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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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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
haeredes de corpore and we are not to devise a new form in such case but it is sufficient to shew the speciall matter to the Court. Also the words of the Writ are true for they are Heirs to Sir Roger Lewknor and the count is sufficient pursuant and agreeing to their Writ for they are Heirs although they are not speciall Heirs of the body and so the Court was of opinion that the Writ was good notwithstanding that Exception And Anderson and Periam Justices said That the case is not to be compared to the case in F. Nat. Br. 57. c. for there he cannot shew by whose Demise the Tenant holdeth if he doth not shew the speciall conveyance viz. that the land was given to the Husband and Wife and the Heirs of the body of the Wife Nor is it like unto the case of 26. H. ● 6. for the same cause for alwayes the demise of the Tenant ought to be especially shewed and certainly which it cannot be in these two cases but by the disclosing of the Title also to the Reversion Another Exception was taken because that the Writ doth suppose quod tenuerunt which as they conceived is to be meant that tenuerunt joyntly whereas in truth they were Tenants in common Walmesley contrary because there is not any other form of Writ for there is not any Writ which doth contain two Tenuerunts And the words of the Writ are true quod tenuerunt although tenuerunt in Common But although they were not true yet because there is no other form of Writ it is good enough As Littleton If a lease be made for half a year and the Lessee doth waste yet the Writ shall suppose quod tenet ad terminum annorum and the count shall be speciall 40. Ed. 3. 41. E. 3. 18. If the Lessee doth commit waste and granteth over his term the Writ shall be brought against the Grantor and shall suppose quod tenet and yet in truth he doth not hold the Land 44. Ed. 3. and Fitz. If one make divers leases of divers lands and the Lessee doth waste in them all the Lessor shall have one Writ of waste supposing quod tenet and the Writ shall not contain two Tenets And such was also the opinion of the Court The third Exception was because that the Writ was brought by the two coparceners and the Heir of the third coparcener without naming of the Tenant by the Courtesie And thereupon Snagg cited the Case of 4. Ed. 3. That where a Lease is made for life the Remainder for life and the tenant for life doth waste he in the Reversion cannot have an Action of waste during the life of him in the Remainder So in this case the Heir of the third coparcener cannot have waste because the mean estate for life is in the Tenant by the courtesie And to prove that the Tenant by the courtesie ought to joyn he cited 3. E. 3. which he had seen in the Book it self at large where the Reversion of a tenant in Dower was granted to the Husband and to the Heirs of the Husband and the tenant in Dower did waste and they did joyn in an Action of waste and not good And so is 17. E. 3. 37. F. N. B. 59. f. and 22. H. 6. 25. a. Walmesley contrary for here in our case there is nothing to be recovered by the tenant by the courtesie for he cannot recover damages because the disinheresin is not to him and the term is expired and therefore no place wasted is to be recovered and therefore it is not like unto the Books which have been cited for in all those the tenant was in possession and the place wasted was to be recovered which ought to go to both according to their estates in reversion But it is not so here for in as much as the term is expired the land is in the tenant by the courtesie and so he hath no cause to complain And such also was the opinion of the whole Court viz. that because the term was ended that the Writ was good notwithstanding the said Exception Then concerning the principall matter in Law which was Whether the Writ were well brought against the second Lessee or whether it ought to have been brought against the first Lessee It was argued by Shuttleworth that it ought to have been brought against the first Lessee for when he granted over his term excepting the trees the Exception was good Ergo c. For when the Land upon which the trees are growing is leased out to another the trees passe with the Lease as well as the Land and the property of them is in the Lessee during the term and therefore when he grants his term hee may well except the trees as well as the first Lessor might have done And that is proved by the Statute of Marlebridge Cap. 23. for before that Statute the Lessee was not punishable for cutting downe the trees and that Statute doth not alter the properties of the trees but onely that the Lessee shall render damages if he cut them down c. Also the words of the Writ of Wast proveth the same which are viz. in terris domibus c. sibi dimissis Also the Lessee might have cut them down for reparations c. and for fire-wood if there were not sufficient underwoods which he could not have done if the trees had been excepted And in 23. H 8. in Brooke It is holden that the excepting of the trees is the excepting of the Soile And so is 46. E. 3. 22. Where one made a Lease excepting the woods and afterwards the Lessee did cut them down and the Lessor brought an Action of Trespasse quare vi armis clausum fregit c. and it was good notwithstanding that Exception was taken to it And it is holden in 12. E. 4. 8. by Fairfax and Littieton That if the Lessee cut the trees that the Lessor cannot carry them away but he is put to his Action of Waste Fenner and Walmesley Serjeants contrary and they conceived that the Lessee hath but a speciall property in the trees viz. for fire-boot plough-boot house-boot c. And if he passe over the Lands unto another that he cannot reserve unto himselfe that speciall property in the trees no more then he who hath common appendant can grant the principall excepting and reserving the Common or grant the Land excepting the foldage The grand property of the trees doth remain in the Lessor and it is proved by 10. H. 7. 30. and 27. H. 8 13. c. If Tenant for life and he in the reversion joyne in a Lease and the Lessee doth wast they shall joyne in an Action of Wast and Tenant for life shall recover the Free-hold and the first Lessor the damages which proves that the property of the trees is in him As to that that he was dispunishable at the common law that was the folly of the Lessor and although it was so at the
Copyholder in Fee who by the Custome might surrender in Fee might make a surrender in taile without any speciall custome so to doe and he who may prescribe to make a Feoffment in Fee might make a Lease for life and it should be good quia omne majus continet in se minus Pasch 26 Eliz. In Communi Banco 27 IN a Writ of Dower the Defendant made her demand de tertia parte liberae faldae and Serjeant Gaudy moved if it were good without setting in certain for what cattell And it was held not good for if it be not of a certain number she shall not be thereof endowed no more then of a Common uncertain And if she do demand Common which is certain yet she shall not be endowed if she do not shew the certaintie of it Windham said That if the Common be uncertain that the woman shall be allowed for it But Meade said He doth not know how the allowance shall be made Pasch 25 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber 28 IT was holden in the Exchequer Chamber before the Treasurer and the Barons in the case of one Pelham That whereas the Queen had granted to him by Letters Patents That he should not be Bailiff Constable nor other Officer or Minister licet eligatur That if the Queen make him Sheriff of a County that he shall not be discharged by that Patent for that such Offices do not extend to Royal Offices as a grant of Amerciaments shall not extend to Amerciaments Royal. And also the making of a Sheriff is not by election but onely by denomination of the Queen So that if he have not these words besides licet eligatur per Nos he shall be Sheriff And that they said was also the opinion of Bromley Lord Chancellour Mich. 26 Eliz. In the King 's Bench. 29 IT was holden by the Court That if a man binde himself to perform the last Will of I. S. and he is made Executor that hee is bounden to pay Legacies without any demands Vide 11. E. 4. 10. a. 14. E. 4. 4. a. 20. E. 4. 28. Yet it was said That Pasch 25. Eliz. they put a difference where a man is bound to perform the last Will and when to perform the Legacies for in the later case the Law is ut suprà Hill 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 30. IF I be bound that my Lessee shall take reap and carry his Corn peaceably without interruption and afterward in Harvest when he is reaping I come upon the land and say to him that he shall not reap any corn there but otherwise I do not disturb him The opinion of all the Justices was that for these words spoken by me upon the Land that I have forfeited my Bond. And yet it was urged by Serjeant Puckering That I was bound to suffer him to do three things scil to take to reap and to carry and all these things he hath done See the Case 47. E. 3. 22. where the saying to a Tenant by one Coparcener that he ought not to pay any thing to the other was a Disseisin Pasch 26. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 31 A Man was bound in a Recognizance for his good behaviour and it was shewed that he was arrested for suspicion of Felony by a Constable and that he escaped from him to which he pleaded Not guilty Exception was taken because it was not shewed that a Felony was committed which might cause suspicion for that is traversable and per Curiam it need not for although no such felony was committed and although the arrest were tortious yet the Recognizor had forfeited his Recognizance by making an escape which is a Misbehaviour Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 32 BUSHEY's Case PAul Bushey Vicar of Pancras leased his Vicarage to Doctor Clark the Glebe land and the Church and all things to the same belonging Excepting the housing reserving twenty pound rent yeerly at Lammas and Sancti Petri advincula by equall portions and if the Rent be behinde by the space of a month that then it should be lawfull for the Vicar to distrein And the Lessee was bound to peform all Covenants Articles and Agreements contained or recited within the same Indenture And 〈◊〉 rent not paid the 29 of August 25. Eliz the Vicar brought Debt upon the Bond To which the Defendant pleaded That the Rent was not demanded the 29 day of August upon which they were at issue and the Jury being ready at the Bar Walmesley said That the Enquest ought not to be taken for three causes First He hath made a lease of the Vicarage except the housing and the Plaintiff hath alledged the demand to be generall super terras glebales and hath not shewed where To that the Justices said It had been better to have said At such a gate or hedg or high-way but notwithstanding they did not allow of that Exception for if it were not well demanded it ought to be shewed of the other side The second exception was because the Enquest were all de Vicincto de Pancras and it might be that some of the Lands appertaining to the Vicarage did extend to Islington but that Exception was disallowed also The third Exception was because that the V●nire facias did not well recite the Issue for the exception of the housing was left out and per Curiam it is not needfull that all be recited But if another issue then that upon which they were at issue had been recited it had not been good And afterwards the Enquest was taken and found for the Plaintiff But nothing was spoken whether there needed any demand in such case or not Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 33 IF a man be presented unto a Benefice which is not above the value of six pound per annum and afterwards he is presented unto another of twenty pounds and afterwards is deprived for cause of Plurality The Ordinary must give notice to the Patron for that is at the common Law and untill Deprivation it is no Cession Trinity 26 Elizab. In the Common Pleas. 34 THROGMORTON and TERRINGHAM's Case IN a Replevin the Defendant did avow the taking of the cattell by reason that one A. held of him an Acre of land in the place where c. by fealty and sixteen shillings rent the rent payable at two Feasts of the year c. And the Plaintiffe said that he held the same acre and two others of the Avowant by fealty and sixteen shillings payable at one day absque hoc that he held the said 〈◊〉 by the services payable at two dayes c. Snagg The tenure cannot be traversed and 21 E. 4 the last case is the same case where the Avowry is made for 12 pence at four days and the Plaintiff said that he held by twelve pence payable at one day without that that he held by the Services payable at four dayes And there it is holden that the same cannot be an Encroachment because they
For there the Jury found a dying seised after Judgement in a Recovery whereas a dying seised was alledged and did not say after a Recovery Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 99 EGLINTON and AUNSELL'S Case IN an Action upon the Case for Words the words were these Thou art a Cosening Knave Crowner and hast cosened many of thy Kindred of their Lands Cook It is adjudged That Cosener will bear no Action for the words are too generall And the word Cosener doth not go to the Office in the Principall Case also the word Cosening is a word abused 30. H. 8. Br. Action upon the Case 104. False perjured man bears an Action but false man without Perjured will bear no Action and is nothing else but false and fraudulent There was a Case as Cook said betwixt Osborne and Frittell You did robb me and took away my Evidences and a Sub pena And it was ruled That no Action did lie for them And there it was holden That the word And was a Copulative Kir●y●'s Case Thou art a crafty cosening Knave and hast cosened many of thy Kindred Adjudged not Actionable Snagg Serjeant contrary That the Action lieth for he said That a Crowner is sworn to do his Office and if he be false and deceitfull in his Office then he is forsworn and the word And here begins a new sentence and doth not expound the precedent words as the words because or in that c. Clench Justice If the word Cosener had been left out it had been a cleer Case that the words would not have born an Action And if one do call him cosening Crowner it is cleer the words are Actionable Gaudy Justice We are to go strongly against these kind of Actions If the words Cosening shall go and extend to the word Crowner then cleerly an Action doth lie in respect of the Office And then if And and all the subsequent words had been left out yet the Action would lie Suit Justice If there were words sufficient before the word And to maintain an Action the subsequent words shall not overthrow those that went before But if the words had been Thou art a Cosening Knave Crowner in cosening of thy Kindred the Action had not been maintainable but the word And is not a word explantory as the word in is The better Opinion of the Court was That the words were not Actionable Mich. 28 29 Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 100 A Man brought an Action upon the Case for speaking these words of him viz. He hath aided Pirats contrary to the Lawes of the Realme and against a Proclamation in that behalfe Snag said That the words are not Actionable because there wants the word Scienter for an honest man may unwittingly do so And if a man chargeth one in an Action upon the Statute of 5. Elizabeth and declare that he said That he was perjured contrary to the forme of the Statute hee also ought to say That hee did it willingly and corruptly Cook True if a man bring an Action upon the Statute of 5. Elizabeth But if he saith Such a one is a perjured man generally an Action upon the Case will lie without saying willingly and corruptly Also those words viz. Contrary to the Lawes of the Realm do imply Scienter for if it were not Scienter it could not be contrary to the Lawes of the Realme Clenche Justice I conceive that the word Scienter is a materiall word in this Case and vouched the Lord Shandoes Case where one said That he was a maintainer of Theeves and it was adjudged that the Action would lie It was one Sidenhams Case Where one said That a Robbery was done and that such a one smelt of it and an Action was brought for the words and adjudged That an Action would lie And the words here are as forcible as if he had said Scienter and the Case was adjourned for the search of presidents untill the next Terme Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 101 IF two men be partners of Merchandizes in one Ship and one of them appoints and makes a Factor of all the Merchandizes It was moved by Godfrey and not denyed by the Justices That both of them may have severall Writs of Account against him or they may joine in one Writ of Account if they please Quaere of that Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench 102 A Man made a Contract with another man when he dwelt in the City of London and afterwards he who made the Contract went from the City and dwelt within the cinque Ports and he being afterward impleaded in the Kings Bench upon the Contract claimed the priviledg of the cinque Ports which according to 12. E. 4. is That those of the cinque Ports shall not be sued elswhere then within the cinque Ports Suit Justice said That that was true for any matter or cause arising within the cinque Ports But otherwise if a man do enter upon a Bond of One hundred or One thousand Pound and then go and dwell in the cinque Ports perhaps so the Obligee might lose his Debt And it was adjudged That the Defendant should not have Priviledge Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 103. Sir JERVIS CLIFTON's Case IN a Quo Warranto The Information was That where the Defendant was seised of a Mannor and of a House within it That he claimed to have a Court or View of Frankpledge infra messuagium praedictum and further it was that Sine aliqua Concessione sive authoritate usurpavit Libertates praedictas The Defendant pleaded That Non usurpavit Libertates praedict ' infra Messuagium praedictum modo forma Piggot The Plea is not good for the naturall Answer to a Quo Warranto is either to claime or disclaime and he doth do neither of them And if a man will tender a generall issue he ought so to tender it as the Nature of the Action doth require That he was never seised after time of memory is no plea in Rescous In Debt rein arere is no plea but he ought to answer to the Debet The speciall matter alledged in the Action ought to be answered and the generall not to be pleaded as it is pleaded here Non usurpavit c. as in 21. E. 3. Detinue of Charters was pleaded in a Writ of Dower and she said That such a one was seised and did enfeoffe her and her Husband and so the Deeds did belong unto her The Partie shall not traverse that they did not belong unto her but must answer unto the especiall matter viz. the Feoffment Also he said Quod non usurpavit c. infra Messuagium praedictum where he ought to have said Infra Manerium praedictum An Account was brought upon a Receipt for seven years and the Defendant pleaded to two of the years and issue was joyned upon it And it was adjudged error Godfrey He ought to say Non usurpavit Libertates praedictas nec earum
And per Curiam a Prohibition shal be awarded And Cook chief Justice said That there were three Causes in the Bill for which a Prohibition should be granted which he reduced to three Questions 1. If a Copy-holder payeth his rent and the Lord maketh a Feoffment of the Manor Whether the Copy-holder shall be compelled to attorn 2. If a man be seised of Freehold Land and Covenants to stand seised to an use Whether in such case an Attornment be needfull 3. If a Feoffment be made of a Manor by Deed Whether the Feoffee shall compell the Tenants to attorn in a Court of Equity And for all these Questions It was said That the Tenants shall not be compelled to attorn for upon a Bargain and Sale and a Covenant to stand seised there needs no attronement And Cook in this case said That in 21. E. 4. the Justices said That all Causes may be so contrived that there needed to be no Suit in Courts of Equity and it appears by our books That a Prohibition lies to a Court of Equity when the matter hath been once determined by Law And 13. E. 3. Tit. Prohibition and the Book called the Diversity of Courts which was written in the time of King Henry the eighth was vouched to that purpose And the Case was That a man did recover in a Quare Impedi● by default and the Patron sued in a Court of Equity viz. in the Chancery and a Prohibition was awarded to the Court of Chancery Mich. 11 Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 298 Sir JOHN GAGE and SMITH's Case AN Action of Waste was brought and the Plaintiffe did declare that contrary to the Statute the Lessee had committed Waste and Destruction in uncovering of a Barn by which the timber thereof was become rotten and decayed and in the destroying of the stocks of Elmes Ashes Whitethorn and Blackthorn to his damage of three hundred pound And for title shewed That his Father was seised of the Land where c. in Fee and leased the same to the Defendant for one and twenty years and died and that the Land descended to him as his son and heir and shewed that the Waste was done in his time and that the Lease is now expired The Defendant pleaded the generall issue and it was found for the Plaintiffe and damages were assessed by the Jury to fifty pound And in this case it was agreed by the whole Court 1. That if six of the Jury are examined upon a Voyer dire if they have seen the place wasted that it is sufficient and the rest of the Jury need not be examined upon a Voyer dire but onely to the principall 2. It was agreed if the Jury be sworn that they know the place it is sufficient although they be not sworn that they saw it and although that the place wasted be shewed to the Jury by the Plaintiff's servants yet if it be by the commandment of the Sheriffe it is as sufficient as if the same had been shewed unto them by the Sheriff himselfe 4. It was resolved That the eradicating of Whitethorn is waste but not of the Blackthorn according to the Books in 46. E. 3. and 9. H. 6. but if the blackthorn grow in a hedg and the whole hedg be destroyed the same is Waste by Cook chief Justice It was holden also so that it is not Wast to cut Quick-set hedges but it shall be accounted rather good husbandry because they will grow the better 5. It was agreed That if a man hath under-woods of Hasell Willowes Thornes if he useth to cut them and sell them every ten years If the Lessee fell them the same is no wast but if he dig them up by the roots or suffereth the Germinds to be bitten with cattel after they are felled so as they will not grow again the same is a destruction of the Inheritance and an Action of wast will lie for it But if he mow the Stocks with a wood-sythe as he did in the principall Case the same is a malicious Wast and continuall mowing and biting is destruction 6. It was said That in an Action of Wast a man shall not have costs of Suit because the Law doth give the party treble damages And when the generall issue Nul Wast is pleaded and the Plaintiff counted to his damages 100l. the Court doubted whether they could mitigate the damage But 7. It was agreed That in the principal Case although the issue were found for the Plaintiff that he could not have judgment because he declared of Wast done in 8. several closes to his damage of 300l. generally and did not sever the damages And the Jury found That in some of the said Closes there was no Wast committed Wherefore the Court said he could not have judgement through his own default But afterwards at another day Hobart then chief Justice and Warburton Justice said That the verdict was sufficient and good enough and so was also the declaration and that the Plaintiffe might have judgment thereupon But yet the same was adjourned by the Court untill the next Term. Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 299 CLARK's Case NOte It was said by Cook chief Justice and agreed by the whole Court and 41. and 43. E. 3. c That if a man deliver money unto I. S. to my use That I may have an Action of Debt or account against him for the same at my election And it was agreed also That an Action of Trover lieth for money although it be not in bags but not an Action of Detinue Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 300 IRELAND and BARKER's Case IN an Action of Wast brought the Writ was That the Abbot and Covent had made a Lease for years c. And it was holden by the Court that it was good although it had been better if the Writ had been That the Abbot with the assent of the Covent made the Lease for that is the usuall form but in substance the Writ is good because the Covent being dead Sons in Law by no intendment can be said to make a Lease But the Dean and Chapter ought of necessity to joyne in making of a Lease because they are all persons able and if the Dean make a Lease without the Chapter the same is not good per curiam if it be of the Chapter Lands And in Adams and W●o●●stey's Case Harris Serjeant observed That the Lease is said to be made by the Abbot and Covent and it is not pleaded to be made by the Abbot with the assent of the Covent Mich. 11 Iacobi In the Common Pleas. 301 The Dean and Canons of Winsor and WEBB's Case IN this Case it was holden by the Court That if a man give Lands unto Dean and Canons and to their Successors and they be dissolved or unto any other Corporations that the Donor shall have back the Lands again for the same is a condition in Law annexed to the Gift and in such Case no Writ of
in the Kings Bench is Judicium affirmetur stet in pleno robore effectu And it is not as the Judgment is in 20 E. 4 44. Judicium stet in aeternum And so that not being the fundamental Judgment the Reversal thereof is but the beginning of another suit 38 H. 6. 3. And admit that the VVrit of Error be a Supersedeas for the second Judgment yet it is a Question whether it shall be for the first which is not touched by the VVrit And whether they may grant Execution upon it or not Vide 13 E. 4. 4 43 E. 3. 3. 8 H. 7. 20. And therefore the Court advised Sir Christopher Heydon to sue unto the Kings Majesty by Petition to have a new Writ of Error for without Petition he cannot have the Writ 32 E. 3 1. 8 E 2. Error 88. And the Justices gave him warning to do it in time convenient otherwise they would award Execution if they did perceive the same to be meerly for delay according to the Cases in 6 H 7. 8 ● 7. And afterwards the Parliament being upon a sudden dissolved without any thing done therein Execution was awarded Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 346. BLITHMAN and MARTIN's Case IOhn Blithman brought an Action upon the Case against Martin upon an Assumpsit and recovered And it was moved That because the Consideration which was the Cause of the Action was against Law that the Judgment might be stayed For the Plaintiffe did alleadge the same to be in consideration That if the Plaintiff being Goaler of such a Prison in Dev●nshire would deliver one who was in Execution for Debt he promised to give him Twenty pounds And he alleadged in facto that he did deliver him the Debt not being satisfied And because the Consideration was to do a thing which was against the Law the opinion of the Court was that it was void and that the Plaintiffe should not have Judgment Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 347. SHERLOE's Case SHerloe brought an Action of Assault and Battery and declared Quod eum the Defendant verberavit And did not shew certain nor alleadge precisely in his Declaration That the Defendant did beat him Exception was taken unto it For there is a difference betwixt a Declaration in an Ejectione Firme Debt and this Action for in those Actions such Declaration is good but not in this Action And to prove the same one Sheriffe and Bridges Case in 39 Eliz. was cited where such Declaration was adjudged void But yet the opinion of the Justices was That the Declaration was good enough notwithstanding the said Judgment in 39 Eliz. Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 348. GRUBE's Case IT was moved in Arrest of Judgment upon issue joyned inter Mathiam Grub and in the Venire facias he was called Matheum Grub. And Cook Chief Justice said That the Venire facias was vitious but because that the Jury did appear upon the Habeas Corpora the Trial was well enough Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 349. CROOK and AVERIN's Case CRook Merchant brought an Action upon the Case against Averine for speaking these words viz. Mr. Crook came into Cornwal with a blue Coat but now he hath gotten much wealth by trading with Pirats and by cosening by tale of Pilchers and by Extortion And Cook Chief Justice said That the Law giveth no favour to those verbal Actions and we see there is not any such Action brought in our old Law-books And therefore he said Words ought to be certain And he examined the words in this Case by themselves and said That the first words are not actionable because they are not material And the other words by trading with Pyrats are too general for an honest man might trade with a Pyrate not knowing him to be a Pyrate and so no damage might come to him But as to the other words he gave no opinion Pasch 12 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 350. CLAYDON Sir JEROM HORSEY's Case CLaydon brought an Action upon the Case against Sir Jerom Horsey for erecting of a house in a certain place called Risborough Common and alleadged in certain That every one who had Common in Risborough pred c. and did not alleadge That the Common is in the Mannor of Risborough But he declared That there is such a Custome within the Mannor of Risborough And the opinion of the Court was That the Declaration was good because there is but one Risborough alleadged and therefore of necessity it must be meant de Manerio Pasch 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 351. The CLOTHWORKERS of IPSWICH Case THe Masters and Wardens of the Clothworkers of Ipswich in the County of Suffolk brought an Action of Debt for 3l. 13s. 4d. against D. and declared That the King who now is had incorporated them by the same name c. And had granted unto them by Charter Quod nullus exerceat artem sive occupationem in aliqua shoppa domo sive camera infra villam predict of a Clothworker or Tailor nisi ante eos vel duos eorum probationem faceret quod Apprentic fuit per spacium 7 annorum per eos sive duos eorum sit approbat sub paena 3l. 13s. 4d. pro qualibet septimana qua exerceat predict artem contra hanc constitutionem And layed in facto That the Defendant had used the Trade of a Tailor for the space c. against c. The Defendant pleaded That he was retained in service with one Mr. Pennel Gen of Ipswich and had been an Apprentice for the space of seven years in tali loco c. And that he made garments for his said Master and his wife and their children infra c. quae quidem exercitio est eadem exercitio artis which is supposed by the Plaintiffs in their Declaration Upon which the Plaintiffs did demur in Law Goldsmith for the Plaintiffs That the Plea in Bar is void For every Plea in Bar ought to confesse and avoid traverse or deny that which is alleadged in the Plaintiffs Declaration But this Plea in Bar had not done any of them and therefore was void For the exercising of the Trade which he hath confessed in his Bar cannot be intended the same matter with which the Plaintiffs have charged him in their Declaration and therefore it is no good bar at all And to prove the same vide 14 H. 6. 2. 35 H. 6. 53. 12 H. 7. 24. 27 H. 8. 2. Sir Robert Hitcham for the Defendant And he held that the matter is well confessed and avoided because that usage which he hath confessed in the Bar is colourable the same usage with which the Plaintiffs have charged him in their Declaration As in a Writ of Maintenance the Defendant saith That he was of Councel with the party being a Serjeant at Law c. which is the same Maintenance which is supposed by the Plaintiffe vide 28 H. 6. 7. 12. 19 H.
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
the Court of York the Plaintiffe had Judgment that the Defendant should accompt And upon that Judgment the Defendant in the Court there brought a Writ of Error in the Kings Bench. And it was adjudged That no Writ of Error lay in that case because the Judgment to Accompt is but the Conveyance and the Plaintiffe hath not any benefit until he be satisfied by the Award of the Auditors for upon their Award the final Judgment shall be given Mich. 12 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 357. The Bishop of SALISBURY's Case IT was holden in this Case That if a Bishop Parson or other Ecclesiastical person do cut down Trees upon the Lands unless it be for Reparations of their Ecclesiastical houses and do or suffer to be done any delapidations That they may be punished for the same in the Ecclesiastical Court and a Prohibition will not lie in the Case and that the same is a good cause of deprivation of them of their Ecclesiastical Livings and Dignities But yet for such Wastes done they may be also punished by the Common Law if the party will sue there Vide 2 H. 4. 3. Trin. 13 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 358. PRAT and the Lord NORTH'S Case A Man was distreined by the Bailiffe of the Lord North for 20s. imposed upon him in the Court-Leet for the erecting and storing of a Dove-Cote And it was said That it cannot properly be called a Nusance but for the destroying of Corn which cannot be but at certain times of the year And therefore it was conceived That the party who was presented might traverse the Nusance to be with his Pidgeons and it was said that a man might keep Pidgeons within his new house all the year or put them out at such a time as they could not destroy the corn And Cook Chief Justice said That there is not any reason that the Lord should have a Dove-Cote more then the Tenant and he asked the Question where the Statute of E. 2. saith Inquiratur de Dove-Cotes erected without Licence Who should give the Licence Ad quod non fuit responsum In Mich. Term following the Case was argued by Damport who said That the erecting of a Dove-Cote by a Freeholder was no Nusance For a Writ of Right lieth of a Dove-Cote and in the Register it is preferred and named before Land Garden c. But he said that there was a fatal defect in the Plea which was That the Presentment at the Leet was That Prat had erected a Dove-Cote unlawfully and did not say ad commune nocumentum as it ought to be otherwise it is not presentable in the Leet And therefore although it was otherwise in the Plea That it was ad commune nocumentum the same did not help the defective Presentment Mich. 10 Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 359. GREENWAY and BARKER's Case BEtwixt Greenway and Barker It was moved for a Prohibition to the Court of Admiralty and the Cause was for taking of a Recognisance in which the Principal and his Sureties his heirs goods and lands were bounden And it was in the nature of an Execution at the common-Common-Law and thereupon they in the Admiral Court made out a Warrant to arrest the body of the Defendant there Dodderidge Serjeant said That it was not a Recognisance at the Common-Law but only a Stipulation in the nature of a Bail at the Common-Law and he said That it was the usual course to pledge goods there in Court to answer the party if sentence were given against him Nichols Serjeant They cannot take a Recognisance and by the Civil Law if the party render his body the Sureties are discharged and Execution ought to be only of the goods for the ship is only arrested and the Libel ought to be only against the ship and goods and not against the party 19 H. 6. acc ' And afterwards Dr. Steward and Dr. James were desired by the Court to deliver their opinions what the Civil Law was in this Case and Doctor Steward said He would not rest upon the Etymologie of the word for if it be a Recognisance Bail or Stipulation it is all one in the Civil Law and in such case he said by their Law Execution might be against the sureties And he argued 1. That ex necessitate it must be agreed that there is an Admiral Court 2. That that Court hath a Jurisdiction And by a Statute made in Henry the 8. time and by another in the time of Queen Elizabeth divers things as Appeals c. were triable by the Civil Law And he said That every Court hath his several form of proceedings and in every Court that form is to be followed which it hath antiently used And as to the proceedings he said That first they do arrest the goods 2. That afterwards the party ought to enter Caution which is not a Bond but only a Surety or Security which doth bind the parties And he said That the word Haeredes was necessary in the Instrument For for the most part the Sureties were strangers And he said That Court took no notice of the word Executors and therefore the word Haeredes is used which extends as well to Executors and Administrators as to Heirs And he said That upon a Judgment given in the Court of Admiraltie they may sue forth an Execution of it in forein parts as in France c. And he said That if Contracts be made according to other Laws the same must be tryed according to the Law of that Country the Contract is made Dr. James said That in the same Court there are two manners of proceedings 1 The Manner 2 the Customs of the Court are to be observed And he said that Stipulation ought to be in the Court by coertion which word is derived à stipite by which the party is tyed as he said as a Bear to the stake or as Vlisses to the Mast of the ship And he said In a Judicial stipulation four things are considerable 1 The Judicial Sistem 2. Reparratum habere 3. Judicatum solvere 4. De expensis solvendis as appeareth in Justinians Institutes cap de Satisdationibus For Satisdatio and Stipulatio are all one in the Civil Law And after Cook Chief Justice said That it ought to be confessed that there hath been a Court of Admiralty 2. That their proceedings there ought to be according to the Civil Law And he observed four things 1. The Necessity of the Court 2. The Antiquity of it 3. The Law by which they proceed and lastly the Place to which they are confined And as to the necessity of the Court he said That the Jurisdiction of that Court ought to be maintained by reason of Trade and Traffique betwixt Kingdom and Kingdom for Trade and Traffique is as it were the life of every Kingdom 2. A mans life is in danger by reason of traffique and Merchants venture all their estates and therefore it is but reasonable that they have a place for the trial of
puisne or the lesser Debt and although the Debtor be able and sufficient to pay both Debts viz. the Kings Debt and the Debt owing to the Subject yet the Kings Debt is to be first paid Now to apply these cases to the Case in question Here is a Subject who is indebted to the King And I say That the Lands which such a Debtor hath in his power and dispose although he hath not any Estate in the Lands shall be liable to pay the Debt to the King And I say That Sir Christopher Hatton had a Fee in the Mannors and Lands in this case And although he did convey them bona fide yet untill his death by reason of the Proviso of Revocation they were extendable Trin. 24. E. 3. Rot. 4. Walter de Chirton Customer who was indebted to the King for the Customs purchased Lands with the Kings monies and caused the Feoffor of the Lands to enfeoffe certain of his friends with an intent to defraud and deceive the King and notwithstanding he himself took the profits of the Lands to his own use And those Lands upon an Inquisition were found and the values of them and retorned into the Exchequer and there by Judgment given by the Court the Lands were seized into the Kings hands to remain there untill he was satisfied the Debt due unto him And yet the Estate of the Lands was never in him But because he had a power viz. by Subpena in Chancery to compell his Friends to settle the Estate of the Lands upon him therefore they were chargeable to the Debt You will say perhaps there was Covin in that Case But I say that neither Fraud Covin nor Collusion is mentioned in the Report in Dyer 160. C. 11. par 92. And that Case was a harder Case then our Case is For Walter de Chirton in that Case was never seised of the said lands But in our Case Sir Christopher Hatton himself had the lands And when he had the lands he was assured of the Office although he had not the possession of it For he was sure that no other could have it from him and no other could have it but himself And for another cause our Case is a stronger Case then the Case of Walter de Chirton For Chirton had no remedy in Law to have the lands but his remedy was only in a Court of Equity and a remedy in Consc ' onely But in our Case Sir Christopher Hatton had a time in which he might let the land to passe and yet he had a power to pull it back again at his pleasure So as he had the disposition of it but before the alteration of the uses he dyed And if he had been living being indebted to the King the King might have extended the lands because that then he had the possession of them There were two Considerations which moved Sir Christopher Hatton to Convey the Lands the first was honorable viz. For the payment of his Debts the second was natural viz. For the preferment of his Children Although the Conveyance of the Lands for payment of his Debts was but for years yet the same was too short like unto a Plaister which is too short for the sore For the Covenanters were not his Executors and so they were not liable to Debts And although he be now dead and cannot revoke the former uses yet he had the power to revoke the uses during his life And so he was chargeable for the Debt due to the King Tanfield Chief Baron agreed with Justice Dodderidge in all as before And he said That all powerful and speedy courses are given unto the King for the getting in of his Revenues and therefore he said he had the said Prerogatives as have been recited And in 25 E. 3. in libro rubro in the Exchequer there the Foundations of the said Prerogatives do appear If a common person arrest the body in Execution he shall not resort to the lands contr to Blumfields Case C. 5. par The course of the Exchequer makes a Law every where for the King If any Officer be indebted unto the King and dyeth the course of the Exchequer is For to call in his Executors or the Heir or the Terre-Tenants to answer the Debt and if he hath no lands then a Writ issueth out of the Exchequer to know what goods he had and to whose hands they be come All Inquisitions concerning Lands in the like Cases are Habuit vel seisitus and not that he was seised onely The word Habuit is a large word and in it is contained a disposing power But in this Case Sir Christopher Hatton had a power every day to revoke the uses And when he had once revoked them then was he again as before seisitus 7 H. 6. in the Exchequer the Kings Farmor had Feoffees to his use and dyed indebted to the King And upon an Inquisition it was found that Habuit for he had them in his power by compelling his Feoffees by Equity in Chancery and therefore it was adjudged that the King should have the Lands in the Feoffees hands in extent But in this case Sir Christopher Hatton might have had the Lands in him again without compulsion by a Court of Equity for that he had power to revoke the uses in the Conveyance at his pleasure Mich. 30. H. 6. rot in the Exchequer A Clark of the Court was assigned to receive monies for the King who had Feoffees of lands to his use And the lands were found and seised for the Kings monies by force of the word Habuit 32 H. 6. Philip Butler's Case who was Sheriffe of a County being indebted to the King his Feoffees were chargeable to the Kings debt by force of the word Habuit For habuit the lands in his power 6 E. 4. Bowes Case acc ' 34 H. 6. A widow being indebted to the King her Feoffees were chargeable to pay the Kings debt because she had power of the lands It being found by Inquisition that habuit 1 R. 3. the like Case And 24 Eliz. in Morgan's Case it was adjudged That lands purchased in the names of his Friends for his use were extended for a debt due by him to the King Hobart Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas argued to the same purpose and agreed with the other Justices and he said in this case it was not material whether the Inquisition find the Deed to be with power of Revocation For he said that the Land is extended and that the extent remains good untill it be avoided And he said that a revocable Conveyance is sufficient to bind the Parties themselves but not to bind the King but the Lands are lyable into whose hands soever they come When a man is said to forfeit his body it is not to be intended his life but the freedom of his body Imprisonment At the Common Law a Common person could neither take the bodie nor the Lands in Execution But yet at the Common Law
Cestuy que use when he entreth and maketh a Lease he hath no reversion nor shall punish waste And as it is in the Creation so is it in the Continuance 4 H. 7. 18. If Cestuy que use for life or in tail maketh a Lease for life it is warranted during his own life by the Statute of 1 R. 3. but if Tenant for life at the Common Law maketh a Feoffment or a lease for life there the first Lessor ought to avoid this forfeiture by entrie and it is not void by the death of the second Lessor viz. the Tenant for life 27 H. 8. 23. A Feme Covers is Cestuy que use the husband maketh a Feoffment and dieth the Feoffment is void by his death Br. Feoffments to Uses 48. If Cestuy que use for life levieth a fine it is no forfeiture but good by the Statute of 1 R. 3. during his own life And if in such case Proclamations pass there needeth no claim nor entrie within five years but the Law is contrarie of Tenant for life by the Common Law for if Tenant for life at the Common Law levieth a fine it is a forfeiture Dyer 57. Cestuy que use for life or in tail maketh a Lease for life the Lease is determined by the death of Cestuy que use and the Lessee is become Tenant at sufferance but a Lease for life by Tenant for life at the Common Law is not determined by the death of Lessee for life who was Lessor and his Tenant is tenant for life and not at sufferance as in the Case before and the first Lessor ought to avoid it by entrie Br. Feoffments to Uses 48. A Recovery by Cestuy que use in tail or in fee is ended by his death By these Cases appears a main difference betwixt the validitie of a Feoffment by Cestuy que use and the Feoffment at the Common Law The Statute of 27 H. 8. of Uses doth not execute Uses which are in abeyance C. 1. part Chudleigh's Case 9 H. 6. by the Common Law the Devise to an Enfant in ventre samier is good but by the Statutes of 32 and 34 H. 8. of Wills such a Devise is not good for the Statute Law doth not provide for the putting of lands in abeyance By the Statute of 1 R. 3. All Feoffments and Releases c. shall be good and effectual to those to whom they are made to their uses And this Feoffment in our Case was not made to a man in Nubibus Cestuy que use by this Statute of 1 R. 3. makes a lease for years the remainder over to the right heirs of I. S. the remainder is not good for the Statute doth not put it in abeyance for the remainder ought to be limited to one in esse 21 H. 8. cap. 4. giveth power to Executors to sell that Executor who proveth the Will shall sell and when he selleth if he have any right to the land the right of the said Executor is not gone by that Statute So if Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts sell the Lands of the Bankrupt and one of the Commissioners hath right to the land so sold his right is not extinct And so in this Case the Statute limits what shall pass Upon the Statute of ●3 Eliz. cap. 4. which makes the lands of Receivers liable for their debts if the King selleth the right of the Accomptant passeth but not the Kings right 17 E. 3. 60. An Abbot having occasion to go beyond the Seas made another Abbot his Procurator to present to such Benefices which became void in his absence That Abbot presents in the name of him who made him Procurator to one of his own Advowsons the right of his own Advowson doth not pass but yet it is an usurpation of the Abbot which went beyond sea to that Church What is the nature of this right All rights are not gi●en away by Feoffments at the Common Law Lit. 672. Land is given unto husband and wife in tail the husband maketh a Feoffment and takes back an Estate to him and his wife both of them are remitted Which Case proveth that the husband hath left in himself a right notwithstanding the Feoffment 41 E. 3. 17. 41 Ass 1. John at Lee's Case So at the Common Law a Feoffment doth not give away all the right This right doth stick so fast in the issue as the Statute of West 2. cap. 1. can back it unto him 2 E. 3. 23. 22 E. 3. 18. At the Common Law if Tenant in tail had offered to levie a fine the Judges ought not to receive it but ought to have refused it if it had appeared unto them that the Conusor was Tenant in tail the same was before the Statute of 4 H. 7. which gave power to Tenant in tail to levie a fine for the Statute of West 2. Cap. 1. saies Quod finis sit nullus 2. E. 2. age 77. 2 E. 3. 33. 3 E. 3. 1. 24 E 3. 25. If Donee in tail levie●h a Fine yet there is no remedie against his Tenant for he shall not be compelled to attorn for that the right is in the Donor ● E. 2. Avowry 181. 48 E. 3. 8. Avowry was made upon the Donee in tail notwithstanding that he made a Feoffment and Avowry is in the realtie and right 4 E. 3. 4. 4 H. 6. 28. 10 H. 7. 14. In a Replevin ancient Demesne is a good plea because the Avowry is in the realtie The Donor shall know for homage upon the Donee after that the Donee hath made a Feoffment 7 E. 4. 28. the Donee shall do homage And Litt. 90. saith That none shall do homage but such as is seised in his own right or in the right of another 2 E. 2. Avowry 85. 7 E 54. 28. 15 E. 4. 15 Gard. 116. the issue shall be in Ward notwithstanding a Feoffment by Tenant in tail Com. 561. Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment yet the right of the tail doth remain in the Tenant in tail 21 H. 7. 40. Tenant in tail of a Rent grants the same in Fee if an Ancestor collateral releaseth with Warranty the same bindeth the Tenant in tail There is a common Rule That a Warranty doth not bind when a man hath not a right The Cases cited in C. 1. part Albonies Case where Feoffments give Rights I agree Barton and Ewers Case A man made a Feoffment of Land of which he had cause to have a Writ of Error he gave away his Writ of Error by the Feoffment I agree all those Cases for that is in Cases of Feoffments at the Common Law but in our Case the Feoffment is by the Statute of 1 R. 3. In our Case there is Jus habendi possedendi recuperandi It is like unto a plant in Winter which seemeth to be dead yet there is in it anima vegitativa which in due time brings forth fruit So the right in our Case is not given away nor is it in abeyance
Commission was to A. B. and the Sheriff cuilibet eorum The Supplicavit was delivered to the two Iustices who took a Recognizance from L. but M. N. could not be found The Sheriffe was afterwards out of his Office because his year of Sheriffwick expired The new Sheriffe made a Retorn That M. N. non sunt inventi in balliva mea And also Retorned That A. B. had taken a Recognizance of L. as appeareth per quandam schedulam huic annex in haec verba c. This Case was argued and 21 H. 7. 20. 21. vouched That if the Writ be first delivered to the Sheriffe then he only is for to execute the Writ and retorn the Supplicavit But if it be first delivered to the Iustices then they ought to execute it and retorn it 9 E. 4. 31. A Supplicavit is a Iudicial Writ and cannot be executed by a Deputy but a Ministerial Writ may be executed by a Deputy In this case the succeeding Sheriffe did retorn the Writ and it was not directed unto him And the same being delivered to the Chancellor whether the same should be a Record or not was the Question 4 H. 7. 17. Debt was brought upon an Obligation The Kings Serjeant prayed the Bond for the King because that the Plaintiffe was a person Outlawed Bryan Iustice You ought to bring a Writ of Detinue to recover the Bond which is a legal course for the King And so in this case here is no Record for the King because the Recognizance comes not in by a legal course viz. a lawful Retorn for it was retorned by the new Sheriffe and also by him who did not execute the Commission Heath said cleerly There was no Record for the King and vouched 21 H. 7. 20 21. Note the whole Case there 1. Where it is said In casu superiori ipse Justiciarius qui primo illud breve de Supplicavit recepit tota executione ejusdem Brevis tantummodo tenetur reliqui sociorum suorum tangent dictum Breve exonerentur Justiciarius hanc recipiens nomine suo proprio illud retornabit And in our Case it was directed to the Sheriffe and Iustices and being delivered to the Iustices the Sheriffe had not to do to make Certificate of it and in this case he is but as a private man This suit is a Scire facias to have Execution upon the said Recognizance A Dedimus potestatem is directed to two and one of them doth execute it the other cannot certifie it for the Execution of it ought to be upon his own knowledge A Record taken by one cannot be certified by another for if it be it is not any Record upon which a Scirefacias can be awarded In our Case the Justices made the Record and the Sheriffe did certifie it Ley Chief Justice When the Recognizance is put to writing or Notes of Remembrance taken of the Recognizance before the Commissioners it is immediately a Record One takes Notes of a Recognizance and dyeth He to whose hands the Notes come may certifie the same for it is a perfect Record by the taking of the Notes of Remembrance But that is to be understood when no Writ is directed to Commissioners but when a Justice takes is In our Case the Sheriffe may retorn the Writ ex officio and also retorn That executio istius brevis patet in quadam schedula annexa And it doth not appear but that the now Sheriffe was at the Execution of this Commission But admit that he was not yet now the Writ being retorned into the Chancery your pleading and taking issue upon another matter hath made it a good Record And therefore I hold that the Judgment ought to be given for the King according to the Verdict Haughton Justice Judgment cannot be for King If the Record doth not come duly into the Chancery according to course of Law it is not any Record upon which there can be any Procution If a Judge take a Fine and dyeth before it be certified a Certiorari ought to be directed to the Executors of the Judge v. 2 H. 7. 10. but the Certiorari ought not to be to a stranger If two Iustices of Peace have Commission to take a Recognizance and one of them taketh it and dyeth the Certiorari must be to his Executors and not to the other Iustice In this Case the Record came into the Chancery by undue course The Commission was several Cuilibet eorum and those who took upon them the Execution thereof are now made Officers by the express words of the Writ and it is not so here retorned and therefore Iudgment ought to be against the King A Dedimus potestatem is directed to four to take a Fine of Lands in several Counties Two of them take it in one County and they certifie it and the two other take it in another County and they certifie it None of the Certificates are good Dodderidge Iustice Iudgment ought to be against the King There are two Questions in the Case 1. Whether the Sheriffe as this Case is may onely make the Retorn 2. Admitting that he cannot but the same being retorned and the Chancery accepting of it and sending it to this Court whether we can damn the Record 1. This is a special Recognizance upon the grievance of the party and by the Kings Commission they are made especial Iudges in this case And when the party who sues delivers the same to the two Justices the Sheriff cannot entermeddle therewith for then the Justices ought to retorn the Recognizance by vertue of that Commission 21 H. 7. 20 21. there the Case is direct in the point That they to whom the Writ is first delivered they only are to execute it and retorn it for they only have power by vertue of the special Commission The Writ was against three and two of them are not to be found The Sheriff cannot retorn Non sunt inventi for the two by force of this Commission and he is not to make his Retorn as a Minister or Officer to the other because the Writ is Judicial If a Challenge be to the Sheriff and Coroners and process is directed to Esliors they are to execute the process as particular Officers by vertue of the Writ and they are to retorn the same and not the Sheriff because their authority is by vertue of a special Writ To the 2. point it hath been said That the Record is in the Chancery and the partie hath pleaded to it to issue and it is now sent into this Court and now fault is found with it but not before Though all this be so yet we cannot accept of it here if it have not due proceedings If process be directed to the Coronors for Challenge to the Sheriff and then a new Sheriff is made against whom there is no cause of challenge yet the Coronors must execute and finish the process and not the new Sheriff for the Law will not endure that Offficers do
and for these causes he prayed Judgment for the Defendant Observe Reader the Argument of Calthrope he doth not speak to the point where part of the thing or Contract is upon the Sea and part upon the Land as it was urged by Andrews who argued on the other side The Case was adjourned Pasch 3 Caroli rot 362. in the Kings Bench. 475. IT was cited to be adjudged That if a man purchase the next Avoidance of a Church with an intent to present his son and afterwards he present him that it is Symony within the Statute Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 476. SUTTON the Chancellor of Gloucester's Case IN the Case of Sutton who was Chancellor of Gloucester and put out of his place for insufficiency in the Ecclesiastical court Trotman moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court and said that the Bishop had power to make his Chancellor and he only hath the Examination of him and the allowance of him as it is in the Case of a Parson who is presented to the Bishop and said that if his sufficiency should be afterwards reexamined it would be very perilous Doddridg Justice If an Office of Skill be granted to one for life who hath no skill to execute the Office the grant is void and he hath no Frank-tenement in it A Prohibition is for two causes First to give to us Jurisdiction of that which doth belong unto us And secondly when a thing is done against the Law and in breach of the Law then we use to grant a Prohibition Jones Justice Brook had a grant of the Office of a Herald at Arms for life and the Earl Marshal did suspend him from the execution of his Office because he was ignorant in his profession and full of Error contrary to the Records and it was the opinion of the Justices that because he was ignorant in such his Office of Skill that he had no Freehold in the Office In the Principall Case the Prohibition was denyed And afterwards Sutton was put out of his Office by Sentence in the Spiritual Court for his insufficiency Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 477. SYMM'S Case TWo men having speech together of John Symms and William Symms one of them said The Symmses make Half-crown peeces and John Symms did carrie a Cloak-bag full of clippings And whether the Action would lie was the Question because it was incertain in the person For he did not say these Symmses but The Symmses Like unto the Case where one Farrer being slain and certain persons being Defendants in the Star-Chumber one having speech of them said These Defendants did murder Farrer and it was adjudged that the Action would not lie for two causes First because the words These was uncertain in the person And secondly it was incertain in the thing For it might be that they had Authority to do it as in Mills Case 13 Jac. in the Kings Bench Thou hast Coyned Gold and art a Coyner of Gold Thirdly a Cloakbag of clippings that is also uncertain for it might be clippings of Wooll or other things or it might be clippings of Silver from the Goldsmith For the Goldsmith that maketh Plate maketh clippings And fourthly It is not shewed any certain time when the words were spoken And for these causes it was adjudged that the Action would not lie Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 478. WHITTIE and WESTON'S Case AN Action of Debt was brought upon the Statute of 2 E. 6. and the Plaintiff declared That at the time of the Action brought he was Parson of Merrel and that Weston the Defendant did occupie such Lands and sowed them with corn Anno 21 Jac. and that he did not fet forth his Tythe-corn c. The Defendant pleaded in barr of the Action That W. W. Prior of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem was of the Order of Hospitalers c. and that he held the said Lands free from the payment of Tythes and that the Priory came by the Statute of 32. H. 8. to the King By vertue of which Statute the King was seised thereof and that the same descended to Queen Elizabeth who granted the Lands unto Weston to hold as amply as the late Prior held and that he was seised of the Lands by vertue of that grant Et propriis manibus suis excolebat Upon this Plea the Plaintiff did demurr in Law Noy argued for the Plantiff There are three points in the Case First If these Lands the possessions of the Hospitalers of St John which they held in their own hands were discharged of Tythes Secondly If there be any thing in the Statute of 32 H. 8. by which the Purchasor of the King should be discharged Thirdly Admitting that it shall be a discharge if the Defendant hath well entitled himself to such discharge or Priviledg First it is not within the Statute of 31 H. 8 cap. 13. for that Statute did not extend to the Order of St John Secondly the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap. 13. doth not discharge any but what was then dissolved Thirdly The Statute of 32 H. 8 cap. 24. gives the possessions of the Hospitalers of St Johns to the King and not the Statute of 31 H. 8. Note that the Defendant did recite the branch of the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap 13. That as well the King his heirs and successors as all and every such person and persons their heirs and assignes which have or hereafter shall have any Monasterie c. or other Religious or Ecclesiastical houses or places shall hold c according to their Estates and Titles discharged and acquitted of the payment of Tythes as freely and in as large and ample manner as the said Abbots c. had or used Also he recited the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 7 which Enacts that none shall pay Tythes who by Law Statute or Priviledg ought to be discharged The Statute of 31 H. 8. recites that divers Abbies c. and other Religious and Ecclesiastical houses and places have been granted and given up to the King The Statute ena●ts that the King shall have in possession for ever all such late Monasteries c. and other Religious houses and places c. And also enacts that the King shal have not only the said Monasteries c. but also all other Monasteries c. and all other Religious and Ecclesiastical houses which hereafter shall happen to be dissolved suppressed renounced relinquished forfeited given up or by any other means come to the King and shall be deemed adjudged vested by Authority of this present Parliament in the very actual possession and seisin of the King for ever in the state and condition they now be Vi. The Statute And shall have all priviledges c. in as ample manner and form as the late Abbots c. had held or occupied c. The Question then is Whether the men of the Hospital of St John at Jerusalem are intended to be within 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