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A21071 The lavves resolutions of womens rights: or, The lavves prouision for woemen A methodicall collection of such statutes and customes, with the cases, opinions, arguments and points of learning in the lavv, as doe properly concerne women. Together with a compendious table, whereby the chiefe matters in this booke contained, may be the more readily found. Edgar, Thomas, lawyer.; Doddridge, John, Sir, 1555-1628.; I. L. 1632 (1632) STC 7437; ESTC S100217 253,135 400

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learning he insisteth vpon his Writt of Consultation adding that if he die which made the promise the other may sue in Court Christian against the Executor or Executors of Executors 22. ass pla 70. is thus vpon Contract had betwixt two men that if one of them will marry the others Daughter hee shall haue ten pound c. the ten pound after Marriage must be demanded in the Kings Court because the promise was not with his Daughter in Marriage but by Couenant that he should c. But if he had promised the money with his Daughter in Marriage it must haue béene demanded in Court Christian And if a man promise vpon his faith to pay ten pound the Ordinarie cannot compell him to pay it but he may enioyne corporall penance vnlesse the promiser will voluntarily redéeme it Thus teacheth Iustice Thorpe in declaration of the Statute of circumspecte agatis 45. Ed. 3. fo 24. The Demandant declares vpon a couenant betwixt him and the Defendant that if he married the Daughter of the defendant hee should haue an hundred pound c. It was moued that this demand of debt vpon a Couenant concerning Matrimony was not good but the matter concerned the Court Christian per articulos cleri Notwithstanding because the demand was vpon a déed and a written déed maketh a lay couenant the defendant was compelled to answer But 14. of Ed. 4. fo 6. in an action of debt the Plaintiffe declares that he had married the Defendants daughter vpon agréement of twenty pound to be paid c. and all the Iudges of the common pleas without tarrying the Defendants answer awarded que le plaint prist rieu person brief for the demand is say they of the same nature with the espousals viz. ius spirituale and determinable no where but in Court Christian and yet the Booke of assises was there remembred 15. Ed. 4. fo 32. the plaintiffe in a Writt of debt demanding fiue markes declares vpon a couenant quod not● for fiue pound where he had marryed c. and 33. pound fiue shillings foure pence was paid but the residue being 5. Marks the defendant denyed to pay yet I care not saith Catesoy though he be discharged for I know well enough that vpon such a matter the action lieth not at common Law quod fui● concessum per curiam And the cause alledged was that there was not quid for quo 17. Ed. 4. fo 5. The master of the Rowles asketh the Iustices of the Common pleas if a man promise money to another to marry his daughter or seruant which marrieth her accordingly whether an action of debt will lye at the common Law or no No saith Townsend for it is but a nude promise of no more effect then if I promise you 20. pound to build you a new Chamber and ex nudo pacto non oritur actio But if I promise you sixe shillings euery wéeke for the bording of I. S. here is quid for quo for law intendeth here that I haue aduantage and profit by the seruice of I. S. But further in your case the thing that is to bee done is spirituall which cannot bee sold neither can the party be compelled to doe it Rogers and Siliard were contrary to him in opinion That a promise vpon Marriage is no ●●dum pactum because the daughter cousin or friend is by intendment aduanced And if I promise a Schoole-master money to teach my childe he shall haue action of Debt Likewise if I promise a Surgeon money to heale a poore mans wound or a Labourer money to mend a high-way But in the end Choke Little●on agréed with the Master of the Rowles that in the case by him propounded none action lyeth at common Law because Matrimony whereupon the promise is founded is a thing spirituall and by no manner of meanes vendable 19. Ed. 4. fo 10. in an action of debt brought vpon such a bargaine Collow saith it is true a man must demand a woman contracted to him in the spirituall Court but money is a temporall thing And when a Parson of a Church is to recouer tythes he must sue in Court Christian but if he sell his tythes when they be seuered hee shall sue for the money in the Kings Court but then and afterward in the same or like case 20. of Ed. 4. fo 3. Bryan asketh him then to what end serueth the Statute that things touching Matrimony and Testaments must be tryed in Courts Christian cui des vous quam vous purres achate les Sacraments Sir saith Neale dismes are a thing spirituall but if a Parson of a Church lease his Tythes hee must sue for the rent in a temporall Court and Collow stands to it that per emptionem venditionem res spirituales efficiuntur temporales he neuer spake a truer word in his life Out of these opinions consorting together like harpe and harrow may be gathered this sure learning That hee which will wed shall doe well and according to the Statute of circumspecte agatis to take as much as he can of his wiues marriage money before hand with faire Indentures or good obligation for the residue And by the aboue-said Bookes as also by M. Plowden in that case he may haue action of debt for euery déed sealed and deliuered carrieth sufficient consideration to wit the will of him that made it Concerning the old scruple though money be a visible signe of inuisible grace Sacramentall and Spirituall specially if it be in Angels yet I trust it is not more spirituall then the woman her selfe with whom it is promised And as there is no question made but a man may sue in Court Christian for his lawfull wife vnlawfully taken and witholden vpon which suite if a prohibition be granted a consultation may be had for procéedings quatenus p●r restitutione vxoris duntaxat prosequitur c. So by Fitzherbert in his Writt of Consultation an Action may be brought at Common Law de vxore abducta cum bonis viri or an action of trespasse for taking onely of the Wife But for a cleare proofe that in these promissions of money vpon Marriage neither the money is any Ghost nor the promise any nudum pactum Sée the case 10. Eliz. Dyer 272. An Action of the Case was brought vpon promise of twenty pound made to the Plaintiffe in consideration that at speciall Instance and request of the Defendant he had married his Cousin this was a good cause of action in the Queenes Court although the Marriage were celebrated and perfected before the assumption because the Nuptialls did ensue the Defendants request And as Lands may bee giuen in Franke marriage after the Espousals and yet the Espousals be cause and consideration of the gift so may money be promised after Espousals and yet the Espousals be cause of the promise But Reader be not confident of the Law in that Case of Dyer for I haue séene a report of a Case betwéene Sandill Plaintiffe and
de peccatis for the heire could not be bastardized when the parents both or one of them were dead and therefore not citable to appeare c. And it is holden strongly by Thorpe 39. Edw. 3. and in the Parliament 24. H. 8. see Brooke titulo Bastardie 23. 37. 44. 47. And a diuorce cannot bee had but of a marriage consisting and not yet by death dissolued for there cannot wel be a reuersing of any diuorce when the parties diuorced be dead as Brooke vnderstandeth Connings by 12. H. 7. 22. for saith he it was adiudged in Co●bers case where the baron and feme had issue and afterward were diuorced the baron taking another wife by whom he had issue and died that when the first issue sued in spirituall Court to reuerse the diuorce and bastardize the second issue after his fathers death a prohibition lay But it was said that the title and discent were comprised in the libell or else the prohibition could not haue beene granted Thus saith Brooke titulo Deraignment But titulo Bastardy 47. hee setteth downe the same case that a man may be bastardized after the espousals wherein he was begotten and borne or by death determined Sée Sir Edw Cokes 7. report Kennes case that some diuorces dissolue the matrimony scilicet à vinculo matrimonei and bastardize the issue and ●ar●● the woman of her Dower and some à mensa Thoro which dissolueth not the marriage nor barre the wife of her Dower nor bastardize the issue And therefore if any action be brought and diuorce pleaded the cause of diuorce ought to bée shewed And there it is said that a diuorce may be repealed in the spirituall Court after the death of the parties but a suit after the death of the parties to diuorce them and to bastardize their issue may not be for that the triall of bastardy or not belongeth to the temporall Court originally if sentence doe not hinder And sée Sir Edw. Cokes Institut ca. Dower f. 33. ca. Estates upon condition fol. 181. the deriuation of the word diuorce à diuertendo or dino●●●ndo quia vir diuertitur ab vxore and sée there the seuerall causes of diuorces and how for any of them respectiuely doe extend in power and effect and in Littletons tune many diuorces were of force which the Statute of 32. H. 8 cap. 8. take away and there sée that a man may marry the sister of his first wife since that Statute By Na. br ●●l 44. in the writ of prohibition and Na. br 1●9 and Dyer 28. H. ● 1● agrée if the woman shall haue the goods not spent and that detinue lyes for them If goods be giuen in marriage with a woman shée shall recouer them in the spirituall Court after diuorce and there lyeth no prohibition ●6 Hen. 8. fol. 7. is that if the husband before diuorce had haue giuen or sold without collusion such goods as were the wiues before marriage she is without remedy for them being diuorced But if he aliened them by collusion and bring a writ of detinue for so much of them as the property may bée decerned of and for the residue money and such like shee shall sue in spirituall Court If a man which is bound to a woman by obligation marry her and they be diuorced she hath her action againe which was suspended ibid by Fitzh and Norwich But see the booke of 11. Hen. 7. 4. p Cur. contrary where the diuorce is causa praecontract ' and it is so cited Dyer 4. Mar. fol. 140. If the woman diuorced were an Inheritrix c. and the husband before diuorcement hath done waste felled her woods receiued her rents granted her wards presented to her Churches giuen away her goods none of these things past in possession executed can be reuersed or recalled But if the Inheritance it selfe were discontinued or charged or a release made of it or hir villaines manu●●itted shée shall haue remedy for these things by common Law If baron and feme Iointpurchasers de disseised and the baron release c. the wife shall haue a moiety if they bee diuorced although before there were no moieties betwixt them for the diuorce conuert that into moieties which sée Brooke title Deraignement and diuorce 32. H. 8. In Sir Edward Cokes 5. Rep. in Olands case it was holden that if a Lease bée made to baron and feme during the Couerture and the baron soweth the land and after there is a diuorce causa praecontract the baron shall ha●e the Corne and not the lessor for although the baron prefecuted the suit yet the sentence which dissolues the marriage is the iudgment-in Law and Iudicium redditur in ●●ultum And as by diuorce that which was intire may bée conuerted or diuided into moeties so by it inheritance may bee made francktenement And if baron and feme donées in taile haue issue and be diuorced now they haue but francktenement and the issue shall not inherit for it is not like here as where lands are giuen to two men or ●o a man and his mother or to a man and his daughter and to the heires of their bodies where seuerall heires shall seuerally inherit for it was neuer lawfull for them to marry 7. Hen. 4. 16. Broo● 9. in titulo Taile sée also 13. Edw. 3. titulo Deraignment If land be giuen to baron and feme in taile which be diuorced causa praecontract c. they shall hold ioyntly for terme of their liues and the land goe to the Suruiuor But by the Reporter if the gift were in franckmarriage the party which did not cause the diuorce shall haue all and agreeing to that difference is Perk. Chap. feoffement Sect. 238. and also agréeing is Sir Edw. Cokes 9. Rep. in Beamonts case 12. Assisar p. 22. Dorees in franckmarriage were diuorced at the womans suit the baron continued possession till he died and afterward the womandied the possession was adiudged to haue remained alwayes to the woman because shee neuer made any debate for it so that the man neuer had it by disseisin and agréeing to that is Plowden Wymbysses case fol. 58. Dyet 3. M. fol. 126. 19. Assisar plac 2. The Do●●e in franckmarriage wedded infra annus nubi●es sued diuorce by the barons motiue and the wiues agréement at their full age and the woman recouered all the land against her quondam husband by assise And Titulo Assise in Fitzh pla 413. 44● is this case A man of certaine tenements infeoffed his feoffor his wife in tayle the remainder to the right heires of the baron they were diuorced at the suit of her husband which kept the woman out of the lands and she brought an Assise whereby she recouered a moyty of the tenemen's by iudgement presently And propter difficultatem it was adi●rned for the other m●ity to the Commonpleas where shee had ●udgement of that also because diuorce was at the husbands s●●t As a woman may haue an Assise against her
setting it abroach but the curious learning w. is that of spirituall kindred caused either by holy Baptisme or by the blessed Chrisme and this had power impediendi Matrimonium contrahendum dirimend● matrimonium contractum yea this was such a matter that 39. Ed. 3. fo 32. Bastardie is pleaded against the Plaintiffe in assise and the cause was that the father married a woman before which Marriage he had christned ●●● which was his Wiues cousin and for this cause after and of them was dead Diuorce was sued and Iudgement thereof giuen in the spirituall Court though indéed by Iustice Thorpe and the greatest opinion in the temporall Court the Issue could not be bastardized vnlesse the Parents had beene called and the Nuptials destroyed by sentence which was now impossible to doe for death had determined them Out of question therefore if the parties had liued a little or no Kindred had marred great good acquaintance But howsoeuer by those dayes secular Marriage was forbidden in spirituall men and secular men were straightly prohibited by spirituall Spirituall Kindred the Statutes afore-going haue now welcomm●● Wedlocke cleane out of the Popes stockes And the 18. of Leuiticus alone doth in a manner sufficiently demonstrate with what persons Women are restricted to marry SECT XXX With what persons Women may not marry SUch are her Grand-father her Father her Sonnes Sonne c. her Brother though it be but the one part her Fathers or Mothers Brother her Brothers or Sisters Sonne or her Sonnes Sonne Brothers or Sisters Children saith Ramus in his Commentaries of Christian Religion lib. 2. ca. 9. are forbiden to inter-marry ed more non lege Diuina vel Roman● Christians he saith further which haue abrogated the Law 25. of Deuteronomy whereby a Brother might bee challenged to raise vp the house of his deceased brother haue also constituted a prohibition within certaine degrées of affinity and therefore a man may not marry with the widdow of his Grandfather or of his Father or with the widdow of his owne Sonne or of his Sonnes Sonne or with the widdow of his Brother or of his Brothers Son or of his Brothers Sonnes Sonne c. Nor with the Grand-mother Mother Daughter Neece great Aunt Aunt or Sister of his deceased wife SECT XXXII Of Wooing I Am affraid my feminine acquaintance will say I writ as I liue I talke much of Marriage but I came not forward stay a while yet I pray you I know many an honest woman more repenting her hastie Marriage ere she was w●oed then all the other sinnes that euer she committed It were good reason we speake a little of wooing but to handle that matter per genus species would take vp as much roome as the Indian figge-tree euery thrid whereof when it falleth to the ground groweth to a body I will slip by it onely obseruing that the giuing of gloues rings bracelets chains or any thing that is ex sponsaliorū largitate as a man would say of loues liberality or as a pledge of future Marriage betwixt them that are promised haue a condition silent for the most part annexed vnto them that if Matrimony doe not insue the things may be demanded backe and recouered yet there is a distinction of like for I haue authoritie in it Si sponsus dedit aliquid aliquo casu impediuntur nuptiae donatio penitus rescinditur nisi osculum intervenerit marry if he had a kisse for his money then the one halfe of that which was giuen is the womans owne good And she hath yet more fauor in the case for whatsoeuer shee gaue were there kissing or no kissing betwixt them she may aske all and haue all againe Quaere of this in the Consistorie SECT XXXII The Condiments of Loue. THere are with vs as wel as with the Ciuilians many kinds of Donations propter nuptias and some ex sponsaliorum largitate Good meats are the better for good sauce venison craueth wine and Wedlocke hath certaine Condiments which come best in season in the wooing time and serue as Breton saith pour doner fees come melier talent d'aymer Matrimonie A husband per se is a desirable thing but Donements or Feoffements c. better the stomacke though of it selfe it be good and eager And because the first Marriage made in Paradice if you marke it well had a Iointure I cannot but allow the circumspection which is had SECT XXXIII Of Franke Marriage IT was as I suppose more frequent in the old time that men gaue Lands with their Daughters in Marriage then it was at this day But now as then if a man liberally and freely without money or other considerations saue onely loue and naturall affection giue Lands of Tenements to another man with a woman which is Daughter Sister or Cousin to the Donor in Franke Marriage whether it bee tempore Matrimonij vel ante vel post this word Franke Marriage maketh an estate of Inheritance viz. to the Donees and the heyres of their two bodies and they shall hold quite of all manner of seruices except the pure fealtie till the fourth degree bee past But the Issue in the fift degree and his Descendant shall hold of the Donor and his Heyres as they hold ouer SECT XXXIV The Gift must bee Franke. PEr Rich. 16. assi p. 66. if a man giue land in Franke Marriage rendring a rent the reseruation is voyde till the fourth degree be past per Martine Iustice 4. H 6. 22. such a reseruation is méerely voyde for it is contrary to the nature of Franke Marriage By the old tenures such a reseruation is good and the Donée shall hold in Common estate taile by Brooke in his Abridgement it cannot be any estate taile for want of the parol heyres And where such a gift is made to a woman not cousin to the Donor there passeth but estate for life for it is by a maxime or ground that Franke Marriage maketh inheritance and this case is out of the principall By Bracton fo 28. 29. Si terra detur in maritagium viro cum vxore eorum haeredibus pro homagio seruitio viri licet detur in liberum maritagium qua sunt sibi ad inuicem aduersantia c. tunc prefe 〈…〉 um erit ac si donatio fieret tai● viro quam vxori he deliuereth the like learning before fo 22. and this rule withall ●x tacita conditione pacta incontinenti opposita insunt contractibus legem dant eis illos infirmant SECT XXXII The gift must be to a Woman c. IT was deliuered for a Law in tempore H. 8. that Lands cannot be giuen to a man in Frank Marriage though he be Cousin to the Donor SECT XXXVI It may be tempore Matrimonij ante vel post WHat if after the gift made the man refuse to marry the Cousin of the Donor marry else-where If two Donées in taile after the Common forme be diuorced vpon a pre-contract made by
comfort of your Husband yet a farre greater comfort the effect of Balaams desires Let me die the death of the righteons and let my end be like his SECT XV. The Husbands power in Lands which the Wife holdeth in Dower or otherwise for life THe Husbands Soueraigntie ouer his wife her goods and chattels personall or reall is no lesse then hath béen declared The dominion likewise ouer all manner of Franke Tenements his owne or his Wiues is supereminent in him during Couerture but so that he standeth well bridled from doing any thing a per luy whereby either the Dower which his wife had by a former marriage or expecteth by the present or any other estate for life or in fée can be taken from her when he● is gone If a Widdow tenant in Dower marry and her new husband surrendreth c. this is good during Couerture but if the Feme suruiue or if there be a Diuorce causa praecontractus the Feme may enter and defeate the surrender though he to whom it was made be dead and his Heyre in by descent yea and the Law differeth not heere though the Wife had ioyned with the Husband in the surrender But if Baron and Feme will surrender Lands which the wife holdeth for life by fine this shall bind the wife for the wife which is giuer shall be examined c. for no particular Tenant can surrender by fine without being named in the writt wherevpon the fine is leuied Par. 117. If a lease be made to Baron and Feme for life and the Baron make ali●nation in fee the Lessour may enter for a forfeiture and maintaine an assise if he be ousted but the Wife sur●i●ing may haue a cui in vira post mortem is by a husband disseised release all his right to the husband and afterward notwithstanding the release brings a writt of entry in nature of an Assise and recouereth against him by default the wife of the releassée shall bee indowed But if the Heyre of a disseisor being in by descent the disseisée re-enter and take a wife now a recouery against the Baron by default or reddition in a writt of entry in nature of Assise taketh away Dower from the wife for the recoueror had right according to the nature of his action and the possession which the Baron had during Couerture is destroyed But it falleth out otherwise where a man is married and then there is a disseisin descent entry and recouery vt supra If a Precipe be brought against the Baron which pleadeth misnosmer or iointenancy and it is found against him whereby the demandant recouereth this ousteth not Dower vnlesse the Demandant had right In a writt of entry in le post against the Baron hee voucheth himselfe to saue the state taile and sheweth how his father gaue him the land in taile and that the fée simple is descended vnto him and vpon a trauerse of the gift in taile it is found for the demandant which recouereth and the Baron dieth Now if so be that the Baron might well haue pleaded a release of all actions or all right of the demandant the Wife may falsifie this recouery in her writt of Dower Tenant in taile hauing Issue dieth a stranger abateth dieth his heyre entreth and takes a wife the Issue of tenant in taile arraignes an assise of Mortdancestor against the Baron which trauerseth the points of the writt and they are found against him so that the demandant recouereth and the Baron dieth It hath béene holden that the wife shall not recouer Dower heere vntill the heyre haue reuersed the verdict by attaint But it seemes saith Parkins he may falsifie the recouery in a writt of Dower maine tenant for the husband might haue pleaded to the action of the demandants writt and if the Feme which by no meanes might haue attaint must tarry till the Heyre haue defeated the verdict perhaps he will neuer sue attaint or he will release so the wife which once was intituled to dower by her husbands possession neuer defected but by his owne lachesse should lose her Dower maugre sat est which seemeth vnreasonable Yet quaere saith he for the iudgement is upon a verdict comprehending matter repugnant and contrary to that which should hee pleaded against the writt But if the demandants entry had béene congeable then out of doubt the wife had had no power of falsifying for the entry had wrought a remitter The Heyre of a Disseisor entreth taking a wife and the Disseisée in a writ of entry ad terminum qui preterit recouereth against the Baron by default the wife may falsifie this recouery in a writ of Dower But it is seldome that the demandant in Dower shall falsifie a recouery against the husband had by his lachesse in not pleading a plea which went méerely in abatement of the writt And therefore to say that the Baron might haue pleaded misnosmer or ioynt-tenancie will not serue to falsifie a recouery But if she can proue that the demandant had no right nor cause of action but iointly with a stranger which stranger by his deed shewed forth to the Court had released before commencement of suit all his right to her husband being in possession this will serue to falsifie the recouery for a moity Thus hath Parkins in his treatie of Dower at large discouered that a title neuer tryed against the Baron in his life time may be tryed by his wife when he is in his grane And so further 36. H. 6. titulo fauxifier de recouerie in Fitzherbert 15. That a woman may falsifie a recouery had against her husband by action tried but it must be in another point and not in the very same which was tried by the recouery SECT XVII Losse of Dower by the Husbands attainder HEe that hath a notable grudge against his wife and would be sure to delude her hope of Dower hath adirect way though it be somewhat dangerous and I will not be of his Counsell Hee needs doe no more but imagine compasse and conspire some detestable renowned treason of the old stampe and if he be once attainted thereof according to his desire c. But if he doe but pingle as suffer himselfe to bee outlawed in action of trespasse this was neuer any forfeiture of Franke Tenement The Law was in the late dayes of Littleton and Parkins that euery attainder of murther or felonie done by the Baron was an ouster of dower to the wife The first Solons of the English Law be like thought that tender regard of a wiues estate should restraine a husband from all inormious transgression against the sacred Crowne and dignitie Royall would God it might but the true reason why the law was so penall for such offences of the husband toward the wife in whom perhaps was no fault that thereby shee should haue no Dower and towards the children that they should haue no descent of inheritance but the hereditary blood should be corrupt was vpon
Lessor running to smoke rightly to smoke which is something more then nothing for if after all this the Lessor bring an action of waste against the Baron and Feme the Baron cannot barre her by shewing her reprisall and remitter but hee is stopped from speaking against his owne Feoffement and receipt So that here may bee an estoppell or conclusion by a matter not witnessed with specialty or any manner Scripture But if in the action of waste the Baron will make default at the grand distresse the wife vpon her prayer receiued to shew her matter shall barre the Lessor of his action right well For in euery case where a woman is receiued to plead in her husbands absence she shall haue aduantage as if shee were a Feme sole And the reason why rendring backe the land by the Alien to Baron and Feme worketh a remitter though it were by ●ne is because a Feme Couert that taketh any thing by fine is neuer examined by the Iustices But where somewhat is to bee conueyed from a Feme Couert by a fine as if Baron and Feme make cognizance to another c. or a grant or render or a release by fine in all or such like cases because the right of a Wife is passing and she shall be eternally concluded she must bee examined before the fine can be receiued and if shee confesse that her husband menaced her if shee would not leuie the fine c. it shall not be receiued 15. E 4 ●0 1. But where nothing is moued in fines saue onely a wiues purchase and gaining there is vsed none examination of her and therefore such fines doe not conclude her If Tenant in taile discontinueth it and dieth and the discontinuee makes a Lease to the Daughter and heyre of the Tenant in taile being of full age and to her husband for their two liues the daughter is remitted If Baron and Feme Tenants in speciall taile be and the Baron alieneth in fée and takes backe an estate to him and his wife for their liue● because they are but one person and the estate is likewise one and intire without moities and the Feme cannot be remitted here without the Husband be also remitted they are adiudged both in their remitter But the Baron himselfe is stopped from claiming so much contrary to his owne alienation If Lands he giuen to a Woman in taile remainder to another in taile remainder to a third in taile with remainder ouer in Fee if the woman take a husband that discontinueth in fee all the remainders are discontinued and if the Wife dyeth without Issue there is no remedie but a Formedon by turne if the first second or third Donée die without Issue But if after the discontinuance an estate be made to the Baron and Feme for their owne life or another mans life or any other estate the Wife is remitted and so are all they in remainder If the Feme die the next in remainder may enter and so is it for them in the reuersion after the caile is ended A Lease of a house is made to a Feme sole for terme of her life and in a ●aint or false action a stranger recouereth this house against her by default so that she may haue a quod ei deforcear by West 2. ca. 4. now is the reuersion of the Lessor discontinued and hee cannot haue an action of waste But if the woman marries and the recouerer lease this house to the Baron and Feme for life the wife is remitted to her first estate by the Lease the first Lessor to his reuersion and he may haue action of waste if there because Yet here if the other which recouered in the false action bring an action of waste the Baron hath no other remedie but to make default at the grand distresse and then the wife receiued may bar him by shewing the fain●nes or falshood of his action whereby he recouered If after discontinuance c. the Baron take backe estate to himselfe and his Wife and to a third person this is a remitter for a moity and for the other moity the Feme must sue her cui in vita after the death of her Husband If after discontinuance of the Wiues estate the Baron goe beyond the Seas and the discontinued lease the Land to the Wife for life and deliuer seisin if the Baron agree thereunto at his returne this is a remitter for the Feme shall be adiudged as an Infant and not as a Feme sole in this Case Quaere saith Littleton if the Baron at his returne disagree c. whether this oust the Feme of her remitter If the Baron discontinue the discontinuée be diseised and the disseisor lease the tenements to the Baron and feme for life this is a remitter to the Wife though the Baron were consenting to the disseisin But if the Baron and Feme were both of Conen and Consent to the disseisin the wife shall be a disseiseresse and not remitted If the discontinuée make backe estate to Baron and Feme by indenture vpon condition viz. rendring rent and for fault of payment re-entry and because the rent is ar●eare the discontinuée doth re-enter vpon this entry the woman may haue an assise of nouell disseisin after the husbands decease for the condition by the remitter was cleane extinct in truth though during couerture the Baron was estopped c. so that he and his Wife could not haue an assise together If the Baron discontinue take backe estate to himselfe for life the remainder after his decease to his wife for her life here is no remitter till the husband be dead but the Wife suruiuing Franke Tenement is cast vpon her maine Tenant will she nill she by act of Law and shee is remittted for though shee enter not yet shee can haue none action against any body for this land but any man that hath cause may haue action of it against her because a recipe quod reddat is maintainable against tenant in ley and that is the widdow here But Tenant of Franke Tenement in fair is one which hath an actuall seisin and vpon disseisin thereof may maintaine an assise The Statute of Glocester perceiued how by common Law a man may play fast and loose with his Wiues Inheritance by feoffement to discontinue her estate and to continue it againe by resumption and so to make it Inheritance or not to his wiues at his pleasure But a feoffement doth onely barre the Wiues entry what if to his feoffement the Baron aimes warrantie what if to his warrantie assets what if he leuie a fine Glocester ca. 3. anno 6. Ed. 1. is If Tenant by the Courtesie alion c. his sonne shall not be barred in a Writt of Mortdancester by the deed of his Father from whom none heritage is descended to demand and recouer the mothers land although his Fathers Charter be with warrantie for him and his heyres But if land descend to him de part son
according to the will and died Now the question is wh● the Issue in taile or Deuisée of the remainder should haue this Land Et per iudicium curiae Partly because his mother had waued the estate taile and although shee had not done so yet because he could not conuey his title and discent but aswell as heyre to his father as to his mother the fine with proclamations leuied onely by his father barres him So farre goeth the Booke And you may obserue that it barres the wife if she will See also 5. Eliz. 224 in Dyer the husband leuied a fine with proclamations of his owne land and after fiue yeares died his widdow continuing sole of full age whole memory out of prison within compasse of the foure Seas and doth not make any demand or claime of dower within 5. yeers after her husbands death quaere if he which pleadeth in barre of Dower ought expresly to auerre this The question was if she were barred of Dower Dyer telleth vs termino Hillarij 4. H. 8. rotulo 344. such a barre pleaded was admitted good for the ground of Dower was the Husbands seisin and the action giuen by his death So that it is within the second sauing of 4. H 7. which preserueth to all which are not parties pursuit of right growne after the fine by or vpon cause before the fine so that they take it within fiue yeares In Plowden fo 373. Iustice Dyer arguing Stowell and the Lord Zouches case affirmes the learning which I haue recited out of his owne booke But Plowden inserts his note that he takes the Law to be otherwise and that a woman is bound to no time of her Dower after such a fine for saith he the ayme of 4. H. 7. as against future droicts is wholly against such rights as either suffered wrong before the fine or by the fine and in this case of Dower the title is all after the fine and standeth well in accord with it not touched by the Statute the woman therefore may demand when she listeth So if there be a cessor begun a yeare before a fine with proclamations continued a yeare after the Lord is not restreyned at the end of 5. or 15. yeares to bring a cessauir so he saith likewise if a morgage be disseised a fine lenied by the Disseisor with Proclamations passed yet the morgager paying his mony to the Morgagee may at any time within 5. years or more after the payment re-enter When Giants fight Pigmées may not part them but howsoeuer some incertainty arise in euery corner of the Law this is here certaine that a fine leuied by the husband onely of his owne land tolleth not the wiues action of Dower if she come in time And a fine so leuied by him of the wiues Land taketh not away her seasonable entry but the gulfe that swalled vp entrie action right and all possibility of reducement by Law is a fine lawfully leuied by baron and feme where forsooth because a woman is examined by a Iustice or one that hath a Dedimus potestatem c. and acknowledgeth her frée consent and agréement what cannot men get wiues to doe if they list she shall be barred and for euer excluded of a great many acres of ground for a few kisses and a gay gowne That is a fine finem litibus imponens for till it be done and dispatcht the poore woman can haue no quiet her husband keepes such a iawling SECT XXIX Of common recoueries AS for trickes of Common recoueries I perceiue not how that can be greatly preiudiciall to women for first if a man will suffer a faigned recouery of his owne Land to defeate his wiues Dower she may falsi●●e it c. sée the Eiectione firmae per Eare against Snow Plowd fo 515. the baron there being tenant in taile his wife hauing nothing in the Land he and his wife suffered a common recouery with voucher to his owne vse c. the opinion of all the Iustices was that though the woman suruiued yet the estate taile shal be barred for it was found precisely by verdict that the wife had no interest in the Inheritance The baron therefore which alone lost estato taile by the recouery might recouer alone estate taile in value But as for the wife no man can say what estate shee had nor whether she should haue a quod ei deforceat or a Writt of right if she had lost the land by default So likewise hauing lost by the recouery nothing or no man can tell what her recompence in value must be She was named said the Iustices vpon intent to barre her of Dower and such is the meaning of husbāds which wil haue their wiues named in such recoueries but cleere the estate taile is barred if in this case the wife might sue execution in value against the vouchée by estoppell yet the issue in taile should not be concluded by the act of his Father but he might oust her of that which she had so recouered in value c. see Sir E. Cokes 10. Rep. 43. a. in Mary Portingtons ca. that the vsage hath béen alwayes vpon common recoueries against Baron and Feme to examine the wife and to grant a dedimus potestatem to take vpon her examination her Conusance as in case of a Fine But let the case be Tenant iure vxoris is agréed with Iohn a Stile to suffer a recouery of his wiues Lands to certaine vses comprised in Indentures betwixt them two a Writ of entry in the post is brought against the Baron and Feme which appeare in person or by Atturney calling to warranty the common vouchée a man well worth a couple of new rosted egges which re-enters into warrantie Then after declaration and imparlance at the day of the appearance shall the demandant recouer against Baron and Feme and they in right of the Wife shall recouer against the Vouchee of such lands as he hath or is like to haue when time hath a hairy crowne shall this recouery or possibility of vnlikely recouery in value binde the wife when the Baron is dead whether she will or no by Brooks nouell cases 23. H. 8. pl. 37. it séemes that such a recouery did then bind the wife to but without examination mee thinks it should not bind the wife The Statute of 32. is that none Act of the Barons shall make discontinuance c. except onely a Fine by Baron and Feme Ergo such a recouery notwithstanding though it be executed the wife may enter See 23. Eliz. cap. 3. and there is a sauing to euery Feme couert or her heyres her Writt of error to be sued within 7. yeares after she become sole for reuersing of Fines and recoueries past if they must be reuersed by error it séemes without error they were very dangerous For a rule to conclude withall take this That wheresoeuer the Baron doth any thing out of Court which thing he and his Wife were compellable to doe it
Plaintiffe may take his bill in Chancery against him which is of the Chancery and leaue out the other hut hee cannot doe so here specially the trespasse being supposed to be done by the wife The priuilege being dissolued Littleton praieth that the Defendant may answer Nay saith Billing the wife neuer yet appeared therefore take your Processe against her and we wil pray an Idem dies for the husband In an Action of Debt saith Littleton against Baron and Feme it is true that one shall not answer without the other and in trespasse also the wife shall not answer without her husband but the husband may answer without the wife if she make Default Truth saith Prisot all is one in euerie writ of trespasse whether it be of ●attery or otherwise and in euerie other personall Action one of them shall not plead without the other But in a Praecipe quod reddat the default of a wife is the default of the husband and wife aliter in trespasse or debt against baron and feme for there if the baron appeare by cepi corpus or exigent and the wife makes default the baron shall haue an idem dies ꝑ maineprise and if the wife waiu● be the husband shall goe sine die for in euery case where the wife is party to the writ it must be intended prima facie that the cause of action beginneth from the wife Bryan a Protonotaries Clarke said it had béene holden by the Court before this time that if the baron came in gratis he should answer sans sa feme but if he come by cohersion c. then vt supra But saith Prisor all is one and there is no diuersity to whom all the Iustices and many Serieants agréed q̄ il ne respondra vnques sans sa feme en nul case yet afterward 36. H. 6. fo 1. in an action against baron and feme vpon the Statute ● Hen. 6. of forcible entries the Sheriffe returned the plur ' capias mandaui balliuis c. which answered they had taken their bodies etc. the Bailiffes were demanded to bring in their prisoners the Baron appeared and she wife made default It is a doubt whether the husband should answer maintenant and a writ goe out to the Sheriffe ad habendum corpus vxoris or whether the baron should haue an idem dies with the wife and goe in the meane season sans maineprise for by Wangford he might not answer without his wife because of the imprisonment c. Prisor here asked what was the supposall of the writ and when he vnderstood it was of an entry by baron and feme ioyntly hee affirmed the baron should answer presently without the wife And so said he in trespasse battery when it is supposed by the writ that baron and feme together did beat the Plaintiffe the baron appearing fans le feme shall answer otherwise should it be here if the writ had supposed the forcible entry dum sola fuit for it were vnreasonable when the action riseth and is caused from the wife that then her default should bee her husbands default And likewise is it in action of debt if the wife bee waiue the baron appearing at the exigent shall goe sans maineprise for it cannot be intended but that the action riseth onely from the wife But if an action of trespasse done by baron and feme ioyntly the baron appeare at the exigent and the wife be waiue the husband shall answer and if the issue bee found against him and afterward the wife sue her Charter of pardon it shall not bée allowed vnlesse shée bring her husband with her By Prisot also in this 〈…〉 se a man cannot haue a writ in the Chancery against baron and feme supposing a forcible entry du 〈…〉 sola fuit but the entry must bée supposed ioyntly as in an action of trespasse And Laycon declares against the baron in the end of the case And note 40. E. 3 that in trespasse if the baron be outlawed and the wife appeare at the exigent ●l al 〈…〉 sans iour if the baron purchase a pardon and sue scire facias against the party he must bring his wife with him or his pardon shall not bée allowed But it is other wise i● the baron appeare and the wife be waiue c. for the baron alone may answer There is much of this matter in the yéere bookes 43. Ed. 3. so 18. in action of detinue against baron and feme the wife was waiue the husband appeared at exegent praying that the Plaintiffe might declare against him which hee did vpon a deliuery to the feme dum sola fuit Because the processe was determined against the wife whose acts the baron alone could 〈…〉 answer vnto It was awarded que il 〈…〉 quit for though to losse of issues returned to baron and feme the wiues default is the barons default yet it is otherwise vpon a capias or exigent for the corporall punishment But in a praecipe quod redda● a grand Cape shall goe out vpon the wifes default And sée 41. Ed. 3. so 24. in a writ of dower against baron and feme vpon the default agr●●d Cape went out and at the day the baron only appeared 〈…〉 pleaded that he alone was tenant c. sans c●o that his wife had any thing in the land here the wiues default was so 〈…〉 r a default of baron and feme both that the 〈…〉 seasin 41. Ed. 3. 24. in libro veter But the Barons default is neuer any default of the wife therefore 16. Assis p. ● In a pr●cipe quod redda● against Baron and Feme the Baron made default any the wife 〈…〉 here 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 issue which being sound against her shée and her husband brought an attaine Though in 〈…〉 were challenged first 〈…〉 the Baron they said by default had 〈…〉 and then because he was 〈…〉 to the 〈…〉 3. 〈…〉 In a writ of debt at the 〈…〉 ned Cepi corpus for she 〈…〉 and the 〈…〉 non est ●●uentus the exigent here went out only against the Baron and an idem dies was giuen to the wife But it was said if the 〈…〉 had returned the husband taken and the wife non 〈…〉 exigent should haue gone against them both for the wife is to be brought by the husband For by Cho● Danble 9. Ed. 4. f. 23. if 〈…〉 an action of debt the Baron appeare and the wife make default capias shall goe against them both quod m●rum faith Brooke where corporall punishment shall bée indéed it séemeth to be no law for 9. H. 6. f. 8. in an action of debt at the exigent the Baron and Feme sued a super●edeas but notwithstanding they were returned outlawed and at the same day the Baron appeared alone and a new exigent went out against the wife only and an idem dies giuen to the husband car il ●auer● corporall paine c. ●nd if he make default at the returne of the exigent
companion diuorced for lands wherein shee claimeth inheritance or estate for life so if he haue aliened in sée ●ée tayle ●r for life the lands which he had in fée simple ●ée ●a le or for terme of life to a stranger she may as soone as she i● diuorced bring a Writ called a ●●i ante diuor●●●m against the Al●enee And this Writ may be in the per cu● post If shee dye before action commenced or before recouery her heire may haue a Writ called a sur●uran●e diuortium and the Aunt and Néece may joyne in i● But for her estate tayle her heire shal be put to a formidone But note Reader that it séemeth both the woman and her heire may enter after the Statute of 32. Hen. 8. and neuer bring Cui in vita nor sur cuim vi●a c. for the opinion in Grenlies Case Sir Edw. Cokes 8. Rep. fol. 73. is that if the baron alien and after the wife is diuorced causa praecontract which dissolue the marriage à vinculoma rimonii the wife during the life of the husband or after his death may enter for the words of the A●tare n● fine fe●ffeinent c. during the Couerture betwéene them and although the Statut● saith But that the same wife c. that is to be intended of her which was his wife at the time of the alienation c. Note that whereas West 2. cap. ● giueth a cui in vita vpon recouery by default against the husband c. shée shall haue a cu●●h●e diuortium vpon the like ●e●ouery by equity extension of the Statute and the processe is summons grand cape pe●i● cape I wil here set the bounds and limits of my third booke not because this sequell and consequence ●iuorte I meane whereby the issue had is bas●●●●●zed and the w●●an restored to her goods and lands conforteth with the marriage so perfectly begun as I meant it for this is not the vntying of true wedlocke but rather a dissipation of marriage tainted at the beginning and in Christian Court adiudged to a ●●llity as if it had neuer béene the Baron and F●me that I h●●● spoken of all this while if they were not married in their infant loue and very first flowing age yet were they not ●rostbitten or so blasted either of them when they were young but they might well haue fr●●tified neither was either of them a common Law breaker intangled with promise or praecontract and as for consanguinity or affinity there was no more betwixt them than is betweene Iack Flecher and his bolt You may imagine some matter by onely imagination perhaps more visible than it could haue béene being true whereupon a publike sentence of seperation being published a Thoro mensa but then there was a monition of chast liuing and prohibition to both the parties that neither of them should fl●● to other marriage so long as both of them were liuing And the Author of seperation that is the party suing diuorce did put in sufficient caution to doe nothing contrary to this prohibition So that the holy liues of matrimony were not cleane broken and pulled asunder but within a yéere or two they were reconciled voluntarily of their ●wne accord And soone after so I will make it hauing the Distaffe Spindle and Shéeres all in mine owne hand the husbands life was suddenly cut off or else the wi●e had béene sole executrix THE WOMANS LAWYER The fourth BOOKE PAle death equo pulsans pede pauperum tabernas regnumque ●urres Death I say to whom the Poet did attribute so much power in this his verse Omnia sub leges mors vocat a●●a suas hath called the husband hence left the house full of mourning and specially the wife cannot chuse but sorrow and lament If my ●oure legged beast should fall into halues the one halfe starke dead without motion or spirit and the other halfe standing still vpright senting séeing féeling gazing must it not thinke you be wonderfully astonished If an Elephant in whom as some d●e write is vnderstanding of his countries spéech a wonderfull memorie and recenting of things past a great delight in loue and glorie besides prudence equitie and religion should haue his head cut off his body remaining still for all that vegetable and sensitiue would he not trow yée be excéeding sorrowfull for the forgoing such an ornament I dare be bold to giue a woman as much as Pliny gaue the Elephant She hath vnderstanding and spéech firme memorie loue naturall and kindnesse desire of glorie and reputation with the accomplishment of many meritorions vertues But alas when she hath lost her husband her head is cut off her intellectuall part 〈…〉 gone the verie faculties of her soule are I will not s 〈…〉 cleane taken away but they are all be 〈…〉 ned di 〈…〉 ed and dazled so that she cannot thinke or remember when to take rest or ref●ction for her weake body And though her spirits and naturall moysture being inwardly exhausted with sorrow and extreme griefe she be called and inforced to seeke restauration by such aliments as life is prolonged by yet is she nothing desirous of life hauing lost a moytie of herselfe yea the principall maytie now best prised and estéemed but neuer best loued Time must play the Physitian and I will helpe him a little Why mourne you so you that be widowes Consider how long you haue beene in subiection vnder the predeminance of parents of your husbands now you be frée in libertie frée proprii●uris at yo●r owne Law you may see num cap. ●0 That maidens and wiues vowes made vpon their soules to the Lord himselfe of heauen and earth were all disauowable and infringible by their parents or husbands vnlesse they ratified and allowed them either expresse or by silence at the day when such vowes came first to their notice and knowledge But the vow of a widow or of a woman diuorced no man had power to disallow of for her estate was free from controlment Must a woman néeds wéepe thus for the losse of her Buckler Shield and defence in the person of him with whom she held daily commutation of all offices proceeding from loue and superlatiue kindnesse Let her learne to cast her whole loue and deuotion on him that is better able to loue and defend her than all the men in the world Him I meane that hath forbidd●n to afflict widdowes or orphans with promise to heare their cries and vindicate their wrongs by killing them by the sword and making the wiues widdowes and their children fatherlesse of them which breake this Commandement Exod. cap. 22. Then because a sober carefulnesse and moderate sedulitie in businesse of profit or disprofit doth mitigate greatly the sorrowing for such actions as opinion or fancie makes thus grieuous let her looke to her affaires as cause and need requireth SECT I. Of Executorship and Administration SHe is not made an Executor because the office is troublesome let her take
this Warrantor be vnder age yet the Law fauoureth widdowes so much that the plaint shal not attend his full age Therefore if the Tenant shew forth any Charter Déed or speciall cause whereby the Court may perceiue that the Infant is bound to Warrantie by the Ancestors act he shall answer presently what age soeuer he be of And though the Infant in ward be aliened by his Gardian or Gardians from hand to hand this shall not preiudice the Voucher for alwayes he shall vouch to warrantie the Heire and not the Gardian who is bound to present his ward so vouched in Court without difference whether it be one or many parceners Thus saith Britton and 48. Ed. 3. fol. 5. agreeth that he which voucheth an heire vnder age must vouch him in ward de vntiel If he be a ward it is said there also that hee which voucheth an heire at full age must shew a Déed quaere But when the lands are in the Gardians owne possession to his owne profit and vse the writ of Dower must ●ée brought against the Gardian and not against the Infant 46. Ed. 3. fol. 19. Where Mowbray saith where an Infant is vouched in ward of the King the woman shall recouer Dower maintenant 3. H. 6. fol. 17. It was agréed per curiam that in Action of Dower if the tenant vouch the heire in the Kings ward within the same Countie where the writ is brought the Demandant shall not recouer before the warrantie be determined but the Law is contra if the Voucher had prayed summons in another Countie for then the Demandant should recouer maintenant yet by the Register fol. 7. if in a writ of Dower the tenant vouch in Durham the Demandant shall abide triall of the warrantie and not recouer presently But by Fitzherbert for a rule in titulo Voucher if the tenant vouch in a forraine Countie shee shall recouer maintenant and neuer attend triall of the warrantie but when Voucher is in mesme l● countie If the heire vouched to warrantie aft●r ●hee hath appeared and count●● pleaded the warrantie or before appearance being lawfully summoned do 〈…〉 ke default the Defendant shall haue execution against him maintenant if hee haue lan●s within the Countie Brooke Dower 5. And also Dower the 6● when the heire is vouched in the same Countie the woman shall recouer against the heire Dyer 3. Eliz. ●●● In Dower the tenant vouch the heire in the same Countie who co 〈…〉 as one that hath nothing by descent in ●ée and renders Dower the tenant auers that he hath ass●●● by descent qu 〈…〉 if he should not say in fée for by Weston and Browne if the lands be in taile it doth not 〈…〉 the tenants lan●s And the opinion of the Court was that the Demandant shall haue Iudgement presently aga 〈…〉 the heire if he hath lands c. and if not against the tenant and that before the issue of the ass●●s tried 1 Ed. ● fol. 24 In a writ of Dower against Tenant for life if he vouch his Lessor which is heire to the husband the woman shall recouer against the Tenant and he ouer against the Vouchee But when the heire i● vouched by Charter of his Ancestor the Demandant shall 〈…〉 couer against the Vouchee and the Tenant shall hold 〈…〉 peace Yet in a Writ of Dower against Lessée for 〈…〉 e of the Barons demise if the heire bee vouched to Warrantie though here the reuersion which is the cause of the Warrantie were made by the Baron the Demand 〈…〉 shall recouer against the Tenant and he against the heire If the tenant vouch in a writ of Dower and the Vouch 〈…〉 counter plead the Warrantie the woman shall recouer maintenant though in other actions it bée otherwise 46. Ed. 3. fol. 25. and 49. Ed. 3. fol. 23. In a Writ of Dower the Tenant vouched himselfe to s●●e the 〈…〉 taile 2. H. 4. fol. 18. in Dower the Tenant vouched the heire Processe went on to sequatur sub suo periculo sicut alias the Vouchée came not it was awarded the Demandant should recouer against the Vouchée if hee had lands in the same Countie If not that shee shall recouer against the Tenant and hee ouer in value But first it was examined if the Vouchee were heire to the Baron 21. Ed. 3. fol. 30. In Dower the tenant voucheth the Barons heire in ward of the demandant per cause de nurture shewing the Ancestors Déed he was compelled to plead in barre because now the woman might be endowed De la plus beale for Gardeine pur nurture hath alwayes intendment to Soccage tenure Vide Brooke Dower 42. 5. Ed. 3. The fathers wife was endowed the Grandmother brought a writ of Dower against her ●he vouched the heire in reuerston the Demandant recouered against the tenant and shee against the heire a third part of two parts remaining but not in value Sée Brooke Dower 79. If the Grandmother die the mother may enter into the first dower and the heire into the second SECT IX Plees in a writ of Dower ADmitting there were no Voucher let vs run ouer other matters vsually pleaded 14. H. 4. 33. in Dower was demanded a third part of two mils of other lands y● tenant asked Iudgement of the plaintiffe for they were during the whole time of couerture but the ●●te of two mills viz. to●ts 38. Ed. 3. fol. 13. In a writ of dower against one as Gardian of land and heire of K. de R. the defendant answered that the Infants father was ● de R. Iudgement del briefe and if the writ were good hee was ready to render dower You cannot said Knyuet plead to the writ render dower both at one day so the demandant praying Iudgement seisen was awarded her And because she auerred that the defendant was not touts temps prist to render dower an Inquest of dammages was awarded and that execution should cease till the Inquest were past 13. Ed. 4. fol. 7. In action of dower the tenant pleaded touts temps prist de render Dower vncore est The demandant said that I. S. her husband died seised and that such a day and yeere she required the tenant to indow her at Dale which refused c. he replyed that at the same day he offered to goe with her to the lands and to assigne her dower but she refused sans ceo that he refused The Court held the Issue well taken by this speciall pleading But if hee had said generally and barely hee refused not some thought it had not beene sufficient insomuch as it denies not the request Bryan said the demandant here might not haue seuerall Iudgements of one thing for note shee was to recouer dower vpon the first plea but all the other Iustices were of opinion cleere that shee should haue Iudgement of Dower maintenant and 18. Ed. 3. In action of Dower Iudgement was to recouer dower with an inquest for dammages As in a Quare
seisi que Dower la puit It was giuen in e●idence to the Inquest on the Demandants ●ehal●e that a feosment was made to the ●aron in fee y● déed of feofment was shewed to the Court it was answered that long time before the feofment the Earon was seised to him and his first wife in speciall taile and how afterward hee discontin●ed that and takes backe an estate in fée simple to himselfe by ●he 〈◊〉 aforesaid of which estate hee died seised so that the heire in speciall taile was remitted and the second wife being now Demandant not dowable Mountague would haue demurred and dis●●ssed the ●ury but the Iustices were cleare in opinion that the ●ury ought to 〈◊〉 for the Demandant because their charge was only vpon the issue viz. whether the Baron had euer ●ei●in of such ●state that th● wife might haue dower And they were not to ●●g●●d the Remitter but onely to looke to the generall issue giuen them in charge But if the spe●i●ll matter had 〈◊〉 pleaded the Demandant must n●●d● haue ●éene ●arred for if he which makes a feoffement with condition to r●●nter for the condition broken and then in a Writ of d●●er brought by th●fe●●●●●s wi●● hee will plead ne vnques ●●i●●● qu● dower it shall be found against him Knigh●ly therefore would haue the sp●●iall matter found by the Iury and a verdict at large but the Iust●ces would not consent Yet ●empore Edw. 1. There was a case that the Baron discontinued his wi●es 〈◊〉 and died his wife recouered against the discontinue and he died the discontinues wife brought a Writ of Dower against the woman Recou●rer and she pleaded the generall issue ne vnques ●eisi que dower la puit All this matter was found ●y ●pe●iall ver●●●● and ●udgement gi●●n vpon the issue 〈◊〉 foolishly ●●yn●d that the Demandant should reco●er Dower which shee should neuer haue done had the 〈◊〉 ●éene good S●● and marke well this case and 21. Edw. ● fol. 60. and the ●●se 28 A●s pl. 4. SECT XIV Recouerie against the husband 14. H. 4. 33. IN action of Dower the Tenant pleaded a recouery in Assise against the husband iudgement si action c. the Demandant said her husband was seised c. and married her and infeofed the Tenant and afterward disseised him against whom the Tenant recouered in Assise the Baron died she prayed to bee indowed The Tenant said he was seised till by the Baron disseised against whom hee recouered by Assise sans c●o that the Baron was seised before the disseisin que dower la puit the Demandant said seised before the disseisen que dower la puit Likewise 47. Edw. 3. 13. the Baron makes a feofment and ousteth the feofée the feofée recouers in assize the baron dieth now in a writ of Dower if the feoffée plead recouery in assize the widdow cannot ●al●●●●● the recouery but she may plead that long time before it c. her husband was seised que dower la puit and the Defendant contra 12. H. 4. 20. 21. The Tenant said he brought a Formedone against the husband which Writ hanging he shewed to the husband a d●ed of intailment whereupon presently he rendred the land in p●is to the Tenant which entred and now au●rreth the entail● Iudgement si action Thi●● said the Statute was si vir reddat aduersario suo de plen● Iusticiarii adiudicent mulieri dotem but he and the whole Court agréed that rendring in pais doth not defeat me●●● estates of them which were neither parties nor priuy to the rendring and therefore they awarded the wo●●● should recouer Dower Hanke said fée simple might not be rendered without liuery and seisin and where there is Lord and Tenant the Tenant may not surrender to his Lord Of falsifying of recoueries I haue spoken already Note If land bee recouered in value against the husband because of warranty made by his Ancestors the widdow shall haue Dower of those lands notwithstanding for if the Baron had ali●ned the land before voucher it should not haue beene rendred in value Consequently therefore the womans title is more ancient than the vouchers which beginneth but the day of vouching By F●●zh in his Abridgem●nt Dower 129. And his ●at● ●re 150. d. SECT XV. Ne vnques accouple c. SOmetime the vnlawfulnesse of marriage is pleaded in barre of Dower As 39. Edw. 3. 15. the Tenant pleaded the Demandant was first married to A and hée liuing she married B. of who●e dow●ent she claimeth A. being still aliue this was hold●n no good pleading and therefore he added ●ss●●t nient accouple in loyall matrimony The entry was only ne vnques accouple c. and a Writ awarded to the Bishop to certifie but for all such pleas deduced at length by old Writers as stand vpon the inualidity of marriage I will ref●rre widdowes to that which is gone before of marriage and diuorce The pleas also of vnder 9. yéeres of age of attainder of non tenure ioyntenure or seuerall tenure I will not tarry on them 39. Ed. 1. fol. 4. A woman brought Dower against tw● by seuerall precipes and one of them prayed ●yd of the other as parceners so that it appeareth that seuerall tena●cie is a good plea in action of Dower Contra in Assise Brooke 99. SECT XVI Plea that t●e Baron is ye● aliue THe Writ de dote vnde nihil habet affords another e●ception against Dower because it saith quond●● viri sui for though the fundamentall cause of dower be matrimony quoad le title yet as to the possession a woman cannot claime it till matrimony be dissolued therefore by Fitzherbert if the Baron take habit of religion the wife shall not be endowed till the husband be dead re vera yet by Britton it is issuable whether the Baron be entred into religion or no and that issue shall be tried by the Ordinary and iudged according to his certificat ●ut when the deforcer will barre Dower by ●l●a that the husband is yet aliue if the widdow reply he is dead the proofe regularly belongs to the Plaintiffe But if the Defendant say the husband is in plein vy ceo est prist auerrer he must proue his a●er●ent and sometime ●oth parties shall be heard to make their pr●●e which if it ●e a●●●e strong on either ●●●e the De●andant may haue i●dg●ment o●●eisi● finding surety such as the Court shall ●ward to res●ort if h●r husband hereafter ●ee brought into Court the ●a●d with the issues and pro●●●s ther●●● i● t●e interim reco●●●d But if the matter be doubtfull and the woma●●a●●ot ●●●●e such surety the seisen shall r●●●●●e where i● is and t●● plea in suspence to be renewed p●●summons as occasion shall serue Britton fo 25. SECT XVII Iudgement IVdgement in a Writ of Dower is framed according to the substance of the title and circumstance of the pleading It is touched aboue when or how a woman shall recouer dammages by s●r●ise that the husband dyed
habet in the other Writ for hee ●aith where a woman that hath recouered part of her dower of one Tenant already demands the re●nant against the same Tenant in the same Towne because the words vnde nihil habet will not se●ue this Writ de recto de do●● is vsed of necessity and is directed to the heires Gardian if he be in ward or to the heire himselfe or to a deforcour And some say that a woman losing her dower by default in a praecipe quod reddat she shall recouer by this Writ de recto de dote by the opinion of some But it séemes shée may haue a quod ei deforceat by equity the Statute W. 2. cap. 4. Whereas before shee had no ●●●edy but by this Writ or by action of deceipt if shée were not summoned Fitzherbert holdeth also if a woman lose her dower by assise or other action tryed she● may haue an attainte but not this Writ de recto for the land was assigned her once to hold in dower and by that title she had possession so that that title est execute and so she ought to sue an action of her owne possession if shee bee deforced and not demand dower againe quaere The forme is Praecipimus tibi vt plenum rectum ●●neas B. quae fuit vxor C. de tertia parte decem acr●rum cum pertinentiis in D. quam cla●at tenere de te in dote ꝑ liberum seruitium tertiae partis vnius denarii per annum c. And this Writ may bee of the moity of land according to the custome c. or of the profit● of an office Fitzherbert sets downe one for example Rex Andreae salutem we command you that you yéeld vnto B. which was wife of ● her full right and third part of the profits issuing of the Custody of Westm Abbay goale with a third part of thrée Acres a●rable of one rood of meadow of bread meat and bottles of ale weekly c. which shee claimeth as belonging to the francktenement which shee holds of you in dower c. by frée seruice and bearing a third part of cost and charge towards the kéeping the goale and gate of the Abbey aforesaid c. whereof you your selfe deforce her hereby appeareth plaine that a woman deforced from any thing appendant or appertenant to dower assigned her may haue remedy by Writ de recto de dote The old na bre notes that of a Bailiwicke or any such office in fée which a woman may execute her selfe or make substistute or deputy of it she shall haue dower but not of Stewardship or Marshalship of England And of a common of beasts without number a woman is not dowable 9. H. 7. 4. Park Sect. 341. And of an vse before the Statute of 27. Hen. 8. of vses shee was not dowable as it is said in Vernons ca. Sir Edward Cokes 4. Rep. fol. 1. And of an annuity shall bee no dower but of prediall tithes dower shal be as appeares by the Countesse of Oxfords Case cited in Harpurs Case in Sir Edw. Cokes 11. Rep. fo 256. The paroll or plea is sometimes remoued in this Action As if the Writ be to the husbands heire which heire being himselfe Tenant of the Land will not do● right the Demandant may haue out a pone to remoue the matter straightway from the heires Court into the Common place but a tolt to remoue it first into the County for the originall is nisi fece●●s vicecomes faciet and from thence it may bée remoued by the Plaintiffe to the Common place by a pone without any cause mentioned in the Writ But the Tenant in a droit patent cannot remoue the Plea out of the County without shewing case in the pone yet as well in a Writ de recto de dote as in a Writ of droit patent the tenant may remoue the plea shewing cause and that immediatly out of the Lords Court into the Common place by recordare and so cut of the heires Court quaere If a man se●l all his land and dye so that the ●eire hath nothing by discent now this Writ must be directed to the feo●ee of whom the widdow when shee is indowed mus● hold as of her Lord by ●ealty But if before the Statute of quia Emptores terrarum ● if the husband ●●● infeofed a stranger of part of his Lands to hold of the husband c. a Writ of right of Dower must haue béene ●o the heire in whose Court the matter was to bée pur●ue● by reason of the remaining Seignory So ●● it if at thi● day the Baron giu● part of his Manor to hold in tayle But if a man giue away all his ●and to bee holden of him in tayle and dye now the Writ de recto de dot● must bee against the donée directed to the Sheriffe retournable in the Common place for the heire hauing only a S●gniory in grosse can kéepe no Court. An● in the Writ shall bee inserted quia B. capitalis dominus feodi remisit nobis curiam suam If the Baron hauing leased all his land● for terme of life d●● c. And though there be not in Chancerie or any where els● any matter wherby to proue the Lords remission of the Court yet if the Lord haue not any demes●●● whereupon to hold a Court he can haue none action against the Demandant for the ●alse supp●sall or ●urmise nor let nor hinder the procéedings in Common place But if he had a Court to hold pl●a in and did not remit his Court to the King he may ha●● prohibition to the Iustices commanding the● not to pro●éed any further But saith Nat. Breu. quaere of that matter And s●e Plowd fol. 74. ● where the Lord hath a Court and he will remit his Court his Certificate must bée to the King in his Chanceri● and thereupon a Writ of right shall be returnable in the Court of Common P●ea● In the Common Place when the plea is remoued thither your processe is Grand c●pe and Petit cape In the Lords or heires Court is vsed fir●● a precept in nature of s●mm●●● and of a Grand cape and Petit cape And note that in this writ if ●●● 〈◊〉 appeare they neuer procéed to grand 〈◊〉 or tr●●ll by battaile from which the 〈◊〉 is ex●●p●ed and so ●●●●●quently here is neuer per Br●cton any E●soine de mal● lecti But the tenant may ●●●●h his 〈◊〉 if ●● haue any And after the woman hath ma●● h●● 〈◊〉 or dem●●● pursuing h●r writ the tenant may in 〈…〉 say that ●●ee rendred she land to hi● of h●r owne accord Or if she said he disseised her of her Dower he may plea●●●● Relege saith Bracton Et po●●ri●●●ritas per patriam d●clarari SECT XIX What thing● shall be assigned in Do●●● c. WHen Iudgement is giuen in curia regis against the tenant either vpon his default at the Grand cape returned or vpon confession or issue tried the chiefe
vita If the assignment of this Dower be sans fait it is no barre or con̄clusiou but a Remitter otherwise if it be by Deed or Record If a man giue lands to a woman to marrie with him and after espousals he alieneth the same land and dieth she may haue a Cui in vita And note that the gift or demise alleaged in a Cui in vita is trauersable Thus much Fitzherbert 48. Ed. 3. 8. In a Cui in vita claiming to hold sibi 〈…〉 de corpore without shewing of whose donation the 〈◊〉 pleaded to the Writ and it was abated But in a Quod ●● de 〈…〉 the Demandant needs not shew by who●e gift she claimeth 49. Ed. 3. fol. ●9 The Writ was Qua 〈…〉 sib 〈…〉 W. N. The tenant said she neuer had any ●●ing of the gift of W. N. per Belknap the answer was not good for were the gift from one or other if the husband aliened she might haue the action and the Writ may be Qu●m elama● vt ius haere●●a●em though she purchased the lands adior●at●r The latter point is affirmed 7. H. 4. fol 5 per Littleton accorded but for the first vide 50. Ed. ● fol. 6. in a Cui in vi●a quam cl●mat ●ener●●x dimissione per termino vi●ae ● N. it was admitted vpon argument a good answer per ● u●iam for where one maketh title it ●ught to be true And there finde sur release made to Baron and F●me and to the herres of the baron by I. N. was holden no demise for it must be supposed the baron and feme were in possession tempore finis And Persy said it had béene adiudged if a woman claimed in her Writ ad termi●um vitae if it were found she had estate taile the Writ should abate So likewise if a woman claime by lease for terme of life per A. and it was sound that A. made no lease shée had now no estate and consequently hath none action Likewise said Kirton if in Ass●ze of nouell disseism the plaintiffe make his title by f●off●●nt of A. and is found that A. inf●offed him not but B. did hée shall bee barred in the Assize for where a man maketh his title vpon a point which is bo●nd against him it cannot be inten●●● that he hath a better title and there he shall not haue aduantage of any other 39. H. 6. fol. 38. In a Cui in vita quod clamat esse ius su●●● ex d●no I. which infeoffed t●● Demandant and her fate husband with declaration that they were seised as of Franktenement and l●e les explees as te●ants for life c. Pri●o● said That in cases speciall this Writ ought to make mention of whose gift lease or demise the Demandant claimeth as Ad ●erminum vitae ex dono I. S. or Sibi haeredibus ex dono I. S. But in demand of Fée ●●●nple it is enough to say Q●●m ●l●m●t vt ●us hae●●ditatem without shewing by whose gift or fe●ffment 7. H. 7. fol. 2. If this Writ ●e agains●●aron and feme for lands holden in the wiues right it must bee in quod vxor ingressa est per I. N. non quod vir v●or ingressi sunt per I. N. S●CT XXIV west 2. Case 3. 2. E● 4. fo● 13. IF a man be seisod in right of his wife and recouerie is had against them by default the woman after his death may haue a Cui in vita but not a Quod ei deforceat per Moyle Iustice It séemes that at Common Law this writ of Cui in vita was onely granted vpon actuall discontinuance by the baron for West 2. cas●●● i● Q●ando vir amiserit per defalcum tenementum quod ●uit in vxoris suae duru●● fuit quod vxor post mortem viri non habu●rit aliud recup●rare quam per breue de recto propter quod D●minus Rex ●●atuit vt mulier post mor●●in ●iri ha●eat r●●●p●ra●● p●n bre●ede ingressu cui ●●●a in vita c. But in this case if the ten●●● can proue that hee had right on his side when hee recouered Mu●er ●i●il capit per ●reue● N●t● also by the way that this heat w●●s Si vir se absentaveri● ●●luerit ●●● vxoris 〈◊〉 defend●re v●d si in vlta vxoris redd●●● 〈◊〉 ●● v●●● an●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 para●a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de●●●dete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to further for recoueries If Iudgement of ●or eiudger be giuen against Baron and F●uie this is not void as soone as the Ba●on is dead but v●ydable by error for the woman cannot haue a Cui in vita 〈◊〉 fol. 2●● A 〈◊〉 ●y 〈◊〉 ●● 〈◊〉 alienation ● and therefore vpon su●● a ●●coverie as soone ●● the husband is dead the woman may haue a C●●●●●●● by the Common Law 4 Ed. 2. ●rook● 〈◊〉 vit● 18. If a r●co●eri● be ●●● by 〈◊〉 W●●● of wa●●e th● w●●e cannot ●●u●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either because the recouerie is not méerely by default or else because the 〈◊〉 of waste hath no demand of land quaere if shée shall haue a Quod e● de●o●ceat 9. Ed. 4. 16. If Baron and Feme be impleaded by one which hath good title and the Baron confesse the action the woman hath no remedie Yet the Statute is that vpon rendring by the Baron the wife may be receiued ●● But if Baron and Feme be receiued vpon default of tenant for life where the reuersi●n is in the wife the Baron cannot confesse the action for hée must be 〈◊〉 Ad ius 〈◊〉 def●●●endum 7. Ed. 4. 17. SECT XXV The Sur ●ui in vita IF she which hath cause to bring a Cui in vita of Fée simple lands die before she hath sued c. her heire shall haue ● Sur ●●● in vita But if the wiues lands which the husband aliened were in state of Fee taile and the wife ne●●● 〈◊〉 her heire must sue a 〈◊〉 in dis●onder and not a 〈◊〉 ●●●●●● for though both these 〈◊〉 hée the children of the ancient Common Law and were before West 2. Yea and this latter Writ was maintainable for lands giuen to the mother in francke marriage or to the heires of her body which at the first was Fé●●●●pte yet when 〈◊〉 made 〈◊〉 ● taile it did also expressely set downe ● Writ whereby the heire should recouer such estates The Sur c●●●n vita for it is no ●ore but Praecipe quod 〈◊〉 c. quod 〈◊〉 esse i●● hae●● ditatē su●● in quod non habuit ingressum nisi per E● and so in the Cui o● in the 〈◊〉 And the A●●t and Née●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it vpon alienatio● made by the husband of their common Ancestor or vpon recouerie had against ●●● and her If a second husband alienhis wiues Fée si●ple land● and she dieth the issue by her first husband 〈◊〉 ●u●● Sur cui in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these ●●nd husband still liuing if hée were neuer intituled to be T●nant by the Curt●sie But
acsi esset tenens Neither is nul tiel recouery a good plea prima facie saue only for the Demandant when the Tenant pleads a recouery by default 2. Edw. 4. fol. 11. Littleton stands to his old opinion that there was a quod ei deforciat at the Common law and hee would haue it maintainable still by one that hath cause to bring a formedone or an assize or writ of entry sur disseism But the Court séemes to wonder at his sayings and also at the first when Billing comes and demands oier del record for the Tenant in a quod ei deforceat the Court askes him quae intendes per ceo so that with question● of ad●iration they séeme plainly to reiect both opinions that there is any quod ei deforciat at the Common law giuen otherwise than vpon recouery by default and then the Tenant may plead ●ul tiel record for neither the writ nor the d●claration makes any mention of the recouery But Li●●leton comes once more 10. Edw. 4. fol. 2. and 〈◊〉 that once he brought a quod ei deforciat for his mother of lands which shee claimed to hold in Dower the Tenant said there was no record to 〈◊〉 that the 〈◊〉 were lost by default And Littleton challenged the plea because it might be the 〈◊〉 was in a 〈◊〉 Baron by default in a Writ of right in which ●●●● quod ●● deforc●at lyeth and therein i● no record 〈◊〉 is a record by default ●he Tenant said there wa● neither record nor recouery where any 〈◊〉 by default appeared and this was holden a good plea per le● 〈…〉 And Littleton relinquished his suit 44. Edw. 3. fol. 42. A quod ei deforciat was brought against the heire of one which recouered in an assize hee prayed the plea might stay for his non age and vouched to warranty W. N. c. the voucher was allowed but not his age because he might not haue had it in his first Action So that it appeares this writ lyes vpon recouery in assize and the Tenant may vouch But by Thorpe if it had béene the party himselfe which recouered he could not haue vouched Et mirum saith Brooke that vpon a recouery in assize which is by iury and not by default this writ should be And if yée looke this booke at large yée shall finde againe that this writ and the procéeding in it is méerly by the Statute vpon a recouery by default therefore a quod ei deforciat lieth and that vpon a recouery by default in a quod ei deforciat As 13. Edw. 1. a woman recouered in a Writ of Dower by default against Tenant for life of rent and afterward the Tenant which lost by default brought a quod ei deforciat against the woman and she lost by default and then sued a quod ei deforciat c. This is the highest Writ which these particular tenants can haue of their owne possession as it were their writ of right and it lieth against him which is Tenant though he be not party to the recouery as against the feofée of him which recouered But it lyeth seldome or neuer for a stranger to the recouery Yet 41. Edw. 3. fol. 30. the Baron and Feme ioyned in a quod ei deforciat of lands lost by the Feme before marriage bene And by Belknap it lyeth vpon a recouery in a sciri facias and it lyeth without shewing the record The Tenant in this Writ whether it be he which recouered or his alienée shall not haue view 41. Ed. 3. 8. If a man lose by default in a writ of right brought in a Court Baron he may remoue the record and haue a quod ei deforciat in the Common place and quaere saith Fitzherbert if he neuer remoue the record if he then may not sue his quod ei deforciat in which Court hée will either the common place or the Court Baron He agréeth if a woman lose by default and then marrie she and her husband may haue this Writ but if Tenant in tail● lose by default and dye his heire must sue a Formedon for that is his Writ of right If lands be giuen to Baron and Feme in especiall taile the remainder to the Baron in generall taile and the wife die sans issue now if the Baron lose by default in a Praecipe quod reddat his writ of Quod ei deforceat must be Quod clamat tenere sibi haeredibus de corpore suo for so soone as the wife died the state apres possibility drowned in the remainder 50. Ed. 3. fol. 4. If in a Scire facias brought in Chancerie by an heire of full age to auoyd indowment assigned in Chancerie whilest he was ward he recouer by default the woman may haue a Quod ei deforceat in Commune Banco So likewise if a man recouer land by default in Scire facias out of some record in the Kings Bench the Tenant which lost by default may sue a Quod ei deforceat in the Common Place If two coparceners tenants in taile lose by default they may ioyne in a Quod ei deforceat yet the default of one is not the default of the other 46. Ed. 3. in Fitzherbert Nat. Breu. Brooke hath it also A Quod ei deforceat brought by two men heires in taile of Gauill kinde Quam clama● sibi tenere haeredibus de corporibus exeuntibus was awarded good though they could haue none issue of their two bodies 46. Ed. 3. 21. If tenant for life or in taile appeare in a Praecipe quod reddat and afterward depart in despite of the Court he shall lose the land but yet he may recouer by Quod ei deforceat for the recouerie is by default for that he doth not appeare when he is demanded But if tenant for life or in taile after the mise ioyned in writ of right depart in despite of the Court they shall lose the land and not haue a Quod ei deforceat for the Iudgement is finall If Baron and Feme seised in droit le feme for her life lose by default in a Praecipe quod reddat they may haue a Quod ei deforceat by Fitzherbert which is denied in the old Nat. Breu. 155. If tenant for life lose by a default in a C●ssauit he shall haue a Quod ei deforceat by this Statute of West 2. If ●e in reuersion vpon default of tenant for life pray to bée receiued plead and lose by action tried yet the tenant for life may haue a Quod ei deforceat for the Iudgement must be against him by his default If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant vouch and the ●ouchee will not appeare so that the Tenant loseth by default of the Vouchée Fitzherbert makes it a question whether hee may haue a Quod ei deforceat or no because the Iudgement is not giuen vpon the tenants owne default But cléere it is if the Vouchée appeare enter into Warrantie and lose
by default that now the Tenant shall not haue a Quod ei deforceat but Iudgement to recouer in value against the Vouchée If Baron and Feme t●nants for life in the wiues right lose by default and the Baron dye a Quod ei deforceat lieth not but a Cui in vita as vpon a Demise made by the baron In a Quod ei deforceat the Demandant must count that he was seised c. in his Demesne as of Francktenement or in his Demesne as of Fée tail● laying the Esplees in himselfe but he néeds not shew of whose gift lease or demise though he claime for life or she claimes in Dower or sibi haeredibus de corpore And the Defendant must deny the Demandants right c. and shew how he recouered in a Formedon or in some other Action concluding that he is ready to maintaine his right a●d title aforesaid c. vnde petit iudici●m Then the Demandant must either trauerse it or shew matter in barre but he shall not make defence and then plead inbarre as he shall doe in a Formedon Fi●zh 10. Ed. 4. fol. 2. Dictum f●●t and the tenant may plead a release of all the Demandants right in a Quod ei deforceat But the old Nat. Breu. obserueth that if the Demandant vouch●one that entreth into Warrantie hee which recouered shall not plead the Vouchées release made after recouerie In a Quod ei deforceat the Tenant may vouch and so may the Demandant 50. Ed. 3. 25. But if the Demandant vouch his Vouchée cannot vouch ouer 10. H. 7. 39. The old N●t B●eu acknowledgeth that in a Scire f●cias there lies no oucher yet if a man recouer by default in a ●c●re facias out of a sine against Tenant in taile which bringeth a Q●od ei de●orceat if the Recouerer maintaine the title of his first Writ the Tenant in taile may vouch The Law séemes to be otherwise sée Plow 11● 206. 14. H. 7. 18. The questions arose vpon the Demandants vouching 10. H. 7. fol. 10. The first whether he must shew cause of the Warrantie or no. The second whether hée may vouch one that hath nothing in the reuersion The third whether he shall recouer in value Frowicke answered The Voucher is by Statute and hee néeds not shew any cause for the Statute of W. 2. cap. 3. saith Concedatur ei quod vocet ad warrant ac si esset tenens in priori breue in which case he should shew no Déed Second hée shall not vouch any stranger for the Statute is Ideo concedatur eis quod vocen●ur ad warrantum quia non possunt sine his ad quos spectat reuersio respondere Third the Statute giuing voucher meanes that he shall haue the effect of his vouching id est to recouer in value And if a Statute giue action for a thing whereof the action did not lye at Common Law the partie shall haue iudgement processe and execution incident or belonging to that action and a reuersion is a cause of voucher and of recouerie in value Frowicke said fu●ther That though he which leased cannot disclaime yet his Grantee may and award his charge and if voucher here should be no more but an aid prayer the Grantée might not disclaime for if Tenant for life pray in aid of him in reuersion hée shall not disclaime And Tenant by the courtesie cannot vouch for he shall neuer recouer in value SECT XXVII Admonition for women to take heed of him in the reuersion THe rest of this fourth booke shall consist most in warnings to widdowes and women tenants in ●articular estates that they doe nothing preiudiciall to their warrant It is true for the most part Ex quibus rebus maxima vtilitas ex ii●dem summa pernicies Water washeth and drowneth fire reasteth and it burneth the Sunne ripeneth and it scortcheth and seareth They that can help can hurt The reuersioner of a widdowes estate of whom she shall haue aid to defend her shall take her estate from her in many cases if she offend him in his reuersion SECT XXVIII Of Waste EVen by the antique Law of England if Bracton say truth fol. 316. The Gardian in Chiualrie committing waste did lose the wardship was auerred Et damna restaurabat But if Tenant in Dower committed waste there was no forfeiture of her land or parcell of it but he in reuersion might stop and let her from doing waste and such hinderance was no Disseisen Also he might haue if néed required a Non permittas to the Sheriffe commanding him not to suffer waste vendiction or exile in lands tenements houses woods garden c. and he might haue attachment against the widdowes or a Pone per vadios saluos plegios to make her come c. shew why shée committed waste If the waste in a wood were found by Inquisition the paine was no more but that from thenceforth shée should take no manner of Estouers either to build burne or inclose but it must be per visum forestarior●m haeredis And Bracton sets forth the W●●● for placing and appointing of the F●r●e●cor or by the heire ad praedict ' 〈…〉 custodiendum But now by the Stat. of Gloc. cap. 5. A writ of waste lyeth against Tenant in the courtesie or for life or for yeares or in Dower and the partie attainted in waste shall lose the thing wasted and make grée to trebble value of so much as the value shall be taxed at This Statute made 6. Ed. 1. ordaineth also that the Gardian which loseth his wardship for committing waste shall render dammages if losse of wardship be not equiualent to the harme Peraduenture Bracton wrote after the Statute for in one part of his Booke Ed. 1. is named ● 3. But it is said Sir Edw. C●kes 3. Rep. fol. 40. a. that Glanuile wrote temps H. a. Bracton temps H. 3. Britton temps Ed. 1. and in Sir Edw. Cokes 8. Rep. in Iohn Webs case fol. 46. b. he saith that Bracton wrote in fine del Roy H. 3. and Fleta wrote in temps E. 1. But note a woman shall not answer for waste done before her time yea if land bée leased to Baron and Feme for terme of their liues and they commit waste if the Baron die now the widdow is not punishable for this waste For that which the Baron did during couerture was only his act and offence dead and determined with his person Concessum per curiam 2. H. 4. and Br. 59. in his Writ of waste Yet if the lease had beene made to a Feme sole who takes a husband which commits waste otherwise it is by 9. H. 6. 52. women need no further warning to take héed of waste they are of themselues so hauing SECT XXIX The Writ of Entrie in casu prouiso BVtlet e●●●rie good woman take héed how she maketh any gift or alienation of such lands as she holdeth in Dower For Glocest cap. 3. is if a woman sell or