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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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Nisi prius which came to his hand that term which received he bindeth into a bundle and bestoweth them The Custos breviam also maketh entry of the Writs of Covenant and the Concord upon every Fine and maketh forth exemplifications and Copies of all Writs and Records in his office and of all Fines levied The Fines after they be ingrossed the parts thereof are divided between the Custos brevium and the Chirographer whereof the Chirograper keepeth alwayes with him the Writ of Covenant and the note the Custos brevium keepeth the concord and the foot of the Fine upon the which foot the Chirographer do because the Proclamations to be endorsed when they be all proclaimed This Office is in the Princes gift Custos placitorum coronae Bracton l. 2. cap. 5. This seemeth to be all one with him whom we now call Custos rotulorum Of this Officer I find mention in the Writ odio acia Regist orig fol. 133. b. Custos rotulorum is he that hath the custodie of the Rolls or Records of the Sessions of Peace and as some think of the commission of the Peace it self Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 4. ca. 3. pag. 373. He is alwayes a Justice of Peace and Quorum in the County where he hath his Office Idem eodem and by his Office he is rather termed an Officer or Minister than a Judge because the Commission of the Peace layeth by expresse words this especial charge upon him quòd addies loca praedicta brevia praecepta praecessus indictamenta prodictacoram te dictis sociis tuis venire facias Idem eodem where read a competent tract of other things belonging to this Office Custos of the spiritualities custos spiritualitatis vel spiritualium is he that exerciseth the Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of any Dioces during the vacancie of the See the appointment of whom by the Canon Law appertaineth to the Dean and Chapter ca. ad abolendā Extra Ne sede vacante aliquid innovetur But with us in England to the Arch-bishop of the Province by Prescription Howbeit divers Deans and Chapters if M. Gwin say truly in the Preface to his Readings do challenge this by auncient Charters from the Kings of this Land Cutter of the tayls is an Officer in the Exchequer that provideth Wood for the Tayles and cutteth the sum paid upon them and then casteth the same into the Court to be written upon DA DAmmage cometh of the French dam or domage signifying generally any hurt or hinderance that a man taketh in his estate But in the Common law it particularly signifieth a part of that the Jurours be to enquire of passing for the Plaintiff or Demandant in a Civil action be it personal or real For after verdict given of the principal cause they are likewise asked their consciences touching costs which be the charges of sute called of the Civilians expensae litis and Dammages which conte in the hindrance that the Plaintiff or Demandant hath suffered by means of the wrong done to him by the Defendant or Tenant Dane-gilt Dane-gold or Dane-gelt Dane-geldum is compounded of Dane and gelt i. pecunia and was a Tribute layd upon our Ancestors of twelve pence for every hide of Land through the Realm by the Danes that once got the masterie of us in regard as they pretended of clearing the Seas of Pyrates which greatly annoyed our Land in those dayes Cambd. Britan. 83. with whom agree the laws of Edward set out by M. Lamberd cap. 11. Stow in his annals pag. 118. saith that this tribute came to 40000. pounds by the year and that it was released by Ed. the Confessor The Author of the new terms of Law saith that this tribute began in the time of King Etheldred who being sore distressed by the continual invasion of the Daue to procure his peace was compelled to charge his people with importable payments For first he gave them at five several payments 113000. pounds and afterward granted them 48000. pounds yeerly See Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annalium in Henrico secundo fol. 344. a. Dareyn continuance See Continuance Darein is a corrupt word of the French dernier i. ultimus Darrein presentment ultimae prasentatio See Assise or Darreyn presentment Dates dactyli is the plumme or fruit of the tree in Latine called palma in English the Date-tree well known to most men by sight And he that will farther understand the nature or diversities of this fruit may repair to Gerards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 131. They be numbred among Spices and Drugs to be garbled 1 Jacob. 19. Day dies is sometime used in the Law for the day of appearance in Court either originally or upon assignation and sometime for the returns of Writs For example dayes in bank be dayes set down by Statute or order of the Court when Writs shall be returned or when the party shall appear upon the Writ served And of this you may read the Statutes anno 51 H. 3. cap. 1. 2. Marlb cap. 12. anno 52 H. 3. and the Statute de anno bissextili anno 21 H. 3. and lastly anno 32 H. 8. cap. 21. To be dismissed without day is to be finally discharged the Court Kitchin fol. 193. He had a day by the Roll Kitchin fol. 197. that is he had a day of appearance assigned him Day Yeer and waste See Dies and Year DE Deadly feud feuda is a profession of an unquenchable hatred until we be revenged even by the death of our enemy It is deduced from the German word Feed which as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus modo bellum modo capitales inimicitias significat This word is used anno 43 Eliz. cap. 13. Dead pledge mortuum vadium See Mori gage Dean decanus is an Ecclesiastical Magistrate so called of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he hath power over ten Canons at the least Howbeit in England we use to call him a Dean that is next under the Bishop and chief of the Chapter ordinarily in a Cathedral Church and the rest of the Society or Corporation we call Capitulum he Chapter But this word how diversly it is used read Lindwood titulo de judic ca. pri verbo Decani rurales where Dean Rurals are said to be certain persons that have certain jurisdiction Ecclesiastical over other Ministers and Parishes neer adjoyning assigned unto them by the Bishop and Archdeacon being placed and displaced by them As there be two foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the old and the new the new be those which Henry the eighth upon suppression of Abbyes transformed from Abbot or Prior and Covent to Dean and Chapter so be there two means of creating these Deans For these of the old foundation are brought to their dignity much like Bishops the King first ending out his Congé d'eslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yeelding his royal assent and the Bishop confirming him and giving his mandate to install him
take their bodies c. In which place an Attachment is plainly used for an apprehension of an Offender by his goods So that to conclude I find no difference between an Attachment and a Distress but these two That an Attachment reacheth not to Lands as a Distress doth and that a Distress toucheth not the body if it be properly taken as an attachment doth Yet are they divers times confounded as may appear by the places formerly alleged and by Glanvil lib. 10. cap. 3. and Fleta lib. 2. cap. 66. seq Howbeit in the most common use an Attachment is an apprehension of a man by his Body to bring him to answer the action of the Plaintiff a Distress is the taking of another mans goods for some real cause as rent service or such like whereby to drive him to replevy and so to be Plaintiff in an action of Trespass against him that distreined him And so much for the difference and coherence of these words See also Distress I find in West parte 2. symbolaio titulo Proceedings in Chancery sect 22 23. that Attachment out of the Chancery is two-fold one simple and originally decreed for the apprehension of the party the other after return made by the Sheriff Quod defendens non est inventus in Baliva sua with Proclamations made through the whole County in such places as he shall think meet that the party appear by a day assigned and that he be attatched nevertheless if he may be found This second kind hath an affinity with the Canonists viis modis at the which if the Party appear not he is excommunicate or with the Civilians viis modisunà cum intimatione for in the Chancery if he come not upon this he is forthwith pressed with a Writ of rebellion There is an attachment of Privilege which is a power to apprehend a man in a privileged place or else by vertue of a mans privilege to call another to this or that Court whereunto he himself belongeth and in respect whereof he is privileged New book of Entries verbo Privilege fo 431. col 2. There is also a forein attachment which is an attachment of a Foreiners goods found within a Liberty or City to satisfie some Creditor of his within the City There is also an attachment of the Forest which is a Court there held For as M. Manwood saith in his first Book of forest Laws pag. 90 62 99. there be three Courts of the Forest where the lowest is called the attachment the mean the swaynemote the highest the Justice seat in Eyr This Court of attachment seemeth so to be called because the Verderours of the Forest have therein no other authority but to receive the attachments of Offendours against vert and venison taken by the rest of the Officers and to enroll them that they may be presented and punished at the next Justice-seat Manwood parte 1. pag. 93. And this attaching is by three means by Goods and Cattels by Body Pledges and Mainprise or by the body only The Court is kept every fortie daies throughout the year And he that hath occasion to learn more of this I refer him to M. Manwood loco quo supra and to M. Crompton in his Court of the Forest Attachment is commanded in Writs the diversitie whereof you may see in the Regist orig under the word Attachiamentum in Indice At large see Assise at large in the word Assise and Old nat br fol. 105. Verdict at large Littleton fo 98. To vouch at large Old nat br fol. 108. To make title at large Kitch f. 68. See Barre Attaine attincta commeth of the French as you shall see in the word attainted But as it is a Substantive it is used for a Writ that lyeth after Judgement against a Jury that hath given a false verdict in any Court of Record be the action real or personal if the debt or dammages surmount the sum of 40 s What the form of the Writ is and how in use it is extended Fitz. nat br f. 105. and the new Book of Enteries f. 84. colum 1. The reason why it is so called seemeth to be because the party that obtaineth it endeavoureth thereby to touch deprehend or stain the Jury with perjury by whose verdict he is grieved What the punishment of this perjury is or of him that bringeth the Writ against the Jury if he fail in his proof see Glanvil lib. 2. cap. 19. Fitz. nat br fol. 109. K. L. 110. A. B. C. D. c. the Terms of the Law verb. Attaint Fortescue cap. 26. Smith de rep Anglo lib. 3. cap. 2. and anno 11 H. 7. cap. 21. anno 23 H. 8. cap. 3. and others In what diversity of Cases this Writ is brought see the Register orig in Indice Attainted attinctus commeth of the French temdre i. tingere the Participle whereof is teinct i. tinctus or else of attaindre i. assequi attingere It is used in our Common law particularly for such as are found guilty of some crime or offence and especially of Felony or Treason Howbeit a man is said to be attainted of Disseisin Westm 1. cap. 24 36. anno 3 Ed. 1. And so it is taken in French likewise as estre attaint vayncu en aucuncas is to be cast in any cafe Which maketh me to think that it rather commeth from attaindre as we would say in English catched overtaken or plainly deprehended And Britton cap. 75. useth the Participle attaint in the sence that we say attained unto A man is attainted by two means by Appearance or by Proces● Stawnf pl. cor fol. 44. Attainder by Appearance is by confession by battel or by verdict idem fo 122. Confession whereof attaint groweth is double one at the Bar before the Judges when the Prisoner upon his endictment read being asked guilty or not guilty answereth guilty never putting himself upon the verdict of the Jury the other is before the Coroner in Sanctuary where he upon his Confession was in former times constrained to abjure the Realm which kind also of the effect is called attainder by abjuration Idem fol. 182. Attainder by battel is when the party appealed by another and chusing to try the truth by combat rather than by Jury is vanquished Idem fol. 44. Attainder by verdict is when the Prisoner at the bar answering to the endirement not guilty hath an enquest of life death passing upon him is by their verdict or doom pronounced guilty Idem fol. 108. 192. Attainder by Process otherwise called attain der by default or attainder by outlagary is where a Partie flyeth and is not found untill he have been 5 times called publickly in the County and at the last out-lawed upon his default Idem f. 44. Ifind by the same Author f. 108. that he maketh a difference between Attainder and Conviction in these words And note the diversity between Attainder and Conviction c. And with this
anno 35. H. 8. cap. 26. and the County of Litchfield Cromptons Justice of peace fo 59. a. County is in another signification used for the Countie court which the Sheriff keepeth every month within his charge either by himself or his Deputy anno 2. Ed. 6. ca. 25. Crompt Juris f. 221. Bract. li. 3. c. 7. l. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. Of these Counties or Shires one with another there are reckoned in England 37. beside twelve in Wales The word comitatus is also used for a jurisdiction or territory among the Feudists County court curia comitatus by M. Lamberd is otherwise called conventus in his explication of Saxon words divided into two sorts one retaining the geneeal name as the County-court held every moneth by the Shiereve or his Deputy the under Sheriff wherof you may read in Crompt jurisd f. 231. the other called the Turn held twice every year which see more at large in his place and Cromptons Jurisd fol. 231. This County court had in antient times the cognition of these and other great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2.3.4 by Bracton and Britton in divers places and by Pleta lib 2. cap. 62. But was abridged by the Statute of Magna charta cap. 17. and much more by 1 Ed. 4. cap. unico It had also and hath the determination of certain trespasses and debts under forty shillings Britton cap. 27 28. what manner of proceeding was of old used in this Court see Fleta ubi supra Coursitour See Cursetour Court curia cometh of the French court which signifieth the Kings Palace or Mansion as curtis doth among the Lombards All these spring of the Latine curia which signifieth one of thirty parts into which Romulus divided the whole number of the Romans sometime also the Senat-house as appeareth by Tully in his Offices nihil est quod dignum nobis aut in foro aut in curta agere possumus which in his oration pro Milone he calleth Templum sanctitatis amplitudinis mentis consilii publici caput urbis c. Court with us signifieth diversly as the House where presently the King remaineth with his ordinary retinue and also the place where Justice is judicially ministred of which you find 32 several s●rts in M. Cromptons book of Jurisdictions well described And of them most be courts of record some be not and therefore are accounted base Courts in comparison of the rest Beside these also there are Courts Christian Smith de Repnb Anglor lib. 3. cap. 6. which are so called because they handle matters especially appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledg in Divinity cannot be well judged of being held heretofore by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome because he chalenged the superiority in all causes spiritual but sithence his ejection they hold them by the Kings authority virtute magistratus sui as the Admiral of England doth his Court Whereupon it proceedeth that they send out their precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Justices of the Kings Courts do And therefore as the appeal from these Courts did lye to Rome now by the statute anno 25 H. 8. cap. 19. it lieth to the King in his Chancerie Court baron curia baronis is a Court that every Lord of a manor which in ancient times were called Barons hath within his own precincts Barons in other Nations have great Territories and jurisdiction from their Soveraignes as may be proved out of Cassanaeus de gloria mundi part 5. consideratio 56. by Vincentius de Franchis descis 211. and many others Bu here in England what they be and have been heretofore see in Baron Of this Court Baron you may read your fill in Kitchin that writeth a large Book of it and of a Court Leet Sir Edward Coke in his fourth Book of Reports amongst his Copy-hold cases fol. 26. b. saith that this Court is two after a sort and therefore if a man having a mannor in a Town and do graunt the inheritance of the Copy-holders thereunto belonging unto another this grantee may keep a Court for the customarie Tenants and accept surrenders to the use of others and make both admittances and graunts the other Court is of Free-holders which is properly called the Court Baron wherein the suters that is the Free-holders be Judges whereas of the other the Lord or his Steward is Judge Court of Pypowders See Pie-powders Court of Requests curia requestarum is a Court of equity of the same nature with the Chancerie principally instituted for the help of such petitioners as in conscionable cases deal by supplication with his Majestie This Court as M. Gwin saith in the Preface to his Readings had beginning from Commission first granted by Henry the eighth to the Masters of Requests whereas before that time by his opinion they had no warrant of ordinary jurisdiction but travelled between the King and the Petitioner by direction from the Kings mouth But Sir Julius Caesar in a Tractate of his painfully and very judiciously gathered from the Records of the same Court plainly sheweth that this Court was 9 Henrici septimi though then following the King and not setled in any certain place neither swayed particularly by the Masters of Requests as now it is but more at large by others of the Kings most Honourable Councel whom he pleased to employ in this service For page 148. of the said Tractate you have the form of the oath then ministred to those that were Judges in this Court and à pag. pri usque ad pag. 46. causes of divers natures which in the said Kings dayes were there handled and adjudged This Court as that right honourable and Learned Knight in a Brief of his upon the same Court plainly proveth was and is parcel of the Kings most honoutable Councel and so alwayes called and esteemed The Judges thereof were alwayes of the Kings most Honourable Councel appointed by the King to keep his Councel board The keeping of this Court was never tyed to any place certain but onely where the Counsel sate the suters were to attend But now of late for the ease of suters it hath been kept in the White-Hall at Westminster and onely in Term time It is a Court of Record wherein Recognizances are also taken by the Kings Councel The form of proceeding in this Court was altogether according to the processe of summarie causes in the Civil Law The persons Plaintiffs and Defendants were alwayes either privileged as officers of the Court or their servants or as the Kings servants or as necessary Attendants of them or else where the Plaintiffs poverty or mean estate was not matchable with the wealth or greatnesse of the Defendant or where the cause meerly contained matter of Equity and had no proper remedie at the Common law or where it was specially recommended from the King to the Examination of his Councel or concerned Universities Colleges Hospitals
and the like The causes wherewith they deal and whereof they judge are of all sorts as Maritine Ultra Marine Ecclesiastical Temporal But properly Temporal causes and onely of the other sort as they are mixt with Temporal The manner of proceeding in the said Court is first by Privy Seal Letters Missive or Injunction or Messenger or Bond. Secondly By Attachement Thirdly by Proclamation of Rebellion Fourthly by Commission of Rebellion Fifthly by Sergeant at Arms. The effect of the Defendants apparence is that he attend De die in diem on the Councel till he have mad his answer to the Plaintiffs Bill and be licensed to depart upon caution De judicio sisti judicato solvendo and Constitution of his Atturney and Councel by name The authority of this Court is such as upon cause to graunt injunctions for barring the Defendant from suing the Plaintiff at the Common law and to stay the sute at the Common law before commencement and not to arrest the body of the Plaintiff till further order be taken by the Kings Councel and the execution of a Decree in this Court may be done either by imprisonment of the person disobeying being party or claiming under the party or by levy of the summe adjudged upon his Lands Courtesie of England lex Angliae cometh of the French Courtesie i. benignitas humanitas but with us hath a proper signification being used for a Tenure For if a man marry an Inheritrice that is a woman seised of land in fee-simple or fee-tail general or seised as heir of the tail special and getteth a child of her that cometh alive into the world though both it and his wife die forthwith yet if she were in possession shall he keep the land during his life and is called Tenent per Legem Angliae or by the courtesie of England Glanvil lib. 7. cap. 18. Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 30. num 7 8 9. r itto n. cap. 51. fol. 132. Fleta lib. 6. cap. 56. § lex quaedam Fitz. nat br fol. 149. D. Littleton lib. 1. cap. It is called the law of England West 3. cap. 3. This is in Scotland called curialitas Scotiae Skene de verbo sign verbo Curialitas who there saith that this is used in these two Realms onely and maketh a large discourse of the custome Coutheutlaughe is he that wittingly receiveth a man outlawed and cherisheth or hideth him In which case he was in antient times subject to the same punishment that the outlaw himself was Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 13. num 2. It is compounded of couthe i. known acquainted familiar and utlaughe an outlaw as we now call him Coutilage aliâs curtilage Curtilagium alias curtilegium signifieth a garden a yard or a field or piece of void ground lying neer and belonging to a mesuage West parte 2. Symbolaeo titulo Fines sect 26. And so it is used anno 4 Ed. 1. cap. unico anno 35 H 8. cap. 4. anno 39 Eliz. cap. 2. and Coke vol. 6. fol. 64. a. Of this also Lindwood thus writeth Curtilegium vulgare nomen est non ommum patriarum sed certarum Est enim curtis mansio vel manerium ad habitandum cum terris possession●bus aliis emo●umentis adtale manerium pertinentibus prout satis colligitur in libro feudorum titulo De controversia investiturae § si quis de manso Col. 10. Unde curtilegium dicitur locus adjunctus tali curti ubi leguntur herbae vel olera ●●●c dictus à curtis lego legis pro colligere Thus farre Linwood titulo de decimis ca. Sancta § omnibus verbo Curtelegiorum So that in effect it is a Yard or a Garden adjoyning to a House CR Creansour creditor cometh of the French croyance i. persuasio and signifieth him that trusteth another with any debt be it in money or wares Old nat br fol. 67. Cranage cranagium is a liberty to use a Crane for the drawing up of wares from the Vessels at any creek of the Sea or wharf unto the Land and to make profit of it It signifieth also the money paid and taken for the same New Book of Entries fol. 3. col 3. Creek creca crecca vel crecum seemeth to be a part of a Haven where any thing is landed or disburthned out of the Sea So that when you are out of the Main Sea within the Haven look how many landing places you have so many Creeks may be said to belong to that Haven See Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 110. a. This word is mentioned in the statute as anno 5 Eliz. c. 5. and divers others Creast-tile See Roof-tile Croft croftum is a little close or pitle joyned to a house that sometimes is used for a Hemp-ground sometime for Corn and sometime for Pasture as the owner listeth It seemeth to come of the old English word Creaft signifying handy-craft because such grounds are for the most part extraordinarily dressed and trimmed by the both labour and skill of the owner Croises cruce signati be used by Britton cap. 122. for such as are Pilgrims the reason may be for that they wear the sign of the Crosse upon their Garments Of these and their Privileges read Bracton lib. 5. parte 2. cap. 2. part 5. cap. 29. and the Grand Custumary of Normandy cap. 45. Under this word are also signified the Knights of the order of Saint John of Jerusalem created for the defence of Pilgrims Gregor Syntagm lib. 15. cap. 13. 14. CU Cuckingool tumbrella is an engine invented for the punishment of Scolds and unquiet women called in ancient time a tumbrel Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 1. cap. 12. po 62. in meo Bracton writeth this word Tymborella Kitchin where he saith that every one having view of Frank-pledge ought to have a Pillorie and a Tumbrel seemeth by a Tumbrel to mean the same thing cap. Charge in Court leet fol. 13. a. Cuth other uncuth privatus vel extraneus These be old English words not yet worn out of knowledge for the which see Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annalium fol. 345. a. Cudutlaghe See Couthutlaughe Cui ante divortium is a Writ that a Woman divorced from her Husband hath to recover lands or tenements from him to whom her husband did alienate them during the marriage because during the marriage she could not gainsay it Regist. orig fol. 233. Fitzh nat br fol. 204. Cuinage is a word used for the making up of Tinne into such fashion as it is commonly framed into for the carriage thereof into other places anno 11 H. 7. cap. 4. Cui in vita is a Writ of Entry that a Widow hath against him to whom her Husband aliened her Lands or Tenements in his life time which must contain in it that during his life time she could not withstand it Regist orig fol. 232. Fitzh nat br fol. 193. See the new Book of Entries verbo Cui in vita Cuntey cuntey is a kind of trial as
each journey Escuage certain is that which yearly payeth a certain rent in lieu of all services being no further bound than to pay his rent called a Knights-fee or the fourth part of a Knights-fee according to his land and this leeseth the nature of Knights service though it hold the name of Escuage being in effect Soccage Fitzh na br fol. 84. C. Esnecy Aesnecia is a prerogative given to the eldest Comparcener to chuse first after the inheritance is divided Fleta lib. 5. cap. 10. § in divisionem Esples Expletia seem to be the full profits that the ground or land yeeldeth as the Hay of the Meadowes the Feed of the Pasture the corn of the Earable the Rents Services and and such like issues Ingham It seemeth to proceed from the Latine Expleo The profits comprised under this word the Romans call properly accessiones Nam accessionem nomine intelliguntur ea gener aliter omnia quae ex re de qua agitur orta sunt veluti fructus partus omnis causa rei quaecunque ex re procedunt lib. 2. π. De in diem adjectio lib. 50. π. Ad Trebel lib. 61. § hiis etiam π. de furt See the new Terms of Law Esquier Armiger is in letters little altered from the French Esouier i. scutiger It signifieth with us a Gentleman or one that beareth arms as a testimony of his nobility and gentry S. Thomas Smith is of opinion that at the first these were Bearers of arms to Lords and Knights and by that had their name and dignity Indeed the French word is sometime translated Agaso that is a Boy to attend or keep a Horse and in old English Writers it is used for a Lackey or one that carrieth the Shield or Spear of a Knight Mast Cambden in his Britannia pag. 111. hath these words of them having spoken of Knights Hiis proximi fuere Armigeri qui scutiferi hominesque ad arma dicti qui vel à clypeis gentilitiis quae in nobilitatis insignia gestant vel quia principibus ma oribus illis nobilibus ab armis erant nomen traxerunt Olim enim ex hiis duo unicuique militi serviebant galeam clypeumque gestabant c. Hotoman in the sixth Chapter of his Disputations upon the Feodssaith that these which the French men cal Escuiers were 1 Military kind of vassal having jus scuti which is as much to say he there interpreteth himself as that they bare a Shield and in it the ensignes of their family in token of their Gentility or dignity Essendt quietum de telonio is a Writ that lyeth for Citizens and Burgesses of any City or Town that have a Charter or prescription to exempt them from tolle through the whole Realm if it chance they be any where exacted ●he same Fitz. nat br fol. 226. Reg. fol. 258. Essoin essonium cometh of the French essomè or exonniè i. causarius miles he that hath his presence forborn or excused upon any just cause as sicknesse or other incumbrance It signifieth in our Common Law and allegement of an excuse for him that is summoned or sought for to appear and answer to an Action real or to perform sute to a Court Baron upon just cause of absence It is as much as excusatio with the Civilians The causes that serve to essoin any man summoned be divers and infinite yet drawn to five heads whereof the first is ulira mare the second de terra sancta the third de malo veniendi which is also called the common Essoin the fourth is de malo lecti the fifth de servitio Regis For further knowledge of these I refer you to Glanvile in his whole first book and Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. per totum and Britton c. 122 123 124 125. and to Horns Mirrour of Justices lib. 1. cap. des Essoins who maketh mention of some more essoins touching the service of the King celestial then the rest do and of some other points not unworthy to be known Of these Essoins you may read further in Flet. l. 6. c. 8. seq and that these came to us from the Normans is well shewed by the Grand Custumary where you may find in a manner all said that our Lawyers have of this matter cap. 39 40 41 42 43 44 45. Essoins and profers anno 32 H. 8 cap. 21. See Profer Essonio de malo lecti is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the sending of four lawful Knights to view one that hath essoined himself de malo lecti Regist. orig fol. 8. b. Establishment of dower seemeth to be the assurance of dower made to the Wife by the Husband or his friends before or at marriage And assignement is the setting it out by the Heir afterward according to the Establishment Britton cap. 102. 103. Estandard or Standard cometh of the French estandart or estandart i. signum vexillum It signifieth an Ensigne in war as well with us as with them But it is also used for the principal or standing measure of the King to the scantling whereof all the measures thorowout the Land are or ought to be framed by the Clerk of the Market Anlneger or orher Officer according to their functions For it was established by the Statute of Magna Charta an 6 H. 3. cap. 9. That there should be but one scantling of Weights and Measures through the whole Realm which is sithence confirmed by A●co 14 Ed. 3. cap. 12. and many other Statutes as also that all should be fitted to the Standard sealed with the Kings Seal It is not called a Standard without great reason because it standeth constant and immoveable and hath all other Measures coming toward it for their conformity even as Souldiers in field have their Standard or Colours for their direction in their march or skirmish Of these Standards and Measures read Britton cap. 30. Estate cometh of the French estat i. conditio and signifieth especially in our Common law that Title or Interest which a man hath in Lands or Tenements as estate simple otherwise called Fee-simple and estate conditional or upon condition which is as Litleson saith libro 3. caput 5. either upon condition in Deed or upon condion in Law Estate upon condition in Deed is where a man by Deed indented infeoffeth another in Fee referving to him and to his Heirs yeerly a certain Rent payable at one Feast or at divers upon condition that if the Rent be behind c. that it shall be lawful to the Feoffor and to his Heires to enter in the Lands or Tenements c. Estate upon condition in Law is such as hath a consideration in the Law annexed to it though it be not specified in writing For example if a man grant to another by his Deed the Office of a Parkership for Term of his life this estate is upon condition in the Law or imployed by Law viz. if the Parker so long shall well and
I find in the Statute for Knights anno prim Ed. 2. cap. prim that such as had twenty pounds in fee or for term of life per annum night be compelled to be Knights Master Stowe in his Annals pag. 285 saith there were found in England at the time of the Conqueror sixty thousand two hundreds and eleven Knights fees others say 60215. whereof the religious Houses before their suppression were possessed of 28015. Knights fee is sometime used for the Rent that a Knight paye●h for his fee to his Lord of whom he holdeth And this is an uncertain sum some holding by forty shillings the shield some by twenty shillings as appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract prim ca. 2. Knighton gylde was a Gylde in London consisting of ninteen Knights which King Edgar founded giving unto them a portion of void ground lying without the walls of the City now called Portsokenward Stowe in his Annals pag. 151. LA LAborariis is a Writ that lyeth against such as having not whereof to live do refute to serve or for him that refuseth to serve in Summer where he served in Winter Orig. Regist fol. 189 b. Laches commeth of the French Lascher i. laxare or lasche i. frigidus ignavus flaccidus It signifieth in our Common law negligence as no Laches shall be adjudged in the Heir within age Litleton fo 136. and Old nat br fol. 110. where a man ought to make a thing and makes it not I of his laches cannot have an Assise but I must take mine Action upon the Case Lagon see Flotzon Laisedlists an 1 R. 3. ca. 8. Land tenent anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. ca. 3. anno 23 ejusdem cap. 1. 26. ejusdem stat 5. cap. 2. See Terre-tenent anno 12 R. 2. ca. 4. an 4 H. 4. c. 8. It is joyned with this word Possessor as Synonymon v. anno 1 H. 6. ca. 5. See Terretenant Lants de crescentia Walliae traducexdis absque custuma c. is a Writ that lyeth to the Customer of a Port for the permitting one to passe over Woolls without Custome because he hath paid Custome in Wales before Register fol. 279. Lapse Lapsus is a slip or departure of a right of Presenting to a void Benefice from the original Patron neglecting to present within six months unto the Ordinary For we say that Benefice is in lapse or lapsed whereunto he that ought to present hath omitted or slipped his opportunity anno 13 Elizab cap. 12. This lapse groweth as well the Patron being ignorant of the avoidance as privy except only upon the Resignation of the former Incumbent or the Deprivation upon my cause comprehended in the Statute anno 13 Eliz. cap. 12. Panor in ca. quia diversitatem num 7. de concess praebend Rebuffus de devolut in praxi benesiciorum Lancelotus de collation lib. 1. Institut Canon § Tempus autem In which Cases the Bishop ought to give notice ●o the Patron Larceny Laricinium commeth of the French Larcen i. furtum detractio alicui It is defined by West parte 2. Sym. titulo Inditements to be theft of personal goods or chattells in the Owners absence and in respect of the thing stolne it is either great or small Great Larcenny is wherein the things stoln though severally exceed the value of 12 d. and Petit Larceny is when the goods stoln exceed not the value of 12 d. hitherto M. West But he differeth from Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 32. nu 1. Of this see more in Stawnf pl. cor li. 1. cap. 15 16 17 18 19. Laghsl●te is compounded of lah i. lex and slite i. ruptum and signifieth mulctam ruptae vel violatae legis Lamb. explication of Saxon words verbo Mulcta Last is a Saxon word signifying a burden in general as also particularly a certain weight for as we say a last of Hering so they say Ein last cornes last wines c. chence commeth Lastage which see in Lestage A Last of Hering containeth ten thousand anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. A Last of ●itch and tar or of ashes containeth 14 parrells anno 32 H. 8. cap. 14. A Last of hides anno 1 Jac. ca. 33. containeth 12 dozen of hides or skins Latitat is the name of a Writ whereby all men in personal actions are called originally to the Kings Bench Fitz. natura brevium fol. 78. M. And it hath the name from this because in respect of their better expedition a man is supposed to lurk and therefore being served with this writ he must put in security for his appearance at the ●ay for latitare est se malitiosè occultaere a nimo fraudandi creditores suos agere volentes l. Eulcinius § Quid sit latitare π. Quibus ex eausis in possessionem eatur But to understand the true original of this Writ it is to be known ●hat in ancient time whilest the Kings Bench was moveable and followed the Court of the King the Custom was when any man was to ●e sued to send forth a Writ to the Sheriff of ●●e County where the Court lay for the calling ●im in and if the Sheriff returned Non est inventus in Baliva nostra c. then was there a second Writ procured forth that had these words Testatum est ●um latitare c. and thereby the Sheriff willeth to attach him in any other place where he might be found Now when the tribunal of the Kings Bench came to be setled at Westminster the former course of Writ was kept for a long time first sending to the Sheriff of Middlesex to summon the party and if he could not be found there then next to apprehend him wheresoever But this seeming too troublesome for the Subject it was at last devised to put both these wits into one and so originally to attach the party complained of upon a supposall or fiction that he was not within the County of Middlesex but lurking elsewhere and that therefore he was to be apprehended in any place else where he was presumed to lye hidden by a Writ directed the Sheriff of the County where he is suspected to be And by this Writ a man being brought in is committed to the Marshall of that Court in whose custody when he is then by reason he is in the same County where the Kings Bench is he may be sued upon an Action in that Court whereas the original cause of apprehending him must be a pretence of some deceit or contempt committed which most properly of old belonged to the cognizance of that Court I have been informed that the bringing of these Actions of Trespass so ordinarily to the Kings Bench was an invention of Councellors that because only Sergeants may come to the Common Pleas Bar found a means to set themselves on work in that Court The form of this Writ is such Jacobus Dei gratia Angliae Franciae Scotiae Hibernia Rex fidei defonsor c. Vicecomisi Cantabridgiae salutem
and the Statute 31 Elizabeth cap. 5. saith by way of correcting the two former Statutes that all actions c. brought upon any Statute the penalty whereof belongeth to the King shall be brought within two years after the offence committed or else be void And the statute anno 39 Eliz. cap. prim secund saith that actions brought after two years by any common person or after three years by the King alone for decay of husbandry or tillage shall be of no force Whosoever offendeth against any such statute and doth escape uncalled for two years or three years in one case of the two later of these three statutes may justly be said to have prescribed an immunity against that action The like may be said of the statute made anno 23 Elizabeth cap. primo which saith that all offences comprised in that statute made in the 13 year of Elizab. cap. 2. are inquirable before both Justices of peace and of Assise within one year and a day after the offence committed Also the title that a man obtaineth by the passing of five years after a fine acknowledged of any land or tenements may justly be said to be obtained by prescription And whereas the Statute anno 8 R. 2. ca. 4. saith that a Iudge or Clerk convicted for false entring of plees c. may be fined within two years the two years being ended he prescribeth against the punishment of the said Statute and whereas the Statute anno 11 H. 7. saith that he which will complain of maintenance or embracery whereby perjury is committed by a lury must do it within six daies those six daies ended the parties prescribe and whereas the Statute anno 5 Ed. 6. saith that a man being not indicted within 3 months of any offences there mentioned touching Service and Sacraments he shall be clear from thence forward the three months being ended he prescribeth and the same may be said of the Statute anno 5 Ed. 6. cap. 5. which saith that a man shall not be indited of any offence there mentioned touching the decay of tillage after three years And whereas it is ordained by the statute anno 8 H. 6. cap. 9. that those which keep possession of lands by force after 3 years possession held by themselves and their ancestors shall not be subject to the arbitrament of Disseisours there set down I hold this a prescription likewise against those censures v. anno 23 H. 6. cap. 15. Lastly a servant prescribeth liberty after a year Bracton li. 1. ca. 10. nu 3. and the right that is gotten in any Stray to a Lord of a manor no man claiming it within the year and day after proclamation made is an usucapion or prescription See Action perpetual and temporal And see Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 173. b. ubi habebis festum But see one rule for all in Lam. Eirenarch lib. 4. cap. 5. pag. 469. Of this prescription and the learning touching the same you may read a solemn report in S. Edwards Cooks Luttrels case vol. 4. f. 84. b. seq Presentation Praesentatio is used properly for the act of a patron offering his Clerk to the Bishop to be instituted in a benefice of his gift the form whereof see in the Register original fol. 322. a. Presentment is a meer denunciation of the Iurors themselves or some other Officer as Iustice Constable Searcher Surveyours c. without any information of an offence inquirable in the Court whereunto it is presented See Lamberd Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 5. pag. 467. President praeses is used in the Common law for the Kings Lieutenant in any Province or Function as President of Wales of York Barwick Presient of the Kings Councel Anno 22 Hen. 8. cap. 8. anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 3 14. Preignotary Protonotarius is a word that seemeth to be made either of two French words prime or prim●er i. primus and Notaire i. Notarius tabellio Or of two Latine words prae notarius quasi primus aut principalis notarius The office is likewise borrowed from the later Romans who made his name of half Greek and half Latine viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. primus principalis and Notarius It is used in our Common law for the chief Clerks of the Kings Courts whereof three be of the Common plees and one of the Kings Bench. For the Pregnotary of the Common plees anno 5 H. 4. cap. 14. is tearmed the chief Clerk of that Court He of the Kings Bench recordeth all actions civil sued in that Court as the Clerk of the Crown-office doth all criminal causes Those of the Common plees do enter and inroll all manner of Declarations pleadings assises and judgements and all actions the same term that the apparence is made Also they make out all judicial writs as the Venire facias after issues joyned and Habeas corpus for the bringing in of the Jury after it is returned upon the Venire facias They also make forth writs of executions and of seisin writs of Supersedeas for appearance to Exigents as well as the Exigents and writs of privileges for removing of causes from other inferiour Courts of Record in case where the party hath cause of privilege Also writs of Procedendo of Scire facias in all cases and writs to enquire of dammages and all process upon prohibitions and upon writs of Audita quaerela and false judgement Finally they inroll all Recognisances acknowledged in that Court and all common Recoveries and may make exemplifications of any record the same term before the roles be delivered from them Prender commeth of the French trendere i. accipere acceptare capere prehendere It signifieth in our Common law sometime a power or right to take a thing before it be offered as such things as lye in Prender or such as lye in render West parte 2. titule Fines Sect. 126. where you have these words If the Lord grant the services of his Tenent by fine or otherwise the Lord before atturnment shall have such things as lye in Prender as the ward of the body of the heir and of the Land escheats c. but not such things as lye in render as rents and reliefs heriots and other services For he cannot avow for them before the attournment Prender de Baron signifieth literally in barbarous French to take a Husband But it is used in our Common law as an exception to disable a woman from pursuing an Appeal of murder against the Killer of her former Husband Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 59. The reason whereof whether it be because by her second mariage she may justly be thought to have given up the interest she had in her former husband or for that she is now covert again or for both I leave to consideration Prender del profits signifieth verbatim to take the profits It signifieth substantively the taking of the profits See Cromptons jurisdict folio 185. See Pernour of profits Prest is used for some
which doctrine Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium fol. 112. E. extendeth thus far that if any of the goods be cast upon the dry Land by any in the ship it is no wreck subject to the Prerogative for by this some of the Ship are presumed to come to land and still to have a custody of the goods Cook ubi supra This in the Grand Customary of Normanny cap. 17. is called varech and latined veriscum where it appeareth that the like law to ours was in Normandy almost in all points But some sorts of their precious Merchandise do by their law appertain to the Duke by his Prerogative though a just challenge of the goods be made within the year and day The Emperors of Rome made no advantage of this pitifull event as appeareth titulo De Naufragiis 11. Cod. And it appeareth that Richard the first had some remorse of poor sea-mens miseries in this case For he quietum clam evit wreck suis subditis Rog. Hoveden parte poster suerum ann●l fol. 386. Of this M. Skene de verb. siguif speaketh to this effect wreck signifieth a power liberty and prerogative appertaining to the King or to any person to whom the same is granted by him by feoffment or any other disposition to take up and gain such goods as are ship-broken or fall to him by escheat of the sea Writ breve is that with our Common Lawyers in Sir Thomas Smiths judgement lib. 2. de Repub. Anglorum ca. 9. which the Civilians call Actionem sive formulam But I am rather of his judgement that hath added the marginal note unto him saying that Actio is the parties whole sute and that Breve is the Kings precept whereby any thing is commanded to be done touching the sute or action as the Defendant or Tenent to be summoned a distresse to be taken a disseisin to be redressed c. And these writs are diversly divided in divers respects Some in respect of their order or manner of granting are termed original and some judicial Original writs be those that are sent out for the summoning of the Defendant in a personal or Tenent in a real action or other like purpose before the sute beginneth or to begin the sute thereby Those be judicial that be sent out by order of the Court where the cause dependeth upon occasion growing after sute begun Old nat brev fol. 51. And Iudicial is thus by one sign known from the Original because the Teste beareth the name of the Chief Iustice of that Court whence it commeth where the Original beareth in the Teste the name of the Prince Then according to the nature of the action they be personal or real and real be either touching the possession called writs of Entry or the property called writs of right Fitz. nat br sparsim per totum Some writs be at the sute of a party some of office Old nat br fol. 147. Some ordinary some of privilege A writ of privilege is that which a privileged person bringeth to the Court for his exemption by reason of some privilege See Procedendo See the new book of Entries verbo Privilegt See Brief Writ of Rebellton See Commission of Rebellion Writer of the Tallies Scriptor talliarum is an Officer in the Exchequer being Clerk to the Auditor of the Receipt who writeth upon the Tallies the whole letfers of the Tellers bills Y. YA YArd lands Virgata terrae is a quantity of land called by this name of the Saxon Gyrdlander but not so certain a quantity as that it is all one in all places For in some Countries it containeth 20 acres in some 24. in some 30. as M. Lamberd saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo virgata terrae This Yard land Bracton calleth virgatam terrae lib. 2. cap. 10. et 37. but he expresseth no certainty what it containeth YE Year and day annus et dies is a time thought in construction of our Common law fit in many cases to determine a right in one and to work an usucapion or prescrition in another As in a case of an estray if the owner Proclamations being made chalenge it not within that time it is forfeit So is the year and day given in case of appeal in case of descent after entry or claim of no claim upon a fine or writ of right at the Common law so of a villein remaining in antient demean of the death of a man sore bruised or wounded of Protections Essoins in respect of the Kings service of a wreck and divers other cases Coke vol. 6. fol. 107. b. And that touching the death of a man seemeth an imitation of the Civil Law Nam si mortiferè fuerit vulneratus et posteà post longum intervallum mortuus fit inde annum numerabimus secundum Iulianum l. ait lex n. ad legem Aqui● Year day and wasto annus dies et vastum is a part of the Kings Prerogative whereby he challengeth the profits of their lands and tenements for a year and a day that are attainted of petit treason or felony whosoever be Lord of the Manor whereunto the lands or tenements do belong and not only so but in the end wasteth the tenement destroyeth the houses rooteth up the woods gardens pasture and ploweth up meadows except the Lord of the fee agree with him for the redemption of such waste afterward restoring it to the Lord of the fee wherof you may read at large Siawnf prarog cap. 16. fol. 44. et seq YO Yoman seemeth to be one word made by contraction of two Danish words young men which I gather out of Canutus Charter of the Forest set out out by M. Manwood parte prim fol. prim num 2. in these words Sunt sub quolibet horum quatuor ex mediocribus hominibus quos Angli Legespend ●uncupant Dani vero yong men vecaut locati qui curam et onus tum vi●id●s tum veneris suscipiant These M. Cambden in his Britan. pag. 105. placeth next in order to Gentlemen calling them Iugenuos whose opinion the Statute affirmeth anno 6 R. 2. cap. 4 Whereunto adde the Statute anno 20. ejusdem Regis cap. 2. Sir Thomas Smith in his Repub. Anglor lib. prim cap. 23. calleth him a Yoman whom our Laws call legalem hominem which as he saith is in English a ●ee man born that may dispend of his own free land in yearly revenue to the sum of 40 shillings sterling Of these he writeth a good large discourse touching their estate and use in this Common wealth The former etymologie of the name he liketh not making question whether it come of the Dutch Yonger yea or not which in the Low-countries signifieth a mean Gentleman or a gay fellow but he that hath added the marginal notes to that book seemeth to draw it from the Saxons Geman which signifieth a maried man M. Verstegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 10. writeth that Gemen among the antient Teutonicks and Germein among the modern signifieth as much as common and that the first Letter G. is in this word as in many others turned into Y. and so writeth Yemen and that therefore Yemen or Yeomen signifieth so much as Commoner Yoman signifieth an Officer in the Kings house which is in the middle place between the Sergeant and the Groom as Yoman of the Chaundry and Yoman of the Scullery an 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Yoman of the Crown anno 3 Ed. 4. cap. 5. anno 22 ejusdem cap. 1. anno 4 H. 7. cap. 7. This word Yongmen is used for Yomen in the Statute anno 33 H. 8. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS
ubi supra Accedas ad Vicecomitem is a writ directed to the Coroner commanding him to deliver a writ to the Sheriff that having a pone delivered unto him doth suppress it Regist orig fol. 83. Accessory Accessorius vel Accessorium is used in our Common law otherwise than among the Civilians For whereas with them it is generally taken for any thing depending upon another here though it be so likewise yet most commonly and notoriously it signifieth a man that is guilty of a felonious offence not principally but by participation as by commandment advice or concealment And a man may be accessory to the offence of another after two sorts by the Common law or by Statute and by the Common law two waies also that is before or after the fact Before the fact as when one commandeth or adviseth another to commit a selony and is not present at the execution thereof For his presence maketh him also a principal wherfore there cannot be an accessory before the fact in man-slaughter because man-slaughter is sodain and not prepensed Cook lib. 4. fol. 44. a. Accessory after the fact is when one receiveth him whom he knoweth to have committed selony Accessory by Statute is he that abetteth counselleth or hideth any man committing or having committed an offence made felonie by Statute For though the Statute make no mention of abettours c. yet they are by interpretation included Of all these consult with Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 45 46 47 48. There is also an accessory of an accessory as he that wittinglie receiveth an accessory to felony lib. Assis 26. pl. 51. coron Fitz. 197. Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 48. And the Law of England is that so long as the principal is not attainted the accessorie may not be dealt with Stawnf ubi supra The reason whereof you may see Cook li. 4. fo 43. b. And this is also true by the Civil Law Claudius de Battandier in pract crim regula 101. at the least untill the principal be certainly known Of this subject read M. Cromprons Justice fol. 37. b. 38 39. Acceptance is a receiving of a rent whereby the Receiver bindeth himself for ever to allow a former fact done by another whether it be in it self good or not New tearms of Law Accompt computus is in the Common law taken for a writ or action brought against a man that by means of Office or business undertaken is to render an account unto another as a Bailiff toward his Master a Guardian in soccage toward his Ward and such others as you shall find particularly named by Fitz. in his nat br fol. 116. where you may also have the form and further use of this writ See ex parte talis Accroche See Encrochment This word Accroche is used an 25 Edward 3. Stat. 3. cap. 8. Achat commeth of the French achet i. emptio nundinatio and is used for a contract or bargain Brook tit Contract Acquittal signifieth in our Common law most ordinarilie a deliverance and setting free from the suspicion or guiltiness of an offence and is two fold acquital in law or acquital in fact Acquital in law is when two be appealed or endicted of felony one is principal the other accessory the principal being discharged the accessory by consequent is also freed And in this case as the the accessorie is acquitted by law so is principal in fact Stawnf pl. cor fol. 168. Acquittance acquietantia commeth from the French quicter or quitter i. accepto ferre or quictance i. acceptitatio apocha and signifieth a release or discharge from a debt formerly due But the verb acquit the participle acquitted and the noun acquittal signifie also a discharge or clearing from an offence objected as acquitted by proclamation Smith de Rep. Anglo pa. 76. Stawnf pl. cor fol. 168. Brook tit Acquittall See the new tearms of Law verbo Acquittal and Acquittance Acquietandis plegiis is a writ lying for a suretie against the creditour that refuseth to acquit him after the debt is paid by the Debtour Regist orig fol. 158. where it appeareth that this is a Justicies Acre acre is a certain quantity of land containing in length 40 perches and four in breadth or to that quantitie be the length more or less And if a man erect any new Cottage he must lay 4 acres of land to it after this measure anno 31 Eliz. ca. 7. and with this measure agreeth Master Crompton in his Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 222. though he say also that according to the divers customes of divers Countries the the Perch differeth being in some places and most ordinarily but 16 foot dimid But in the County of Strafford 24 foot as was adjudged in the case between Sir Edward Aston and Sir John B. in the Exchequer In the Statute made of sowing of Flax anno 24 H. 8. cap. 4. eight score Perches make an acre which is 40 multiplyed by 4. See also the ordinance of measuring of Land made an 34 Ed. 1. statut 1. which agreeth with this acompt The word Acre seemeth to come from the German word acker which is all one with the Latine ager Action actio is defined by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 1. as it is by Justinian lib. 4. Instit titulo de actionibus viz. Actio nihil aliud est quàm jus persequendi in judicio quod alicui debetur Action is principally divided by Justinian in personalem realem by Bracton into personal real and mixt action personal is that which belongeth to a man against another by reason of any contract offence or cause of like force to a contract or offence made or done by him or some other for whose fact he is by law to answer Bract. lib. 3. cap. 3. nu 2. Action real is defined to be that which is given to any man against another that upon any cause possesseth or occupieth the thing requited or sued for in his own name and no other mans and in this only respect that he possesseth or occupieth the thing and none other Bract. ibid. nu 3. and his reason is this quia habet rem vel possidet quam restituere potest vel dominum nominare This definition and reason he farther exemplifieth in the words there following which he that will may read at large Action mixt is that which lyeth as well against or for the thing which we seek as against the person that hath it and is called mixt because it hath a mixt respect both to the thing and the person Bract. lib. 3. cap. 3. nu 5. For example the division of an Inheritance between co-heirs or co-partners called in the Civil law actio familiae exciscundae secondly the division of any particular thing being common to more called likewise actio de communi dividundo and this kind of action saith Bracton doth seem to be mixt because it lyeth as well against the thing as the person and indeed so do other excellent Civilians as Cuiacius and
Wesenbecius in their Paratitles π. finium regund And though Justinian in his first division omitteth the third member yet afterward in the same title § 20. he saith as these men do viz. that there be certain actions naming these and other of like nature that seem to have a mixture c. Of this you may also read Britton at large in his Chapter 71. And this division of action springeth from the object or matter whereabout it consisteth Wesenb parat π. de actio obliga The Author of the new Tearms of Law defineth a mixt action to be a sute given by the Law to recover the thing demanded and also the damages for wrong done as in Assise of novel disseisin the which writ if the disseisour make a feoffment to another the disseiseur shall have a remedie against the disseisour and the feoffer or other land tenant to recover not only the land but the dammages also See the test These words occasion me to shew that actio is by the Civil law called mixta in two respects Nam quadam mistae sunt quòd in se actionis in rem actionis personalis naturam habeant in üs actor reus uterque sit l. actionis verbo § fina w. de obliga actio Tales sunt actio familiae excisc communi dividun finium regun quaedam verò mistae sunt quòd rem simul poenam persequantur ut in actione vi bonorum rapt legis Aquiliae ea quae datur contra eos qui legata vel fidei commissa sacrosanctis Ecclesiis relicta solvere distulerunt And of this latter sort is the example that the said Author bringeth of a mixt action Action is also by the Civilians divided of the efficient cause in civilem praetoriam Whereof one riseth out of the common civil law the other from some Edict of the Pretour Who being Chief Justicer had authority for his year to supply the defects of the general law by his especial edicts And a division not unlike this may be made in the Common law of England one growing from the antient customary law the other from some Statute Brook tit Action sur le statut Action of the final cause is divided into civill poenal mixt Cook vol. 6. fol. 61. a. Action civil is that which tendeth only to the reeovery of that which by reason of any contract or other like cause is due unto us as if a man by action seek to recover a sum of mony formerly lent c. Action penal is that aimeth at some penalty or punishment in the party sued be it corporal or pecuniary As in the Action legis Aquiliae in the Civil law wherby in our Common law the next Friends of a man feloniously slain or wounded shall pursue the law against the murtherer or him that wounded him to condign punishment Bract. li. 3. ca. 4. Action mixt is that which seeketh both the thing whereof we are deprived and a penalty also for the unjust deteining of the same as in an Action of Tithe upon the Statute anno 2 3 Ed. 6. cap. 13. Action is also according to the form of Petition divided into such as are conceived to recover either the simple value of the thing chalenged or the double the triple or quadruple Bract. li. 3. ca. 3. nu 6. So doth Decies tantum lye against Embracers Fitz. not br fol. 171. and against Jurours that take mony for their verdict of one part or the other or both And to be short any other action upon a Statute that punisheth any offence by restitution or fine proportionable to the transgression Action is prejudicial otherwise called preparatorie or else principal prejudicial is that which groweth from some question or doubt in the principal as if a man sue his younger Brother for Land descended from his Father and it be objected unto him he is a Bastard Bract. lib. 3 ca. 4. nu 6. For this point of bastardy must be tryed before the cause can further proceed and therefore is termed praejudicialis quia prius judicanda Action is either awncestrel or personal Stawnf pl. cor 59. Auncestrel seemeth to be that which we have by some right descending from our Ancestor upon us and that personall which hath the beginning in and from our selves Action upon the Case actio super casu is a general Action given for redress of wrongs done without force against any man and by Law not especially provided for For where you have any occasion of sute that neither hath a fit name nor certain form already prescribed there the Clerks of the Chancery in antient time conceived a fit form of Action for the fact in question which the Civilians call actionem in factum and our common Lawyers action upon the case In factum actiones dicuntur ideo quia quod nomine non possunt exprimere negotium id rei gesta enarratione declarant citra formulam ac solennitatem ullam Cuiacius Gothofredus ad Rubricam de praescriptis verbis And whereas in the Civill Law there are two sorts actionis in factum one termed actio in factum ex praescriptis verbis the other actio in factum praetoria Wesenb parat de praescrip verb. the former growing upon words passed in contract the other more generally upon any fact touching either contract or offence formerly not provided against this Action upon the Case seemeth in use to be more like to the Pretours Action in factum than to the other because in the perusal of the new book of Entries and Brooks his Abridgement hereupon I perceive that an Action upon the Case lyeth as well against offences as breach of contract Of this see more in the word Trespass Action upon the Statute actio super Statuto is an Action brought against a man upon breach of a Statute to be resembled in mine opinion to any Action given in the law Imperial either upon edictum praetoris ple biscitum or senatusconsultum For as the Pretour so the common People in comitiis tributis and the Senators or Nobility in curia vel senatu had power to make laws whereupon the Pretour or other Judges permitted Action And even so our high Court of Parliament maketh Statutes against such offences as are either newly grown or more and more increased and our Judges entertain their Plees that commence their actions against the breakers of them Action is perpetual or temporal perpetua vel temporalis and that is called perpetual the force whereof is by no time determined Of which sort were all civil Actions among the antient Romans viz. such as grew from Laws decrees of the Senate or constitutions of the Emperors whereas actions granted by the Pretor died within the year de perpet tempor actio in Instit So we have in England perpetual and temporary actions and I think all may be called perpetual that are not expresly limited As divers Statutes give actions so
but of a Rent the same Actions lye as do of Land as the Case requireth The third difference is that an Annuity is never taken for Assets because it is no Free-hold in law neither shall be put in execution upon a Statute Merchant Statute Staple or Elegit as a Rent may Dyer fol. 345. num 2. speaketh also to this effect Annise-seed semen anisi is a medicinal seed not unknown so called of the herb anisum whereof it is the fruit Of this he that listeth may read Gerards Herbal lib. 2. ca. 397. It is noted among the garbleable drugs and spices anno 1 Jaco ca. 19. Anoisance aliâs Noisance aliâs Nusance nocumentum commeth of the French nuisance i. incommodum noxa and hath a double signification being used as well for any hurt done either to a publick place as high-way bridge or common river or to a private by laying any thing that may breed infection by incroaching or such like means as also for the Writ that is brought upon this transgression whereof see more in Nusance The word Anoysance I find anno 22 H. 8. c. 5. AP Apostate capiendo is a Writ that lyeth against one that having entred and professed some order of Religion breaketh out again and wandereth the Country contrary to the Rules of his Order For the Abbot or Prior of the House certifying this into the Chancery under their Common seal and praying this Writ directed to the Sheriff for the apprehension of such Offendour and for the delivery of him again to his Abbot or Prior or their lawfull Attorney were wont to obtain the same The form wherof with other circumstances you shall find in the Register orig fol. 71 267. and Fitzh natur br fol. 233. C. Apparlement commeth of the French pareilement i. similiter perinde itidem and signifieth a resemblance as apparlment of War anno 2 R. 2. stat 1. ca. 6. Appeal appellum commeth of the French appellor i. accire accersere nominare evocare clamore aliquem flagitare Itsignifieth in our Common-law as much as accusati● with the Civilians For as in the Civil-law Cognisance of criminal Causes is taken either upon inquisition denunciation or accusation so in ours upon indictment or appeal indictment comprehending both inquisition and denunciation And accusation or appeal is a lawfull declaration of another mans crime which by Bracton must be felony at the least in the Common-law before a competent Judge by one that setteth his name to the Declaration and undertaketh to prove it upon the penalty that may ensue of the contrary To declare the whole course of an Appeal were too much for this Treatise Wherefore for that I must refer you to Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. c. 18. cum sequent Britton c. 22 23 24 25. and to S. Thomas Smith l. 3. de repub Anglo c. 3. and lastly to Stawnf pl. cor l. 2. c. 6 7 c. usque 17. An Appeal is commenced two waies either by VVrit or by Bill Stawnf ubi supra fol. 46. And it may be gathered by him fol. 148. that an Appeal by VVrit is when a VVrit is purchased out of the Chancery by one to another to this end that he appeal a third of some felony committed by him finding Pledges that he shall do it and deliver this VVrit to the Sheriff to be recorded Appeal by Bill is when a man of himself giveth up his accusation in writing to the Vicount or Coroner offering to undergo the burthen of appealing another therein named This point of our Law among others is drawn from the Normans as appeareth plainly by the grand Customary cap. 68. where there is set down a solemn discourse both of the effects of this Appeal viz. the order of the combat and of the tryal by inquest of which by the Common-law of England it is in the choise of the Defendant whether to take See the new book of entries verbo Appel and the book of Assises fo 78. Appel Appeal of mahem appellum mahemit is an accusing of one that hath maimed another But that being no felony the Appeal thereof is but in sort an action of Trespass because there is nothing recovered but dammages Bracton calleth this appellum de plagis mahem●o and writeth of it a whole Chapter l. 3. tract 2. ca. 24. See S. Edw. Cook 4. vol. fo 43. a. Appeal of wrong imprisonment appellum de pace imprisonnamento is used by Bracton for an action of wrong imprisonment whereof he writeth a whole tractat lib. 3. tractat 2. ca. 25. Appeal appellatio used in our Common law divers times as it is taken in the Civil Law which is a removing of a cause from an inferiour Judge to a superiour as appeal to Rome an 24. H. 8. ca. 12. an 1 Eliz. ca. 1. But it is more commonly used for the private accusation of a murtherer by a party who had interest in the party murthered or of any felon by one of his complices in the fact See Approver Appendant appendens is any thing belonging to another as accessorium principali with the Civilians or adjunctum subjecto with the Logicians An Hospital may be appendant to a manor Fitz. nat br f. 142. Common of fishing appendant to a free hold Westm 2. ca. 25. anno 13. Ed. 1. Appertinances pertinentiae commeth of the French appertenir i. pertinere It signifieth in our common law things both corporall belonging to another thing as to the more principall as Hamlets to a chief Mannor common of pasture turbarie piscarie and such like and incorporeall as liberties and services of Tenents Brit. c. 39. Where I note by the way that he accounteth common of Pasture turbary and piscary to be things corporal Look Common Apportionment Apportionamentum is a dividing of a Rent into parts according as the land whence the whole rent issueth is divided among two or more See the new terms of Law Apprentice Appenticius commeth of the French aprenti i. tyro rudis discipulus or of the verb apprendre i. addiscere discere and signifieth with us one that is bound by covenant in word or writing to serve another man of Trade for certain years upon Condition that the Artificer or man of Trade shall in the mean time endeavour to instruct him in his Art or Mysterie S. Thomas Smith in his Book de rep Ang. l. 3. c. 8. saith that they are kind of Bondmen differing only in that they be Servants by Covenant and for a time Of these you may read divers Statutes made by the wisedome of our Realm which I think superfluous here to mention Appropriation appropriatio proceedeth from the French approprier i. aptare accommodare and properly signifieth in the law of England a severing of a benefice ecclesiastical which originally and in nature is juris divi●i in patrimonio nullius to the proper and perpetual use of some Religious House or Dean c. and Chapter Bishoprick or College And the reason of
assisa de Clarendon whereby those that be accused of any hainous crime and not able to purge themselves by fire and water but must abjure the Realm had liberry of fourty daies to stay and try what succour they could get of their Friends towards their sustenance in exile Stawnf pl. cor fo 118. out of Bracton li. 3. tract 2. cap. 16. num 2. Of this also Roger Hoveden maketh mention and more particularly than any I have heard parte poster suorum annalium fo 313. b. in Henrico secundo Assise of the Forest assisa de Foresta which is a statute or condition touching orders to be observed in the Kings Forest Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws p. 35. Crompton in the Court of Justices of the Forest per totum fo 146. seq And the assise of the King anno 18. Edw. 1. Stat. 1. called the Statute for view of Frank-pledge And these be called assises because they set down and appoint a certain measure tate or order in the things which they concern Of Assise in this singnification doth Glanvile also speak lib. 9. c. 10. in fine Geraliter verum est quod de quolibet placito quod in comitatu deducitur terminatur misericordia quae inde provenit vicecomiti aebetur quae quanta sit per nullam assisam generalem determinadum est And thus much touching Littletons division But if we mark well the Writers of the Law we shall find this word assise more diversly used than this Author hath noted For it is sometime used for the measure or quantity it self and that per Metonymiam effecti because it is the very scantline described or commanded by the Ordinance as for example we say when Wheat c. is of this price then the bread c. shall be of this assise This word is further taken for the whole process in court upon the Writ of assise or for some part thereof as the issue or verdict of the Jury For example assises of new disseisin c. shall not be taken but in their shires and after this manner c. Mag. Char. c. 12. And so it seemeth to signifie Westm 2. cap. 25. an 13 Ed. 1. in these words let the Disseisour allege no false exceptions whereby the taking of the Assises may be deferred c. And anno 34 Ed. 1. Stat. 2. if it be found by assise the assise is arrained to aver by the assise the assise by their default shall pass against them and also anno 1 H. 6. c. 2. assises awarded by default of the Tenents c. Lastly by Merton cap. 4. an 20 Henry 3. certified by the assise quit by the assise c. And in this signification Glanvile calleth it magnam assisam domins regis quae ex duodecim ad minus legalium hominum sacramentis consistit li. 2. c. 7. Bracton useth it in like sort as assisa cadit in transgressionem lib. 4. c. 30. assisa cadit in perambnlationem eodem c. 31. num 2. Fleta defineth an assise in this signification thus Assisa in jure possessorio est quaedam recognitio duodecim hominum juratorum per quam Justicjarii certiorantur de articulis in brevi contentis And assise also thus signifying is said sometime to pass per modum assisae and sometime in modum juratae in manner of an assise when only the Dissesin in question is put to the tryal of the Twelve in manner of a Iury when as any exception is objected to disable the interest of the Disseisee and is put to be tryed by the Twelve before the assise can pass as for example Quaestio status causa successionis causa donationis pactum sive conditio vel conventio voluntas disimulatio transactio vel quistaclamatio vel remissio confirmatio sive consensus propria usurpatio rei propriae difficultas Judicii justum judicium finis chirographum intrusio in rem alienam vel disseisina si incontinenti rejiciatur negligentia quae per transitum temporis excludit actionem Fleta lib. 4. c. 10. § 1. whom read also to this point c. 11. § Si autem à domino and at large c. 16. ejusdem libri l. b. 5. c. 6. § Item vertitur assisa seq And note that assise in this signification is taken four waies Old nat br fol. 105. The first is assise at large which is taken as well upon other points as upon the disseisin For example where an Infant bringeth an assise and the deed of his Ancestor is pleaded whereby he claimeth his right or foundeth his title then the assise shall be taken at large that is the Jury shall enquire not only whether the Plaintiff were disseised or not by the Tenent but also of these two points viz. whether his ancestor were of full age of good memory and out of Prison when he made the Deed pleaded Another example out of Kitchin fol. 66. The Tenent pleadeth a forein release in bar to an assise whereupon the cause was adjourned At the day the Tenent maketh default Therefore the assise was taken at large that is not only whether the Plaintiff were disseised but also whether there be any forein release A third example you may read in Littleton c. Estates upon Condition The second manner of assise in point of assise assisa in modum assisae which is when the Tenent as it were setting foot to foot with the Demandant without farther circumstance pleadeth directly contrary to the Writ no wrong no disseisin The third manner is assise out of the point of assise assisa extra assisam velin modum jurata viz. when the Tenent allegeth some by exception that must be tryed by a Jury before the principal cause can proceed as if he plead a forein release or forein matter tryable in another County For in this case the Justices refer the Record to the Court of Common pleas for the Tryal of the Forein pleas before the disseisin can come to be decussed Of this sort read divers others examples in Bracton l. 4. parte 1. c. 34. For there be of them as he saith and Britten also c. 52. both dilatory and peremptory The fourth and last manner is Assise of right of dammages and that is when the Tenent confessing a putting out and referring it to a demurrer in Law whether it were rightly done or not is adjudged to have done wrong For then shall the Demandant have a Writ to recover dammages which is called assise to recover dammages as also the whole processe Assise is further taken for the Court place or time when and where the Writs and processes of the assise be handled or taken And in this signification assise is general as when the Justices pass their several Circuits every couple with their Commission to take all assises twice in the year For he that speaketh of any thing done at that time and in that place will commonly say that it was done at the general assise It may likewise
d 14 b c. See Monstraverunt and Fitzherb fol. 14. and Dessendo quietum de telonio fol. 226. Fleta maketh three tenures holding of the Crown Ancient demeasne by Echeate and by Purchase lib. 1. cap. 2. See Demaine Auncient Demesn arere antiquum dominicum à retro is that auncient demeasn which the King granteth over to hold of a mannor Kitch fol. 67 b. Avowè Advocatus see Advowè Britton saith that Avowè is he to whom the right of Advowzen of any Church appertaineth so that he may present thereunto in his own name and is called Avowè for a difference from those that sometime present in another mans name as a Gardian that presenteth in the name of his Ward and for a difference also from them which have the lands whereunto an advowzen appertaineth but only for term of their lives or of yeers or by intrusion or Disseisin cap. 29. Avowrie see advowry Avoir du pois is in true French avoir du poix i. habere pondus aut justi esse ponderis It signifieth in our Common law two things first a kinde of weight diverte from that which is called Troy weight containing but twelve ounces to the pound whereas this containeth sixteen And in this respect it may be probably conjectured that it is so called because it is of more weight than the other Then also it signifieth such merchandise as are weighed by this weight and not by Troy weight as in the statute of York anno 9 Edw. 3. in proaem anno 27 Edw. 3. statut 2. cap. 10. anno 2 Rich. 2. cap. 1. See Weights Auxilium ad silium militem faciendum filiam maritandam is a Writ directed to the Sheriff of every County where the King or other Lord hath any Tenents to levy of them reasonable ayde toward the knighting of his son and the marriage of his daughter See Ayde and Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 82. B. BA BAcheler bachalaureus cometh of the French bachalier i. tyro and thereupon I think those that be called Bachelers of the companies in London be such of eath company as be springing towards the estate of those that be employed in councel but as yet are inferiors For every company of the twelve consisteth of a Master two Wardens the Livery which are assistants in matters of counsel or at the least such as the assistants be chosen out of and the Bachelers which are yet but in expectance of dignity among them have their function only in attendance upon the Master and Wardens I have read in an old monument this word Bacheler attributed to the Lord Admiral of England if he be under a Baron in French words to this effect And it is to weet that when the Admiral rideth to assemble a ship of war or other for the business and affairs of the realm if he be a Bacheler he shall take for his dayes wages 4 s. sterling if he bean Earl or Baron he shall take wages after the rate of his estate and degree This word is used an 13 R. 2. stat 2. cap. 1 and signifieth as much as Bacheler knight doth anno 3 Ed. 4. cap. 5. that is a simple knight not a knight baneret See Baneret Touching the farther etymologie of this word Bachalarii teste Renano à Bacillo nominati sunt quia primi studii authoritatem quae per exhibitionem baculi concedebatur jam consecuti fuissent Ut fuerit velut quoddam mancipationis signum in hujusmodi aliquod studium baculi traditto Alciat writeth the word baccalaurei eosque dicit visos à baccâ laureâ nomen sumpsisse in l. cui praecipua 57 π. de verbo signif Backberond is a Saxon word and almost English at this day signifying as much as bearing upon the back or about a man Bracton useth it for a signe or circumstance of manifest theft which the Civilians call Furtum manifestum For dividing Furtum in manifestum non manifestum he defineth furtum manifestum in this sort Furtum verò manifestū est ubi latro deprehensus est seisitus de aliquo latrocinio sc haud habend backberend insecutus fuerit per aliquem cujus res illa fuerit lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 32. Master Manwood in the second part of his Forest laws noteth it for one of the four circumstances or cases wherein a Forester may arrest the body of an offender against vert or venison in the Forest For by the assise of the Forest of Lancaster saith he taken with the manner is when one is found in the kings forest in any of these four degrees sc Stable stand Dog draw Back bear and Bloody hand In which place you may find all these interpreted Badger cometh of the French bagage i. sarcina impedimentum It signifieth with us one that buyeth corn or victuals in one place and carrieth it into another See Cromptons Justice of Peace f. 69 70. Baye or Penne is a Pond head made up of a great height to keep in a great quantity or store of water so that the wheels of the furnace or hammer belonging to an iron mill may stand under them and be driven by the water coming out of them by a passage or floud-gate called the Penstock and falling upon the said wheels This word is mentioned in the statute an 27 Elizab. cap. 19. Bayl ballium plevina manucaptio commeth of the French bailler i. attribuere tradere tribuere It is used in our Common law properly for the freeing or setting at liberty of one arrested or imprisoned upon action either civil or criminal under surety taken for his appearance at a day and place certainely assigned Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 8. num 8 9. The reason why it is called Bayl is because by this means the party restrained is delivred into the hands of those that binde themselves for his forth-coming There is both common special bayl Common bayl is in actions of small pre judice or slight proof being called common because any Sureties in that case are taken wheras upon causes of greater weight or apparent specialty special bayl or surety must be taken as Subsidy-men at the least and they according to the value Master Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 167. maketh a great difference between Bayland Mainprise in these words and note that there is a great diversity between bayle and mainprise For he that is mainprised is alwayes sayd to be at large to go at his own liberty out of ward after that he is let to mainprise until the day of his appearance by reason of the said common summons or otherwise But otherwise it is where a man is let to bayle by four or two men by the Lord chief Justice in the Eyre of the forest until a certain day For there he is alwayes accounted by the Law to be in their ward and custody for the time And they may if they will keep him in ward or in
Coursetour of the court and hath been chosen of some one of he clerks in the remembrancers offices or of the clerk of the Pipes office He at the days of prefixion taketh oath of all high Sheriffs and their under Sheriffs and of all Escheatours Bayliffs and other accountants for their true accounting He taketh the oath of all Collectours Controllers Surveyours and searchers of the Custom houses that they have made true entrances in their books He apposeth all Sheriffs upon their Summons of the Pipe in open Court He informeth the rest of the Barons of the course of the Court in any matter that concerneth the Kings Prerogrative He likewise as the other Barons taketh the declaration of certain receivers accounts and examineth the letters and sums of such of the former accountants as are brought unto him These Barons of the exchequer are antient officers for I find them named West 2. c. 11. an 13 Ed. 1. they be called Barons because Barons of the realm were wont to be employed in that office Fleta li. 2. c. 24. S. Tho. Smith saith of them that their office is to look to the accounts of the Prince and to that end they have Auditors under them as also to decide all causes appertaning to the Kings profits coming into the Exchequer by any means This is in part also proved by the Stat. an 20. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 27 ejusd stat 2. ca. 18. anno 5. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 9. 12. et anno 14. ejusd ca. 11. And hereupon they be of late men learned in the Common Law of the Realm whereas in autient times they were others viz. majores et discretiores in regno sive de clero essent sive de curia Ockam in his lucubrations de fisci regii ratione Horn. in his mirrour of Justices saith that Barons were wont to be two and they Knights cap. De la place del Eschequer Then be there in this signification Barons of the Cinque Ports anno 31 Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. an 33 H. 8. cap. 10. which are two of every of the seven towns Hastings Winchelsey Rye Rumney Hithe Dover and Sandwich that have places in the lower-house of Parliament Cromptons jurisd fol. 28. Baron in the third signification is used for the husband in relation to his wife which is so ordinary in all our law-writers that write in French as it were superfluous to confirm it by any one Baronet I read this word anno 13 R. 2. stat 2. cap. 1. But I hold it falsly printed for Baneret or else to signifie all one with it Baronye baronia baronagium is the fee of a Baron In which account are not onely the fees of Temporal Barons but of Bishops also who have two respects One ●s they are Spiritual men without possessions as was the Tribe of Levie among the Israelites being susteined by the onely First fruits and Tenths of the other Tribes Josh cap. 13. vers 14. The other respect they have groweth from the bounty of our English Kings whereby they have Baronies at the least and are thereby Barons or Lords of the Par●iament This Baronie as Bracton saith lib. 2. cap. 34. is a right indivisible and therefore if an inheritance be to be divided among Co-parteners Though some capital messuages may be divided yet si capitale messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae he faith they may not be parcelled The reason is ne sic caput per plu●es particulas dividatur plura jura comitatuum baroniarium deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baroniis dicitur esse constitutū Barre Barra commeth of the French barre or barriere i. repagulum obex vectis It is used in our Common law for a peremptory exception against a Demand or plaint and is by the Author of the terms of Law defined to be a Plee brought by the Defendant in an Action that destroyeth the Action of the Plaintiff for ever It is divided into a Barre to common intent and a Barre scecial A Barre to a common intendment is an ordinary or general Barre that ordinarily disableth the Declaration or Plee of the Plaintiff A Barre special is that which is more than ordinary and falleth out in the case in hand or question upon some special circumstance of the fact Plowden casu Colthirst fol. 26. a.b. For example an Executor being sued for his Testators debt pleadeth that he had no goods left in his hands at the day when the Writ was purchased or taken out against him This is a good barre to common intendment or prima facie But yet the case may so fall out that more goods might come to his hands sithence that time which if the Plaintiff can shew by way of replication then except he have a more especial plee or barre to allege he is to be condemned in the action See also Plowden in the case aforenamed fol. 28. a. b. and Broke t●●ul● Barre num 101. and Kitchin fol. 215. Barre also in the same signification is divided into barre material and barre at large Kitchin fol. 68. A barre material as it seemeth may otherwise be called a barre special as when one in the stop of the Plaintiffes Action pleadeth some particular matter as a descent from him that was the undoubted owner a Feoffment made by the Ancester of the Plaintiff or such like A bar at large is when the Tenent or Defendant by way of exception doth not traverse the Plaintiffs title by pleading not guilty nor confe ie and avoid it but onely maketh to himself a title in his barre As if in an Assise of novel disseisin the Tenent plead a Feoffment of a stranger unto him and gives but a colour onely to the Plaintiff Of this there is an apt example to be found 5 H. 7. fol. 29. Barre is also in regard of the effect divided into barre perpetual and barre pro tempore Perpetual is that which overthroweth the action for ever Barre pro tempore is that which is good for the present and may fail hereafter look an example or two in Broke titu Barre nu 23. where he saith that to plead plenè administravit is good until it may appear that more goods come to the Executors hands afterward which also holdeth for an heir that in an action of his Ancesters debt pleadeth rien per discent This word is also used for a material bar as the place where Sergeants or Councellers stand to plead causes in Court or Prisoners to answer to their Indictment Of which our Common lawyers that be licensed to plead in other Countries called licentiati are termed Baristers anno 24 H. 8. cap. 24. Barrator barectator cometh from the French Barat i. astutia and is neer the French it self in signification For barateur in that tongue betokeneth a deceiver and a barator in our Common law is a common wrangler that setteth men at ods and is
lawyers signifying him to whose use any other man is infeoffed in any Lands or Tenements See the new book of entries verbo uses and in Replevin fol. 508. colum 3. verbo Trespas fol. 606. fol. 123. a. b. colum 3. num 7. CH Chafe wax is an Officer in Chauncery that fitteth the wax for the sealing of the Writs such other instruments as are there made to be sent out This Officer is borrowed from the French For there calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chase chacea commeth of the French chasser i. sectari belluas apros cervos It signifieth two things in the Common Law First as much as actus in the Civil law that is a driving of cattel to or from any place as to chase a distress to a fortlet Old nat br fol. 45. Secondly it is used for a receit for Deer and wild beasts of a middle nature between a Forest and a Park being commonly lesse than a Forest and not endued with so many liberties as the Courts of attachment Swain mote and Justice seat and yet of a larger compas and stored with greater diversity both of keepers and wild beasts or game than a park And Crompton in his book of Jurisdictions fol. 148. saith that a Forest cannot be in the hands of a subject but it forth with loseth the name and becommeth a chase and yet fol. 197. he saith that a subject may be lord and owner of a Forest which though it seem a contrariety yet be both his sayings in some sort true For the King may give or alienate a Forest to a subject yet so as when it is once in the subject it leeseth the true property of a Forest because that the Courts called the Justice seat the Swain more and Attachment forthwith do vanish none being able to make a Lord chief Justice in Eyr of the Forest but the King as M. Manwood well sheweth parte 2. of his Forest Lawes cap. 3. 4. And yet it may be granted in so large a manner that there may be Attachment and Swainmote and a Court equivalent to a Justice seat as appeareth by him in the same chapter num 3. So that a Chase differeth from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a subject which a Forest in his proper true nature cannot and from a Park in that that it is not inclosed hath not onely a larger compasse and more store of game but of Keepers also and Overseers See Forest Chale●ge calumnia cometh of the French chalenger i. sib● asserere is used in the Common law for an exception taken either against persons or things persons as in assise to the Jurors or any one or more of them or in a case of felony by the prisoner at the barre Smith de re● Angl. lib. 2. cap. 12. Briton cap. 52. Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Against things as a declaration Old nat br fol. 76. Chalenge made to the Jurors is either made to the array or to the polles Chalenge to the array is when the whole number is excepted against as partially empaneled chalenge to or by the polle when some one or more are excepted against as not different Terms of the Law Chalenge to the Jurours is also divided into Chalenge principal and Chalenge per cause i. upon cause or reason Challenge principal otherwise by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 157. 158. called peremptorie is that which the Law alloweth without cause alleged or farther examination Lamberd Eirena lib. 4. cap. 14. as a prisoner at the barr arraigned upon felonie may peremptorily chalenge to the number of 20. one after another of the Jurie empaneled upon him alleging no cause but his own dislike and they shall be still put off and new taken in their places But in case of high treason no challenge peremptorie is allowed anno 33 H. 8. cap. 23. Fortescue saith that a prisoner in this case may challenge 35 men c. 27. but that law was abridged by anno 25 H. 8. cap. 3. I cannot here omit to note some difference that in mine opinion I observe between Chalenge principal and Chalenge peremptorie finding peremptorie to be used only in matters criminal and barely without cause alledged more than the prisoners own phantasie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 124. but principal in civil actions for the most part and with naming of some such cause of exception as being found true the law alloweth without farther scanning For example if either party say that one of the Jurors is the son brother cousin or tenent to the other or espoused his daughter this is exception good and strong enough if it be true without farther examination of the parties credit And how far this Chalenge upon children reacheth you have a notable example in Plowden casu Vernon against Manners fol. 425. Also in the plee of the death of a man and in every action real as also every action personal where the debt or dammages amount to 40 marks it is a good Chalenge to any man that he cannot dispend 40 shillings by the year of Free-hold anno 11 H. 7. cap. 21. and Terms of the Law verbo Chalenge The ground of this Chalenge you may see farther in Fleta lib. 4. cap. 8. Chalenge upon reason or cause is when the party doth allege some such exception against one or more of the Jurors as is not forthwith sufficient upon acknowledgement of the truth thereof but rather arbitrable and considerable by the rest of the Jurors as for example if the son of the Juror have married or espoused the daughter of the adverse party Terms of the Law ubi supra This Chalenge per cause seemed to be tearmed by Kitchin chalenge for favour fol. ●2 or rather Chalenge for favour is said there to be one species of Chalenge per cause where you may read what chalenges be commonly accounted principal and what not See the new book of Enteries verbo Chalenge and the Old nat br fol. 158. 159. That this word Chalenge is long sithence latined by the word calumnia appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 18. lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 6. lib. 5. cap. 6. But I doubt Priscian will never forgive him that first strook this blow at him Of Chalenge you may farther read Fleta lib. 1. cap. 32. § Ad quem diem seq Chamberdekins are Irish beggers an 1 H. 5. c. 8. Chamberer is used for a Chamber-maid an 33 H. 8. cap. 21. Chamberlain camerarius vel camberlingus cometh of the French chambellan i. cubicularius vel praefectus cubiculi It is diversly used in our Cbronicles Laws and Statutes as Lord great Chamberlain of England Lord Chamberlain of the Kings house the Kings Chamberlain anno 13 Ed. 1. cap. 41. anno 17 R. 2. cap. 6. to whose office it especially appertaineth to look to the Kings chambers and wardrope and to govern the under ministers
Hog R. answereth It is true that thou sayest and I delivered thee thy Hog which I am ready to prove Deraisnian he defineth to be a proof of a thing that one denieth to be done by himself which his adversary saith was done defeating or confounding his adversaries Assertion as you would say and shewing it to be without and against reason or likelihood which is avouched in our Common law it is used diversly first generally for to prove as Dirationavit jus suam hares propinquior Glanvil lib. 2. cap. 6. and Habea probos hemmer qui hoc viderum audierunt parati sunt hoc dirationare Idem lib. 4. cap. 6. and Dirationavit terram illam in curia mea Idem lib. 2. cap. 20. 1. he proved that land to be his own c. And pertinentiam eam dirationavit in vita sua vel alio modò juste perquisivit Idem lib. 6. cap. 12. and Bracton useth it after the same sort in these words Habeo sufficientem disratiocinationem probationem lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 16. and so he useth disrationare lib. 4. cap. 22. and so in Westm 2. anno 13 Ed. pri cap. 32. and to derein the warranty Old nat br fol. 146. and to derein the warranty Paramount anno 31 H. 8. cap. primo And dereigner le Warranty in Plowd casu Basset in fine 2. partis fol. 6 7. 8. a. hath the same signification So it is used West 2. cap. 5. anno 13 Ed. 1. in these words And when the parson of any Church is disturbed to demand Tithes in the next Parish by a Writ of Indicavit the patron of the Parson so disturbed to demand Tithes shall have a Writ to demand the Advowson of the Tithes being in demand and when it is deraigned then shall the Plee passe in the Court Christian as sarre forth as it is deraigned in the Kings Court. Bracton also lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. num 1. speaking of him that appealeth another for any Treason or Felony hath these words Proponat accufans appellum suum in hunc modum sc debet dicere se interfuisse vidisse certo loco certo die certa hora sci●isse ipsum accufatum praelocutum fuisse mortem reg●s vel se●●tionem suam vel exercitus sui vel consensisse vel anxiliant consilium impendisse vel ad hoc authoritxtem praestitisse hoc ego juxta considerationent curiae disrationare paratus sum He useth it like wise as the Normans use Disraisniam for him that offereth to justifie his denial as lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 2 S. num 1. in these words Rex consilio Episcoporum bonorum mrsit propter comitem ut statuto die ventret ad curiam ad disrationandum vel defendendum se si posset Lastly in some places I find the substantive dereinement used in the very literal signification of the French disrayer or defranger that is as a man would say turning out of course displacing or ferting out of order as dereinement or departure out of Religion anno 31 H. 8. cap. 6. and dereinment or discharge of their profession anno 33 H. 8. cap. 29. which is spoken of those Religious men which forsook their orders and professions as also anno 5 6 Ed. 6. cap. 13. So doth Kitchin use the verb fol. 152. in these words The Leasse entreth into Religion and afterward is dereigned And Britton useth these words Semounse desrenable for a summons that may be challenged as defective or not lawfully made cap. 21. Of this you may read something more in Skene de verb. signif verbo Disrationare where in one signification he confoundeth it with our waging and making of Law De son tort Demesne seem to be certain words of form in an action of trespasse used by way of reply to the Plee of the Defendant For example A. sueth B. in action of Trespasse B. answereth for himself that he did that which A. calleth a Trespasse by the commandement of C. his Master A. saith again that B. did it de son tort demesne sans ceoque C. luy commanda modo et forma that is B. did it of his own wrong without that C. commanded him in such form c. Detinet See Debito and Debet Detinew detinendo is a Writ that lyeth against him who having goods or chattels delivered him to keep refuseth to deliver them again See of this Fitzh nat br fol. 138. To this is answerable in some sort actio depositi in the Civil law And he taketh his action of detinew that intendeth to recover the thing delivered and not the Dammages sustained by the Detinew Kitchin fol. 176. See the new book of Entries verbo Detinew Devastaverunt bona testatoris is a Writ lying against Executors for paying Legacies and Debts without specialties to the prejudice of the creditours that have specialties before the debts upon the said specialties be due For in this case the Executors are as liable to action as if they had wasted the goods of the Testarour riotously or without cause New Terms of Law Devest Devestir is contrary to Invest For as Investire signifieth possessionem tradere So devestire is possessionem auferre feud lib. pri cap. 7. Devise alias divise cometh of the French diviser i. dispertiri discernere separare distinguere as diverser parici et par la distribuere This word is properly attributed in our Common Law to him that bequeaths his goods by his least Will or Testament in writing and the reason is because those that now appertain onely to the Devisour by this act are distributed into many parts Wherefore I think it better written divise then devise howbeit it were not absurd to derive this word from the French deviser i. serm●cinari fabulari con●ilium conferre For in this sense it agreeth in some sort with the nature of the act of the Testator and with the Etymology of a Testament set down by Justinian who saith that testamentum is quasimentis testatio titulo de testa ordinan in instit and testatio mentis cannot be so well as by talk and conference with our wise and skilful friends Devoires of Cales anno 2 R. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 3. et anno 5. ejusdem Stat. 2. cap. 2. were the customes due to the King for Merchandize brought to or carried out from Caleis when our Staple was there The word is French signifying as much as officium dutie Devorce alias divorce divortium is with our Common Lawyers accounted that separation between two de facto married together which is à vinculò matrimonii non solùm à mensa thoro And therefore the woman so divorced received all again that she brought with her This is not but only upon a nullity of the marriage through some essential impediment as consanguinity or affinity within the degrees forbidden precontract impotency or such like See the new Tearms of Law DI Diem clausit extremum is a Writ that lyeth for
may appoint one to order his moveables and chattels until the age of fourteen years at which time he may chuse his Gardian accordingly as by the Civil Law he may his Curator For we hold all one rule with the Civilians in this case and that is Invito curator non datur And for his Lands if he hold any by Copy or Court-rol commonly the Lord of the Fee appointeth him a Guardian until he come to the age of fourteen years and that is one next of kind to the Minor of that side that can hope for least profit by his death If he hold by charter in socage then the next of kind on that side by which the land cometh not is the Guardian and hereupon called guardian in socage And that which is said here of socage seemeth to be true likewise in petit sergeantie anno vicesimo octavo Ed. vardi primi statuto primo And the reason of this Fortescue giveth in his book intituled A commendation of the politique laws of England cap. 44. viz. because there might be suspition if the next kinsman on that side by which the land descendeth should have the custody and education of the Child that for desire of his land he might be entised to work him some mischief Lastly if a man die seised of lands holding by Knights service leaving his heir in minority that is under 21 years the Lord of the Fee hath by Law the custody both of the heir an● his land until he come to age See the statute anno 28 Ed. prim statut prim And the reason of this Fortescue likewise giveth for that he to whom by his Tenure he oweth Knights service when he can perform it is likeliest to train him up in martial and ingenious discipline until he be of ability But Polidore Virgil in his Chronicle lib. 16. saith that this was Novum vectigalis genus excogitatum to help Henry the third being oppressed much with poverty by reason he received the Kingdome much wasted by the Wars of his Ancestors and therefore needing extraordinary help to uphold his estate yet the 33 Chapter of the Grand Custumary maketh mention of this to have been used by the Normans and I think this the truer opinion Here it is to be observed whether land in Knights service hold in capite or of another Lord or some of the King and some of another If of the King whether of the King alone or not all is one For the King in this case is Guardian to the heirs both person and land by his prerogative Stawnford praerogat cap. 1. If he hold of a common Lord it is either of one alone or more if of one onely then is he Guardian of both person and Lands if of more then the Lord of whom he holdeth by the elder Tenure is Guardian of the person and every one of the rest hath the custody of the land holden of himself If the priority of the Tenure cannot be discerned then is he Guardian of the person that first happeth him Terms of the law Stawnf ubi supra whom you may read more at large which Author fol. 19. maketh mention of Gardeyn in feit and Gardeyn in droit that is in deed and in law I take the first to be him that hath purchased or otherwise obtained the ward of the Lord of whom the Land holdeth The second him that hath the right by his inheritance and seignorie Old nat br fol. 94. Then is there Gardeyn per cause de gard which is he that hath the wardship of a Minor because he is Guardian of his Lord being likewise in minority Stawnford ubi supra fol. 15. Of this you may read Skene de verb. signif verbo Varda by whom you may learn great affinity and yet some difference between the Law of Scotland and ours in this point Guardia is a word used among the Feudists for the Latine Custodia and Guardianus seu guardio dicitur ille cui custodia commissa est lib. Feudo 1. titulo 2. titulo 11. Gardeyn of the Spiritualities Custos spiritualium vel spiritualitatis is he to whom the spiritual jurisdiction of any Diocesse is committed during the vacancie of the See an 25 H. 8. c. 21. And I take that the Guardeyn of the Spiritualties may be either Guardein in law or Jure Magistratus as the Arch-bishop is of any Dioces within his Province or Guardian by delegation as he whom the Arch-bishop or Vicar general doth for the time depute Gardeyn of the peace Custos pacis See Conservatour of the peace Gardeyn of the Cinque ports Gardianus quinque portuum is a Magistrate that hath the jurisdiction of those Havens in the East part of England which are commonly called the Cinque ports that is the five Havens who there hath all that jurisdiction that the Admiral of England hath in places not exempt The reason why one Magistrate should be assigned to these few Havens seemeth to be because they in respect of their situation anciently required a more vigilant care than other Havens being in greater danger of invasion by our enemies by reason that the Sea is narrower there than in any other place M. Cambden in his Britannia pag. 238. saith That the Romans after they had setled themselves and their Empire here in England appointed a Magistrate or Governour over those East parts whom they rearmed Comitem littoris Saxonici per Britanniam having another that did bear the same title on the opposite part of the Sea whose office was to strengthen the Sea Coasts with Munition against the outrages and robberies of the Barbarians And farther signifieth his opinion that this Warden of the Cinque ports was first erected amongst us in imitation of that Roman policie See Cinque ports Gare anno 31 Ed. 3. cap. 8. is a coarse wool full of staring hairs as such as groweth about the pesil or shanks of the Sheep Garnishment cometh of the French Garnir i. instruere It signifieth in our Common law a warning given to one for his appearance and that for the better furnishing of the cause and Court. For example one is sued for the detinue of certain Evidences or Charters and saith that the Evidences were delivered unto him not onely by the Plaintiff but by another also and therefore prayeth that that other may be warned to plead with the Plaintiff whether the said conditions be performed yea or no. And in this petition he is said to pray Garnishment New book of Entries fol. 211. colum 3. Terms of the Law Cromptons Jurisd fol. 211. which may be interpreted either warning of that other or else furnishing of the Court with parties sufficient throughly to determine the cause because untill he appear and joyn the Defendant as Fitzherb saith is as it were out of the Court nat br fol. 106. G. and the Court is not provided of all parties to the action I am the bolder thus to interpret it because I find Britton in the same
hurried to the Kings Bench if the cause were too high for the County Court They differed from the Justices of Oyer and Terminer because they as is above-said were sent upon some one or few especial cases and to one place whereas the Justices in Eyre were sent through the Provinces and Counties of the land with more indefinite and general Commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11 12 13 and Britton cap. 2. And again they seem to differ in this because the Justices of Oyer and Terminer as it is before said were sent uncertainly upon any uproar or other occasion in the countrey but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth down in the Preface to his Reading were sent but every seven year once with whom Horn in his mirrour of Justices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux point estre actourrs c. and lib. 2. cap. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and li. 3. ca. de Justices in Eyre where he also declar●th what belonged to their office These were instituted by Henry the 2. as M. Camden in his Britannia witnesseth pag. 104. And Roger Hoveden parte posteri annalium fol. 313. b. hath of them these words Justiciarii itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui divisit regnum suum in sex partes per quarum singulas tres Justiciarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Justices of Gaol delivery Justiciarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with Commission to hear and determine all causes appertaining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authority is to punish such as let to Mainprise those prisoners that by law be not baileable by the Statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitz. nat br fol. 151. I. These by likelihood in antient time were sent to Countries upon this several occasion But afterward Justices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the Kings Justices of either Bench Old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Justiciariorum See Oath Justices of labourers were Justices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or have unreasonable wages See anno 21 Edvardi 3. cap. primo anno 25 ejusd cap. 8. an 31 ejusd cap. 6. Justices of Nisi prius are all one now adayes with Justices of Assises for it is a common Adjournment of a cause in the Gommon Plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Justiciarit venerint ad eas parte ad capiendas Assisas and upon this clause of Adjournment they are called Justices of Nisi Prius as well as Justices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they have to deal in their Commission you may see in Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference between them because Justices of Assise have power to give judgement in a cause but Justices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both their functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Justices of Nisi prius have to deal in causes personal as well as real whereas Justices of Assise in strict acception deal only with the possessory writs called Assises Justices of trial baston aliàs of trayl baston were a kind of Justices appointed by King Edward the first upon occasion of great disorder grown in the Realm during his absence in the Scotish and French warres they are called in the Old nat brev fol. 52. Justices of trial Baston but by Holynshed and Stow Ed. pri of Trail baston or trailing or drawing the staff as Holynshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realm by the verdict of substantial Juries upon all officers as Maiors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators and others touching extortion briberies and other such grievances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that used to take money for beating of men and also of them whom they did beat by means of which inqusitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the Realm the land was quieted and the King gained great riches toward the supporting of his wars Inquire farther of the name Baston is thought by some to be the beam of a pair of Scoales or Weights And this is in this place metaphorically applied to the just peising of recompence for offences committed My poor opinion is that the etymologie of this title or addition groweth from the French Treilles i. cancelli bars or lettises of what thing soever a grate with crosse bars or of the singular Treille i. pargula an house arbour a rail or form such as vines run upon and Baston a staff or pole noting thereby that the Justices imployed in this Commission had authority to proceed without any solemn Judgement Seat in any place either compassed in with railes or made Booth or Tent-wise set up with staves or poets without more work wheresoever they could apprehend the malefactors they sought for See libro Assisarum folio 57.141 Justices of Peace Justiciarii ad pacem are they that are aprointed by the kings Commission with others to attend the peace of the Countie where they dwell of whom some upon special respect are made of the Quorum because some businesse of importance may not be dealt in without the presence or assent of them or one of them Of these it is but folly to write more because they have so many things appertaining to their Office as cannot in few words be comprehended And again Justice Fitzherbert sometime sithence as also Master Lamberd and Master Crompton of late have written Bookes of it to their great commendation and fruitfull benefit of the whole Realm See also Sir Thomas Smith de repub Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 19. They were called Gardians of the Peace until the 36. year of king Edward the third cap. 12. where they be called Justices Lam. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 19. pag. 578. Their oath see also in Lamberd lib. 1. cap. 10. Justices of Peace c. within Liberties Justiciarii ad pacem infra libertates be such in Cities and other Corporate Towns as those others be of any County and their authoritie or power is all one within their several precincts Anno 27 H. 8. cap. 25. Justicies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some especiall cause wherewith of his own authoritie he cannot deal in his County Court lib. 12. cap. 18. whereupon the Writ de Excommunicato deliberando is called a Justicies in the Old nat brev fol. 35. Also the Writ de homine replegiando eodem fol. 41. Thirdly the Writ de secunda superoneratione pasturae eodem fol. 73. Kitchin fol. 74. saith that by this writ called Justicies the Sheriff may hold plee of a great summe whereas of his ordinary authoritie he cannot hold plees but
those which were formerly in use that King Henry the third was thought but hardly to yield unto it that to have the 15th peny of all the movable goods both of the Spiritualty and Temporalty throughout his Realm Holinshed in Hen. the 3d. And though this Charter consist not of above 37 Charters of Laws yet is it of such extent as all the laws we have is thought in some sort to depend of it Polydor. and Holinshed ubi supra Mahim Mahemium commeth of the old French Mehaigne as M. Skene saith de verbor significat verbo Machanium and signifieth a corporal hurt whereby a man loseth the use of any Member that is or might be any defence unto him in Battel The Canonists call it Membrimutilationem as the eye the hand the foot scalpe of the head his foretooth or as some say of any finger of his hand Glanvile lib. 14. cap. 7. See Bracton at large lib. 3. Tractat. 2. cap. 24. num 3. and Britton cap. 25. and Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 41 and the new exposition of Law-terms and the Mirrour of Justices cap. d'Homicid The grand Customary of Normandy cap. 6. calleth it Mahaignium and defineth it to be Enormen laesionem All agree that it is the losse of a Member or the use thereof And membrum as Cassan de consuetu Burgund pag. 168. defineth it out of Baldus Est pars corporis habens destinatam operationem in corpore where you may read more of this point But if you will see it largely discussed look Ugolinus de irregularitatibus cap. 4. sect 3 4 5. also read M. Skene ubi supra Mainour aliâs manour aliâs meinoure seemeth to come of the French manier i. manu tractare attrectare or else of Amener i. abducere It signifieth in our Common law the thing that a Thief taketh away or stealeth As to be taken with the Manour Pl. cor fo 179 is to be taken with the thing stollen about him again fo 194. It was presented that a Thief was delivered to the Viscount together with the Mainour And 3ly fo 186 If a man be indicted that he feloniously stole the goods of another where in truth they be his own goods and the goods be brought into the Court as the Mainour and it be demanded of him what he saith to the goods and he disclaim them though he be quitted of the felony he shall lose the goods And again fo 149. If the Defendant were taken with the Manour and the Manour be carried to the Court they in ancient times would arraign him upon the Manour without any appeal or inditement I find this word used in the Old nat brev fol. 110. in this sort where a man maketh a thing by Manour or leavying or estopping in such Case he shall have assise where it signifieth handy labour and is but an abbreviation of Mainovery Mainvre see Minoverye Mainprise manucaptio is compounded of two French words Main 1. manus and prius id est captus which is a participle of the verb prendre id est capere excipere captare It signifieth in our common Law the taking or receiving a man into friendly custody that otherwise is or might be committed to the mercy of the prison upon security given for his forth-comming at a day assigned as to let one to mainprise Old nat bre f. 42. is to commit him to them that undertake his appearance the time appointed And they that do thus undertake for any are called Mainpernours because they do receive him into their hands Pl. Co. fol. 178. Of this sort is the word Mainpernable which signifieth him that hath committed such an Offence as by law he may be thus bayled for in many Cases a man is not mainpernable whereof see Brook titulo Mainprise per totum and Fitzh nat brev fol. 249. seq Master Manwood in his first part of his Forest laws pa. 167. maketh a great difference between Bayl and Mainprise For he that is mainprised quoth he is alwaies said to be at large and to go at his own liberty out of ward after the day is set to mainprise untill the day of his appearance by reason of the said several summons or otherwise But otherwise it is where a man is let to bayl to four or two men by the Lord Justice in Eyr of the Forest untill a certain day For there he is alwaies accounted by the Law to be in their ward and custody for the time And they may if they will keep him in ward or in prison all that time or otherwise at their will So that he that is so bayled shall not be said by the Law to be at large or at his own liberty Thus far Master Manwood The Myrrour of Justices maketh a difference also between pledges and Mainpernours saying that pledges are more general and that Mainpernours are body for body lib. 2. c. de Trespass veniall and lib. 3. cap. des Pledges and Mainpernours When Mainprises may be granted and when not see Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 136 c. usque 141. and Lambert Eirenarch lib. 3. cap. 2. pag. 336 337 338 339 340. See also Britton fol. 73. a. cap. des Pledges Mainpernours The Author of the Mirrour of Justices saith that Pledges be those that bayl or redeem any thing but the body of a man and that Mainpernours be those that free the body of a man And that Pledges therefore belong properly to real and mixt actions and Mainpernours to personal Maintenance manutentio vel manutenentia is a French word and signifieth an upholding of a cause or person metaphorically drawn from the succouring of a young Child that learneth to go by ones hand In our Common law it is used in the evill part for him that secondeth a Cause depending in sute between others either by lending of mony or making Friends for either party toward his help Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 9. And when a mans act in this kind is by Law accounted Maintenance and when not See Brook titulo Maintenance and Kitchm fol. 202 seq and Fitzh natura brev fo 172. and Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 38. The writ that lieth against a Man for this offence is likewise called Maintenance Terms of the Law verbo Maintenance Special Maintenance Kitchin fol. 204. seemeth to be maintenance most properly so termed Of this see Cromptons Justice of peace fo 155. b. and the New Book of Entries verbo Maintenance Maintenance v. Novos terminos juris Make facere signifieth in the Common law to perform or execute as to make his Law is to perform that law which he hath formerly bound himself unto that is to clear himself of an Action commenced against him by his oath and the Oaths of his Neighbours Old nat brev fol. 161. Kitchin fol. 192. Which Law seemeth to be borrowed of the Feudists who call these men that come to swear for another in this Case Sacramentales Of whom thus saith Hotoman in verbis Feudal
effect and saith thus Vifangthef dicitur extraneus latro veniens aliunde de terra aliena qui captus fuit in terra ipsius qui tales habet libertates It seemeth to be compounded of these three words Vi fang thef which in our modern English be out take or taken Thief Of this Fleta hath these words Vifangenthef dicitur latro extraneus veniens aliunde de ●erra aliena qui captus fucrit in terra ipsius qui tales habet libertates Sed non sequitur quod possit ille hominem suum proprium extra libertatem su●m captum reducere usque in libertatem et ibi cum judicare reducere tamen poterit judicatum et judicium in proprio patibulo exequi ratione libertatis commodum tamen non video Debet enim quilibet juri subjacere ubi deliquit proprios tamen latrones et alienos judicare possunt dum tamen infra libertatem fuerint capti c. Vtlaghe significat bannitum extra legem Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47. See Vtlawrie Vtlagatio capiendo quando utlagatur in uno comitatu et postea fugit in alium is a writ the nature whereof is sufficiently expressed in the words set down for the name thereof See the Register original fol. 133. Vtlawrie utlagaria aliâs utlagatio is a punishment for such as being called into law and lawfully sought do contemptuously refuse to appear And as Bracton saith lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. He that is sued must be sought and called at 5 Counties a month being between every County to answer to the law And if he come not within that time pro exlege tenebitur cum principi non obediat nec legi et ex tunc utlagabitur that is as the Author of the Terms of Law saith he shall be pronounced by the Coroner to be out of the Kings protection and deprived of the benefit of the Law The effect of this is divers as the same Author saith for if he be out-lawed in an action personal he meaneth at the sute of another in a civil cause he shall forfeit all his goods and cattels to the King if upon felony then he shall forfeit all his Lands and Tenements that he hath in fee-simple or for term of his life and his goods and cattels Bracton ubi supra xum 5. saith that such as be outlawed upon Felony Ex tunc gerunt caput lupinum ita quod sine judiciali inquisitione ritè pereant et secum suum judicium portent et meritò sine lege pereunt qui secundum legem vivere recusarunt Et haec ita si cùm capiendi fuerint fugiant vel se defendant si autem vivi capti fuerint vel se reddiderint vita illorum et mors erit et manu Domini Regis See Horns miror of Justices lib. 3. cap. des fautes punishables Bracton saith in the place above specified with whom also Fleta agreeth lib. 1. cap. 27. that a Minor or a woman cannot be out-lawed But take his own words Minor vero qui infra aetatem 12. annorum fuerit utlagari non potest nec extra legem poni quia ante talem aetatem non est sub lege aliqua nec in Decenna non magis quàm foemina quae utlagari non potest quia ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlangh Anglice sc in franco plegio sive decenna sicut masculus 12. annorum ulteriùs Et ideo non potest utlagari Waiviari tamen bene potest pro derelicta haberi cum pro felonia aliqua fugam fecerit sine ceperit Est enim waivium quod nullus advocat nec princeps eum advocabit nec tuebitur cum fuerit rite Waiviata sicut fit de masculo qui secundum legem terrae ritè fuerit utlagatus c. To the same effect writeth Fitzherbert in his Natura brev fol. 161. viz. And because women be not sworn in Leets to the King as men be of the age of twelve years or upward it is said when a woman is out-lawed that she is waived but not out-lawed for she was never under the law nor sworn unto it More of this you may read in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 12 13. and then in the 14. how an out-law is in-lawed again and restored to the Kings peace and protection See also Fleta lib. 1. cap. 28. per totum Vtrum See Assise Vtter Baristers be such as for their long study and great industry bestowed upon the knowledge of the Common law be called out of their contemplation to practise and in the face of the world to take upon them the protection and defence of the Clyents These are in other Countries called Licentiati in jure Howbeit in modesty they still continue themselves hearers for divers years like the Scholars of Pythagoras that for the first five years never adventured to reason or discourse openly upon any point of their Masters Doctrine which their silence à cohihibendo sermone was termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Suidas and Zenodorus do report Vtlepe significat escapium latronum Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. W WA VVAge vadiare proceedeth of the French Gager i. dare pignus pignore certare and signifieth in our Common law the giving of security for the performing of any thing as to wage law and to wage deliverance which see before in Gage None wageth law against the King Brook titulo Chose in action num 9. The substantive of this verb is Wager in the Latin vadium which some Feudists call wadium as testifieth Hotoman in his Commentaries de verbis feudalibus verbo Wadium See Law Wainage wanagium aliâs wannagium signifieth as much as peculium servorum of the Saxon word wonen i. habitare woening i. habitatio See Gamage Waive waiviare Regist. orig fol. 277. a. is to forsake habere pro derelicto as the Civilians term it Waiviare feudum suum Bracton lib. 2. cap. 7. that is to forsake Many of the Kings liege people to be out-lawed and many waived by erroneous proces anno 7 H. 4. cap. 13. See Vtlawry To waive the company of Theeves Stawnf pl. cor fol. 26. To waive his benefit Idem fol. 46. To waive the advantage Idem praerog fol. 17. Persons attainted or waived West parte 2. symbol tit Fines Sect. 13. D. This word waived waiviata properly belongeth to a woman that being sued in the Law contemptuously refuseth to appear as out-lawed doth to a man Regist. orig fol. 132. b. 277. a. The reason whereof see in Fitz. nat br fol. 161. A. See Weif Wales Wallia is a part of England on the West side inhabited by the off-spring of the antient Britons chased thither by the Saxons being called hither by them to assist them against the might of the Picts The reason of the appellation commeth from the Saxon Wealh i. exterus vel peregrinus for so the Saxons both called them and held them though now to the great quiet of this