For in things of Continuance Nullum tempus occurrit Regi C. 7. part 28. For so the rule of Nullum tempus c. is to be understood of a thing of Continuance and not a thing unica vice v. Fitz. Entre Congeable 53. Trav. 40. where it is said Where the King hath cause to seise for the forfeiture of Tenant for life if the Tenant for life dyeth the Reversion may enter for in that case Tempus occurrit Regi and the King cannot seize after the death of the Tenant for life 35 H. 6. 57. There is no discent against the King and if there be no discent then there is no Remitter The consequence of all this is That the Office doth relate to the Right And that the Monstrans de Droit doth not lie And the want of Office found for all this time was the fault of the Kings Officers and shall not prejudice the King But if the Office should not relate then the Monstrans de Droit would lie because then the King was in but by one single matter of Record We shew in the Office 33 Eliz. That there issued forth a Commission directed to certain of the Privy-Councel to enquire of the Treason and if Francis Bigot upon the Treason were Indicted And in our Case we shew immediately another Commission was directed to the Lord Chancellor and the two Chief Justices c. to arraign Francis Bigot And all that is confessed by Ratcliffe himself viz. modo forma And therefore the Objection which Glanvile made was frivolous viz. That it did not appear that Francis Bigot was attainted by Verdict by Confession or by Outlawry And so he concluded That for these causes the Judgment given in the Court of Common-Pleas ought to be reversed George Crook argued for Ratcliffe and he prayed that the Judgment might be affirmed I will argue only these points following 1. That Francis Bigot had not so much as a right of Action at the time of his Attaindor for he had not any right at all 2. Admit that he had a right of Action If this right of Action be given to the King by the said Statutes of 26 31 H. 8. It was objected That the right being clothed with a possession that the same is given to the King But I will prove the contrary 3. When Francis Bigot being Tenant in tail and being attainted and executed for Treason and then Katherine his wife dyeth being one of the Donees in tail 21 H. 8. and the lands discend to Ratcliff If the Office afterwards found shall relate to take away the Remitter I say it doth not but that his Remitter doth remain to maintain his Monstrans de Droit and he is not put to his Petition The chief point is What right Francis Bigot had at the time of his Attaindor 1. When Ralph Bigot being Tenant in tail 6 H. 8. made a Feoffment in Fee what right remained in Francis his Son The right is in abeyance viz. in nubibus that is in custodia Legis And then Francis Bigot had no right of that entail 21 H. 8. when he made the Feoffment Com. 487. There Jus is divided viz. Jus recuperandi Jus in randi Jus habendi Jus retinendi Jus percipiendi Jus possedendi but here Francis Bigot had not any of these rights Com. 374. if the Discontinuee of Tenant in tail levieth a Fine with proclamations and five years passe and Tenant in tail dyeth the issue in tail shall have other five years because he is the first to the right 19 H. 8. 7. C. 7. part 81. If Donee in tail maketh a Feoffment in Fee in rei veritate the Donee hath not jus in re neque ad rem C. 3. part 29. Litt. 649. There it appeareth that the right to an estate tail may be in abeyance Com. 552. Walsinghams Case There the King gave land in tail to Wyat who made a Feoffment unto Walsingham Afterwards Wyat was attainted of Treason and there the estate tail of Wyat was forfeited but the cause there was because that the reversion was in the Crown and so no discontinuance by his Feoffment because that the reversion was in the Crown In our Case no right of the estate tail was in Francis Bigot after the Feoffment unto his own use but the right is in abeyance It was objected That the Writ of Formedon is Discendit jus and the Monstrans de Droit was so I answer It is so in point of form in the Writ but not in substance C. 7. part 14. Tenant in tail makes a Lease for life and Tenant for life dyeth Now he hath an ancient right and the Donor may avow upon the Tenant in tail notwithstanding his Feoffment but that is by reason of privity and not by reason of any right he hath Jus recuperandi did discend to the issue in tail viz. Francis Bigot 21 H. 8. He who hath a right of Action giveth the same away by his Livery and Feoffment as appeareth by the Cases put in C. 1. part 111. It was objected That Cestuy que use was an Attorney or Servant therefore he doth not passe his own right for he cannot make an Attorney to make Livery and 9 H. 7. 26. was cited to be adjudged so But it is adjudged to the contrary M. 25 H. 8. in the Kings Bench rot 71. betwixt the Bishop of London and Kellet as it appeareth in Dyer 283. and Bendloe's Reports and C. 9. part 75. For there it is expresse that Cestuy que use may make a Letter of Attorney to make Livery which proves that he makes not the Feoffment as a Servant but as Owner of the Land It was objected That Cuesty que use was as an Executor but that I deny 49
E. 3 17 a. Persay Executors cannot make a Feoffment but they ought to make a Sale and the Vendee viz. the Bargainee is in without Livery and Seisin But if they do make a Feoffment by the Livery all their right is given away But if an Attorney giveth Livery in the name of his Master nothing of his own right to the same Land is given away by the Livery and Seisin but if he maketh Livery in his own name then he giveth away his own right and the Statute of 1 R. 3. cap. 1. maketh the Feoffment good which is made by Cestuy que use against him and his heirs C. 1. pt 111. By Livery and Seisin his whole right is given away Com. 352. The Feoffees of Cestuy que use are disseised the Disseisor enfeoffeth Cestuy que use who enfeoffs a stranger And the Question was If by this Feoffment made by Cestuy que use the right of the first Feoffees were determined and extinct Fitzherbert held that the right was gone and in that case the Uses were raised after 1 R. 3. and before 27 H. 8. cap. 10. Although Yelverton held that it was meant of a Feoffment before the Statute of 1 R. 3. Jus recuperandi was in Francis Bigot Then the question is Whether this Right were given away by the Statutes of 26 31 H. 8. The Statute of 26 H. 8. 31 H. 8. are several and distinct Statutes The words of the Statute of 26 H. 8. are That the party offending shall forfeit all his Possession and Vse but there is no word of Right in the Statute and that Statute doth not extend to give any land but that which was in possession or use And the cause was because before that Statute of 26 H. 8. Uses were not given unto the King for Attaindor for Treason they being but a Trust and Confidence C. 11. part 36 b. The Statute sayes By any wayes title or means But observe when this Statute was made It is a penal Statute and therefore shall be taken strictly Stamford 129 b. C. 11. part 36 b. The Statute of 5 6 E. 6. takes away Clergy but if a stranger be in the house by licence of the Owner the party shall have his Clergy because out of the words and being a penal Law it shall be taken strictly The Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 20. forfeits for Treason Right to the Land viz. right of Entry but the Statute of 26 H 8. giveth not any Right Before the Statute of 33 H. 8. a right of Entry was not given to the King for Treason à fortiori a right of Action was not forfeited to the King It is the Statute of 31 H. 8. the private Act which hurteth us which expresly gave Rights But this Right in our Case is not forfeited by this Statute which giveth Rights which a man hath But in our Case Francis Bigot had not the Right but the Right was in abeyance Statutes in points of Forfeiture forfeit no more then a man hath But yet a Statute may give to the King that which a man hath not C. 11. part 13. The statute of Monasteries gave that to the King which was not viz. Monasteries in reputation saving to none but strangers no not to the Donors Hussies Case Tenant in tail doth bargain and sell to the King and a statute gave it to the King saving to strangers but neither the Donor nor his issue were within the saving Old Entries 423. b c d. It was enacted That the Duke of Suffolk should forfeit for Treason all his Lands Rights and Tenements and all such Rights and Titles of Entry which he had But thereby rights of Action were not given to the King but only rights of Entries The statutes of 31 33 H. 8. are alike in words If Tenant in tail the Remainder over forfeit c. the Remainder is saved without words of saving But if the statute giveth the land by name unto the King then the Remainder is not saved but is destroyed If a Right of Action be given unto the King the statutes of Limitation and Fines are destroyed for he is not bound by them C. 485 486. in point of forfeiture Stamf. 187 188. There is a difference betwixt real and personal Rights given to the King C. 3. part 3. A right of Action concerning Inheritances are not forfeited by Attaindor c. But Obligations Statutes c. are forfeited by Attaindor C. 7. part 9. A right of Action is not given to the King by general words of an Act because it lieth in privity And it would be a vexation to the subject if they should be given C. 4. pt 124. Although that a Non compos mentis cannot commit Felony yet he may commit Treason for the King is Caput salus reipublicae If Non compos mentis maketh a Feoffment and then committeth Treason the King shall not have an Action to recover the Land of the Non compos mentis as the party himself may have But if Non compos mentis be disseised and then be attainted of Treason then the King may enter into the Lands because the party himself had a right of Entry which is given to the King It was objected That a right of Action clothed with a possession might be given to the King Tenant in tail discontinues and takes back an estate and is attainted of Treason This right of Action shall not be forfeited to the King for his right of Action was to the estate tail In our Case the right of Action was to Katherine for she was Tenant for life The Attaindor was 29 H 8. and the Act which forfeited the Right was made 31 H. 8. and then the right and possession were divided 30 H. 6. Grants 91. The King may grant the Temporalties of a Bishop before they happen to be void And so he may grant a Ward But the King cannot grant the Lands of J. S. when he shall be attainted of Treason for the Law doth not presume that J. S. will commit Treason The Devise of a Term the Remainder over is good But if the Devise be of a Term to one in tail the Remainder over the Remainder is void because the Law doth presume that an estate in tail may continue for ever C. 8. part 165 166. The Law did not presume that Digby at the time of the Conveyance intended to commit Treason It was objected That whatsoever may be granted may be forfeited I deny that C. 3. part 10. by Lumley's Case If the issue in tail in the life of his Father be attainted of high Treason and dyeth it is no forfeiture of the estate tail But if the issue in tail levieth a Fine in the life of his Father it is a bar to his issues C. 3. part 50. Sir George Brown's Case 10 E. 4. 1. there Executors may give away the goods of the Testator but they cannot forfeit the goods of their Testator Com. 293. Osborns Case Guardian in
be quashed and exonerated and discharged in the possession of the King For it is out of the Rule which is in C. 10 part 48 for the cause of quieting and repose of the Terre-Tenants otherwise it would be a cause of Suits But all Rights Tythes Actions c. might for the same reasons viz. for the quiet of the Terre-Tenants and the avoidance of Suits and Controversies be released to the Terre-Tennants By the same reason here the right of Action of Francis Bigot shall be discharged and exonerated by this forfeiture viz. for the quiet and repose of the Terre-Tenants for the Law delights in the quiet and repose of the Terre-Tenants If Francis Bigot had granted a Rent the ancient right of the tail had been charged C. 7. part 14. Where Tenant in tail makes a lease for life and grants a Rent charge and Tenant for life dieth he shall not avoid his charge although he be in of another Estate because he had a defeisible possession and an ancient right the which c. so as they could not be severed by way of conveyance and charge and no lawfull act Then I admire how he will sever this from himself by his unlawfull act viz. the Feoffment the discontinuance Lit. 169. If a man commit Treason he shall forfeit the Dower of his wife yet he doth not give the dower of his wife but it goes by way of discharge in those Lands 13 H. 7. 17. Tenant by the Curtesie in the life of his wife cannot grant his Estate of Tenant by the Curtesie to another but yet he for Felony or Treason may forfeit it viz. by way of discharge A Keeper of a Park commits Treason there the King shall not have the Office of Keeper for a forfeiture because it is an Office of trust but if he had been Keeper of the Kings Park and had been attainted there he should forfeit his Office by way of discharge and exoneration This Statute of 26 H. 8. hath been adjudged to make Land to revert and not strictly to forfeit Austin's Case cited in Walsingham's Case Tenant in tail the reversion in the King the Tenant makes a Lease for years and dies the issue accepts of the Rent and commits Treason the Lease is avoided for the King is not in by forfeiture by the Statute of 26 H. 8. but by way of Reveter by the Statute of 26 H. 8. It was objected that if Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment and takes back an Estate for life and is attainted of Treason that he shall not forfeit his old right I agree that Case For indeed it is out of the Statute of 26 H. 8. which speaks of Inheritance and in that Case the Tenant hath but a Freehold The Statute of 26 H 8. saith that it shall be forfeited to the King his heirs and Successors And if in our Case the old right should remain then it should be a forfeiture but during the life of the Testator When the Common Law or Statute Law giveth Lands it gives the means to keep them as the Evidences So here the King is to have by force of this Statute of 26 H. 8. the Evidences The forfeiture of right is expresly within the Statute of 26 H. 8. as the forfeiture of Estate as by any right title or means for the old Estate tail is the means of Estates since 6 H. 8. And if you will take away the Foundation the Building will fall For all the Estates are drawn out of the old Estate tail The Statute of 26 H. 8. is not an Act of Attaindor for none in particular is attainted by the Act but the Act of 31 H. 8. doth attaint Francis Bigo● in particular It was objected that here in this case there needed not to be any express Saving I answer that there are divers Statutes of Forfeitures yet the Statutes have Savings in them so as it seems a saving in such Acts were not superfluous but necessary The Act of 33 H. 8. for the attainder of Queen Katharine there is a saving in the Act and yet an Act of Forfeiture Dyer 100. there the land vested in him in the Remainder by force of a saving in the Act so the saving is not void but operative C. 3. part Dowlies Case vid. the Earl of Arundels Case there the saving did help the wife so it appears savings are in Acts of Parliaments of Forfeiture and Acts of Attaindor Dyer 288 289. The Bishop of Durham had Jura Regalia within his Diocese and then the Statute of 26 H. 8. came now whether the Forfeiture for Treason should be taken away from the Bishop by reason of that Statute and given to the King was the doubt It was holden that of new Treasons the Bishop should not have the Forfeitures for those were not at the Common Law as the Forfeitures of Tenant in tail but that he should have the Forfeitures of Lands in Fee within his Diocese and that he had by force of the saving in the Statute so that a Saving is necessary and operative Com. Nichols's Case there Harpers opinion that there needs no saving to strangers but yet a saving is necessary for the Partie and the Issue if they have any thing as well as strangers vid. C. 3. part Lincoln Colledg Case It is the Office of a good Interpreter to make all the parts of a Statute to stand together Com. 559. By these general words Lose and Forfeit and by excluding of the heir in the saving the heir is bound So the Judges have made use of a Saving for it is operative 2 Ma. Austin's Case cited in Walsinghams Case Tenant in tail the Reversion in the Crown Tenant in tail made a Lease for years and levied a Fine to the King the King shall not avoid the Lease for the King came in in the Reverter but in such Case if he be attainted of Treason then the King shall avoid the Lease So a Statute of Forfeiture is stronger then a Statute of Conveyance By this Statute of 26 H. 8. Church Land was forfeited for so I find in the Statute of Monasteries which excepts such Church Lands to be forfeited for Treason Dyer Cardinal Poole being attained did forfeit his Deanary and yet he was not seised thereof in jure suo proprio for it was jus Ecclesiae 27 E. 3. 89. A writ of Right of Advowson by a Dean and he counteth that it is Jus Ecclesiae and exception that it is not Jus suae Ecclesiae But the Exception was disallowed for the Jus is not in his natural capacitie but in his politique capacitie and yet by this Statute of 26 H. 8. such Church Land was forfeited for Treason this is a stronger Case then our Case Vide C. 9. part Beaumont's Case Land is given to husband and wife in tail and the husband is attainted of Treason the wife is then Tenant in tail yet the Land is forfeited against the issue although it be but a possibility for the whole estate
was not found and so the King was not entitled to rights and priviledges and by consequence so was not his Pattentee 2. It did not appear that the Councel of Lateran 15 Johannis did extend to these Orders which was said to have been created 17 E. 3. whereas indeed it was created in the time of Henry the 1. Regularly this priviledge is not transferrable for it is ratione Ordinis As when the King makes a Duke and gives to him possessions those possessions annexed to the Dukedom are not transferrable over but by special Act of Parliament 35 H. 6. 36. Moile There if there had been special words in the Act of Parliament it had been Frankalmoigne This Priviledge is transferred to the King by the Act of 32 H. 8. and that Statute requires no aid of Regular or Ecclesiastical persons Secondly the words are special And all other things of theirs This Case opposeth not the Bishop of Canterbury's Case C. 3 part For that refers to the Statute of 1 E. 6. which had not so large words The intent of an Act shall be taken largely and beneficially to inlarge the Kings possessions as the grants of the King shall be taken largely and beneficially for the King There is a difference betwixt this Statute of 32 H. 8. and the Statute of 27 H. 8. The copulative words of the Statute of 27 H. 8. are To have all Rights and Interests and Hereditaments C. 11. part 13. pro omnibus demandis c. there the demand shall extend to Temporal demand so All rights and Interest and Inheritance shall be construed All temporal rights c. But the Statute of 32 H. 8. is larger viz. Of what name and nature soever If by the words of the Statute of 31 H. 8. Priviledges Tythes had been given to the King without especial provision after made then what needed the special Clause after was the Objection which hath been made I answer The special Clause was necessary For in pleading otherwise he ought to have shewed what Priviledge and Discharge it was in particular and so the Clause was added for the case of pleading C. 9. part The Abbot of Strata Mercellos case there it is said That if a man plead to have such priviledges as such a one had he ought to shew in particular what those priviledges were But this provision in the Statute of 31 H. 8. was made for the benefit of pleading The Statute of 17 E. 2. which gave the Tythes to the Hospitalers give them by the word of Priviledges for they had their possessions as it were by a new purchase Cook Entries 450. there the Case much differs from this so then the general word Priviledges doth extend to Tythes 14 H. 8. 2. By a grant of All trees Apple-trees will not pass yet if it be of all trees cujuscunque generis naturae nominis aut qualitatis then they will pass C. 3. part 81. By grant of all goods Apparel will not pass Here are special words in the Statute cujuscunque naturae nominis c. Nominla sunt symboa rerum And then call them what you will they are given to the King and intended to be transferred to the King and so there needs no special provision for the discharge of the Tythes For to say that the Priory was of the Order of the Cistertians is sufficient Admit then that the King shall have the Tythes as I have argued he shall then his Pattentee shall have them It is a real discharge in the King and not a discharge in respect of his person only Priviledges of discharge may be transferred as well as Priviledges of profit Then the question further is Whether they of S. Johns of Jerusalem were Ecclesiastical They were Regular as appeareth by the Statute of 32 H. 8. for that saith that they shall be free from Obedience Trin. 8. Jacobi in the Common-Pleas Bowyers case Whore Cook Nichols Warburton and Winch did agree that they were Ecclesiastical Priests The Prior had Parsonages and none could have Parsonages but Ecclesiastical persons 3 E. 3. 11. They had Appropriations which could not be unto Lay-men 22 E. 4. 42. There a Writ of Annuity was brought against the Prior of S. Johns of Jerusalem and it was ruled there that he ought to be named Parson which proves that he was Ecclesiastical 26 H. 8. cap. 2. there it is said That he shall pay First-fruits as other Parsons which proves that he was Parson 42 E. 3. 22. there they are called Ecclesiastical 35 H. 6. 56. they were seised in the right of the Church Linwood lib. cap. 47. de Judiciis That they were Ecclesiastical It was objected that Knight-hood cannot be given to Ecclesiastical persons and they were Knights Popham once Chief Justice of this Court said That he had seen a Commission directed unto a Bishop to Knight all the Parsons within his Diocese and that was the cause that they were called Sir John Sir Thomas and so they continued to be called untill the Reign of Queen Elizabeth Jones and Dodderidge Justices They were Ecclesiastical persons although they were divided from the jurisdiction of the Bishop The Case was adjourned to be further argued Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 479. LANGLEY and STOTE's Case IN an Ejectione firme the Plaintiff declared of an Ejectment 26 Martii 23 Jacobi contra pacem dicti Domini Regis nunc which could not be because King James dyed the 27 of March and so it was not contra pacem Caroli Regis 8 H. 4. 21. An Appeal of Maheim was brought and the Plaintiff declared That he meyhemed in the time of the King that now is and the Writ did suppose the same to be in the time of King R. 2. And for that cause it was adjudged Quod nihil capiat per Breve Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 480. MUTLE and DOE's Case DEbt was brought upon a Bond aud the Plaintiff in his Declaration doth not say hic in Curio prolat It was holden by the Court That although it be in the election of the Defendant to demand Oyer of it yet the Plaintiff ought to shew it The Judgment also was entred Concessum est whereas it ought to have been Ideo consideratum est And for these causes the Judgment was reversed So was it adjudged also the same Term in this Court in Barret and Wheeler's Case Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 481. Serjeant HOSKIN's Case HE was Indicted for nor paving of the Kings high-way in the County of Middlesex in S. Johns street ante tenementa● sua And in the Indictment it was not shewed How he came chargeable to pay the same Nor was it shewed that he was seised of any house there nor that he dwelt there nor was it averred that he had any Tenement there The opinion of the Court was that the Indictment was incertain for it might be that his Lessee dwelt in the house and so the Lessee ought to have repaired it and
the Nisi Prius the Defendant gave in Evidence That he had paid the Money to the Plaintiff before the day and that the Plaintiff had accepted of it all which Matter the Jury found specially and referred the same to the Justices And it was said by the whole Court That that payment before the day was a sufficient Discharge of the Bond but because the Defendant had not pleaded the same Specially but Generally that he had paid the Money according to the Condition the Opinion was That they must find against the Desendant for that the Speciall Matter would not prove the Issue and the Lord Dyer Chief Justice said That the Plaintiffs Councel might have demurred upon the Evidence Mich. 24. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 15 AN Action was brought upon the Statute of 1 2 Phil. Mar. And the Statute is That no Distresse shall be driven out of the Rape Hundred Wapentake or Laith where such distresse is or shall be taken except it be to the Pound Overt within the said County not exceeding three Miles distant from the place where the Distresse was taken and the Plaintiff declared of a Distresse taken in a Hundred in such a County and that he drove it six miles out of the County and because a Hundred may be in diverse Counties and the Statute is That the driving ought not be more then 3 miles out of the Hundred and that it might be that the driving was six miles from the place where the Distresse was taken in another County and yet not three miles from the Hundred where the taking was for that Cause it was not adjudged against the party And that was after Verdict in arrest of Judgment Pasch 24. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 16. A Feme sole seized of a Manor to which there were Copyholds One of the Copyholders did entermarry with the woman and afterwards he and his wife did suffer a Recovery of the Manor unto the use of themselves for their lives and afterwards to the use of the heires of the wife The Question was Whether the Copyhold were extinct And Anderson the Chief Justice said That if a Copyholder will joyn with his Lord in a Feoffment of the Mannor that thereby the Copy-hold is extinct The same Law is if a Copyholder do accept a Lease for years of his Copyhold which was agreed by the whole Court Pasc 24. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 17. I. N. Doth Covenant with I. S. by Indenture to pay him forty pounds yearly for one and twenty years and afterwards I. S. doth release to I. N. all Actions The Question was Whether the whole Covenant were discharged And it was holden by all the Justices that only the Arrerages were discharged because the Covenant is executory yearly to be executed during the Term of one and twenty years for he may have several Actions of Covenant for every time that it is behind and if it be behind the second year he may have a new Action for that and so of every year during the Term several Actions for nothing shall be discharged by the release of all Actions but that which was in Action or a Dutie at the time of the release made As in 5. E. 44. and L. 5. E. 4. 41. In debt for Arrerages of an Annuity the defendant pleaded a release of all Actions which bore date before any arrerages were behind And the opinion of the Justices was there That it was no Plea and so it was adjudged for it is not a thing in Action nor a Duty untill the day of paiment comes And it is there holden by Arden That if a man make a Lease for two years rendring Rent and that the Tenant shall forfeit twenty shillings nomine poenae for not paiment at the day there a release of all Actions personals made to the Tenant before the penalty be forfeited is no Bar for it is neither Duty nor thing in Action before the failer of paiment And in 42. E. 3. 33. A man did release to his Tenant for term of life all his Right for the Term of the life of the same Tenant for life And that he nor his heirs might any right demand nor challenge or claim for the life of the Tenant for life in the said Land and afterwards he died and the Tenant committed Waste and the heir brought an Action of Waste and the Tenant pleaded the same Release and it was holden no Plea for nothing was extinct by the same Release but that which was in Action at the time of the Release made and that the Waste was not Rhodes Serjant put a Case which he vouched to be adjudged 4. Eliz. which was That if a man Covenant with I. S. that if he will marry his daughter that then he will pay him twenty pounds If a Release were made by I. S. before the marriage the same will not determine the twenty pounds if he marry her afterwards because it was not a Duty before the marriage So in the principal Case notwithstanding that the Covenant was once broken for the non-paiment at the first day yet because a several Action of Covenant lieth for every day that it was arreare the Release shall extinguish but only that which was Arreare at the time of the Release made And so Note That a Release doth not discharge a Covenant which is not broken Pasch 24. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 18. UPon a special Verdict in an Action of Debt The Case was this I. S. and I. N. did submit themselves to the Award Order Rule and Judgemant of A. and B. for all Matters Quarrels and Debates and the Bond was made to perform the Award Order Rule and Judgement ment made by them And they Award Order Rule and Adjudge That I. S. shall pay to W. N. who was a Stranger twenty shillings The first Question was Whether the Award were good And it was holden by Anderson Chief Justice Meade and Periam Justices That the Award was void because it was out of their Submission for they cannot Award a man to do a thing which doth not lye in his power for in this Case W. N. to whom the money is to be paid is a Stranger and it is in his Election if he will accept of the money or not And so it is holden in 22. H. 6. 46. and 17. E. 4. 5. but vid. cont 5. H. 7. 2. Then if the Award be void The second Question was If yet the Bond to performe it be good or not And it was holden by the whole Court that it was void also against the Book of 22. H. 6. 46. because that the Condition was to performe that which was against the Law Quaere that Case for it seemes not to be Law at this day And it was then holden That Awards concerning Acts to be performed by them which have not submitted are void And in all Cases where each of the parties which submit have not some thing the Award is void Pasch
not recited in the Statute So here our Case is within the Mischiefe of the Statute of 21. H. 8. Cap. 4. although it be not within the Example So the Statute of West 1. is That if the Gardien or Lessee for years maketh a Feoffment in Fee Tam Feofator quam feofatus habeantur pro disseisoribus yet 22. Ass is That if Tenant by Elegit make a Feoffment it is within the Statute Also it may be a doubt Whether Land devisable onely by custome bee intended in the Statute of 21. H. 8. Cap. 4. And whether Land devisable by the Statute of 32. H. 8. be within it or not viz. If a Statute of a pu●sne time shall be taken by Equity within a more Ancient Statute and I conceive it may as 12. H. 7. the Statue of 4. H. 7. which sayes that the heire of Cestuy que use shall be in Ward shall extend to the Statute of Praerogativa Regis for if he be in Ward to the King he shall have Prerogative in the Lands to have other Lands by reason thereof Gaudy Justice did rely very much upon the word Devisees viz. that they have an Interest and that the Sale was not good Suit Justice They are both Executors and Devisees of the Lands Devisees of the Lands and Executors to performe the Will Cook he who refused to sell cannot waive the Freehold which is in him by a refusall in pars as 7. H. 2. and 7. E. 4. but ought to waive it in a Court of Record therefore he hath an Interest remaining in him Clenche Justice What if he had devised the Lands to four and made one of them his Executors and willed that he should sell could not he sell All the Court agreed that he might Cook When a man deviseth that his Executors shall sell the Fee descends to the heir yet they may sell that which is in another but the same is not like to our Case It was adjourned Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the King 's Bench. 93. A Judgement was given upon a Bond for four thousand pound And the Scire facias was sued for three thousand pound and he did not acknowledge satisfaction of the other thousand pound Haughton moved That the Scire facias should abate As if a man brings Debt upon a Bond of twenty pound and shews a Bond for forty pound and doth not acknowledge satisfaction for 20l l it is not good The Justices would advise of it And at another day it was moved againe Whether the Scire facias was good because it doth recite Quod cum nuper such a one recuperasset four thousand pound and doth not shew in what Action or at what day the Judgment was given or the Recovery had Piggot That is not material for such is the Form in an Audita querela or Redisseisin As to the other That he doth not acknowledge satisfaction as in the Case before cited by Haughton which Case is in 1. H. 5. That is not like to an Execution for an Execution is joint or severall at the will of him who sues it forth as in 19. R. 2. Execution 163. hee may have part of his Execution against one in his life time and if he dieth other part against his Heir or Executor Note the Execution was of the whole but because the Defendant had not so much he had but part against him who had no more and therefore of the residue he had Execution against the Heir Gawdy Justice I conceive that he cannot have an Execution unlesse he acknowledge Satisfaction There is no difference as to that betwixt the Action of Debt upon a Bond and a Scire facias and the intendment viz. that it shall be intended that he was paid because he sued but for Three thousand Pound will not help him Piggot as to that vouched a Case out of 4 5. Mary in Dyer which I cannot find Suit Justice said That if the Defendant in the Scire facias say nothing by such a day that Judgement should be entred for the Plaintiffe Quod executio fiet Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 94 JUdgement was given against an Infant by default in a reall Action of Land And a Writ of Error was thereupon brought and it was argued That it is not error for in many cases an Infant shall be bound by a Judicious act as 3. E. 3. Infant 14. Where an Infant and a Feme Covert bring a Formedon and the woman was summoned and severed And it was pleaded That where the Writ doth suppose the woman was Sole she was Covert and Judgment was demanded of the Writ and that the Infant could not gainsay it but confessed it this Confession of the Plea which abated his Writ was taken And 3. H. 6. 10. Br. Saver Default 51. An Infant shall not save his default for he shall not wage his Law See there that the Default shall not be taken against him therefore that book seems rather against it then for it Vide 6. H. 8. Br. Saver Default 50. That Error lieth upon a Recovery by default against an Infant otherwise if it be upon an Action tried so is 2 Mar. Br. Judgment 147. It was said That a generall Act of Parliament shall bind an Infant if he be not excepted The Justices did seem to incline That if Judgement be given by default that it shall bind an Infant but there was no rule given in the Case Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 95 A Clark of the King's Bench sued an Officer of the Common Pleas and he of the Common Pleas claimed his Priviledge and could not have it granted to him for it is a generall rule That where each of the persons is a person able to have Priviledge he who first claimes it viz. the Plaintiffe shall have it and not the Defendant As if an Atturney of the Common Pleas sueth one of the Clarks of the Kings Bench yet he of the Kings Bench shall not have Priviledge although the Kings Bench be a more high Court because the other is Plaintiffe and first claimeth it Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 96 AM Action upon the Case upon a Promise was brought but the Case was so long that I could not take it But in that Case Tanfield who argued for the Defendant said That it is not lawfull for any man to meddle in the cause of another if he have not an Interest in the thing for otherwise it will be Maintenance But if a Custome be in question betwixt the Lord of the Manor and Copy-holder all the other Copy-holders of the Manor may expend their money in maintenance of the other and the Custome and the Master may expend the money of the servant in maintenance of the servant So he in the Remainder may maintain him who hath the particular Estate Maintenance is an odious thing in the Law for it doth encrease troubles and Suites He argued also How that Bonds Obligations and Specialties might be
therefore the Commoner shal be excluded But it will be objected that the Statute is that the Owners of the Ground may enclose But Sir Francis Barrington is not Owner for the Lord Rich is the Owner of the Ground I say that Sir Francis Barrington is the Owner for he hath the Herbage and the Trees so as he hath all the profit and he who hath the profit shall be said to have the Land it self and he vouched Paramour and Yardleys Case in Plow Com. Dyer 285. and 37. H. 6. 35. and 17. E. 4. 16. Also the Statute is in the disjunctive viz. the Owner or the Vendee and although he be not Owner of the soil yet he is Vendee of the Trees Secondly It will be objected that the same is not a general Law of which the Judges are to take notice and therefore he ought to plead it I hold it to be general enough of which you are to take knowledge although it be not pleaded he cited Hollands Case Thirdly It will be objected that by such general Law the particular interest of a private man shall not be destroyed To that I say that such general Statutes will include such particular interests and therefore the Case betwixt Sir Foulke Grevill and Stapleton was adjudged that where Willoughby Lord Brookes had Lands to him by Act of Parliament with authority to make Leases for one life and no more By the Statute of 32. H. 8. of Leases that authority is enlarged and he might make Leases for three lives Haughton Serjeant Although he be Owner of the profits he is not Owner of the soil and there is a difference betwixt the same and the soil And the Statute speaks of Trees growing in his own soil Foster Justice The Arbitrament the Assurance and the especial Act of Parliament is nothing to the purpose in this Case and to plead them was more then was needfull For by the Arbitrament and the Assurance the Commoner being a third person cannot be bounden in which he was not a party And by the special Act of Parliament he shall not be bound because the Act is against the Lord Rich and his Heirs so as a stranger shall not be bound by the Act And therefore upon the Statute of 18. Eliz. cap. 2. of Patents the Case was That the Queen made a Lease for years which was void for not reciting of a former Lease and afterwards she granted the Inheritance unto another And then came the Statute of 18. Eliz. which confirmed all Patents against her her Heirs and Successors by that Statute the Grantee in Fee was not bounden but he might avoid the Lease for years for the Statute is against the Queen and her successors and that case was adjudged But our case is without doubt as to that point for the right and interest of estrangers is saved by the Act then all rests upon the Statute of 22. E. 4. and I conceive that the same is a speciall Act and ought to be pleaded for it is not generally of all Woods but only of Woods in Forrests and Chases But admitting it to be a generall Act yet I conceive That it was not the meaning of it to exclude a Commoner and that appears fully by the later words of the Statute viz Without licence of c. which excludes only the Owners of the Forrest and it was not the meaning that he might inclose without the leave of the Commoner One thing hath troubled me in the Statute because it is said that before that time he could not inclose more then for 3. years so as before that statute he might enclose for 3 years as it seems without Licence and now by the Statute for 7 years Also for another cause I conceive that the Defendant shall not take advantage of the Statute as he hath pleaded for he hath pleaded that he did enclose and cut whereas the statute saies that he shall enclose after the Cutting so as I hold cleerely that he hath not pursued the authority of the Stat. for upon the St. of 35. H. 8. which is penned contrary to this Stat. scil that the Owner of the wood shall make enclosure and division for the Cōmoner and then he is to cut I hold cleerly that after the felling he cannot make any enclosure Also admitting that by the Stat. the Cōmoner shall be excluded I hold that by the Stat. of 35. H. 8. that that Stat. is repealed in that point for the Stat. of 35. H. 8. is That no man shall fell woods wherein Commoners have Interest by Prescription until he hath divided the fourth part so that the Authority if any were is restrained by that Stat. if he be a Cōmoner by Prescription as he is in our Case But if it had been a Common by grant it had not been within the Clause of Restraint And Leges posteriores priores contrarias abrogant especially the Stat. being in the Negative as it is here For by a Negative Statute the Cōmon Law shall be restrained otherwise if the Stat. were in the affirmative for these reasons I conclude That the plaintiff ought to have Judgment Warburton Justice contrary All the matter rests upon the Statute of 22. E. 4. First I hold that the same is a general act although it be particular in some things So you may say of all statutes which are particular in some one point or other I hold also That the Stat. of 22. E. 4. is not repealed in this point by the Stat. of 35 H. 8. because they were made to several purposes The one was for Forrests and Chases the other onely for other particular Woods And I hold that the Cōmoner shall be excluded for otherwise the Stat. should be void and contrary viz. to give power to one to enclose and exclude all beasts and yet to permit another to put in his cattel And by the words of the Statute which exclude all beasts and cattell the Deer shall not be excluded or intended for they shall not be said beasts or cattel As in 30. E. 3. One who chaseth a cow in a Park shall be said within the Statute de Malefactoribus in Parcis And then if the authority of enclosure be not to exclude the Deer it shall be to exclude the cattell of the Commoner and other the like estrangers or otherwise it should be to no purpose As to that which hath been said That there is not a person who may inclose by the Statute the Statute is that the Owner shall inclose or he to whom the Wood shall be sold so that although that hee be not Owner yet he is to have the Trees and the profits and the Statute doth intend that he may inclose who ought to have the profit and although the sale be not for monie yet such a person may be said Vendee well enough Wherefore I conclude that Judgment ought to be for the Defendant Walmesley Justice I hold that he hath not authoritie by the
Statute to enclose For the Statute is When any man fels trees in his proper soile so that he not being owner of the ground he is not within the Statute and that was the effect of his argument And as to the other point he did not speak at all Cook chief Justice I hold that the plaintiffe ought to have judgment all the matter doth consist upon the Statute of 22. E. 4. which is to be considered And first is to be considered what was the common Law before that Statute and that was That one who had a Wood within a Forrest might fell it as it appeareth by the Statute de Forresta and the Statnte of 1 E. 3. 2. by licence and also he might enclose it for three yeers as it appeareth by the Statute of 22. E. 4. but the enclosure was to be cum parvo fossato haia bassa as it appeareth by the Register in the Writ of Ad quod damnum so as before that Statute there was an enclosure But the Law is cleer That before that Statute by the enclosure the Commoner shall not be excluded Then wee are to consider of the Statute And first Of the persons to whom the Statute doth extend and that appeareth by the preamble to be betwixt the King and other owners of Forrests and Chases and the owners of the Soil so as a Commoner is not any person within the meaning of the Statute And for the body of the Statute you ought to intend that the sentence is continued and not perfected untill the end of the Statute and the words Without licence c. prove That no persons were meant to be bounden by the statute but the Owners of the Forrests and Chases and not the Commoners Like the case in Dyer And although you will expound the words of the bodie of the Statute generally yet they shall be taken according to the intent of the preamble and therefore the Case of 21. H. 7. 1. of the Prior of Castleacre although it be not adjudged in the Book yet Judgment is entred upon the Roll which Case is Pasch 18. H. 7. Rot. 460. By which case it appeareth that although that a Statute be made which giveth Lands to the King yet by that statute the Annuity of a stranger shall not be extinguished And the Case which hath been put by Justice Foster upon the Statute of 18. Eliz. was the case of Boswel for the Parsonage of Bridgwater That although that one who hath a lease for years of the King which was void for misrecitall might by the said Statute hold it against the King yet the Patentee in Fee shall not be prejudiced by the said Statute So I conclude That the Commoner is not a person within this Statute of 22. E. 4 Secondly It is to be considered if a Wood in which any one hath Common be within the Statute and I hold it is not but onely severall Woods For as I have said the Wood which before the Statute might be enclosed for three years was onely a severall Wood and not such a Wood in which any one had common And the statute of 22. E. 4. doth extend onely to such Woods which might be felled and enclosed for three yeers and I conceive contrary to my Brother Warburton That the Deer of the Forrest shall well enough be said to be beasts and cattell And whereas by the common Law before this statute the enclosure was onely to be as I have said cum parvo fossato haia bassa by which the Deer were not excluded now by this statute I hold that they may make great hedges to exclude aswell the Deer as other beasts And I agree with Justice Foster that if he will take advantage of the Statute that hee ought to have pleaded that first hee felled and afterwards enclosed and è contrà upon the Statute of 35. H. 8. scil that hee ought first to divide and afterwards to fell c. And also I agree with him that in that point the Statute of 35. H. 8. being contrary doth repeal the Statute of 22. E. 4. if by that Statute the Commoner shall be excluded But I am of opinion with my Brother Warburton cleerly That hee is a Vendee of the Trees and so within the Statute for it is not neeessary that in the Grant there be the word Sell or that money by given nor that it be a contract for a time onely and not to have cantinuance as it is in our case But he who hath the Trees to him and his heirs shall be said to be a Vendee well enough As to the other matter which hath been moved Whether the Statute of 22. E. 4 be a generall law or not I hold cleerly that we are to take knowledg of it although it be not pleaded because it concerneth the King for it is made for the Kings Forrests and of all the Acts made between the King and his subjects wee ought to take knowledg for so was Stowel's Case And also it was adjudged that wee ought to take knowledg of the act concerning the Creation of the Prince because it concerneth the King And Cook in his argument said That if there had not been a speciall proviosin for the Commoner in the Statute of 35. H. 8. the Commoner had not been excluded by that Statute And afterwards Judgment was entred for the plaintiffe Pasch 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 236 NOte That it was holden by three of the Justices viz. Walm●sley Warburton and Foster Cook and Daniel being ab●ent for law cleerly That a Tenant at will cannot by any custome make a Lease for life by licence of the Lord and that there cannot be any such custome for a lease for life as there is for a lease for years Pasch 8. Jacobi In the Common Pleas. 237 BERRY's Case NOte That upon an Evidence given to a Jury in a Case betwixt Berry and New Colledg in Oxford it was ruled by Walmesley Warburton Foster Justices in an Action of Trespass If it appear upon the Evidence that the plaintiff hath nothing in the land but in common with a stranger yet the Jury ought to finde with the Plaintiff and if the Defendant will have advantage of the Tenancy in common in the plaintiff he ought to have pleaded it Nichols Serjeant was very earnest to the contrary and took a difference where the Plaintiffe and Defendant are Tenants in common and where the Plaintiff is tenant in common with a stranger But he was over-ruled the action was an action of Trespass Quare clausum fregit c. Cook and Daniel were absent Pasch 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 238 IT was holden by Walmesley Warburton and Foster Justices That if a Rent be granted to one and his heirs for the life of another man and the grantee dieth that his heir shall not be an occupant of the Rent And Foster said that the reason was because he cannot plead a Que estate of a Rent
because that the particular estate was determined The cause of forfeiture was because that the Copiholder had made a lease for life Pasch 8. Iacobi in the Common Pleas. 242 Dr. NEWMAN's Case IN this Case it was said by Cook Chief Justice That it had of late time been twice adjudged that if Timber trees be oftentimes topped and lopped for fuell yet the tops and lops are not Tithable for the body of the trees being by law discharged of Tithes so shall be the branches and therefore he that cutteth them may convert them to his own use if he please Pasch 8. Jacobi In the Exchequer Chamber 243 KERCHER's Case AN Action upon the Case was brought in the Common Pleas upon a simple contract made by the Testator which afterwards came into the Exchequer Chamber before all the Judges Cook in the Common Pleas was of opinion that the Action would lie Tanfield Chief Baron said That in these cases of Equitie it were most reason to enlarge and affirme the Authoritie of the Common law then to abridge it and the rather because the like Case had been oftentimes adjudged in the Kings Bench and there was no reason as he said that there should be a difference betwixt the Courts and that it would be a Scandall to the Common Law that they differed in opinion Afterwards at another day the Case was moved in this Court And Walmesley Justice doubted if as before But Foster held that the Action was maintainable And Cooke desired that Presidents might be searched And he said That he could not be perswaded but if the Executor be adverred to have Assetts in his hands sufficient to pay the specialties but that he should answer the debt Note the money demanded was for a Marriage portion promised by the Testator Pasch 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 244 ADAMS and WILSONS Case Note It was said That when a false Judgement passeth against the Defendant he may pray the Court that it be entred at a day peremtory so as he may have Attaint or a Writ of Error And Cook Chief Justice said That if Judgment in the principall Action be reversed the Judgment given upon the Scire facias shall also be reversed because the one doth depend upon the other Walmesley in this Case said That it had been the usual course of this Court That if one deliver a plea unto An Aturney of the Court as the Last Terme and it is not entred that now at another Terme the Defendant might give in a new plea if he would because the first is not upon Record Pasch 8. Iacobi in the Common Pleas. 245 CULLINGWORTH's Case IF one be bounden in an Obligation That he will give to J. S. all the Goods which were devised to him by his father in Debt brought upon such an Obligation the Defendant cannot plead that he had not any Goods devised unto him for the Bond shall conclude him to say the contrary Vide 3. Eliz. Dyer 196 Rainsford Case Pasch 8. Iacobi in the Common Pleas. 246 QUOD's Case QVod had Judgement in an Action upon the case at the Assizes and damages were given him to Thirty Pound Hutton Serjeant moved in Arrest of Judgement That the Venire facias was de duodecim and that one of them did not appear so as there was one taken de circumstantibus and the entry in the Roll was That the said Jurour exactos venit but the word Juratus was omitted And for that cause the Judgement was stayed Mich. 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 247 STONE 's Case STone an Atturney of the Court was in Execution in Norfolk for One thousand Pound and by practice procured himself to be removed by Habeas corpus before Cook Chief Justice at the Assizes in Lent and escaped to London and in Easter Terme the Bailiffe took him again and he brought an Action of false Imprisonment against the Bailiffe and it was holden by the Court That the fresh Suit had been good although he had not taken him in the end of the year if enquiry were made after him and so by consequence the Action was not maintainable Mich. 8. Jacobi in the Star-Chamber 248 MARRIOT's Case NOte It was agreed in this Case for Law That the Sheriffe cannot collect Fines or issues after a generall pardon by Parliament and therefore one Thorald the under Sheriffe of N. who did so was questioned and punished in the Star-Chamber Mich. 8 Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 249 JOLLY WOOLSEY's Case JOlly Woolsey of Norfolk brought an Action of Trespass against a Constable of Assault and Battery and Imprisonment the Defendant as to the Assault and Battery pleaded Not guilty and justified the imprisonment by reason of a Warrant directed unto him by a Justice of Peace for the taking and to imprison the Plaintiffe for the keeping of an Ale-house contrary to the Statute 12 Feb. 5. El. whereas the Statute was 12 Feb. 5. Ed. 6. and the matter was found by speciall Verdict And it was holden by all the Justices That the misrecitall of the Act was not materiall for it being a generall Act the Justices ought to take knowledge of it And Cook Chief Justice said That a man cannot plead Nul tiel Record against an Act of Parliament although that in truth the Record be imbezelled if the Act be generall because every man is privy to it Mich. 8. Iacobi In the Common Pleas. 250 NEWMAN and BABBINGTON's Case IT was resolved in this Case That if Debt be brought against an Executor who pleads that he hath fully administred and it is found that he hath Assets to 40l. whereas the Debt is 60l l that a Judgement shall be given for the 60l. against the Defendant and upon that Judgment if more Assets come after to the Executors hand the Plaintiffe may have a Scire facias Mich. 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 251 WALLER's Case NOte It was said by Cook Chief Justice That if the King present one to a Benefice and afterwards presenteth another who is admitted instituted and inducted the same is a good repeal of the first presentation And he said That if the Lord doth present his Villain to the Church the same is no enfranchisement of him for that presentation is but his commendation And if the King will present a French man or a Spaniard they shall not hold the Benefice within this Realm for that the same is contrary to a special Act of Parliament Mich. 9. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 252 NOte It was holden by all the Justices That Perjury cannot be commited in the Court of the Lord of Copy-holds or in any Court which is holden by Usurpation otherwise is it in a Court Leet or Court Baron which is holden by Title Trinit 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 253 BURY and TAYLOR's Case IN an Ejectione firme brought upon Not guilty pleaded by the Defendant it was given in Evidence to the Jury to this effect viz. That one J. S. who did
man and his heirs such Seat and he and his heirs have used to repair the said Seat If another will libell against him in the Spirituall Court for the same Seat he shall have a Prohibition And he said That he had seen a Judgement in 6. E. 6. That if Executors lay a Grave Stone upon the Testator in the Church or set up his Coat-armour in the Church If the Parson or Vicar doth remove them or carry them away that they or the heir may have their Action upon the Case against the Parson or Vicar Note in the principall no Prohibition for the reasons before Trinit 10. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 287 The Archbishop of York Sedgwick's Case THe Archbishop of York and Doctor Ingram brought and exhibited a Bill in the Exchequer at York upon an Obligation of seven hundred pound and declared in their Bill in the nature of an Action of Debt brought at the common Law which matter being shewed unto the Court of Common Pleas by Sedgwick the Defendant there A Prohibition was awarded to the Archbishop and to the said Court at York And Cook chief Justice gave the reasons wherefore the Court granted the Prohibition 1. He said because the matter was meerly determinable at the common Law and therefore ought to be proceeded in according to the course of the common Law 2. Although the King hath granted to the Lord President and the Councel of York to hold pleas of all personall Actions yet he said they cannot alter the form of the proceedings For as 6. H. 7. 5. is The King by his Grant cannot make that inquirable in a Leet which was not inquirable there by the Law nor a Leet to be of other nature then it was at the common Law And in 11. H. 4. it is holden That the Pope nor any other person can change the common Law without a Parliament And Cook vouched a Record in 8. H. 4. That the King granted to both the Universities that they should hold plea of all Causes arising within the Universities according to the course of the Civil Law and all the Judges of England were then of opinion That that grant was not good because the King could not by his Grant alter the Law of the Land with which case agrees 37. H. 6. 26. 2. E. 4. 16. and 7. H. 7. But at this day by a speciall Act of Parliament made 13. Eliz. not printed The Universities have now power to proceed and judge according to the Civil Law 3. He said That the Oath of Judges is viz. You shall do and procure the profit of the King and his Crown in all things wherein you may reasonably effect and do the same And he said That upon every Judgement upon debt of forty pound the King was to have ten shillings paid to the Hamper and if the debt were more then more But he said by this manner of proceeding by English Bill the King should lose his Fine 4. He said That if it was against the Statute of Magna Charta viz. Nec super eum ibimus nec super eum mittemus nisi per legale judicium parium suorum vel per legem terrae And the Law of the Land is That matters of fact shall be tried by verdict of twelve men but by their proceedings by English Bill the partie should be examined upon his oath And it is a Rule in Law That Nemo tenetur seipsum prodere And also he said That upon their Judgement there no Writ of Error lyeth so as the Subject should by such means be deprived of his Birth-right 5. It was said by all the Justices with which the Justices of the King's Bench did agree That such proceedings were illegall And the Lord Chancellor of England would have cast such a Bill out of the Court of Chancery And they advised the Court of York so to do and a Prohibition was awarded accordingly Trinit 10. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 288 Doctor HUTCHINSON's Case DOctor Hutchinson libelled in the Spirituall Court against one of his Parishioners for Tithes The Defendant there shewed that the Doctor came to the Parsonage by Symony and Corruption And upon suggestion thereof made in the Common Pleas prayed a Prohibition Doctor Hutchinson alledged that he had his pardon and pleaded the same in the Spirituall Court And notwithstanding that the Court granted a Prohibition because the Pardon doth not make the Church to be plena but maketh the offence onely dispunishable But in such case If the King doth present his presentee shall have the Tithes Trinit 10. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 289 NOte by Cook Chief Justice that these words viz. Thou wouldest have taken my purse from me on the high way are not actionable But Thou hast taken my money and I will carry thee before a Justice lay felony to thy charge are actionable Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 290 HATCH and CAPEL's Case IN an Action upon the Case upon an Assumpsit brought against the Defendant The Plaintiffe declared How that one Hallingworth who was the Defendants Husband was indebted unto the Plaintiffe eight pound ten shillings for beer and that he died and that after his death the Plaintiff demanded the said mony of the Defendant his wife and she in consideration that he would serve her withbeer promised that she would pay unto the said Plaintiff eight pound ten shillings and for the rest of the beer at such a day certain And the Plaintiffe did averr That he did sell and deliver to her Beer and gave her day for the payment of the other money as also for the Beer delivered unto her and that at the day she did not pay the Money Cook and all the other Justices agreed That the Action would well lie and that it was a good Assumpsit and a good consideration for they said That the forbearance of the money is a good consideration of it selfe and they said That in every Assumpsit he who makes the promise ought to have benefit thereby and the other is to sustain some losse And judgement was given for the Plaintiff Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 291 NORTON and LYSTERS Case IN the Case of a Prohibition the Case was this Queen Elizabeth was seised of the Manor of Nammington which did extend into four Parishes viz. Stangrave and three other And the Plaintiff shewed That he was seised of three Closes in Stangrave and prescribed That the said Queen and all those whose Estate he hath in the said Closes had a Modus decimandi for the said three Closes and for all the Demeanes of the said Manor in Stangrave And whether the Venire facias should be de parochia de Stangrave or of the Manor was the question And it was resolved by the whole Court That the Visne should be of the Parish of Stangrave and not of the Manor And the Difference was taken when one claimes any thing which goes unto the whole Manor and when only to
Contracts made upon the Sea by them or their Factors And for the Antiquity of the Court v. t' E. 1. sitz t' Annuity 7 R. 2. t' trespas in Statham And so long as there hath been any Commerce and Traffique by this Kingdom so long there hath been a Court of Admiralty 3. He said The Court of Admiralty is no Court of Record in which a Writ of Error lieth 37 H. 6. acc ' 4. He considered the place And that he said was of things super altum mare only as appeareth by the Stat. of 13 R. 2. And he said That all the Ports and Havens within England are infra corpus Comitatus and vouched 23 H. 6. 30 H. 6. Hollands Case who was Earl of Exeter and Admiral of England who because he held plea in the Court of Admiralty of a thing done infra Portam de Hull damages were recovered against him of 2000l And he said That if the Court and Civil Law be allowed then he said the Customs of that Court ought to be allowed and he said That the Custome of the Civil Law is That in no case the Surety is chargeable when the Principal is sufficient And he agreed with the Doctors That the word Haeredes ought to be in the Stipulation because those beyond the Seas did not take any cognisance of the word Executors Also he said That they may take the body in Execution which are for the most part the Masters of the ships and Merchants who are transeuntes and therefore if they could not arrest their bodies they might perhaps many times lose the benefit of their suits But he said that in no case they might take forth Execution upon Lands And he said That if a Contract be made in Paris in France it shall be tryed either by the Common Law or by the Law of France and if it be tryed here then those of France shall write to the Justices of England and shall certifie the same unto them And he said That in Sir Robert Dudley's Case it was allowed for good Law where a Fine was levied and acknowledged in Orleance in France which was certified and allowed for good by the Common Law here in England But he said That the Civil Law could not determine of the Fine And to conclude he said That no Custome can be good which is against an Act of Parliament The principal Case was adjourned Mich. 13 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 360. The MAIOR of YORK'S Case IN an Action of False Imprisonment brought It was holden by the whole Court 1. That no man can claim to hold a Court of Equity viz of Chancery by Prescription because every Prescription is against Common Right and a Chancery-Court is founded upon Common Right and is by the Common Law 2. It was holden per Curiam That the King by his Charter cannot grant to another any of the Customs of London But the like Liberties Franchises and Customs as London holdeth or useth the King by his Letters Patents may grant Quaere because the Customs in London are confirmed by Act of Parliament Mich. 13 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 361. LAMBERT and SLINGBY'S Case A Man brought an Action of Debt as Administrator and took the Defendants body in Execution The Sheriffe suffered him to escape And afterwards a Will was found by which Will the said Administrator is nominated Executor The Question now was Whether he might maintain an Action against the Sheriffe for the Escape as Executor when he was but Administrator at the time and it was the opinion of the Court that the action of Debt against the Sheriff upon the Escape would lie and that the same Debt should be assets in the Executors hands And it was holden cleer That the Executor of an Executor might have Debt upon the Escape for that he is Executor to the first Testator and therefore à fortiori the Action in the principal Case would lie Mich. 13 Iacobi in the Common-Pleas 362. IT was holden by the Court That if a man present by Usurpation to my Advowson within six moneths I may have a Quare Impedit But after the six moneths past if the Church become void I cannot present but am put to my Writ of Right of Advowson And that if a man usurpeth upon the King he is put to his Quare Impedit within the six moneths And it was holden That a double Usurpation upon the King doth put him to his Writ of Right v. 22 24 E. 3 ac● Pasch 13 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 363. OWEN alias COLLIN'S Case JOhn Owen alias Collins of Godstow in the County of Oxford was indicted and arraigned of High-Treason for speaking these traiterous English words at Sandwich in the County of Kent viz. If the King be excommunicate by the Pope it is lawfull for every man to kill him and it is no murder For as it is lawfull to put to death a man that is condemned by a Temporal Judge so it is lawfull to kill the King if he be excommunicate by the Pope For that is the execution of the Law and this of the Popes supreme sentence The Pope being the greater includes the King being the lesser To which words he pleaded Not guilty And the Evidence to the Jury was the Major of Sandwich a Parson of the same Town and the Servant of the Town-Clark And this was the sum of the Evidence That the said Owen coming from S. Lucar in Spain spake the said words to divers persons who told them to the Major whereupon the said Major had conference with Owen and then he spake the like words unto the Major and thereupon the Major tendred unto him the Oath of Allegiance which he refused to take and he put his hand to awriting containing the said words as his opinion and further said That if he had twenty hands he would put them all to it The Exception which Owen took unto the Evidence given against him was That he did not speak of the King of England But the same was said to be a simple Exception For before he spake the words to the Major the Major asked him if he were an Englishman or not To which he answered that he was and then after he spake the said words to the Major which must necessarily have reference to the speeches which were before betwixt him and the Major And Cook Chief Justice said That if he had not spoken of the King of England but of the King generally yet it had included the King of England The matter of his Indictment of Treason was not grounded upon the Statute of Supremacie but upon the Common-Law of which the Statute of 25 ● 3. is but an Expl●nation which was his intent to compass the death of the King And he said That notwithstanding that the words as to this purpose were but conditional viz. If he were Excommunicate yet he said it was High-Treason For proof of which two Cases were cited The Duke of Buckingham in
disseised and the Disseisor levieth a Fine with proclamations and five years passe and afterwards Tenant in tail dyeth there the issue in tail is barred for there after the Fine levied the Tenant in tail himself had right so as the issue in tail was not the first to whom the Right did accrue after the Fine levied C. 3. part 87. Com. 374. a. When Ralph Bigot made the Feoffment 6 H. 8. Francis Bigot had a Right by his own Feoffment 21 H. 8. his Right was extinguished The second Objection was upon the Form of pleading in a Formedon viz. Post cujus mortem discendere debet to him viz. the issue Then the Ancestor had such a Right which after his death might have discended to his issue Then that proveth that the Ancestor by his Feoffment hath not given away all the Right I answer The form is not Post cujus mortem but Per cujus mortem and the Post cujus mortem discendere debet is not traversable and therefore it is but matterof form and not of substance Old Entres 240. One dum non fuit compos mentis maketh a Feoffment he shall not avoid the Feoffment because that the Law doth not allow a man to stultifie himself C. 4. part 123. But his heir after his death may avoid the Feoffment of his Ancestor for de ipso discendit jus although the Father had not a Right in his life It was thirdly objected out of C. 4. part 166. b. where it is said That if an Ideot maketh a Feoffment the King shall avoid the same after Office found I answer That the Book it self doth cleer the objection For it is in regard of the Statute of Prerogativa Regis cap. 9. Ita quod nullatenus per eosdem fatuos alienentur c. and not in respect of any Right which the party hath who maketh the Feoffment By the Common Law Tenant in tail viz. He who had a Fee-simple conditional had not any right after his Feoffment Then the Act of West 2 cap. 1. makes such a Fee an Estate in tail and provides for the issue in tail for him in the Remaindor or in Reversion but not for the party who made the Feoffment or Grant for a Grant of Tenant in tail is not void as to himself Magdalen-Colledge Case A Lease by a Parson is good against himself but voidable against his Successor And so the same is no Exception Discendit jus post mortem c. The fourth Objection was That although Tenant in tail had made a Feoffment yet he remained Tenant to the Avowry of the Donor and therfore some right of the old estate tail did remain in him I answer 5 E. 4. 3 a. 48 E. 3. 8. b. 20 H. 6. 9. 14 H. 4. 38. b. C. 2. part 30. a. The matter of the Avowry doth not arise out of the Right or Interest which a man hath in the Land but out of the Privity As when the Tenant maketh a Feoffment he hath neither right nor interest in the Land yet the Lord is not compellable to avow upon the Alienee before notice In a Precipe quod reddat the Tenant alieneth yet he remaineth Tenant as to the Plaintiffe and yet he hath not either a Right or any Estate as to the Alienee The fifth Objection was upon the Statute of 1 R. 3. cap. 1. All Feoffments c. by Cestuy que use shall be effectual to him to whom it was made against the Feoffor and his heirs I answer The words of the Statute are to be considered All Feoffments c I desire to know how this affirmative Law doth take away the power of the Feoffees And the Feoffees are bound by the Feoffment of Cestuy que use and are seised to the use of such Alienees 27 H. 8. 23. b. by Fitzherbert If Cestuy que use enter and maketh a Feoffment with warrantie c. but there are not words that the old rights are given away The Feoffees to use before the Statute of 1 R. 3. c. 1. might only make Feoffments but after that Statute Cestuy que use might also make Feoffments of the Lands And so the Statute of 1 R. 3. did not take away the power of the Feoffees for they yet may make Feoffments but it did enlarge the power of Cestuy que use Com. 351 ●52 Then the Question further riseth If Francis Bigot had any Right in the Tail which might be forfeited by the Statutes by 26 H. 8. and 31 H. 8. A particular Act made for the Attaindor of the said Francis Bigot From the time of West 2. cap. 1● untill the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. there were many Bills preferred in Parliament to make Lands which were entailed to be forfeited for high Treason but as long as such Bils were unmasked they were still rejected But Anno 26 H. 8. then at a Parliament a Bill was preferred That all Inheritances might be forfeited for Treason so that as under a vail lands in tail were forfeited for Treason which was accepted of The Statutes of 26 H. 8. 31 H. 8. are not to be taken or extended beyond the words of the Statute which are That every Offender hereafter lawfully convict of any manner of high Treason by Presentment confession Verdict or Process of Outlawry shall forfeit c. It doth not appear that Francis Bigot was attainted in any of these wayes For the Inquisition is That he was Indicted and convicted but Non sequitur that he was convict by any of those wayes viz. Verdict Confession or Outlawry And one may be attainted by other means 4 E. 4. in Placito Parliamenti Mortimer was attainted by Parliament 1 R. 2. Alice Percy was attainted by Judgment of the Lords and Peers of the House of Lords in Parliament It was objected That after an Indictment Verdict ought to follow I answer Non sequitur for it may be without Verdict viz. by standing mute And then the Statute of 26 H. 8. doth not extend unto it C. 3. part 10 11. Admit it were an Attaindor within the Statute of 2● H. 8. yet Francis Bigot had not such lands which might be forfeited C. 3. part 10. For this Statute doth not extend to Conditions or Rights And C. 7. part 34. this Act of 26 H. 8. doth not extend to Rights and Titles And it is cleer that Francis Bigot had not any Estate within the letter of the Act. It was objected That if we have not set forth the full Title of the King in the Monstrans de Droit then is the Monstrans de Droit naught and void I answer 9 E. 4. 51. 16 E. 4. 6. I find no book that in a Monstrans de Droit we should be put to observe that Rule For a Petition were a going about The Statute of 2 E. 6. cap. 6. gives the Monstrans de Droit 16 E. 4. 7. If a Petition be void for want of instructing the King and if all his Title be not set forth in it
Soccage may grant the Ward but he cannot forfeit him C. 3. part 3. Right of Actions reals because they are in privity by general words of a Statute are not given to the King v. Dyer 67. String fellow's Case That which is in custodia Legis cannot be taken as a Distress in a Pound overt cannot be taken out of the Pound upon another Distress The third Point is If he were remitted And I conceive that he was remitted When Tenant in tail is attainted of Treason the issue at the Common Law should inherit as if he had not been attainted Lit. 747. C. 1. part 103. for as to the Estate tail there was no corruption of blood C. 10. part 10. If Tenant in tail before the Statute of 26. H. 8. commit Treason the land shall discend to his issue for the issue doth not claim by the Father but per formam doni● C. 8. part 166. such a discent shall take away entrie But in our Case Ratcliff had both possession and right and therefore is remitted the speciall Verdict finds that he was remitted and the Judgment given in the Court of Pleas in the Exchequer was that he was remitted It was objected that the Remitter was destroyed by the relation of the Office but the same is not so for the Office relates only to avoid Incombrances viz. acts done by himself but to devest the Freehold and to settle the same in the King the Office shall not relate And if it should relate then the King should lose many Lands which he now hath Com. Nichols Case Tenant for life upon condition to have Fee c. If the Office shall relate then the same takes away the Freehold out of the person attainted à principio and then the Fee cannot accrue and so by that means the King should lose the lands A Remitter is no incombrance for it is an ancient right and the Act of the King cannot do wrong C. 1. part 44. b. 27 Ass 30. There Tenant for life with clause of re-entrie is attainted the reversioner entreth the Office shall not relate to take the Freehold out of the reversioner C. 3. part 38. Relatio est fictio juris and shall never prejudice a third person and the Office found in the life of Katherine shal not prejudice him C. 9. part Beamounts Case the husband and wife are Tenants in tail the husband is attainted of Treason and dyeth yet the wife is tenant in tail when it is not to the damage or prejudice of the King there tempus occurrit Regi C. 7. part 28. Baskervile's Case From 29 H. 8. untill 33 H. 8. Katherine and afterwards Ratcliff had the possession and then the Law was taken to be that Ratcliff had a lawfull possession For these reasons he concluded that the Judgment ought to be affirmed In Trinity Term following viz. Trin. 21. Jacobi Regis the Case was argued again and then Coventry the Kings Attorney general argued for the Lord Sheffield That the Judgment given in the Court of Pleas in the Exchequer ought to be reversed He said I will insist only upon the right of the Case Whether upon the right of the Case Ratcliff may maintain a Monstrans de Droit First If by the Attainder the right of the old Estate tail as well as of the new Estate tail be forfeited Secondly Admitting that the old right of entail be not forfeited then if the Office do overreach the Remitter for then a Monstrans de Droit doth not lie but a Petition for the reason of the discontinuance First it is evident that when Ralph Bigot Tenant in tail in possession 6 H. 8. made a Feoffment that that was a discontinuance and it is as clear that the right of the old Estate tail vested in Francis Bigot The Feoffment made by Francis Bigot 21 H. 8. did not devest the right of the old tail First for the weaknesse of the Feoffment Secondly for the inseparableness of the Estate tail which is incommunicable and not to be displaced by weak assurance That Feoffment was made according to the Statute of 1 R. 3. and not by the Common Law but only by force of the said Statute The Feoffment is without Deed and so nothing passeth but only by way of Livery or else nothing at all Also at the time of the Feoffment in 21 H. 8. the Feoffees were in seisin of the Lands and Ratcliff shews in his Monstrans de Droit that Francis Bigot did disseise the Feoffees and so the Feoffment had no force as a Feoffment at the Common Law but only by the Statute of 1 R. 3. For at the Common-Law if Cestuy que use had entred upon the Feoffees and made a Feoffment nothing had passed There is a difference betwixt a Feoffment at the Common Law and a Feoffment according to the Statute of 1 R. 3. which operates sub modo Feoffments are the ancient Conveyances of Lands but Feoffments according to the Statute of 1 R. 3. are upstarts and have not had continuance above 150 years In case of Feoffments at the Common Law the Feoffor ought to be seised of the lands at the time of the Feoffment but if a Feoffment be according to the Statute of 1 R. 3. in such Case the Feoffor needeth not be in possession Feoffments at the Common Law give away both Estates and Rights but Feoffments by the Statute of R. 3 give the Estates but not the Rights In case of Feoffment at the Common Law the Feoffee is in the Per viz. by the Feoffor but in case of Feoffments by the Statute of R. 3. the Feoffees are in in the Post viz by the first Feoffees 14 H. 8 10. Brudnel says that a Feoffment by Cestuy que use by the Statute of 1 R. 3 is like to fire out of a flint so as all the fire which cometh out of the flint will not fasten upon any thing but tinder or gunpowder So a Feoffment by Cestuy que use by force of the Statute of 1 R. 3 will not fasten upon any thing but what the Statute requires 5 H. 7. 5. 21 H. 7. 25. 8 H. 7 8. 27 H. 8. 13. 23. by these books it appeareth that if Cestuy que use maketh a Leafe for life during the Lease he gaines nothing and after the Lease he gains no reversion for the Lessee shall hold of the Feoffees and of them he shall have aid and unless it be by deed Indented in such a Case a Reservation of Rent is void and the Lessor in such a Case cannot punish the Lessee for waste for he makes the Lease meerly by the power which the Statute gives him 8. H. 7. 9. Cestuy que use makes the Feoffment as servant to the Feoffees and if not as servant to the Feoffees yet at least as servant to the Statute of 1 R. 3. If a man entreth upon another and maketh a Lease for life he gains a reversion to himself and shall maintain an Action of Waste but
but in Francis Bigot which may be regained in due time Dyer 340. there was Scintilla juris as here in our Case 19 H. 8. 7. Where Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment and the Feoffee levieth a fine and five years pass there it is said that the Issue in tail shall have five years after the death of Tenant in tail who made the Feoffment and the reason is because he is the first to whom the right doth discend This Case was objected against me yet I answer that Tenant in tail in that Case hath right but he cannot claim it by reason of his own Feoffment he cannot say he hath right but another may say he hath right In our Case Francis Bigot cannot say he hath a Right in him but another may say he hath a Right It is like where Tenant in Fee taketh a Lease for years by Deed Indented of his own Lands He during the years cannot say that he hath Fee yet all other may say that he hath the Fee C. 4. part 127. The King shall avoid the Feoffment for the benefit of a Lunatique which Feoffment the Lunatique had made and shall not the King avoid a Feoffment which a Lunatique hath made for his own benefit viz for the benefit of the King himself I conceive that he shall Secondly Admit the right be in the person viz. in Francis Bigot yet they object that it is a right of Action and so not forfeited If this right be in the person at the time of the Attainder it shall be forfeited if it be not in his person but in Nubibus yet it shall be forfeited Tenant in tail makes a Feoffment unto the use of himself and his wife in tail if the old right of entail rest or not in his person it is forfeited to the King 34 Eliz. this very Point was then adjudged Where Tenant in tail before the Statute of 27 H. 8. of Uses made a Feoffment unto the use of himself and his wife in tail It was resolved upon mature deliberation by all the Judges of England that the old Estate tail was in such case forfeited for Treason Set this Judgment aside yet it rests upon the Statute of 26 H. 8. A general Act for forfeiture for Treason and the particular Act of 31 H. 8. which was made for the particular Attaindor of Francis Bigot I will argue argue only upon the Statute 26 H. 8. which hath three clauses First to take away Sanctuary Secondly to provide that no Treason be committed and the Offender punished The third which clause I am to deal with which giveth the forfeiture of Lands of Inheritance c These three clauses do depend upon the Preamble It was high time to make this Statute For when H. 8. excluded the Pope he was to stand upon his guard And that year of 26 H. 8. there were five several Insurrections against the King therefore it was great wisdom to bridle such persons King Ed. 6. and Queen Mary repealed divers Statutes for Treason and Felony yet left this Statute of 26 H. 8. to stand in force Anno 5 E. 6. cap. 5. this Statute of 26 H. 8. somewhat too strict was in part repealed viz. That the Church lands should not be forfeited for the Treason of the Parson This third branch doth insist upon a Purview a●d a Saving and both agree with the Preamble The Purview is ample Every Offender and Offenders of any manner of High Treason shall forfeit and lose c. I observe these two words in the Statute shall Forfeit those things which are forfeitable and Lose those things which are not forfeitable But it shall be lost that the heir of the Offender shall not find it shall Forfeit and l●se to the King his heirs and successors for ever so it is a perpetual forfeiture shall forfeit all his Lands which includes Use Estate and Right by any right title or means So you have Estate Right Title and Use Here Francis Bigot shal forfeit the Castle and Mannor of Mulgrave unto the King his heirs and Successors and he must forfeit the Land Right Title and Use otherwise it cannot be to the King for ever and what is saved to strangers all shall be saved and what will you not save to the Offender and his heirs all his Lands Right c. as was saved to strangers It was objected that it was not an Act of Assurance but an Act of Forfeiture which is not so strong as an Act of Assurance I do not doubt of the difference but how much will that difference make to this Case doth the Statute goe by way of Escheat it doth not but in case of Petty Treason Land shall Escheat but when the Statute of 25 E. 3. speaketh of High Treason the words of the said Statute are Shall forfeit the Escheat to the King But is the Right devided from the King Truely no the word Forfeit take it in nomine or in natura is as strong a word as any word of Assurance Alienare in the Statute of West 2. cap. 1. Non habeant illi potestatem alienandi so non habent illi potestatem forisfaciendi is in the nature of a Gift Com. 260. Forfeiture is a gift in Law Et fortior est dispositio legis quam hominis and so as strong as any assurance of the partie If a Statute give the Land to the King then there needeth not any Office 27 H. 8. Br. Office Com. 486. The Right vests before Office It was objected that the statute of 26 H 8. doth not extend to a right of Action but to a right of Entrie The purpose of this Act of 26 H. 8. is not to attaint any particular person as the Statute of 31 H. 8. was made for the particular Attaindor of Francis Bigot 5 E. 4. 7. Cestuy que use at the Common Law did not forfeit for Felony or Treason but by this Act of 26. H. 8. Cestuy que use shall forfeit both Use and Lands out of the hands of the Feoffees 4 E. 3. 47. 4 Ass 4. The husband seised in the right of his wife at the Common Law for Treason shall not forfeit but the profits of the lands of his wife during his life and not the Freehold it self but by this Act of 26 H. 8. the Freehold it self is forfeited 18 Eliz. in the Common Pleas Wyats Case C. 10. Lib. Entries 300. And if the Statute of 26 H. 8. had had no saving all had been forfeited from the wife 7 H. 4. 32. there it is no forfeiture yet by this Statute it is a forfeiture A right of Action shall not Escheat 44 E 3. 44 Entre Cong 38 C. 3 part the Marquess of Winchesters Case and Bowti●s Case and C 7. part Inglefield●s Case A right of Action per se shall not be forfeited by the Rules of the Common Law nor by any Statute can a right of Action be transferred to another but by the Common Law a right of Action may
is in the wife but the cause thereof is because it was once coupled with a possession C. 7. part Nevils Case There was a question whether an Earldom might be entailed and forfeited for Treason which is a thing which he hath not in possession nor use but is inherent in the blood And there resolved that the same cannot be forfeited as to be transferred to the King but it is forfeited by way of discharge and exoneration 12 Eliz. Dyer the Bishop of Durhams Case There if it had not been for the saving the Regal Jurisdiction of the Bishop had been given to the King by the Statute of 26 H. 8. This Statute of 26 H. 8. was made for the dread of the Traitor For the times past saw how dangerous Traitors were who did not regard their lives so as their lands might discend to their issue It was then desperate for the King Prince and Subject For the time to come it was worse The Law doth not presume that a man would commit so horrid an act as Treason so it was cited by Mr. Crook who cited the case That the King cannot grant the goods and lands of one when he shall be attainted of Treason because the Law doth not presume that he will commit Treason If the Law will not presume it wherefore then were the Statutes made against it If the Land be forfeited by the Statute of 26 H. 8. much stronger is it by the Statute of 31 H. 8. But then admit there were a Remitter in the Case yet by the Office found the same is defeated Without Office the Right is in the King Com. 486. c. 5. part 52 where it is said There are two manner of Offices the one which vests the estate and possession of the Land c. in the King where he had but a Right as in the case of Attaindor the Right is in the King by the Act of Parliament and relates by the Office Com. 488. That an Office doth relate 38 E. 3. 31. The King shall have the mean profits The Office found was found in 33 Eliz. and the same is to put the King in by the force of the Attaindor which was 29 H. 8. and so the same devests the Remitter Tenant in tail levieth a Fine and disseiseth the Conusee and dyeth the issue is remitted then proclamations pass now the Fine doth devest the Remitter C. 1. part 47 Tenant in tail suffereth a common Recovery and dyeth before Execution the issue entreth and then Execution is sued the Estate tail is devested by the Execution and so here in our Case it is by the Office C. 7. part 8. Tenant in tail maketh a Lease and dyeth his wife priviment ensient without issue the Donor entreth the Lease is avoided afterwards a Son is born the Lease is revived Com. 488. Tenant in capite makes a Lease for life rendring rent and for non-payment a re-entry and dyeth the rent is behind the heir entreth for non-payment of the rent and afterwards Office is found of the dying seised and that the land is ho●den in capite and that the heir was within age In the case the Entry for the Condition broken was revived and the Estate for life revived 3 E. 4. 25. A Disseisor is attainted of Felony the Land is holden of the Crown the Disseisee entreth into the Land and afterwards Office is found that the Disseisor was seised the Remitter is taken out of the Disseisee which is a stronger case then our Case for there was a right of Entire and in our Case it is but a right of Action which is not so strong against the King And for these Causes he concluded That the Judgment given in the Court of Pleas ought to be reversed And so prayed Judgment for the Lord of Sheffield Plaintiffe in the Writ of Error This great Case came afterwards to be argued by all the Judges of England And upon the Argument of the Case the Court was divided in opinions as many having argued for the Defendant Ratcliffe as for the Plaintiffe But then one new Judge being made viz. Sir Henry Yelverton who was before the Kings Sollicitor his opinion and argument swayed the even ballance before and made the opinion the greater for his side which he argued for which was for the Plaintiffe the Lord Sheffield And thereupon Judgment was afterwards given That the Judgment given in the Court of Pleas should be reversed and was reversed accordingly And the Earl Lord Sheffield now Earl of Mulgrave holdeth the said Castle and Mannor of Mulgrave at this day according to the said Judgment Note I have not set here the Arguments of the Judges because they contained nothing almost but what was before in this Case said by the Councel who argued the Case at the Bar. Pasch 21 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 418. IT was the opinion of Ley Chief Justice Chamberlain and Dodderidge Justices That a Defendants Answer in an English Court is a good Evidence to be given to a Jury against the defendant himself but it is no good Evidence against other parties If an Action be brought against two and at the Assises the Plaintiffe proceeds only against one of them in that case he against whom the Plaintiffe did surcease his suit may be allowed a Witnesse in the Cause And the Judges said That if the Defendants Answer be read to the Jury it is not binding to the Jury and it may be read to them by assent of the parties And it was further said by the Court That if the party cannot find a Witnesse then he is as it were dead unto him And his Deposition in an English Court in a Cause betwixt the same parties Plaintiffe and Defendant may be allowed to be read to the Jury so as the party make oath that he did his endeavour to find his Witnesse but that he could not see him nor hear of him Pasch 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 419. THe Husband a wife seised of Lands in the right of the wife levied a Fine unto the use of themselves for their lives and afterwards to the use of the heirs of the wife Proviso that it shall and may be lawfull to and for the husband and wife at any time during their lives to make Leases for 21 years or 3 lives The wife being Covert made a Lease for 21 years And it was adjudged a good Lease against the husband although it was made when she was a Feme Covert and although it was made by her alone by reason of the Proviso Pasch 21 Jacobi in the Common-Pleas 420. NOte that Hobart Chief Justice said That it was adjudged Mich. 15 Jacobi in the Common-Pleas That in an Action of Debt brought upon a Contract the Defendant cannot wage his Law for part and confesse the Action for the other part And it was also said That so it was adjudged in Tart's Case upon a Shop-book And vide 24 H. 8. Br. Contract 35. A Contract cannot be divided
then the tender is good But if he be not there but at another place the notice is sufficient Dodderidge The Law requires certainty in a Declaration and the matter cannot be taken by intendment so we ought to have a certainty set forth otherwise no certain Judgment can be given It was adjourned for Dodderidge and Haughton Justices were against Ley Chief Justice But as I have heard the Case was afterwards adjudged for the Plaintiffe There quaere the Record of the Judgment Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 425. A Man made a Lease for life and covenanted for him and his heirs That he would save the Lessee harmless from any claiming by from or under him The Lessor dyed and his wife brought a Writ of Dower against the Lessee and recovered and the Lessee brought an Action of Covenant against the heir And it was adjudged against the heir because the wife claimed under her husband who was the Lessor But if the woman had been mother of the Lessor who demanded Dower the Action would not have layen against the heir because she did not claim by from or under the Lessor And so it was adjudged v. 11. H. 7. 7. b. Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 426. SNELL And BENNET'S Case A Parson did contract with A. his Executors and Assigns That for ten shillings paid to him every year by A. his Executors and Assigns that he his Executors or Assigns should be quit from the payment of Tythes for such Lands during his life viz. the life of the Parson A. paid unto the Parson ten shillings which the Parson accepted of And made B. an Enfant his Executor and dyed The mother of the Enfant took Letters of Administration durante minori aetate of the Enfant and made a Lease at Will of the Lands The Parson libelled in the Ecclesiastical Court for Tythes of the same Lands against the Tenant at Will who thereupon moved for a Prohibition Dodderidge During the life of the Parson the Contract is a foot but the Assignee cannot sue the Parson upon this Contract yet he may have a Prohibition to stay the suit in the Ecclesiastical Court and put the Parson to his right remedy and that is to sue here This agreement is not by Deed and so no Lease of the Tythes The Parson shall have his remedy against the Executor for the ten shillings but not against the Tenant at Will and the Executor hath his remedy against the Tenant at Will Crook 21 H. 6. A Lease of Tythes without Deed is good for one but not for more years v. 16 H. 7. And afterwards a Prohibition was granted Trin. 16 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 427. PHILPOT and FEILDER'S Case THe Parties are at issue in the Chancery and a Venire facias is awarded out of the Chancery to try the issue and the Venire facias was Quod venire facias coram c. duodecim liberos legales homines de vicineto de c. quorum quilibet habeat quatuor lib. terrae tenementorum vel reddituum per annum ad minus per quos rei veritas melius sciri poterit c. And it was moved in arrest of Judgment That the Venire facias is not well awarded for it ought to be Quorum quilibet habeat quadraginta solidos terrae tentorum vel reddit per an ad minus according to the Statute of 35 H. 8. cap. 6. which appoints that every one of the Jurors ought by Law to expend forty shillings per annum of Freehold and it ought not to be quatuor libras terrae c. according to the Statute of 27 Eliz cap. 6. which Statute of Elizabeth doth not speak of the Chancery but only of the Kings Bench Common-Pleas and the Exchequer or before Justices of Assise Before the Statute of 35 H. 8. no certain Land of Jurors was named in the Venire facias but since the Statute of 35 H. 8. it was quadragint solidos untill the said Statute of 27 Eliz. and now it is quatuor libras in the Kings Bench Common-Pleas and Exchequer It was adjourned At another day the Case was moved again That the Venire facias ought to be 40 solidos c. according to the Statute of 35 H. 8. cap. 6. And 10 H. 7. 9. 15 were vouched That if a Statute appoint that the King shall do an act in this form the King ought to do it in the same form and manner So if a Letter of Attorney be to make a Bill in English and the same is made in Latine it is not good although it be the same in form and matter Cook lib Entries 578. Waldrons Case is That in the Chancery the Venire facias was but 40 but that Case was between 35 H. 8. and 27 Eliz. cap 6. Dodderidge and Haughton Justices It is a plain case For the Venire facias ought to be according to 35 H. 8. cap. 6. because the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 6. speaks nothing of the Chancery Quod nota Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 428. HEWET and BYE'S Case IN an Ejectione Firme of a house in Winchester the Ejectment was laid to be of a house which was in australi parte vici Anglice the High-street Ley Chief Justice If it had been ex australi parte vici then the South part had been but a Boundary but here it is well laid Then it was moved That the Venire facias is Duodecim liberos legales homines de Winton and doth not say of any Parish in Winton But notwithstanding it was holden good For Dodderidge Justice said That it is not like unto Arundels Case C. 6. part 14. For there the Offence was laid to be done in paroechiae Sanctae Margaret de Westminster therefore the visne ought to be of the Parish but in this case it being laid generally in Winton it is sufficient that the visne come out of Winton Judgment was given for the Plaintiffe Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 429 WATERER and MOUNTAGUE'S Case A Man made a Lease for six years and the Lessor covenanted That if he were disposed to lease the said lands after the expiration of the said term of six years that the Lessee should have the refusal of it The Lessee within the six years made a Lease thereof to J. S. for 21 years Dodderidge Haughton and Ley Chief Justice The Covenant is not broken because it is out of the words of the Covenant But Dodderidge said Temp. E. 1. Covenant 29. The Lessee covenanted to leave the houses trees and woods at the end of the term in as good plight as he found them and afterwards the Lessee cut down a tree that in that case the Covenant was broken and the Lessor shall not stay untill the end of the term to bring his action of Covenant because it is apparant that the tree cannot grow again and be in as good plight as it was when he took the Lease Trin. 21
by vertue of the Act of 31 H. 8. A Feoffment in Fee is made unto the use of A. in Tail he hath the Use by the Statute of West ● cap. 1. Now when the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. came he hath the possession by force of that Act viz. of 27 H. 8. and not by force of the Statute of West 2. If the King be not in by the Statute of 3 H. 8. then he shall not have every of the Priviledges which the Act of 31 H. 8. giveth C. 2. part The Bishop of Canterburies Case The Colledg of Maidstone was Religious but not Ecclesiastical and it was adjudged that the Purchasors of the Lands of the said Colledg were not discharged from the payment of Tythes because the Colledg was not Ecclesiastical but Religious only and Religious and not Ecclesiastical came not to the King by the Statute of 31 H. 8. 18 Jacobi in the Common Pleas Wrights Case The Priory of Hatfield being of small value viz. not having Lands of the value of 200l per annum was dissolved by the Statute of 27 H. 8. and the Lands were not Tythe-free in the hands of the Purchasors because the Priory came not to the King by the Statute of 31 H. 8. and yet they were Tythe-free in the hands of the Prior himself The second point upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. The words are That the King shall have all Rights Interests and Priviledg as it was in the hands of the Abbots Priors c. It is objected To be free from payment of Tythes is a Priviledg I answer That neither Right Interest nor Priviledg do free him from the payment of Tythes First there is no discharge of Tythes by the word Interest in the Statute for that is plain Then the question is if the word Priveledg will discharge the Lands from the payment of Tythes and if that word would have sufficed to have discharged the Tythe what need was there of the special Clause to discharge Tythes The Statute of 27 H. 8. dissolves Chaunteries and there it is said That the King shall have and enjoy c. and there also all Priviledges are given then the Statute of 1 E. 6. came and gave all Chauntries to the King and there the word Priviledg was not in the Act yet by those words the Lands were not discharged from the payment of Tythes The Statute of 31 H. 8. is Conditions and Rights of Entrie yet there was another Act made to give Conditions to the King But admit that the King himself be discharged yet his Patentees are not discharged The Priviledg was personal and personal Priviledges are not transferrable 35 H. 6. 56. A Statute dissolve● the Templers and gives the Lands to the Hospitalers to hold by the same service as the Templers did which was Frankalmoign yet the Grantee held by Fealty for that Frankalmoign is a personal priviledg and cannot be transferred by general words The King it's true shall have the priviledg for he is a priviledged person for of his goods he shall not pay Tythes if he do not grant them over and the Grants prove That unless he had granted them he should have paid no Tythes The Statute of 31 H. 8. sayes All Conditions which the Abbots c. have yet untill the Statute of 32 H 8. no Purchasor could take advantage of a Condition Hill 44. Eliz. in the Common Pleas Rot. 1994. Spurlings Case The Purchasors of Lands of the Hospital of St Johns of Jerusalem were not priviledged from the payment of Tythes Pasch 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas Vrry and Bowyers Case In a Prohibition it was holden by Cook and Nichols That the Purchasor of St Johns of Jerusalem should pay Tythes but Winch and Warburton cont 18 Jacobi in the Common Pleas All the Judges but Warburton held that the Purchasor should pay Tythes 10 Eliz. Dyer There it doth not appear whether they were of the Order of Templers or Cistertians The third point in this Case The Defendant doth make no title to the Discharge for he hath not averred that the Priory were Ecclesiastical persons If a man plead that A. is professed the Court cannot take notice of it that he is a dead person in Law But if he saith that he was of such an Order he ought to set forth of what Rule the Order is Secondly The manner of their discharge was when they did Till and sow their Lands propriis sumptibus manibus If they grub up Roots and make the Lands fit for Tillage but if their Tenants sow the Lands they shall pay Tythes for they had the priviledg in respect they should not be idle unless all these do concur they shall pay Tythes viz. plough sow reap and carrie the Corn. These Priviledges are to be taken stritly because they are to defeat the Church of her endowment and therefore in this Case the Defendant doth not well entitle himself to the Discharge unless he do shew that he did occupie the Land for one whole year before and that he did plow sow and ●eap the corn But he ought for to have shewed that such time he pl●●ed the Land such a time he sowed it and such a time he reaped the 〈◊〉 Otherwise the Court will intend that another man did plow and sow the land and that he only reaped it For if Lessee of the Hospital doth plow the Land and sow it and afterwards doth surrender to the Prior of the Hospital who reaps the same he shall pay Tythe of the same for the Priviledge was granted unto them who were Labourers And the Defendant perhaps might have the Lands to halfs that is to say to have half the Corn growing upon the Lands The pleading is not good When you plead two Bars each Bar must stand of it self and the surplusage of the one Bar shall not help the defect of the other Bar. The word Priviledge in the Act of 32 H. 8. doth not extend to Tythes If it doth yet the Purchasor shall not have the Priviledge Dodderidge Justice The Statute of 32 H. 8. was made because that those of S. Johns of Jerusalem said that they could not surrender their Hospital because they had a Supreme Head over them viz. their great Master the Pope Crawley Serjeant argued for Weston the Defendant The pleading was over-ruled to be good the last day the Case was argued We have well entitled our selves to the Discharge For we have pleaded that we had the occupation of the Lands for one whole year and that Weston the Defendant plowed sowed and reaped the Corn upon the lands at his own costs and charges And the Plaintiff hath not shewed that any other plowed sowed or reaped the same Our title is by prescription which is confessed This Society was erected in the time of King Henry the 1. and it continued untill 32 H. 8. 44 Eliz. in Spurlings case there were two reasons of the Judgment 1. There the Statute of 31 H. 8.
The Case shortly is A. being seised in Fee makes a gift in tail to B. and that descends to four daughters c. And the Plaintiff replies That A. was seised in Fee and gave the Lands to B. and to his Heirs Males and the Plaintiffe claimes the entail as Heir Male and the Defendants under the generall tail absque hoc that A. was seised in Fee 27. H. 8. 4. by Englefield If in Trespass the Defendant plead the Feoffment of a stranger and the Plaintiff saith That he was seised in Fee and made a Lease for years to the said stranger who enfeoffed the Defendant he need not to traverse absque hoc that he was seised in Fee C. 6. part 24. The seisin in Fee is traversable Br. Travers 372. acc Dodderidge Justice The seisin in this Case is traverseable Ley Chief Justice Take away the Seisin and then no gift and therefore the Seisin here is Traverseable Haughton and Chamberlain Justices agreed The Court resolved That either the Seisin in Fee or the gift in tail is traverseable Dodderidge Justice If you both convey from one and the same person then you must traverse the conveyance It is a rule C. 6. part 24. there the Books are cited which warrants the traverse of either Quod nota It was adjudged for the Plaintiff Trinit 21. Jacobi In the Kings Bench. 494 Sir EDWARD FISHER and WARNER's Case THE Testator being indebted unto Fisher made Warner his Executor and Warner in consideration that Fisher would forbear suing of him upon the Assumpsit of the Testator did promise to pay him Fifty Pounds and in an Action upon the Case upon this promise Warner pleaded Non Assumpsit in the Common Pleas and it was found for the Plaintiff And a Writ of Error was brought in this Court because it was not shewed for what consideration the Testator did promise 2. Because it was not shewed That Warner the Executor had Assets in his hands It was said by the Councel of Sir Edward Fisher That they need not shew that he hath Assets because the Defendant Warner was sued upon his own promise C. 9. part 94. The Testator made a promise to pay to Fisher fifty pound and died The Executor in consideration of the forbearance of a Suit upon that promise of the Testator doth assume to pay c. The Jury find for the Plaintiff The Error is that no time is limited nor no place where the promise was made and also it is not shewed when the Testator died and so it is not shewed whether the promise were made in the life time of the Testator or not for if it were in the life time of the Testator then the promise was void Nor is the time of the forbearance shewed and so no good consideration Hill 5. Jacobi a consideration to forbear paululum tempus is no good consideration by Cook And the like case was adjudged 36. Eliz. Rot. 448. Sackbdos case We do alledge de facto that we have forborn our Suit and that the Defendant hath not paid us the money Dodderidge Justice It is alledged that the Plaintiff paid money to the Testator upon which he promised And the Action now brought is upon the promise of the Executor Part of the promise is That he paid the fifty pound to the Testator and that ought to be proved in evidence to the Jury C. 6. part Gregories case if it be not specially named how he shall prove it Haughton to forbear to sue him is for all his life time and not paululum tempus Dodderidge Justice Exception was taken that he doth not shew that the Testator was dead at the time of the promise by the Executor It was shewed That after the death of the Testator that he took upon him the Execution of the Will and then promised and that of necessity must be after the death of the Testator Trinit 21. Jacobi in the King 's Bench. 495 WILLIAM's and FLOYD's Case IN an Ejectione firme The Array was challenged because it was made at the Nomination of the Plaintiffe And by consent of the parties two Atturneys of the Court did try the Array The question was Whether the Triall of the Array was good It was said by the Councel which argued for the Defendant That it was not good If one of the four Knights be challenged the three other Knights shall try that challenge and if he be found favourable he shall be drawn and if another of the Knights be challenged hee shall be tried by the other two and if one of the two be challenged then a new Writ shall issue forth to cause three Knights to appear 9. E. 4. 46. The two which quash the Array ought to try the Array of the Tales for that they are strangers to them The assent of the parties in this case is to no purpose for the consent of the parties cannot alter the Law neither can the King alter the Law but an Act of Parliament may alter the Law 29. Ass 4 19. H. 6. 9. by Newton 27. H. 8. 13. Where a triall cannot be out of the County by the assent of the parties and if it be it is errour By the Councel of the other side contrary This triall of the Array is much in the discretion of the Judges for sometimes it is tried by the Coroners and they are strangers to the Array 21. Ass 26. 20. Ass 10. there the Judges at their discretion appointed one of the Array and the Coroners to try it 27. Ass 28. there upon such a challenge it was tried by the Coroners and Shard said That the triall by any of them was sufficient and by Forriners de Circumstantibus 31. Ass 10. so as it rests much in the discretion of the Judges 29. Ass 3. there it was denied But note That that was in Oyer and Terminer and there it did not appear that the Array was made at the Nomination of one of the parties but in other challenges it may be tried by one of the Panell But in our case they were all challenged was the objection 9. E. 4. 20. Billing For if one of the parties will nominate all of the Jurours to the Sheriffe it is presumed that they are all partiall and 〈◊〉 ●his case the whole Array is challenged but in other cases he may challenge one or two of the Array and yet the others may be indifferent But admit it had been errour yet being by the assent of the parties it is no errour Baynams case in Dyer A Venire facias by assent of the parties was awarded to one of the Coroners and good Dyer 367. 43. E. 3. Office of Court 12. One of the twelve doth depart If the Justices do appoint one of the panell to supply his place it is erroneus but yet if it be with the assent of the parties it is good So in our case 21. E. 4. 59. Brian saith That he hath not seen more then two to try the Array yet by assent of the
releaseth A Will is made and A. is made Executor and no trust is declared in the Will and at his death the Testator declares That his Will is for the benefit of his children May not this intent be averred there is nothing more common Dodderidg Justice For the making of an Estate you cannot averre otherwise then the Will is but as to the disposition of the estate you may averre Jones Justice There are two Executors one commits wast or releaseth c. the other hath no remedy at the common Law for that breach of Trust The reason of Chenyes case C. 5. part is Whosoever will devise Lands ought to do it by writing and if it be without the writing it is out of the Will although his intent appeareth to be otherwise Before the Statute of 34. H. 8. cap. 26. The Marches of Wales held plea of all things for things were not then setled But the said Statute gave them power and authority to hear and determine such causes and matters as are or afterwards shall be assigned to them by the King as heretofore had been used and accustomed Now if it be assigned by the King yet if it be not a thing accustomed and used to be pleaded there it is not there pleadable So if it be within the Instructions made by the King yet if it be not used and accustomed it is not pleadable there but it ought to be within the Instructions and also accustomed and usuall Adultery Symony and Incontinency are within their Instructions and are accustomed The things being accustomed to be pleaded there have the strength of an Act of Parliament but by the Instructions they have no power to proceed in case of Legacy Then let us see if the same be included within the generall words things of Equity within the Instructions And then I will be tender in delivering of my opinion If a Legacy be pleadable there or not Whitlock Justice The Clergy desired that they might forbear to intermeddle with Legacies Five Bishops one after the other were Presidents of the Marshes there and they draw into the Marches spirituall businesse but originally it was not so their power was larger then now it is for they had power in criminall causes but now they are restrained in that power There is a common Law Ecclesiasticall as well as of our common Law Jus Commune Ecclesiasticum as well as Jus Commune La●cum The whole Court was of opinion That the Kings Atturney in the Marches being out we ought to have priviledge there In the Chancery there is a Latine Court for the Officers of the Court and the Clarks of the Court for to sue in But in the principal Case a Prohibition was not granted because there was much matter of Equity concerning the Legacy It was adjourned Pasch 3. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 497 HARLEY and REYNOLD's Case HArvey brought an Action of Debt upon an Escape against Reynolds Hill 1. Car. Reynolds pleaded That before the day of Escape scil the twentieth day of January 1. Car. That the Prisoner brake Prison and escaped and that he afterwards viz. before the bringing of this Action viz. 8. die Maii 2. Car. took the Prisoner again upon fresh Suit Anderws for the Plaintiff Reynolds is bound to the last day viz. 8. Maii and not the day before the bringing of the Action for the Bill bears date Hill 1. Car. and the terme is but one day in Law c. 4 part 71. and so no certain day is set for the Jury to find The day which Reynolds sets that he retook the Prisoner is the eighth day of May and he shall be bound by that Com. 24. a. 33. H. 6. 44. Where a day is uncertain a day ought to be set down for a day is material for to draw things in issue C. 4. part 70. the Plaintiff shewed That 7. Maii 30. Eliz. by Deed indented and inrolled in the Common Pleas Ter. Pasc in the said thirtieth year within six monthes according to the Statute for the consideration of One hundred Pounds did bargain and sell But he further said That after the said seventh day of May in the said thirtieth year he levied a Fine of the Lands to the now Plaintiff after which Fine viz. 29. Aprilis in the said thirtieth year the said Deed indented was enrolled in the Common Pleas. Note That another day more certain was expressed therefore the mistaking of the day shall not hurt And there it was helped by Averment 8. H. 6. 10. Repleader 7. In Waste the Defendant said That such a day before the Writ brought the Plaintiff entred upon him before which entry no Waste was done c. Strange It might be that he entred again wherefore the Court awarded that he should recover Co. Entries 178. In Dower the Tenant vouched a stranger in another County who appeared and there the Replication is viz. die Lunae c. so the day ought to be certain 19. H. 6. 15. In a Formedon If the Defendant plead a thing which by the Law he is not compelled to do and the Plaintiffe reply That she is a Feme sole and not Covert it is good but if he plead That such a day year and place there the Trial shall be at the particular place otherwise the Trial shall be at the place where the Writ bears date C. 4 part Palmers Case If the Sheriff sell a Term upon an Extent and puts a Date to it scil recites the Date and mistakes it the sale is not good for there is no such Lease Dyer 111. Then it is said 31. Octobris and there by the computation of time it was impossible and so here the time is impossible scil that 8. Maii 2. Car. should be before Hill 1. Caroli for the taking is after the Action brought and so naught to bar the Plaintiff it is the substanre of his bar upon which he relieth and so no matter of form 20. H. 6. there upon an Escape the Defendant said That such a day ante impetrationem billae in this Court scil such a day he retook him and the day after the scilicet is after the purchase of the Writ there the scilicet and the day expressed shall be void and it shall be taken according to the first day expressed if the Sheriff had retaken him before the filing of the Writ it had been a good plea in Bar otherwise not Calthrope contrary H. brought debt Hill 16. Jacobi against Cropley and 9. Junii 19. Jacobi Cropley was taken in Execution and delivered in Execution to R. by Habeas Corpus afterwards 1. Caroli Cropley escaped and H. brought debt against R. who pleaded a special Plea and shewed That 20. Januarii 1. Caroli Cropley brake prison and escaped and that he made fresh Suit untill he took him and that before the purchase of the Bill scil 8 Maii 2. Caroli he was retaken 16. E. 4. If he retake him before the Action brought it is a good bar so if the
the words are upon reasonable request which implies a reasonable time to consider of it And there might be many occasions both in respect of her self and of the Common wealth that she could not at that ●ime do it And Hill 37. Eliz. in the Common Pleas PERPOYNT and THIMBELBYES Case A man Covenants to make Assurances It was adjudged hee shall have reasonable time to do it In 27. Eliz. the opinion of Popham was That if a man be bounden to make such an Assurance as Councell shall advise there if Councell advise an Assurance he is bound to make it But if it were such Reasonable Assurance as Councell shall advise There If the Councell do advise That he shall enter into seale and deliver a Bond of a thousand pound for the payment of an hundred pound at a day hee is not bound to doe it because it is not reasonable Vide 9. Ed 4. 3. cap. 6. part Bookers Case Doct. Stud. 56. 14. H. 8. 23. Secondly He said That the request in the principall Case was not according to the Covenant for the election in this case was on the womans part and not on the Covenantees part and shee was to doe the act viz. to surrender And where election is given of two things the same cannot be taken from the party and if it should be so in the principall Case the Covenantee should take away the election of the Covenanter And where the manner of Assurance is set down by the parties there they cannot vary from it and in this case the manner is set down in which the Covenanter hath the election because shee is to do the act And hee said That the woman was not bounden afterwards to surrender in Court upon this request because the request was as it were a void request And it is implyed by the words That shee in person ought to make the Surrender and so hee prayed Judgment for the Defendant It was adjourned Trinit 8. Caroli in the King 's Bench. 514. HYE and Dr. WELLS Case DOctor William Wells sued Hye in the Ecclesiasticall Court for Defamation for saying to him that hee lyed And the Plaintiffe prayed a Prohibition It was argued for the Defendant that in this Case no Prohibition should goe For it was said that by the Statute of 21. Edw. 1. of Consultation When there is no Writ given in the Chancery for the party grieved in the Temporall Court there the Spirituall Court shall have the Jurisdiction and in this Case there is no Writ given by Law And Fitzherbert Natura Brevium 53. h. a Consultation doth not lie properly but in case where a man cannot have his Recovery by the Common Law in the Kings Courts for the words of the Writ of Consultation are viz. Proviso quod quicquid in juris nostri regii derogationem cedere valcat aliqualiter per vos nullatenus attemptetur And Vide Register 149. Falsarius is to be punished in the Spirituall Court And Fitzherb Nat. Brev. 51. I. A man may sue in the Spirituall Court where a man defames him and publisheth him for false Vide Linwood in cap. de foro comp●tenti acc Trin. 6. Jacobi in the Common Pleas Boles Case Rot. 2733. A man called a poor Vicar poor rascally Knave for which the Vicar sued him in the spirituall Court And by the opinion of the whole Court after a Prohibition had been granted upon further advice a Consultation was granted 1. It was objected That the party might be punished by the Temporall Judges and Justices for the words To which it was answered That although it might be so which in truth was denied yet the party might sue for the same in the spirituall Court And many Cases put That where the party might be punished by either Lawes that the partie had his election in what Court he would sue And therefore it was said That if a man were a drunkard he might be sued in the Ecclesiastical Court for his drunkennesse and yet he might be bounden to his good behaviour for the same by the Justices so the imputed father of a Bastard child may be sued for the offence either in the spirituall Court or at the Common Law by the Statute of 18. Eliz. and 7. Jacobi So F. N. B. 52. k. If a man sue in the spirituall Court for taking and detaining his wife from him to whom he was lawfully married if the other party sue a Prohibition for the same yet he shall have a Consultation quatenus pro restitutione uxoris suae duntaxat prosequitur and yet he may have an Action at the Common Law De uxore abducta cum bonis viri or an Action of Trespasse Maynard contrary By the Statute of Articuli Cl●ri although that the words be generall yet they do not extend to all defamations And by Register 49. where the Suit is for defamation there the Cause ought to be expressed ought to be wholly spirituall as the Book is in 29. E. 3. and C. 7. part in Kenn's Case And in the principal Case It is not a matter affirmative which is directly spirituall And therefore 22. Jacobi where a Suit was in the Ecclesiasticall Court for these words Thou art a base and paultery Rogue a Prohibition was awarded And so Vinor and Vinors Case Trinit 7. Jacobi in the King's Bench Thou art a drunken woman Thou art drunk over night and mad in the morning 2. Hee said That Crimen falsi in the spirituall Court is meant of counterfeiting of the Seal or of Forgery and Crimen falsi cannot be intended a lie If in ordinary speech one sayes That 's a lie If the other reply You lie that is no defamation for Qui primum peccat ille facit rixam Trinit 42. Eliz. Lovegrove and Br●wens Case A man said to a Clark a spirituall person Thou art a Woodcock and a Foole for which words he sued him in the spirituall Court and in that Case a Prohibition was awarded It was adjourned Trinit 8. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 515 GWYN and GWYN's Case A Quod ei deforceat was brought against two they appeared and pleaded severall Pleas and the issues were found against both of them and a joint Judgement was given against them both and they brought a Writ of Error thereupon in the Kings Bench. And the opinion was That the Judgement was Erroneous and that the Writ of Error would well lie So in a Writ of Dower brought against two Tenants in common who plead severall Pleas the Judgement must be according to the Writ But Barkley said That if in a Writ of right by two the Mise is joyned but in one Issue where severall Issues are the Judgment ought to be severall Quaere quia obscurè Trinit 8. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 516 BLAND's Case THE Case was this Thomas Spence was a Lessee of Lands for one hundred years and he and Jane his Wife by Indenture for valuable consideration did assign over to Tisdale yeilding and paying
171 365 368 369 forfeiture 269 142 365 felling trees 173 174 trespasse brought 174 Corporation 347 dissolved the donor shall have his land again 211 sues 393 Costs 329 345 220 Covenant 38 assignee 162 Executors ibid. 11 12 48 69 70 to build a mill c. there 271 273 175 99 120 333 335 217 to surrender 445 performed 95 The Indenture is void in part 213 Covenant 87 121 cause of things must appear in the Court 401 Countermand 133 County where actions shall be brought 335 of trials 429 Courts-Baron 68 69 Leet 71 Tower Court 145 of Requests 208 216 243 244 Kings Bench and Chancery 357 Acts done in spiritual Courts 33 163 164 181 215 Curia claudenda 127 Custom 5 49 234 140 143 235 267 261 135 of descents 166 127 That the wife may devise to the husband 14 Particular Customes 163 D Day in Court 68 Day materiall to be set down 433 434 Damages recowping in them 53 135 362 jonyt severed 57 assessed 98 343 344 not assessed writ of enquiry 207 not recoverable in account 57 treble 245 to be severed 210 Damage feasan 124 185 Date of a Patent 416 Declaration 251 86 186 in an action upon 1 2. P. M. of distresses 11 upon an Assumpsit 32 Custome 252 particularly 358 insufficient 76 106 343 370 mistakes 345 287 119 160 125 Deed things passe by one deed 129 by deed 354 128 Debt 253 91 336 372 217 210 who liable 294 The Kings debt 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 Default 280 Defamation 440 Delivery of deeds 130 of money to anothers use 210 Demand 23 39 67 96 154 337 where to be 331 by writ 74 335 310 the word 398 Demurrer 10 Denizen made 417 Departure 255 122 Depositions 193 Deprivation 259 163 Detaining 8 Detinue 370 Declaration in it 403 Devastation by Executors 30 Devastavit 285 Devise 7 14 15 16 26 40 46 208 266 280 95 99 130 131 299 319 146 351 352 363 to a Colledge c. 394 prevents a remitter c. 411 to a mans heir 412 to one daughter heir of land held by Knights service c. 17 to sell 78 to the Son and heir 94 Dilapidation 259 Diminution 267 alledged 407 Disability the plaintiff cause of it 75 76 Discharge 11 105 ought to shew what 61 Discent 3●5 312 365 Disclam 25 Discontinuance one issue only found 5 370 within a year 219 Discontinuance by tenant in taile 317 Disseisin 522 of a particular estate 139 Acts of disseisor disseisor sues c. 388 Distresse justified 109 110 187 190 driven out of the Countrey 11 sufficient upon the Land 67 110 Divorce 19 145 Dove-coat a Writ of Right lies of it 259 erected 284 Dower 21 135 145 A Lease is for years 266 Forfeitable by the Husband 323 Averment of seisin of the husband for damage 212 E Ejectione firmae 6 15 18 53 71 72 33● extra tenet unnecessary 60. lyes 157 Plea 149 Election 258 159 127 140 446 To sue 196 determined ibid. Elegit 257 82 84 Ely jurisdiction there 380 381 Emblements 159 Enclosure in Forrests 167 168 169 170 171 Entry into one house 72 To defeat an estate 9 To fortifie it 25 for forfeiture 175 No trespasse 283 Error 26 258 248 73 80 84 87 372 373 lyes not 261 247. brought 376 377 378 379 439. directed 44. things uncertaine 408. severall 440 Escape 22 27 262 280 125 126 372 403 Fresh suite 177 433 Escheat 78 For Miscreancy 34 Right of action 322 Essoine 235 236 Estates 19 42 51 52 272 A Lease for time 102 103 determined 9 the lesse drowned 52 voidable 9 Estoppel 257 48 147 321 177 384 385 Estranger to a plaint erroneous c. 403 Estovers custome pleaded 235. see 238 97 173 Estrepment 112 164 Estrey 150 151 Eviction 258 Evidence maintaines not the issue 235 see 326 Execution 26 257 258 80 82 83 84 290 295 147 125 126 181 371 372 373 217 Assignment after judgement 161 Taking 372. severall 208 Executors 21 192 See Right Of his own wrong 104 Reteines 217 Order in payment 298 Pleads fully administred 178 Exception in a grant 116 117 118 Time past to take it 100 One releases 431 Ex●hange 99 100 Exigent 83 217 Excommunication 191. unjust 406 Exposition 16 17 18 36 37 67 71 236 246 198 of Lawes 39 of Statutes 309. and Patents 425 Extent 82 289 311 Extinguishment 24 11 101 314 128 137 211 Lands given by Statute to the King Annuity not extinguished 170 F Fals●fying a Rec●very 271 Falsely imprisoned 124 Fee executed ●●2 one cannot depend of another ●●7 Fee-simple 155 Felony not before attainder 267 Cause of arrest for it 406 Feoffments 318 319 320 Fieri facias 276 147 83 Fine for vert c. 277. What Courts may fine c. 381 Fine levied by tenor of it 246 Parish not named 440 Record of it 103 129 307 148 351 179 First fruits 393 Forceable entry 45 Forfeiture of Lessor 105 141. Of a Right 321 See Treason Forgery 62 63 175 Form commanded by Statute must be observed 334 188 189 Formedon 239 302 163 Forrests chases c. 169 Frankalmoigne 396 Franchises 17 262 Usurped 91 Frankmarriage 18 19 20 Franktenement rule of it 9 In an upper chamber 44 Forfeiture 6 318 In case of Treason 34 307 308 310 315 316 Fraudulent conveyances and acts 6 7 285 161 191 192 G. GArdian in soccage 316 Gardens 6 Gavel-kind Plea 55 Grants Words apt 7 Of a common person 8 18 24 25 236 237 270 273 Restriction rule 237 To dig in his waste 18 Generall words 183 One thing passes with another 352 Things passe in grosse 127. By one Deed 129. Of the King 8 35 Where a mistake shall not abridge the fulnesse of words precedent 36 Favoured 37 38 262 136 425. See 414 415 416 417 421 422 423 425 Of a possibility 316 H. HAbeas corpus directed 44. See 198 199 Habendum 51 269 272 Habendum successive 220 Holidayes 218 Heire-speciall 3. Force of the word ib. 4 275 102 312 Homage 320 Husband and Wife acts of both or either 2 5 14 15 312 141 180 Wifes lease good 327 Gives land to her husband 143 Execution of the Wives Lease 26 See Reservation Husband may forfeit the Wives Copy-hold 345 May correct his Wife 215 I. IDeot 302 Jeofailes 56 57 194 Imbracery 240 Imprisonment 158 344 199. See Fine Improvement of common 97 Incidents 359 Ingrossers of corn 144 Innkeepers 345 346 Incroachment 24 411 Inquisitions 294 299 Indictment 45 46 65 67 272 84 157 400 346 For erecting a Cottage 383 For omitting the Crosse in Baptisme 119 Joynt 349 Contra pacem when 59 Infant 60 104 In his mothers belly 319 364 365 366. May grant c. 14 Brings Error to reverse a Fine 20 May release 30 31 Acknowledges a Statute c. 149 Appears c. 382 Promises to pay for his meat c. 219. Sues his Guardian discharges 214 Information 91 131 158