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A28468 Nomo-lexikon, a law-dictionary interpreting such difficult and obscure words and terms as are found either in our common or statute, ancient or modern lawes : with references to the several statutes, records, registers, law-books, charters, ancient deeds, and manuscripts, wherein the words are used : and etymologies, where they properly occur / by Thomas Blount of the Inner Temple, Esq. Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing B3340; ESTC R19028 517,540 312

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Ex Reg. Priorat de Cokesford See Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 35. who says inter al. Et dicitur Infangethef latro captus in terra alscujus de hominibus suis propriis seisitus latrocinio Utfangthefe verò dicitur latro extraneuae veniens aliunde de terrâ alienâ qui captus fuit in terrâ ipsius qui tales habet libertates c. See also Sir Hen. Spelmans learned Glossarium In forma pauperis Is when any Man who hath just cause of Sure in Chancery and will make Affidavit that he is not worth Five pounds his debts being paid then upon a Petition to the Master of the Rolls he shall be admitted to sue In forma pauperis and shall have Council and Clerks assigned him without paying Fees and the like by the Judges of other Courts Information for the King Informatio pro Rege Is that which for a common person we call a Declaration and is not always preferred directly by the King of his Atturney but also by some other person who prosecutes as well for the King as for himself upon the breach of some Penal Law or Statute wherein a penalty is given to the party that will sue for the same and may either be by Action of Debt or Information Informatus non sum or Non sum informatus Is a Formal Answer made of course by an Atturney who is not instructed to say any thing material in defence of his Clients cause by which he is deemed to leave it undefended and so Judgment passeth against his Client See the New Book of Entries verbo Non sum informatus Informer Informator Is one who informs or prosecutes in the Exchequer Kings Bench or Common Pleas Assises or Sessions against those that offend or break any Laws or Penal Statutes And are sometimes called Promotors by the Civilians Delatores Ingressu Is a Writ of Entry whereby a Man seeks Entry into Lands or Tenements and lies in divers Cases wherein it hath as many diversities of Forms See Entry This Writ is also called in particular Praecipe quod reddat because those are formal words in all Writs of Entry De Ingressu sine assensu Capituli c. Reg. of Writs fol. 230. Is a Writ given by the Common Law to the Successor of him who alienated Sine assensu capituli c. And is so called from those words contained in the Writ Coke on Littl. fol. 325. b. Ingrossator magni Rotuli See Clerk of the Pipe In grosse Is that which belongs to the person of the Lord and not to any Mannor Lands c. As Villain in grosse Advowzen in grosse c. Coke on Littl. fol. 120. b. Ingrossing of a Fine Is making the Indentures by the Chirographer and the delivery of them to the party to whom the Cognisance is made Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 147. A. Ingrosser Ingrossator Is one that buys Corn growing or dead victuals to sell again except Barley for Malt Oats for Oat-meal or Victuals to Retail Badging by Licence and buying of Oyls Spices and Victuals other then Fish or Salt Anno 5 Edw. 6. cap. 14. Eliz. cap. 14. 13 Eliz. cap. 25. These are the words of Wests Symbol par 2. tit Indictments sect 64. But this definition rather belongs to unlawful ingrossing then to the word in general See Forestaller and 3 Part. Inst fol. 195. Ingrosser Is also a Clerk that writes Records or Instruments of Law in Skins of Parchment as in Henry the Sixth's time He who is now called Clerk of the Pipe was called Ingrossator Magni Rotuli and the Comptroller of the Pipe was called Duplex Ingrossator Spelm. Inheritance Haereditas Is a perpetuity in Lands or Tenements to a Man and his Heirs For Littleton lib. 1. cap. 1. saith this word is not onely understood where a Man hath inheritance of Lands and Tenements by descent of heritage but also every Fee-simple or Fee-tail that a Man hath by his purchase may be called Inheritance because his Heirs may inherit him Several Inheritance is that which two or more hold severally as if two Men have Land given to them and the Heirs of their two Bodies these have Joynt Estate during their lives but their Heirs have several inheritance Kitchin fol. 155. A Man may have an inheritance in title of Nobility three manner of ways 1. By Creation 2. By Descent And 3. by Prescription Inhibition Inhibitio Is a Writ to forbid a Judge from farther proceeding in the Cause depending before him See Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 39. where he confounds Inhibition and Prohibition But Inhibition is most commonly a Writ issuing out of a higher Court Christian to an inferior upon an Appeal Anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. and 15 Car. 2. cap. 9. And Prohibition out of the Kings Court to a Court Christian or an Inferior Temporal Court Injunction Injunctio Is a Writ grounded upon an interlocutory order of the Chancery sometimes to give possession to the Plaintiff for want of appearance in the Defendant sometimes to the Kings Ordinary Court and sometimes to the Court Christian to stay proceeding in a Cause upon suggestion made that the rigor of the Law if it take place is against Equity and Conscience in that case See West Par. 2. Symbol tit Proceedings in Chancery sect 25. Inlagh or Inlaughe Inlagatus Signifies him that is sub lege in some Frank-pledge not out-lawed of whom thus Bracton tract 2. lib. 3. cap. 11. Faemina utlagari non potest quia ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlaughe anglicō scil in Franco plegio sive decenna sicut masculi 12 annorum vel amplius Inlagary or Inlagation Inlagatio Is a restitution of one outlawed to the Protection of the Law or to the benefit or liberty of a Subject From the Sax. In-lagian i. Inlagare Et ex eo seipsum legis patrocinii adeo capacem reddat ut ad compensationem admittatur LL. Canuti Reg. pag. 1. cap. 2. Inland Inlandum Terra dominicalis pars Manerii Dominica terra interior For that which was let out to Tenants was called Utland In the Testament of Brithericus in Itinerar Kantii thus to wulsege that Inland to aelfege that Utland i. Lego terras Dominicales Wulfego Tenementales Aelfego Thus Englished by Lambert To Wulfée I give the Inland or Demeans and to Elfey the Outland or Tenancy Ex dono Wil. de Eston 50 Acras de Inlanda sua Rot. Cart. 16 Hen. 3. m 6. This word is often found in Domesday Inleased Fr. Enlasse Intangled or insnared The word is found in the Champions Oath 2 Part. Cokes Inst fol. 247. Inmates Are those that are admitted to dwell for their Money joyntly with another Man though in several Rooms of his Mansion-house passing in and out by one door and not being able to maintain themselves which are inquirable in a Leet Kitchin fol. 45. where you may finde who are properly Inmates in Intendment of Law Innes of Court Hospitii Curiae Are so called because the
signatus sculptus in pariete Cancellae Ecclesiae de Edwynstone in Ecclesia B. Mariae de Nottingham Et dictus Pes continet in longitudine octodecim Pollices Et in arrentatione quorundam vastorum Pertica 20 21 24 pedum usa fuit c. Ex Regist Abb. de novoloco in Com. Nott. Pesage Pesagium Custom paid for weighing Wares or Merchandise MS. temp E. 3. For Peisa we find used for Pondus hence to Peise or Poise Ponderare Pessona Mast Md. quod anno regni Regis Hen. filii Regis Joh. 37. Dominus de Fretchevil homines sui in bosco de Derley apud Cruche Pessonam scil glandes nuces virgis cortis excussisset querela inde deducta in Comitatu c Anno gratiae MCCLXIII Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 231. b. So tempore Pessonae often occurs for Mast-time or the season when Mast is ripe which in Norfolk they call Shacking-time Quod habeat decem porcos in tempore de Pesson in boscomeo c. fo 113. 10. Pestarable wares Seem to be such Wares or Merchandise as pester and take up much room in a Ship Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 14. Peter-Corne Rex Athelstanus concessit Deo beato Petro Ebor. Colideis praedictis de qualibet Caruca arante in Episcopatu Eboraci unam Travam bladi Anno Domini 936 quae usque in praesentem diem dicitur Peter-corne Ex Reg. S. Leonardi Ebor. in Bibl. Cottoniana fo 5. a. Peter-pence Denarii Sancti Petri otherwise called in the Saxon Romefeoh i. The Fee of Rome also Rome-scot and Romepennyng was a Tribute given by Inas King of the West-Saxons being in Pilgrimage at Rome in the year of our Lord 720 towards the maintenance of a Saxon-School which was a Peny for every house Lamb. Expl. of Saxon words verbo Nummus And fo 128. in St. Edwards Laws num 10. thus Omnes qui habent 30 denariatus vivae pecuniae in domo sua de suo proprio Anglorum lege dabit Denarium Sancti Petri lege danorum dimidiam markam Iste vero denarius debet summoniri in solemnitate Apostolorum Petri Pauli colligi ad festivitatem quae dicitur ad Vincula ita ut ultra illum diem non detineatur c. King Edgars Lawes fo 78. ca. 4. contain also a sharp constitution touching this matter See Romescot St. Peter ad vincula Anno 4 Edw. 4. ca. 1. 17 Ed. 4. ca. 5. See Gule of August Petit cape See Cape Petit larceny Parvum latrocinium See Larceny Petit-treason Fr. Petit trahizon i. Proditio minor Is Treason of a lesser or lower kind For whereas High-Treason is an offence committed against the person of the King and the security of the King and Common-wealth Petit-Treason is where a Servant kills his Master a Wife her Husband a Secular or Religious Man his Prelate Anno 25 Edw. 3. ca. 2. whereof see Cromptons Just of P. fo 2. And for the punishment of it the Stat. 22 Hen. 8. ca. 14. Petition Petitio Signifies in general a Supplication made by an Inferior to a Superior and especially to one having Jurisdiction Anno 13 Car. 2. ca. 5. Petra lanae A Stone of Wool See Stone Petty-fogger from the Fr. Petite Small and Sax. Fogere A Wooer Suiter or Solliciter A silly Advocate a petty Attorney or Lawyer or rather a trouble-Town having neither Law nor Conscience Pharos A Watch-tower No man can build or erect Light-houses Pharos Sea-marks or Beacons without lawful warrant and authority 3 Inst fo 204. Philiser See Filazer Picards A kind of great Boats of fifteen Tun or upwards on the River Severne mentioned 34 35 Hen. 8. ca. 9. Also a Fishers boat Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 11. Piccage Piccagium from the Fr. Piquer i. Effringere Effodere Money paid in Fairs to the Lord of the Soil for leave to break the ground to set up Booths Stalls or Standings Piccage i. Aliquis veniens ad forum nostrum de Rudham cum rebus suis frangendo vel pictando aliquam placcam in dicto foro Prior habebit inde redemptionem Ex registro Priorat de Cokesford Pickards No Person shall use any Iron Cards or Pickards in rowing any Woollen Cloth upon pain to forfeit the same and xx s. for every offence Anno 3 4 Edw. 6. ca. 2. Picle alias Pightel Pictellum Pightellum A small parcel of Land enclosed with a hedge a little Close perhaps from the Italian Picciola i. Minutus which the common people in some parts of England do usually call a Pingle Piepowder Court Curia pedis pulverizati From the Fr. Pied i. Pes Pouldreux i. Pulverulentus Is a Court held in Fairs to yield Justice to Buyers and Sellers and for redress of all disorders committed in them So called because they are most usual in Summer and Suiters to this Court are commonly Country Clownes with dusty feet or from the expedition intended in the hearing of Causes proper thereunto before the dust goes off the Plaintiffs and Defendants feet Of this Court read the Statute 17 Edw. 4. ca. 2. 4 Inst fo 272. and Cromp. Jur. fo 221. This among our old Saxons was called Ceapung-gemot i. A Court for Merchandise or handling matters of buying and selling See Justices of the Pavilion Pig of Lead See Fother Pike or Pick. See Polein Pille of Foddray or Fouldrey In the County of Lancaster Anno 2 Hen. 6. ca. 5. seems to be a defence built on a Creek of the Sea and called Pille by the Idiom of the Country for a Pile or Fort built for the safegard or protection of any place This Pile was erected there by the Abbot of Fornesse in the first year of Edw. 3. Cam. Brit. Rex Dedimus Henrico Comiti Northumb. Insulam Castram Pelam Dominium de Man c. Ror Pat. 1 Hen. 4. m. 36. Pillory Collistrigium q. Collum stringens Pilloria from the Fr. Pilleur i. Depeculator Is an Engin made of Wood to punish Offenders well known By the Statute of 51 Hen. 3. you may see who were then subject to this punishment In the Laws of Canutus ca. 42. it is called Halsfange Sir Henry Spelman says 't is supplicii Machina ad ludibrium magis quam paenam Item utimur tenere Statuta Pistorum omnino sicut antecessores nostri tenuerunt viz. Quod si Pistor in male agendo puniatur per tres vices si post terciam monicionem culpabilis inveniatur Balivi Capitales si ipsum poterint invenire ipsum capiant pro toto puniant habebit vile odibile Judicium de Collistrigio i. the Pillory MS. Codex de LL. Consuetud Burgi-villae Montgom a temp Hen. 2. fo 12. b. See Healfange Pioneers Fr. Pionniers i. Fossores Such Labourers as are taken up for the Kings Army to east up Trenches or undermine Forts Anno 2 3 Ed. 6. ca. 20. Pipe Pipa Is a Roll in the Exchequer otherwise called the great Roll
the Defendant appears and is in contempt for not answering and is in castody upon a Habeas Corpus which is granted by order to bring him to the Bar the Court assignes him a day to answer which being expir'd and no answer put in a second Habeas Corpus is likewise granted and a further day assign'd by which day if he answer not the Bill upon the Plaintiffs Motion shall be taken pro confesso unless cause be shew'd by a day which the Court does usually give and for want of such cause shew'd upon Motion the Substance of the Plaintiffs Bill shall be decreed as if it had been confessed by the Defendants Answer As it was the Case of Filmore and Denny Hill 1662. Or after a fourth insufficient Answer made to the Bill the matter of the Bill not sufficiently answer'd unto shall be taken pro confesso Proctors of the Clergy Procuratores Cleri Are those who are chosen and appointed to appear for Cathedral or other Collegiate Churches as also for the common Clergy of every Diocess to sit in the Convocation House in the time of Parliament The manner of their election see in Cowels Interpreter on this word See Prolocutor and Convocation and see 4 Inst fo 4. Procurations Procurationes Are certain sumnis of Money which Parish-Priests pay yearly to the Bishop or Arch-deacon ratione visitationis They were anciently paid in necessary Victuals for the Visitor and his Attendants but afterwards turn'd into Money Procuratio is defin'd by Vallensis to be necessariorum sumptuum exhibitio quae ratione Visitationis debetur ab ecclesia vel monasterio ei cui ex officio incumbit jus onus visitandi sive is sit Episcopus sive Archidiaconus sive Decanus sive Legatus summi Pontificis Anno 1290. Md. quod die Mercurii in Festo Sancti Lucae Evang. Dominus Episcopus caepit Procurationem suam in cibis potibus apud Bordesley pernoctavit ibidem Giff. fo 226. b. See an Historical Discourse of Procurations and Synodals Printed Anno 1661. These are also called Proxies as Archidiaconatus Glouc. valet clare in Proxis Cenag Pentecostal per an 64 10 00. Ex Record Primitiar 26 Hen. 8. See Dier fo 273. b. and Claus Rot. 31 Ed. 1. m. 15. dorso Procuracy Anno 3 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. ca. 3. See Procurator Procurator Is used for him that gathers the fruit of a Benefice for another Man Anno 3 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. ca. 3. And Procuracy for the writing or instrument whereby he is Authorised They are at this day in the West parts called Proctors Procurors See Malveis Procurors Profe alias Prove Is used for an Enquest Anno 28 Ed. 3. ca. 13. Profer Profrum vel Proferum from the Fr. Proferer i. Producere Edicere Allegare Is the time appointed for the Accompts of Sheriffs and other Officers in the Exchequer which is twice in the year Anno 51 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. which may be gathered also out of the Register fo 139. in the Writ De Attornato vicecomitis pro profro faciendo We read also of Profers Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 21. in these words Trinity Term shall begin the Monday next after Trinity Sunday whensoever it shall happen to fall for the keeping of the Essoines Profers Returns and other Ceremonies heretofore used and ke 〈…〉 In which place Profer signifies the offer or indeavor to proceed in an Action by any Man concerned so to do See Britton ca. 28. fo 50. b. 55. a 〈…〉 80. b. and Fleta lib. 1. ca. 38. Sect. Utlagati seq Praeterea idem Henricus de Hastinggis antecessores sui solebant capere de jure habere rationabiles expensas suas versus Scaccarium singulis annis pro duobus Profris faciendis uno compoto reddendo per annum c. Escact Anno 30 Ed. 1. n. 19. Profer the Half-mark See Half-Mark Profession Professio Is used particularly for the entring into any Religious Order New Book of Entries verbo Profession Prohibition Prohibitio Is a Writ to forbid any Court either Spiritual or Secular to proceed in any Cause there depending upon suggestion that the cognition thereof belongs not to the said Court Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 39. G. but is now usually taken for that Writ which lies for one that is impleaded in the Court Christian for a Cause belonging to the temporal Jurisdiction or the Cognisance of the Kings Court whereby as well the Party and his Counsel as the Judge himself and the Register are forbidden to proceed any farther in that Cause See Brooke hoc titulo and Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 93. and Bracton lib. 5. Tract 5. ca. 3. usque ad 12. who sayes that it lies not after Sentence given in any Cause And the Stat. Anno 50 Ed. 3. ordains that but one Prohibition should lie in one Cause See the diversity of Prohibitions in the Table of the Register of Writs New Book of Entries on this Word and 2 Part Inst fo 601. Prohibitio de vasto directa parti Is a Writ Judicial directed to the Tenant prohibiting him from making Waste upon the Land in controversy during the Sute Reg. of Writs Judic fo 21. It is sometimes made to the Sheriff the example whereof you have next following in the same Book Pro indiviso Is a Possession or Occupation of Lands or Tenements belonging to two or more persons whereof none knows his several portion as Coparceners before partition Bracton lib. 5. Tract 2. ca. 1. Num. 7. Prolocutor of the Convocation House Prolocutor Domus Convocationis Is an Officer chosen by Persons Ecclesiastical publickly assembled by vertue of the Kings Writ at every Parliament And as there are two Houses of Convocation so are there two Prolocutors one of the higher House the other of the lower the later of which is presently upon the first Assembly by the motion of the Bishops chosen by the Lower House and presented to the Bishop for Prolocutor of the Lower House that is the person by whom they intend to deliver their Resolutions to the Higher House and to have their own House especially ordered and governed His Office is to cause the Clerk to call the names of such as are of that House when he sees cause to read all things propounded gather suffrages and the like Cowel Promooters Promotores Are those who in Popular and Penal Actions do prosecute Offenders in their name and the Kings having part of the Fines or Penalties for their reward These among the Romans were called Quadruplatores or Delatores They belong cheifly to the Exchequer and Kings Bench. Smith de Repub Angl. lib. 2. ca. 14. Sir Edw. Coke calls them Turbidum hominum genus 3 Instit fol. 191. Promulged Promulgatus Published proclaimed Anno 6 Hen. 8. ca. 4. Pronotary or Prothonotary Protonotarius i. Primus notarius Is a cheif Clerk of the Common Pleas and Kings Bench whereof the first hath three the other one For the Prognotary of the Common Pleas Anno
Normannorum atque Cynomannensium 1066 Oct. 14 20 11 22 583 Sept. 9 2 Willielmus Rex Anglorum Willielmus dei gratia nutu Dei Rex Anglorum 1087 Sept. 9 12 11 18 570 Aug. 1 1 Henric is Rex Anglorum Henricus Dei gratia Rex Anglorum Henricus gratia Dei Rex Anglorum Princeps Normannorum 1100 Aug. 1 35 4 1 535 Dec. 1 Stephanus Rex Anglorum Stephanus Dei gratia Rex Anglorum 1135 Dec. 1 18 11 18 516 Oct. 25 2 Henricus Rex Angliae Dux Normaniae Aquitaniae Comes Andegaviae 1154 Oct. 25 35 9 8 481 July 6 1 Ricardus Rex Angliae Dux Normaniae Aquitaniae Comes Andegaviae 1189 July 6 9 9 1 471 April 6 Johannes Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Normanniae Aquitaniae Comes Andegaviae 1199 April 6 17 7 0 454 Oct. 19 3 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Normanniae Aquitaniae Comes Andegaviae Anno Regni 44 He Styl'd himself Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Aquitaniae 1216 Oct. 19 56 1 9 398 Nov. 16 1 Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Aquitaniae In Records sometimes named Edward of Westminster 1272 Nov. 16 34 8 6 363 July 7 2 Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Aquitaniae And 14 regni added Comes Pontivi Monstroill Pat. 14 Ed. 2. Par. 2 m. 14. Stiled also Edw. of Carnarvan 1307 July 7 19 7 5 344 Jan. 25 3 Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae Dux Aquitaniae Anno 13 Regni he omitted Dux Aquitaniae He was also called Edward of Windsor and was the first that used Post Conquestum in His Title 1326 Jan. 25 51 5 7 293 June 21 2 Ricardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1377 June 21 22 3 14 271 Sept. 29 4 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1399 Sept. 29 13 6 3 257 Mar. 20 5 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae Et Anno Regni 8 Hen. Dei Gratia Rex Angliae haeres Regens Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1412 Mar. 20 9 5 24 248 Aug. 31 6 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1422 Aug. 31 38 6 8 210 March 4 4 Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1460 March 4 23 1 8 187 April 9 5 Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1483 April 9 0 2 18 187 June 18 3 Ricardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1483 June 22 2 2 5 185 Aug. 22 7 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae 1485 Aug. 22 23 10 2 162 Apr. 22 8 Henricus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae Et Anno 10 Regni Henricus octavus Dei gratia c. Anno 13 Regni fidei Defensor was added Et An. 22 Regni in terra Ecclesiae Anglicanae Hiberniae supremum caput was added Et an reg 34 Rex Hiberniae was added 1059 Apr. 22 37 10 2 124 July 28 6 Edwardus Sextus Dei gratia Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Rex fidei Desensor Et in terra Ecclesiae Anglicanae Hiberniae supremum caput 1546 Ian. 28 6 5 19 117 Iuly 26 Queen Mary summon'd her first Parliament by the same Title but soon after omitted Supremum Caput After She Married King Philip She used Her own and his titles c. 1553 Iuly 26 5 4 22 112 Nov. 17 Elizabetha Dei gratia Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Regina Fidei defensor 1558 Nov. 17 44 4 16 68 March 24 Jacobus Dei gratia Angliae Scotiae Franciae Hiberniae Rex Fidei defensor 1602 Mar. 24 22 8 2 45 March 27 1 Carolus Dei gratia Angliae Scotiae Franciae Hiberniae Rex Fidei defensor 1625 Mar. 27 23 10 2 22 Ian. 30 2 Carolus Secundus Dei gratia Angliae Scotiae Franciae Hiberniae Rex Fidei defensor 1648 Ian. 30 Vivat Vivat OGDOSTEICHON TECHNICON Regum Reginarumque Angliae WIl Conq. Will Rufus Henri Steph. Henque secundus Ric. John Henricus tres Edward Rique secundus Post hos regnavit quartus quintus quoque Henri Hen. sextus Edward quartus quintusque Ricardus Tertius Hen. Sept. Oct. Edwardusque Maria Eliz. Jac. Carolus primus CAROLUSQUE SECUNDUS Regnat aeterno vivat praeclarus honore Imperium Oceano famam qui terminet astris A Law-Dictionary Interpreting such difficult Words and obscure Terms as are found either in our Common or Statute Ancient or Modern LAWS A ABactors abactores were stealers of Cattle or Beasts by Herds or great numbers and were distinguished from Fures Nam qui ovem unam surripuerit ut fur coercetur qui gregem ut abactor M. S. Abate from the French abatre or abbatre i. To fell break down or defeat utterly signifies properly to diminish or take away and in our Law-writers it has a like signification For to abate a Castle or Fortlet Old Nat. Br. fol. 45. in Westm 1. cap. 17. is interpreted to beat it down And to abate a Writ is to defeat or overthrow it by some error or exception Britton cap. 48. As he that puts out the Possessor is said to Disseise so he that steps in between the former Possessor and his Heir is said to abate And in the Stat. De conjunctim Feoffatis 34. Edw. 1. The Writ shall be abated that is shall be disabled or overthrown So in Stamfords Pleas of the Crown fol. 148. The Appeal abates by Covin i. The Accusation is defeated by Deceit Anno 11 Hen. 6. cap. 2. The Justices shall cause to be abated and quashed the said Writ See Intrusion Abatement Fr. is sometimes used for the Act of the Abator as the Abatement of the Heir into the Land before he has agreed with the Lord Old Nat. Br. fol. 91. Sometimes for the affection or passing the thing abated as Abatement of the Writ Kitchin fol. 214. And in this signification it is as much as Exceptio dilatoria with the Civilians Brit. cap. 51. or rather an effect of it For the Exception alleaged and made good works the Abatement And this Exception may be taken either to the insufficiency of the Matter or incertainty of the Allegation by misnaming the Plantiff Defendant or place to the variance between the Writ and the Specialty or Record to the incertainty of the Writ Count or Declaration or to the death of either of the parties before Judgment had and for divers other causes Upon which defaults the Defendant may pray That the Writ or Plaint may abate that is the Plaintiffs sute against him may cease for that time To prevent the Abatement of Writs of Error see
nature and essence of the Covenant And Crompton Juris fol. 185. saith That to be subject to the feeding of the Kings Deer is Collateral to the Soil within the Forest So we may say That Liberties to pitch Booths or Standings for a Fair in another Mans Ground is Collateral to the Ground The Private Woods of a common person within a Forest may not be cut without the Kings Licence for it is a Prerogative Collateral to the Soil Manwood par 1. pag. 66. Collateral Warranty See Warranty Collation of Benefice Collatio Beneficii Signifies properly the bestowing a Benefice by the Bishop who hath it in his own gift or patronage and differs from Institution in this That Institution into a Benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is Patron of it or hath the Patrons right for the time Yet Collation is used for presentation Anno 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 6. Collatione facta uni post mortem alterius c. Is a Writ directed to the Justices of the Common Pleas commanding them to direct their Writ to a Bishop for the admitting a Clerk in the place of another presented by the King who during the suit between the King and the Bishops Clerk is departed this life For Judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before admittance the King may bestow his presentation on another Reg. of Writs fol. 31. b. Colour color Signifies a probable Plea but in truth false and hath this end to draw the tryal of the Cause from the Jury to the Judges As in an Action of Trespass for taking away the Plaintiffs Beasts the Defendant saith That before the Plaintiff had any thing in them he himself was posseised of them as of his proper Goods and delivered them to A. B. to deliver them to him again when c. And A. B. gave them to the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff supposing the property to be in A. B. at the time of the gift took them and the Defendant took them from the Plaintiff whereupon the Plaintiff brings his Action This is a good Color and a good Plea See Doctor and Student lib. 2. cap. 13. And Broke tit Color in Assise Trespass c. fol. 104. Collusion Collusio Is a deceitful agreement or compact between two or more for the one party to bring an Action against the other to some evil purpose as to defraud a third person of his right c. See the Statute of Westmin 2. cap. 32. and 8 Hen. 6. cap. 26. which gives the Quale ju● and enquiry in such Cases See Broke tit Collusion and Reg. of Writs fol. 179. a. Gifts made by Collusion see in 50 Edw. 3. cap. 6. Combat Fr. Signifies as much as Certamen pugna But with us it is taken for a formal tryal between two Champions of a doubtful cause or quarrel by the Sword or Bastons of which you may read at large in Glanvile lib. 14. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. Britton cap. 22. Horns Mirror of Justices lib. 3. cap. Des Exceptions in fine proxime cap. Juramentum Duelli Dyer fol. 301. num 41 42 When Alan de la Zouch had judicially sued John Earl of Warren who chose rather to try the title by the Sword Point than by Point of Law he was wounded by him even in Westminster-hall in the year 1269. says Camden in his Britan. fol. 519. The last Trial by combat was admitted 6 Car. 1. between Donnold Lord Roy Appellant and David Ramsey Esquire Defendant Scotchmen in the Painted Chamber at Westminster before Robert Earl of Lindsey Lord High Constable Thomas Earl of Arundel Earl Marshal with other Lords where after the Court had met several times and Bill Answer and Replication put in by the Parties and Council heard with other Formalities it was at last determined that the matter should be referred to the Kings will and pleasure whose favor enclined to Ramsey Bakers Chron. fol. 500. See Coke on Littl. fol. 294. b. Origines Juridiciales fol. 65. And Spelmans Gloss at large verbo Campus Comitatu Commisso Is a Writ or Commission whereby the Sheriff is authorised to take upon him the charge of the County Reg. of Writs fol. 295. Cokes Rep. lib. 3. fol. 72. a. Comitatu Castro Commisso Is a Writ whereby the charge of a County with the keeping of a Castle is committed to the Sheriff Reg. of Writs fol. 295. Comitatus Of dead Ferms and Debts desperate whereof there is no hope one Roll shall be made and shall be entituled Comitatus and read every year upon the account of Sheriffs 10 Edw. 1. cap. unico Commandry Praeceptoria Was a Mannor or cheif Messuage with Lands and Tenements appertaining thereto belonging to the Priory of St. Johns of Jerusalem in England and he who had the Goverment of any such Mannor or House was called the Commander who could not dispose of it but to the use of the Priory onely taking thence his own sustenance according to his degree who was usually a Brother of the same Priory New Eagle in the County of Lincoln was and still is called the Commandry of Eagle and did anciently belong to the said Priory so were Slebach in Pembrokeshire and Shengay in Cambridgeshire Commandries in time of the Knights-Templers says Camd. These in many places of England are termed Temples as Temple Bruere in Lincolnshire Temple Newsum in Yorkshire c. because they formerly belonged to the said Templers Of these read Anno 26 Hen. 8. cap. 2. and 32 Ejusdem cap. 24. See Preceptories Commandment Praeceptum Hath a divers use as the Commandment of the King when upon his meer motion and from his own mouth he casts any Man into Prison Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 72. Commandment of the Justices is either absolute or ordinary Absolute as when upon their own Authority in their Wisdom and Discretion they commit a Man to prison for a punishment Ordinary is when they commit one rather for safe-custody then punishment A Man committed upon an Ordinary Commandment is replevisable Pl. Cor. fol. 73. Commandment is again used for the offence of him that willeth another Man to transgress the Law or to do any thing contrary to the Law as Murther Theft or such like Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 19. which the Civilians call Mandatum Commendam Ecclesia Commendata Is a Benefice or Church-Living which being void is commended to the charge and care of some sufficient Clerk to be supplied until it may be conveniently provided of a Pastor And that this was the true original of this practise you may read at large in Durandus De sacris Ecclesiae Ministeriis Beneficiis lib. 5. cap. 7. He to whom the Church is commended hath the Fruits and Profits thereof onely for a certain time and the Nature of the Church is not changed thereby but is as a thing deposited in his hands in trust who hath nothing but the custody of it which may be
other keeps the Concord and the Foot of the Fine upon which Foot the Chirographer causeth the Proclamations to be endorsed when they are proclaimed In the Court of Kings Bench there is likewise a Custos brevium Rotulorum who fileth such Writs as are there used to be filed and all Warrants of Attorney and transcribeth or maketh out the Records of Nisi Prius c. Custos placitorum Coronae Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. Seems to be all one with him whom we now call Custos Rotulorum Of which I finde mention in the Writ De Odio atia Reg. of Writs fol. 133. b. Custos Rotulorum Is he who hath the custody of the Rolls or Records of the Sessions of Peace and of the Commission of the Peace it self He is always a Justice of Peace and Quorum in the County where he hath his Office and by his Office he is rather termed an Officer or Minister then a Judge because the Commission of the Peace by express words lays this special charge upon him Quod ad dies loca praedicta Brevia Praecepta Processus Indictamenta praedicta coram te dictis sociis tuis venire facias Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 373. where you may read more touching this Office Who shall appoint the Custos Rotulorum in every County See 37 Hen. 8. cap. 1. and 3 4 Edw. 6. cap. 1. 2 Inst fol. 674. Custos of the Spiritualties oustos spiritualitatis vel spiritualium Is he that exerciseth the Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of any Diocess during the vacancy of the Sea the appointment of whom by the Canon Law appertains to the Dean and Chapter But with us in England to the Archbishop of the Province by Prescription Howbeit divers Deans and Chapters if Gwin say true in his Preface to his Readings challenge this by ancient Charters from the Kings of this Land Cutter of the Talleys Is an Officer in the Exchequer that provides Wood for the Talleys and cuts the sum paid upon them and then casts the same into the Court to be written upon Cyricsceat Sax. Vectigal Ecclesiae Primitias seminum quisque ex eo dato Domicilio in quo ipso natali die domini commoratur Spelm. de Concil vol. 1. fol. 125. See Churchesset D. DAkir According to the Stat. 51. Hen. 3. De Compositione ponderum Mensurarum A Last of Hides consists of Twenty Dakirs and every Dakir of Ten Hides But by 1 Jac. cap. 33. or Last of Hides or Skins is Twelve dozen I have also read of a Dakir of Iron but finde not its quantity Damage Lat. Damnatio Fr. Dommage Signifies generally any hurt or hindrance that a Man receives in his Estate but particularly a part of that the Jurors are to enquire of when the Action be it real or personal passeth for the Plaintiff For after Verdict given of the principal cause they are asked their Consciences touching Costs which are the charges of Sute called by the Civilians Expensae litis and Damages which comprehend a recompence for what the Plaintiff or Demandant hath suffered by means of the wrong done him by the the Defendant or Tenant Coke on Littl. fol. 257. Damage Cléer Damna Clericorum Is now assessed by the Tenth part in the Common Pleas and the Twentieth part in the Kings Bench and Exchequer of all Damages exceeding Five Marks recovered either by Verdict Confession or Judgment of the Court in all Actions upon the Case Covenant Trespass Battery False imprisonment Dower and all others wherein the Damages are incertain which the Plaintiff must pay to the Prothonotary or chief Officer of that Court wherein they are recovered before he shall have any Execution for them For example If one lends another on his word or note under hand One hundred pound or sells commodity to that value the Lender or Seller is forced to sue in an Action of the Case recovers must pay Ten pound if in the Common Pleas and Five pound in the Kings Bench or Exchequer and so proportionably for a greater or lesser sum before he can have Execution This was originally no other then a gratuity given the Prothonotaries and their Clerks for drawing special Writs and Pleadings which afterwards grew to a certainty and was not as some have fancied anciently a Tenth part of the Damages recovered For it doth appear by ancient Records that it hath been at an incertain rate sometimes a Sixth and at other times a Third part This by Act of Parliament 17 Car. 2. cap. 6. is taken away from and after the 29 of September 1672. And till that time and no longer Damage Cleer shall be paid out of such Moneys onely as shall be actually levied or otherwise paid by the Defendants and onely for the proportion of the Money which shall be so levied or paid and no more or otherwise Damage Fesant Fr. Dammage Faisant i. Doing hurt or damage As when a strangers Beasts are doing hurt or spoil in the Grass Corn Woods c. of another Man without his leave or licence In which case the party whom they damage may therefore take distrain and impound them as well in the night as day But in other cases as for Rent Services and such like none may distrain in the night Stat. De Districtione Scaccarii Anno 51 Hen. 3. Danegelt Danegold or Dane-geld Gelt in Dutch signifies Money Was a Tribute laid upon our Ancestors of Two shillings for every Hide of Land through the Realm by the Danes who once mastered us in regard as they pretended of clearing the Seas of Pyrats which greatly annoyed our Coasts in those days Camd. Britan. 83. Stow in his Annals fol. 118. says This Tribute came to 40000 l. per annum and began in the time of King Etheldred who being much distressed by the continual invasion of the Danes to procure his Peace was compelled to charge his people with heavy payments For first he gave them at five several payments 113000 l. and afterwards 48000 l. yearly which was released by Edward the Confessor according to Ingulphus fol. 510. a. Others say it continued till Hen. 1. or K. Stephen See Hoveden par post Annal. fol. 344. a. Spelmans Glossarium and Seldens Marc clausum fol. 190. Et sint quieti de Lene Danegeld Gaywitte de omnibus aliis consuetudinibus c. Carta Hen. 7. Ballivis Burgens Mountgomer Danelage See Merchenlage Darrein Is a Corruption from the French Dernier i. Ultimus and we use it in the same sence as Darrein Continuance See Continuance Darrein Presentment ultima Presentatio See Assize of Darrein Presentment Datife or Dative Dativus That may be given or disposed of Whether a Prior shall be Datife and removable or perpetual shall be tryed by the Ordinary Anno 9 Rich. 2. ca. 4. Si Prior Datife removeable suffer eschape respondeat superior 45 Ed. 3. 9 10. Day Dies Is sometimes used for the Day of Appearance in Court either
Originally or upon Assignation and sometimes for the Returns of Writs For example Dayes in Bank are 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 for which you may read the Statutes 51 Hen 3. ca. 1 2. Marlb ca. 12 52 Hen. 3. and the Statute de Anno Bissextili 21 Hen. 3. and lastly 32 Hen. 8. ca. 21. To be dismissed without Day is to be finally discharged the Court He had a Day by the Roll that is he had a day of Appearance Assigned him Kitchin fol. 193 197. Day Year and Wast See Year Day and Wast And see Dies Deadly Feud Feuda Faida Is a Profession of an Irreconcileable Enmity till we are revenged even by the death of our Enemy It is deduced from the German word Feed which as Hottoman in verbis Feudalibus saith Modo bellum modo capitales inimicitias significat It is used Anno 43 Eliz. ca. 13. Dead Pledge mortuum vadium See Morgage De-afforested That is discharged from being Forest or that is freed and exempted from the Forest-Laws Anno 17 Car. 1. ca. 16. Johannes Dei Gratia c Archiepiscopis Episcopis c. Sciatis nos omnino Deafforestaise Forestam de Brewood de omnibus quae ad Forestam Forestarios pertinent Quare volumus firmiter praecipimus quod praedicta Foresta homines in illa manentes haeredes eorum sint Deafforestati imperpetuum c. Dat. apud Brug 13 Martii Anno regni nostri 5. Dean Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decem Is an Ecclesiastical Magistrate so called because he presides over Ten Canons or Prebends at the least We call him a Dean that is under the Bishop and chief of the Chapter ordinarily in a Cathedral Church and the rest of the Society or Corporation we call Capitulum the Chapter But how diversly this word is used read Lindwood Tit. de Constitut ca. 1. verbo Decani Rurales where Rural Deans are said to be certain persons that have Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical over other Ministers and Parishes neer adjoyning assigned them by the Bishop and Arch-Deacon being placed and displaced by them Such are the Dean of Croiden in Surrey Dean of Battel in Kent c. As there are two Foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the old and the new the new are those which Henry the Eighth upon Suppression of Abbies transformed from Abbot or Prior and Convent to Dean and Chapter so are there two means of Creating these Deans For those of the Old Foundation were exalted to their Dignity much like Bishops the King first sending out his Conge d'Eslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yielding His Royal Assent and the Bishop Confirming him and giving his Mandate to enstal him Those of the New Foundation are by a shorter course Enstalled by Vertue of the Kings Letters-Patent without either Election or Confirmation This word is also applyed to divers that are the chief of certain peculiar Churches or Chappels as the Dean of the Kings Chappel the Dean of the Arches the Dean of St. Georges Chappel in Windsor c. Nec Collegio alicui praefecti nec jurisdictione ulla donati nomine tamen velut honoris gratia insignes sayes Spelman De bene esse Are three common Latin words but their signification more mysterious conceiv'd to be thus To take or do any thing De bene esse is to accept or allow it as well done for present but when it comes to be more fully examin'd or try'd to stand or fall to be allowed or disallowed according to the Merit or Well-being of the thing in its own nature or as we say Valeat quantum valere potest So in Chancery upon motion to have one of the less-principal Defendants in a Case examin'd as a Witness the Court not then throughly examining the justice of it or not hearing what may be objected on the other side often orders such a Defendant to be examined de bene esse i. That his Depositions shall be allowed or suppressed at the Hearing of the Cause upon the full debate of the Matter as the Court shall then think fit but for the present they have a well-being or conditionalallowance It is used in Langhams Caso Croke 3 Part. fol. 68. Debentur Was by a Rum● Act in 1649 ordained to be in the nature of a Bond or Bill to charge the Common-wealth forsooth to pay the Souldier-Creditor or his Assignes the Sum due upon Auditing the Account of his Arrears The Form of which Debentur as then used you may see in Scobels Rump-Acts Anno 1649 ca. 63. The word is also mention'd in the Act of Oblivion 12 Car. 2. ca. 8. Sect. 7. and is used in the Exchequer See Auditor of the Receipts Debet solet Are Latin words often used in our Law-Writers In old Nat. Br. fol. 98. it is said This Writ De secta molendini being in the debet and solet is a Writ of Right c. And again fol. 69. A Writ of quod permittat may be pleaded in the County before the Sheriff and it may be in the debet and solet or in the debet without the solet according as the Demandant claims Wherefore note that those Writs which are in this sort brought have these words in them as Formal words not to be omitted And according to the diversity of the Case both debet and solet are used or debet alone That is if a man sue to recover any Right whereof his Ancestor was disseis'd by the Tenant or his Ancestor then he useth only the word debet in his Writ because solet is not fit by reason his Ancestor was disseis'd and the Custom discontinued but if he sue for any thing that is now first of all deny●d him then he useth both these words because his Ancestors before him and he himself usually enjoyed the thing sued for as sute to a Mill or Common of Pasture until this present refusal of the Tenant The like may be said of debet and detinet as appears by the Reg. of Writs in the Writ De debito fol. 140. a. Debito or De debito Is a Writ which lies where a Man ows another a Sum of Money by Obligation or Bargain for any thing sold him Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 119. This Writ is made sometime in the detinet and not in the debet which properly falls out where a Man owes an Annuity or a certain quantity of Wheat Barley or such like which he refuseth to pay Old Nat. Br. fo 75. See Debet and solet Decem tales See Tales Deceit Deceptio dolus Is a Subtile wily Shift or Trick whereunto may be drawn all manner of Craft Subtilty Guile Fraud Slight Cunning Covin Collusion and Practise used to Deceave another Man by any Means which hath no other more proper or particular Name then Deceit or Offence West pa. 2. Symbol tit Inditements Sect. 68. See
Ideots being indeed as largely extended as both Tutor and Curator among the Civilians For whereas Tutor is he that hath the Government of a Youth until he come to fourteen years of age and Curator he that hath the disposition and ordering of his substance afterward until he attain to twenty five years or that hath the charge of a Frantick person during his Lunacy we use for both these a Guardian onely of which we have three sorts in England one ordained by the Father in his last Will another appointed by the Judge afterward The third cast upon the Minor by the Law and Custom of the Land But the Ancient Law in this Case is in a great measure altered by the Statute of 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. which ordains that Where any person hath or shall have any Childe or Children under the age of Twenty one years and not married at the time of his death it shall be lawful for the Father of such Childe or Children whether born at the time of the decease of the Father or at that time in ventre sa mere or whether such Father be within the age of Twenty one years or of full age by Déed executed in his life time or by his last Will and Testament in writing in the presence of two or more credible Witnesses to dispose of the Custody and Tuition of such Childe or Children for and during the time be or they shall remain under age or any lesser time to any Person or Persons in Possession or Remainder other then Popish Recusants and such disposition shall be good against all Persons claiming such Childe as Guardian in Soccage or otherwise c. And in case the Father appoint no Guardian to his Childe the Ordinary may appoint one to order his Movables and Chattels until the age of fourteen years and then he may chuse his Guardian And for his Lands the next of Kin on that side by which the Land descends not shall be Guardian as heretofore in case of a Tenure in Soccage Gardian or Guardian of the Spiritualties Custos Spiritualium vel spiritualitatis Is he to whom the Spiritual jurisdiction of any Diocess is committed during the vacancy of the See Anno 25 Hen. 8. ca. 21. And I take it the Gardian of the Spiritualties may be either Guardian in Law ot Jure Magistratus as the Arch-bishop is of any Diocess within his Province or Guardian by Delegation as he whom the Arch-bishop or Vicar-general does for the time depute Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 12. Gardian of the Peace Custos pacis See Conservator of the Peace Gardian of the Cinque-ports Gardianus quinque portuum Is a Magistrate that has the Jurisdiction of those Havens which are commonly called the Cinque-ports that is the five Havens who there has all that jurisdiction the Admiral of England has in places not exempt Camden in his Britan. pa. 238. says The Romans after they had setled themselves and their Empire here in England appointed a Magistrate or Governour over those East-parts where our Cinque-ports lie whom they termed Comitem littoris Saxonici per Britanniam having another that bore the same title on the opposite part of the Sea whose Office was to strengthen the Sea-coast with Munition against the out-rages and Robberies of the Barbarians and believes this Warden of the Cinque-ports was first erected among us in imitation of that Roman Policy See Cinque-ports Gardein de L'estemery Anno 17 Car. 1. ca. 15. Warden of the Stanneries Gare Anno 31 Ed. 3. ca. 8. Is a course Wool full of staring hairs such as grows about the Pesil or Shanks of the Sheep Gariofilli Rectius Gariophylli The Spice called Cloves Et salvo haeredibus meis post decessum meum uno clavo Gariofil in praedicto Festo Sancti Mich. pro omni servicio saeculari c. Carta Hugonis de Wygeton Priorat Leominstr Anno 1283. Garnish as to garnish the Heir i. To warn the heir Anno 27 Eliz. ca. 3. Garnishee Is taken for the party in whose hands Money is attached within the liberties of the City of London so used in the Sheriff of London's Court because he has had garnishment or warning not to pay the Money but to appear and answer to the Plantiff-creditors Sute Garnishment Fr. Garnement Signifies a warning given to one for his appearance and that for the better furnishing the Cause and Court. For example one is sued for the detinue of certain Charters and says They were deliver'd to him not onely by the Plaintiff but by J. S. also and therefore prayes that J. S. may be warned to plead with the Plaintiff whether the conditions are performed or no and in this petition he is said to pray Garnishment New Book of Entries fol. 211. col 3. which may be interpreted a warning to J. S. to provide himself of a defence or else a furnishing the Court with all parties to the action whereby it may throughly determine the Cause Britton cap. 28. says Contracts are some naked and sans garnement and some furnished or to use the literal signification of his word apparelled c. Howbeit Garnishment is generally used for a warning As in Kitchin fol. 6. Garnisher le Court is to warn the Court and reasonable garnishment in the same place is reasonable warning And in the Stat. 27 Eliz. ca. 3. Upon a Garnishment or two Nichils returned c. Garranty See Warranty Garter Fr. Jartier i. Periscelis fascia poplitaria Signifies both in divers Statutes and otherwise one special 〈…〉 r being the Ensign of a great and noble Society of Knights called Knights of the Garter This high Order as appears by Camd. pa. 211. was instituted by that famous King Edward the Third upon good success in a Skirmish wherein the Kings Garter the time or occasion not mentioned was used as a token Pol. Virgil casts in a suspition of another original but his grounds by his own confession grew from the vulgar opinion however it runs thus The said King after he had obtained divers great Victories King John of France King James of Scotland being both prisoners in the Tower of London at one time King Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed and Don Pedro restored by the Prince of Wales did upon no weightier occasion first institute this Order in Anno 1350 viz. He dancing with the Queen and other Ladies of the Court took up a Garter that hapned to fall from one of them whereat some of the Lords smiling the King said That ere long he would make that Garter to be of high reputation and shortly after instituted this Order of the Blew Garter which every Companion of the Order is bound to wear daily richly adorned with Gold and Precious Stones and having these words wrought upon it HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENCE which is thus interpreted Evil be to him that evil thinks or rather thus Shame take him that thinks evil Sir John Fern in his Glory of Generosity fol. 120. agrees
other act they are deprived of their Bishoprick or Benefice See Coke on Littl. fol. 329. Privy Fr. Privè i. Familiaris Signifies him that is partaker or hath an interest in any Action or thing as Privies of Blood Old Nat. Br. fol. 117. Every Heir in Tail is Privy to recover the Land intailed Eodem fol. 137. Merchants Privy are opposite to Merchant Strangers Anno 2 Edw. 3. cap. 9. 14. Coke lib. 3. Walkers Case fol. 23. And lib. 4. fol. 123. mentions four kinde of Privies viz. Privies in Blood as the Heir to his Father Privies in Representation as Executors or Administrators to the deceased Privies in Estate as he in Reversion and he in Remainder when Land is given to one for life and to another in Fee the reason is for that their Estates are created both at one time The fourth is Privy in Tenure as the Lord by Escheat that is when Land Escheats to the Lord for want of heirs The Expositor of Law-terms adds a fifth sort of Privy whom see and Coke on Litt. lib. 3. ca. 8. Sect. 161. Privy-seal Privatum sigillum Is a Seal that the King useth to such Grants or other things as pass the Great Seal First they pass the Privy-Signet then the Privy-Seal and lastly the Great Seal of England The Privy-Seal is also sometimes used in things of less consequence that do not at all pass the great one No Writs shall pass under the Privy-Seal which touch the Common-Law 2 Inst fo 555. Priviledge Privilegium Is either personal or real A personal Priviledge is that which is granted or allowed to any person either against or besides the course of the Common-Law as a Member of Parliament may not be Arrested nor any of his menial servants in the time of Parliament nor for certain dayes before and after A Priviledge real is that which is granted to a place as to the Universities that none of either may be called to Westminster-Hall or prosecuted in other Courts See the New Book of Entries verbo Priviledge Privilegium est jus singulare hoc est privata lex quae uni homini vel loco vel Collegio similibus aliis conceditur Privity Fr. Privauté Private Familiarity Friendship Inward Relation If there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant holds of the Lord by certain services there is a privity between them in respect of the tenure See Privie Probat of Testaments Probatio testamentorum Is the exhibiting and proving last Wills and Testaments before the Ecclesiastical Judge delegated by the Bishop who is Ordinary of the place where the party dies If all the deceased parties Goods Chattels and Debts owing him were in the same Diocess then the Bishop of the Diocess or the Arch-deacon according as their composition or prescription is has the Probat of the Testament if the Goods were dispersed in divers Dioceses so that there were any summ of note as five pounds ordinarily out of the Diocess where the party lived then is the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury or York the Ordinary by his Prerogative This Probat is made in two sorts either in common form or per testes The first is onely by the Oath of the Executor who swears upon his credality that the Will by him exhibited is the last Will and Testament of the Party deceased Per testes is when besides his Oath he also produceth Witnesses or makes other proof to confirm the same which later course is taken most commonly where there is fear of strife or dispute about the Testators Goods For it is held that a Will proved in common form onely may be call'd in question any time within thirty years after And where a Will disposes of Lands or Tenements of Freehold it is now usually proved by Witnesses in Chancery Procedendo Is a Writ whereby a Plea or Cause formerly called from a base Court to the Chancery Kings-Bench or Common-Pleas by Writ of Priviledge or Certiorari is released and sent again to the same Court to be proceeded in there after it appears that the Defendant has no cause of priviledge or that the matter comprised in the Parties allegation on suggestion is not well proved Brooke hoc titulo and Coke vol. 6. fo 63. See Anno 21 Rich. 2. ca. 11. Letters of Procedendo granted by the keeper of the Privy-Seal See in what diversity it is used in the Table of the Register of Writs Original and Judicial Anno 21 Iac. ca. 23. Process Processus a procedendo ab initio usque ad finem Is so called because it proceeds or goes out upon former matter either Original or Judicial and has two significations First it is largely taken for all proceeding in any real or personal civil or criminal Action from the Original Writ to the end Britton fo 138. Secondly We call that the Process by which a man is called into any Temporal Court which is alwayes in the name of the King See Lamb. in his Tractat of Processes adjoyning to his Eiren. Divers kinds of Process upon Inditements before Justices of the Peace see in Cromp. Iustice of P. fo 134. Special Proces is that which is especially appointed for the offence by Statute Processum continuando Is a Writ for the continuance of a Process after the death of the Chief Justice or other Justices in the Writ or Commission of Oyer and Terminer Reg. of Writs fo 128. a. Prochein amy Fr. Prochain amie proximus amicus Is used for him that is next of kin to a child in his nonage and is in that respect allow'd by Law to deal for him in managing his affairs as to be his Guardian if he hold in Socage and in the redress of any wrong done him Stat. Westm 1. ca. 48. and Westm 2. ca. 15. and is in the prosecution of any action at law per Gardianum where the Plaintiff is an Infant and per proximum Amicum where the Infant is Defendant See 2 Inst fo 261. Proclamation Proclamatio is a notice publickly given of any thing whereof the King thinks fit to advertise his Subjects so is it used Anno 7 Ric. 2. ca. 6. 31 Hen. 8. ca. 8. Proclamation of Rebellion is a Writ so called whereby publick notice is given where a Man not appearing upon a Subpaena nor an Attachment in the Chancery shall be reputed a Rebel if he render not himself by a day assigned in this Writ See Commission of Rebellion Proclamation of a Fine Is a notice openly and solemnly given at all the Assizes held in the County within one year after the ingrossing it which Proclamations are made upon transcripts of the Fine sent by the Justices of the Common-Plees to the Justices of Assise and of the Peace West Part 2. Symbol tit Fines Sect. 132. where also you may see the form of the Proclamation Proclamare est palam valde clamare See Proclamations in divers cases New Book of Entries verbo Proclamations Pro confesso Upon a Bill exhibited in Chancery where
Michaelmas He makes another Record whether Sheriffs and other Accountants keep their dayes of Prefixion All Estreats of Fines Issues and Americiaments set in any Courts of Westminster or at the Assises or Sessions are certify d into his Office and are by him deliver'd to the Clerk of the Estreats to make out Process upon them There are also brought into his Office all the Accompts of Customers Controllers and other Accountants to make entry thereof on Record See Repertory of Records fo 121. The Remembrancer of the First-fruits takes all Compositions and Bonds for First-fruits and Tenths and makes Process against all such as pay not the same Remitter from the Lat. Remittere to restore or send back Where a man has two titles to Land and is seised of the later and that proving defective he is restored to the former more ancient title This is a Remitter Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 149. F. Dyer fo 68. num 22. and see Brook tit Remitter If Land descend to him that has right to it before he shall be remitted to his better Title if he will Doctor and Student ca. 9. fo 19. b. See Terms of the Law on this word Coke on Litt. li. 3. c. 12. Render from the Fr. Rendre i. Reddere Retribuere and so it signifies with us A Fine with render is where Lands are render'd back by the Cognizee to the Cognizor Also there are certain things in a Mannor that lie in Prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his Officers when they chance without the Tenants leave as Escheats c. and certain that lie in Render that is must be rendred or answer'd by the Tenant as Rents Reliefs Heriots and other Services West Par. 2. Symb. Sect. 126. C. Also some Service consists in seisance some in Render Perkins Reservations 696. Renegeld Per Renegeld Johannes Stanley Ar. clamat habere de qualibet bovata terrae infra feodum de Aldford 1 d exceptis Dominicis terris terris in feodo praedicto infra Hundred de Macclefeld Rot. Plac. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Renovant from renovo to renew or make again The Parson sued one for Tithes to be paid of things renovant but this Horse being onely for labor and travel would not renew c. Croke 2 Part fo 430. Rent Reditus Is a summ of Mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of Lands or Tenements Plowden Casu Browning fo 132. b. 138. a. 141. b. Of which there are three sorts Rent-service Rent-charge and Rent-seck Rent-service is where a man holds his land by fealty and certain rent or by Fealty Service and Rent Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. fo 44. or that which a man making a Lease to another for years reserves yearly to be paid him for the same Rent-charge is where a man chargeth his Land or Tenements by Deed indented either in Fee ' Fee-tail or for term of life with a summ of Money to be paid to the Grantee yearly with clause of distress for not payment thereof Litt. ubi supra Rent-seck otherwise Dry-rent is that which a man making over an Estate of Lands or Tenements by Deed indented reserves yearly to be paid him without Clause of Distress mentioned in the Indenture See more on this subject in the Terms of the Law and the difference between a Rent and an Annuity in Doctor and Student ca. 30. Dial 1. Rents resolute Redditus resoluti Are reckon'd among the Fee-farm Rents to be sold by the Stat. 22 Car. 2. ca. 6. and are such Rents or Tenths as were anciently payable to the Crown from the Lands of Abbies and Religious-Houses and after the dissolution these Abby-lands being demised to others the said Rents were still reserved and made payable again to the Crown Renusiator Et sunt communes latrones Renusiatores hominum c. Trin. 28 Ed. 3. Ebor. 37. q. Reparatione facienda Is a Writ that lies in divers cases whereof one is where there are three Tenants in Common Join-tenants or pro indiviso of a Mill or House which is faln into decay and the one is willing to repair it the other two not In this case the party willing shall have this Writ against the other two Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 127. where you may see the form and many uses of it as also in Reg. of Writs fo 153. b. Repeal From the Fr. rappel i. revocatio Signifies the same with us as the Repeal of a Statute is the revoking or disanulling it Brook uses Repellance in the same sence Re-pleader Replacitare Is to plead again that which was once pleaded before See Brook and New Book of Entries verbo Repleader Replegiare de averiis Is a Writ brought by one whose Cattel are distrained or put in pound upon any cause by another upon surety given to the Sheriff to pursue or answer the Action at Law Anno 7 Hen. 8. ca. 4 Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 68. See Reg. of Writs for divers sorts of this Writ New Book of Entries ver●o Replevin and Dyer fo 173. num 14. Replevie Plevina Is derived of replegiare to re-deliver to the owner upon pledges or suerty and signifies the bringing the Writ called Replegiari facias by him that has his Cattel or other goods distrained by another for any cause and putting in Surety to the Sheriff that upon delivery of the thing distreined he will pursue the Action against him that distreined Coke on Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. Sect. 219. Goods may be replevied two manner of wayes viz. by Writ and that is by the Common-Law or by Plaint and that is by Statute-Law for the more speedy having again of their Cattel and Goods Replevie is used also for the bailing a man Pl. Cor. fo 72 74. and Westm 1. ca. 11. and 15. Replevish Replegiare Is to let one to Main-prise upon surety Anno 3 Ed. 1. ca. 11. Replication Replicatio Is an exception of the second degree made by the Plaintiff upon the first Answer of the Defendant West par 2. Symb. tit Chancery Sect. 55. and Westm 2. ca. 36. It is that which the Plaintiff replies to the Defendants Answer in Chancery and this is either General or Special Special is grounded upon matter arising out of the Defendants answer c. General so called from the general words therein used Report From the Lat. Reportare Is a publick relation or a bringing again to memory Cases judicially argued debated resolved or adjudged in any of the Kings Courts of Justice with such causes and reasons as were delivered by the Judges of the same Coke on Litt. fo 293. Also when the Chancery or other Court refers the stating some case or computing an account c. to a Master of Chancery or other Referree his Certificate therein is called a Report Reposition of the Forest i. A re-putting to Was an Act whereby certain Forest-grounds being made Purlieu upon view were by a second view laid or put to the Forest again Manwood
pascuis sayes Spel. So in an ancient Charter of Garradon-Abby in Leicestershire Dat. 14 Ed. 3. There is mention of the wicket-wong which is a large piece of enclosed ground lying before the Abby-gate still reteiniug the name See VVang Woodgeld VVoodgeldum Seems to be the gathering or cutting wood within the Forest or Money paid for the same to the Foresters And the immunity from this by the Kings Grant is by Crompton called Woodgeld fo 157. Coke on Litt. fo 233. a. sayes it signifies to be free from payment of money for taking of VVood in any Forest Woodmen Are those in the Forest who have charge especially to look to the Kings woods Crom. Jur. fo● 146. Woodmote Court Is the Court of Attachment of the Forest Manw. Par 1. pa. 95. See Attachment UUood-plea Court Is a Court held twice a year in the Forest of Clun in Com. Salop for determining all matters of wood and agistment there and was anciently perhaps the same with VVoodmote Court UUoodward VVoodwardus Is an Officer of the Forest whose Function you may understand by his Oath set down in Crom. Jur. fo 141. YOu shall truely execute the Office of a VVoodward of B. woods within the Forest of VV. so long as you shall be Woodward there you shall not conceal any offence either in Vert or Venison that shall be committed or done within your charge but you shall truely present the same without any favour affection or reward And if you see or know any Malefactors or find any Deer killed or hurt you shall forthwith do the Verderor to understand thereof and you shall present the same at the next Court of the Forest be it Swainmote or Court of Attachments So help you God VVoodwards may not walk with Bow and Shafts but with Forest Bills Manwood par 1. pa. 189. Arcum calamos gestare in Foresta non licet sed ut rescripti utar verbo Hachettum tantummodo Sic Term. Hill Anno 13 Ed. 3. Ebor. rot 106. Wool-drivers Anno 2 3 Ph. Ma. ca. 13. Are those that buy Wool abroad in the Country of Sheepmasters and carry it on horseback to the Clothiers or to Market-Towns to sell again Woolstaple Anno 51 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. That City or Town where wooll was sold See Staple Wool-winders Are such as wind up every Fleece of wooll that is to be packed and sold by weight into a kind of bundle after it is cleansed in such manner as it ought to be by Statute and to avoid such deceit as the owners were wont to use by thrusting in locks of refuse wool and other dross to gain weight they are Sworn to perform that office truly between the owner and the buyer See the Statute 8 H. 6. ca. 22. 23 Hen. 8. ca. 17. and 18 Eliz. ca. 25. Wranglands Seen to be misgrown Trees that will never prove timber Kitchin fo 160 〈◊〉 Wreck Wreccum maris Sax. ƿraec i. Detortum abdicatum Is where a ship is perish'd on the Sea and no man escapes alive out of it if any part of the Ship or any of the Goods that were in it are brought to Land by the Waves they belong to the King by His Prerogative or to such other person to whom the King has granted Wreck But if a man a Dog or a Cat escape alive so that the owner come within a year and a day and prove the Goods to be his he shall have them again by provision of the Statute of VVestm 1. ca. 4. 17 Ed. 2. ca. 11. See Coke Vol. 6. fo 106. a. Bracton lib. 2. ca. 5. num 7. Edouardus Conf. Ringsted cum libertate adjacente omni maris ejectu quod Wrec dicitur Ecclesiae Ramesiensi largitus est Lib. Ramesien Sect. 95. By which and other Antiquities it appears that VVrec did not onely comprehend Goods that came from a perishing Ship but whatever else the Sea did cast upon the Land were it precious Stones Fishes or the like For in the Statuto Praerog Regis ca. 11. we read Rex habebit Wreckum maris per totum regnum Balenas Sturgiones captas in mari vel alibi infra regnum exceptis quibusdam privilegiatis locis per Regem See Rot. Cart. 20. Hen. 3. m. 3. Rot. Cart. 4 Hen. 3. m. 6. Pat. 40. H. 3. in Dorso m. 1. This in the Grand Customary of Normandy ca. 17. Is called Uarech and Latined Veriscum and in some of our ancient Charters it is written Seupwerp quasi Sea-up-werp i. Ejectus maris from Up-werpen ejicere In the Statute 27 Hen. 8. ca. 26. it is called VVreke de mer. See 2 Inst fo 167. Writ Breve Is the Kings precept whereby any thing is commanded to be done touching a Sute or Action as the Defendant or Tenant to be summoned a Distress to be taken a Disscisin to be redressed c. And these VVrits are variously divided in divers respects Some in respect of their order or manner of granting are termed original and some judicial Original VVrits are those which are sent out of the high Court of Cnancery for summoning the Defendant in a personal or Tenant in a real Action before the Sute begins or to begin the Sute thereby Those are Judicial which are sent out by order of the Court where the Cause depends upon emergent occasion after the Sute begun Old Nat. Br. fo 51 147. And judicial are thus known from Original because their Teste bears the name of the Chief Justice of that Court whence it comes whereas the Original saith Teste meipso in the name or relating to the King and according to the nature of the Action they are personal or real real are either touching the possession called VVrits of Entry or the property called VVrits of Right Some VVrits are at the Sute of the Party some of Office Some ordinary some of priviledge A VVrit of Priviledge is that which a privileg d person brings to the Court for his exemption by reason of some priviledge See Procedendo and New Book of Entries verbo Priviledge See Brief Writ of Rebellion See Commission of Rebellion Writ of Assistance issues out of the Exchequer to authorise any person to take a Constable or other publick Officer to seize Goods or Merchandise prohibited and uncostomed c. Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. Writer of the Tallies Scriptor Talliarum Is an Officer in the Exchequer being Clerk to the Auditor of the Receipt who writes upon the Tallies the whole Letters of the Tellers Bills Wudhepec See Pudhepeck Wulvesheved Contractius Wulveshead Sax. ƿlfe lupus heofod caput i. Caputlupinum Was the condition of those who were outlaw'd for Criminal matters in the Saxons time or not yielding themselves to Justice For if they could have been taken alive they must have been brought to the King and i. they for fear of being apprehended did defend themselves they might be slain and their heads brought to the King For their head was no more to
Mixta quae dicitur Actio Hirciscundae locum habet inter eos qni communem habent haereditatem c. See Coke on Littl. fol. 262. b. Action is also according to the Form of the Writ divided into such as are conceived to recover either the simple value of the thing chalenged or the double trebble or quadruple As a Decies tantum lies against Embracers Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 171. And against Jurors that take Money for their Verdict of either or both parties And to be short any other Action upon a Statute that punishes any offence by Restitution or Fine proportionable to the Transgression Action is Pre-judicial otherwise termed Preparatory or else Principal Pre-judicial is that which grows from some question or doubt in the Principal As if a Man sue his younger Brother for Land descended from his Father and it is objected he is a Bastard Bracton lib 3. cap. 4. Numb 6. This point of Bastardy must be tryed before the cause can further proceed and therefore is termed Pre-judicialis quia prius judicanda Action is either Ancestrel or Personal Stamf. Pl. Cor. 59. Ancestrel seems to be that which we have by some right descending from our Ancestor and Personal which has beginning in and from our selves There is also Action Ancestrel Droiturel and Action Ancestrel Possessary which see in Cokes 2 Inst fol. 291. Action upon the Case actio super casum is a general Action given for redress of wrongs done to any Man without force and by Law not especially provided for and is now most in use For where you have any occasion of Suite that neither has a fit name nor certain Form already prescribed there the Clerks of the Chancery in ancient time conceived a sit Form of Action for the thing in question which the Civilians call Actionem in Factum and we Action upon the Case Action upon the Statute actio super Statutum is an Action brought against a Man upon an offence against a Statute whereby an Action is given and lay not before As where one commits Perjury to the prejudice of another he who is endamaged shall have a Writ upon the Statute and his Cause And the difference between an Action upon the Statute and Action Popular is Where the Statute gives the Suite or Action to the party grieved or otherwise to one person certain that is called Action upon the Statute But where Authority is given by the Statute to every one that will so sue that is termed Action Popular Action is Perpetual or Temporal Perpetua vel Temporalis and that is called Perpetual whose force is by no time determined Of which sort were all Civil Actions among the Ancient 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 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 they be pursued within the time by them prescribed namely the Statute of 1 Edw. 6. cap. 1. gives Action for three years after the offences committed and no longer And the Statute of 7 Hen. 8. cap. 3. doth the like for four years and that of 31 Eliz. cap. 5. for one year and no more But as by the Civil Law no Actions were at the last so perpetual but that by time they might be prescribed against So in our Law though Actions may be called Perpetual in comparison of those that are expresly limited by Statute yet is there a means to prescribe against Real Actions after five years by a Fine levied or a Recovery suffered as you may see in the words Fine Recovery and Limitation of Assize Action of a Writ is a term used when one pleads some matter by which he shews the Plaintiff had no cause to have the Writ he brought yet it may be he might have another Writ or Action for the same matter Such a Plea is called A Plea to the Action of the Writ Whereas if by the Plea it should appear That the Plaintiff has no cause to have an Action for the thing demanded then it is called A Plea to the Action Cowel Acts of Parliament are Positive Laws which consist of two parts viz. Of the words of the Act and the sence of it and they both joyned together make the Law Acton-Burnel a Statute so called made 13 Edw 1. An. 1285. Ordaining the Statute Merchant for Recovery of Debts and was so termed because made at Acton-Burnel a Castle anciently of the Burnels afterward of the Lovels in Shropshire Actuary actuarius is the Scribe that Registers the Acts and Constitutions of the Convocation Addition additio signifies A Title given to a Man over and above his Christian and Sirname shewing his Estate Degree Mystery Trade Place of dwelling c. Additions of Estate are these Yeoman Gentleman Esquire and such like Additions of Degree are those we call names of Dignity as Knight Lord Earl Marquess and Duke Additions of Mystery are Scrivener Painter Mason c. Addition of Town as Dale Thorp and such like And where a Man hath houshold in two places he shall be said to dwell in both of them so that his Addition in either may suffice By the Statute of 1 Hen 5. cap. 5. It was ordained That in Suits or Actions where Proces of Outlary lies such Additions should be to the name of the Defendant to shew his Estate Mystery and place where he dwells and that the Writs not having such Additions shall abate if the Defendant take exception thereto but not by the Office of the Court. And this was ordained to the intent that one Man might not be vexed or troubled by the Outlary of another but by reason of the certain Addition every person may bear his own burden See 2 Part. Institut fol. 595. 666. And the Statute 27 Eliz. cap. 7. Addoubors See Redoubors Adeling or Ethling from the Sax. Æðelan i. nobilis Was a Title of Honor among the Angles properly appertaining to the Successor of the Crown For King Edward being himself without issue and intending to make Eadgar to whom he was great Uncle by the Mothers side his heir to this Kingdom called him Adeling Hoveden parte poster Annal. fol. 347. a. Vide Leges S. Edw. Conf. M. S. a. Will. Conq. recept cap. ante-penult See more of this word in Spelmans Glossarium Adjournment from the Fr. adjournement Is when any Court is dissolved for the present or put off and assigned to be kept again at another day or place Adjournment in Eyre Anno 25 Edw. 3. Statute of Purveyers cap. 18. Is an appointment of a day when the Justices in Eyre mean to sit again And in 2 Edw. 3. cap. 11. Adjournment has the like signification See Prorogue Adjudication adjudicatio A giving by Judgment a Sentence or Decree An. 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 10. Ad inquirendum is a Writ
as well as in other Lords Of which I finde mention in the Statute of 27 Hen. 8. cap. 10. This Imposition seems to have descended to us from Normandy or rather from a more ancient Original viz. The Feodal Laws For in the Grand Custumary cap. 35. you have a Tractat entituled 〈◊〉 aides Chevelz i. De auxiliis capitalibus whereof the first is A faire Paine filz de son seigneur Chevalier i. To make the eldest son Knight The second Son ainee fille marier i. To marry the eldest daughter c. Both these and all charges incident thereunto are taken away and discharged by Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. This word Aid is also particularly used in Matter of Pleading for a Petition made in Court for the calling in of help from another that hath an interest in the Cause in question and is likely to give strength both to the party that prays in Aid of him and also to avoid a prejudice growing toward his own right if not prevented But this course of proceeding is of late much disused Fitz-Herbert mentions both Prier in Ayde and Prier Ayde de Patron c. Auxilium petere à patrono Nat. Br. fol. 50. d. And the New Book of Entries verbo ayde de parcener fol. 411. col 4. The word is also found in 13 Rich. 2. cap. 17. This Ayd-prier or Aid-prayer is sometime also used in the Kings behalf that there be no proceeding against him till his Council be called and heard what they can say for avoiding the Kings prejudice or loss in the cause in hand Also a City or Borough that hath a Fee-Farm of the King may pray in Ayd of him if any thing be demanded of them relating thereto Of this you may read the Statute De Bigamis An. 4 Edw. 1. cap. 1. 2 3. 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 14. 19 Car. 2. cap. 8. Vide Resceit Aile of the Fr. aieul i. avus signifies a Writ that lies where the Grand-father or great Grand-father called by us Besaile but in true French Bisaycul was seised of any Land or Tenement in Fee-simple the day he died and a Stranger abateth or enters the same day and dispossesseth the Heir Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 222. See Plowden fol. 449. b. Airie of Hawks See Aerie Alba firma Census annalis qui Centenario sive Domino Hundredi penditur Ideo alba dicta quod non ex more prisci saeculi in anuon â quae tunc Black mail nuncupata fuit hoc est census vel firma nigra sed argento quasi censu albo reddebatur Spelman Duplex est tenura in Com. Westmerland scil una per Albam firmam alia per Cornagium c. 2 Part. Inst fol. 10. Alderman Sax. Ealdorman i. Senior Was among the Saxons as much as Earl among the Danes Camb. Brit. fol. 107. Also an Elder Senator or Statesman At this day we call them Aldermen who are associates to the Civil Magistrate of a City or Town Corporate 24 H. 8. cap. 13. See Spelmans Glossarium at large on this word where you shall finde that we had here anciently a title of Aldermannus totius Angliae Hic requiescit D. Ailwinus inclyti Regis Eadgari cognatus totius Angliae Aldermannus hujus sacri Caenohii i. Ramesien miraculosus Fundator Alepiman alepimannus Omnis Alepiman de tota Soca de Hecham debet singulis annis unum Denarium de Chevagio operabitur per tres Dies in antumpno exceptis illis qui ab hac servitute liberi sunt Consuetudinar de Hecham Prior. Lew. M. S. pag. 21. Videtur Alepimannos istos mancipia fuisse Chevagii enim solutio servitutis judicium est Spelman Aler sans jour Fr. Is verbatim to go without day the meaning whereof is to be finally dismissed the Court because there is no day of farther appearance assigned Kitchin fol. 104 Ale-silver A Rent or Tribute yearly paid to the Lord Major of London by those that sell Ale within the City Antiq. of Purveyance fol. 183. Aletaster Is an Officer appointed in every Court Leet and sworn to look to the Assize and goodness of Bread and Ale or Beer within the Precincts of that Lordship Kitchin fol. 46. where you may see the Form of his Oath Alias vide Capias alias Alien alienare signifies to transfer the property of any thing to another person To Alien in Mortmain is to make over Lands or Tenements to a Religious House or other Body Politick See Mortmain To alien in Fee is to sell the Fee-simple of any Land or Tenements or of any Incorporeal right Westm 2. cap. 25. Anno 13 Edw. 1. Alien alienus One born in a strange Countrey It is usually taken for the contrary to Denizen or a natural subject that is a stranger never here enfranchised Brook Denizen 4 c. Yet a man born out of the Land so it be within the limits of the Kings obedience beyond the Seas or of English Parents out of the Kings obedience so the Parents at the time of the Birth be of such obedience is no Alien in account but a Subject to the King Stat. 2. 25 Edw. 3. commonly called the Statute De natis ultra mare Also if one born out of the Kings alleagiance come and dwell in England his Children begotten here are not Aliens but Denizens See Denizen Alimony alimonia Nourishment maintenance But in a modern legal sence it signifies that portion or allowance which a married Woman sues for upon any occasional separation from her Husband wherein she is not charged with Elopement or Adultery This Alimony was anciently expressed by rationabile estoverium for reasonable maintenance Rex Vic. Bucks salutem Praecipimus tibi quod de Maritagio Emmae de Pinckeney uxoris Laurentii Penire qui excommunicatus est eo quod praedictam Emmam affectione maritali non tractat eidem Emmae rationabile estoverium suum invenias donec idem Laurentius vir suue eam tanquam uxorem suam tractaverit ne iteratus clamor ad nos inde perveniat T. 29 Aug. Anno Regni nostri 7. Rot. Claus 7. Hen. p. 1. m 3. Allay Fr. Is used for the temper or mixture of other Metals with Silver or Gold Anno 9 Hen. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 4. and Stat. 1. cap. 11. The reason of which Allay is with a baser metal to augment the weight of the Silver or Gold so much as may countervail the Princes charge in the Coyning and to make it the more fusile Anto. Faber de Nummariorum debitorum solutionibus cap. 1. Anno 4 Hen. 7. cap. 2 Allocation allocatio A placing or adding unto also allowance made upon an account used in the Exchequer Allocatione facienda Is a Writ directed to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer upon a Complaint of some Accomptant commanding them to allow him such sums as he hath by vertue of his Office lawfully and reasonably expended Register of Writs fol. 206. b. Allodium See Fee Alluminor
Et cest ma Lettre serra son Garrant En tesmoignage de quel chose a y ceste jay mise mon Seal Don a Lemestre le xi jour de Julet le ann de Regne le Roy Henric. le quart apres le Conquest quarte See 2 Part. Instit fol. 474. Quod nullus libere tenens infra Baroniam illam se appruira posset de vasto suo c. Aquage aquagium q. aquae agium i. aquae ductus aquaegangium Non liceat alicui de caetero facere dammas vel fordas aut alia impedimenta in aliquibus landeis watergangiis fossatis sive aquagiis eommunibus in marisco praedicto Ordinatio Marisci de Romeney facta tempore Hen. 3. Edw. 1. pag. 72. See Watergage Arbitrator Lat. Is an exttaordinary Judge or Commissioner in one or more Causes between party and party chosen by their mutual consents This Arbitrement is either general that is including all Actions Quarrels and Demands or Special which is or one or more Matters Facts or Things specified The Civilians make a difference between Arbiter and Arbitrator For though they both ground their power upon the comprimise of the parties yet their liberty is divers For Arbiter is tied to proceed and judge according to Law with Equity intermingled Arbitrator is permitted wholly to his own discretion without solemnity of Process or Course of Judgment to hear or determine the Controversie committed to him so it be Juxta Arbitrium boni viri See Alto Basso Arbitrement See Arbitrator Arches Court Curia de Arcubus Is the chief and ancientest Consistory that belongs to the Archbishop of Canterbury for debating Spiritual Causes and is so called from Bow-Church in London dedicated to the Blessed Virgin where it was kept And the Church is so called of the fashion of the Steeple or Clochier thereof whose top is raised of Stone-pillars built Arch-wise like so many Bent-Bows The Judge of this Court is termed The Dean of the Arches or The Official of the Arches Court Dean of the Arches because with this Officialty is commonly joyned a peculiar Jurisdiction of Thirteen Parishes in London termed a Deanry being exempted from the Authority of the Bishop of London and belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury of which the Parish of Bow is one and the chief because the Court was there kept The Jurisdiction of this Judge is ordinary and extends it self through the whole Province of Canterbury So that upon any Appeal made he forthwith and without any further examination of the Cause sends out his Citation to the Appealee and his Inhibition to the Judge from whom the Appeal was made Of this read more in Historia de Antiq. Eccles Britan. And 4 Part. Instit fol. 337. Archive archivum from arca a Press or Chest The Rolls or a place wherein Ancient Records Charters and Evidences that belong to the Crown and Kingdom are kept also the Chancery or Exchequer Office Armes arma In the understanding of Law are extended to any thing that a Man wears for his defence or takes into his hands or useth in his wrath to cast at or strike another Crompt Just of Peace fol. 65. a. So Armorum appellatio non utique scuta gladios galeas significat sed fustes lapides Armes are also what we call in Latin Insignia Ensigns of Honor. Argentum Dei Gods-penny i. Earnest Money or Money given in earnest In Lincolnshire called Erles Arpen or Arpent Fr. An Acre or Furlong of Ground the most ordinary one called L'Arpent de France is One hundred Perches square after Eighteen Foot to the Perch This word is often found in Doomsday Quatuor Arpenni vineae noviter plantatae Tit. Middlesex Array an old Fr. word signifies the ranking or setting forth a Jury or Enquest of Men empannelled upon a Cause 18 Hen. 6. cap. 14. Hence the Verb to Array a Pannel An. 3. H. 5. cap. 5. and Old Nat. Br. fol. 157. That is to set forth the Men empannelled one by another The Array shall be quashed ibidem By the Statute every Array in Assize ought to be made four days before Br. tit Pannel num 10. To challenge the Array Kitchin fol. 92. See Challenge To lead and conduct persons armed and arrayed 14 Car. 2. cap. 3. Arrayers arraiatores Is used in the Statute 12 Ri 〈…〉 cap. 6. for such Officers as had care of the Soldiers Armor and see them duly accoutred in their kindes Such were the Commissioners of Array appointed by King Charles the First in the year 1642. Edw. Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hib. Dux Aquit dilectis fidelibus suis Johanni de Occlesthorp Johanni de Fenton electoribus Arraiatoribus hominum in Wapentachio de Barkeston salutem Cum ad repellendam Scotorum maliciam qui regnum nostrum hostiliter sunt ingressi homicidiam depredationes incendia alia mala citia perpetrando versus partes Marchiae Scotiae c. Inde Scoti cum toto posse suo ut pro certo didiscimus propè ci●itatem nostram Karleoli ista die Martis se congregare proponunt c. Nos considerantes periculum c. Omnes homines defensibiles potentes ad pugnandum ejusdem Wapentagii tam milites quam alii c. I. me ipso apud North-Alverton xiii die Junii Anno regni nostri primo Arraine or Arraigne from the French Arranger i. to set a thing in order or in his place hath the same signification in Law For he is said to Arraine a Writ of Novel Disseisin who prepares and fits it for Tryal before the Justices of the Circuit Old Nat. Br. fol. 109. Littleton pag. 78. useth the word in the same sence viz. The Lease arraineth an Assize of Novel Disseizin To arraign the Assize is to cause the Tenant to be called to make the Plaint and to set the Cause in such order as the Tenant may be enforced to answer thereto Coke on Littl. fol. 262. b. Also a Prisoner is said to be arraigned when he is endicted and brought forth to his Tryal Arraigned within the Verge upon Murder Stamf. Pl. Cor fol. 150. The manner of this Arraignment you may read in Sir Thomas Smith de Rep. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 23. The Learned Spelman is of opinion it should be written Arrame from arramare and that from the old French arramir i. jura●e promittere solenniter profiteri Arrearages from the Fr. arriere retrò The remain of an Accompt or a Sum of Money remaining in the hands of an Accomptant It is sometimes used more generally for any Money unpaid at a due time as Arrearages of Rent Arrentation from the Span. arrendare q. ad certum reditum dimittere Ordin Forestae 34 Edw. 1. cap. 6. Signifies the licencing an owner of Lands in the Forest to enclose them Bassa haya parvo fossato i. with a low Hedge and small Ditch which is according to the Assize of the Forest under a Yearly Rent Saving of
the Arrentations Is saving power to give such Licences for a Yearly Rent Arrest Fr. a stop or stay and is metaphorically used for a Decree or Determination of a Cause debated or disputed pro and con as Arrest du Senat. i. Placitum Curiae with us Arrest is taken for the Execution of the Command of some Court or Officer of Justice and a Man stopped staid or apprehended for Debt c. is said to be Arrested which may be called The beginning of Imprisonment To move or plead in Arrest of Judgment is to shew cause why Judgment should be staid notwithstanding the Verdict be given To plead in Arrest of taking the Enquest upon the former Issue is to shew cause why an Enquest should not be taken c. Brook tit Repleader For preventing Arrests of Judgments see the Statute 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 8. Arrestandis bonis ne dissipentur Is a Writ which lies for him whose Cattle or Goods are taken by another who during the controversie doth or is like to make them away and will hardly be able to make satisfaction for them afterward Register of Writs fol. 126. Arrestando ipsum qui pecuniam recepit ad proficiscendum in obsequium Regis c. Is a Writ which lies for the apprehension of him that hath taken Prest-Money for the Kings Wars and hides himself when he should go Register of Writs fol. 24. b. Arresto facto super bonis mercatorum alienigenorum c. Is a Writ which lies for a Denizen against the Goods of Strangers of any other Countrey found within this Kingdom in recompence of Goods taken from him in that Countrey after he hath been denied restitution there Register of Writs fol. 129 a. This among the Ancient Civilians was called Clarigatio now barbarously Reprisalia Arretted arrectatus quasi ad rectum vocatus That is convented before a Judge and charged with a crime It is sometimes used for imputed or laid unto as no folly may be arretted to one under age Littleton cap. Remitter Chaucer useth the Verb Arretteth i. Layeth blame as it is interpreted Bracton says Ad rectnm babere Malefactorem i. To have the Malefactor forth coming so as he may be charged and put to his Tryal Lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. And in another place Rectatus de morte hominis charged with the death of a Man Arrura Hoc Scriptum factum apud Sutton Courtenay 20 Dic Dec. 4 Edw. 3. Inter Dominum Hugonem de Courtenay ex parte una Ric. de Stanlake Johannam uxorem ejus ex altera testatur quod idem Dominus Hugo in excambium remisit eisdem Ricardo Johannae omnimoda opera VIZ. Arruras Messiones Cariagia alia quaecunque opera Et ipsi non dabunt Medfee c. Penes Tho. Wollascot de Sutton praedict Ar. q. If not here used for Ploughing and Harrowing Arthel An. 26 H. 8. cap. 6. And that no person or persons shall hereafter at any time cast any thing into any Court within Wales or in the Lordships Marchers of the same by the mean or name of an Arthel by reason whereof the Court may be letted disturbed or discontinued for that time upon pain of c. Is a British word and is more truly written Arddelw which the Southwales men write Arddel and signifies according to Dr. Davies Dictionary Astipulari Asserere Vindicare Assertio Vindicatio Anglicè Avouch Example O delir Dyn ' ai ledrad yn ei Law rhaid iddo geifio Arrdelw cyfreithlon i fwrw ei ledrad oddiwrtho i. It a Man be taken with stoln Goods in his hands he must be allowed a lawful Arddelw Vouchee to cleer him of the Felony Which is part of the Law of Howel Dda but probably was so abused in Henry the Eighths time by the delay of or exemption of Felons and other Criminals from Justice that provision by this Statute was made against it Thus explicated by the Learned Meredith Lloyd Esquire Articles of the Clergy Articuli Cleri Are certain Statutes made touching Persons and Causes Ecclesiastical Anno 9 Edw 2. and Anno 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 3. Assart Fr. Essarter to glade or make Glades in a Wood to make Plain to Grub up or clear a ground of Bushes Shrubs c. Is according to Manwood cap. 9. numb 1. an offence committed in the Forest by plucking up those Woods by the Roots which are Thickets and Cover for the Deer and by making them plain as arable Land which is the greatest Offence or Trespass that can be done in the Forest to Vert or Venison containing as much or more then Waste For whereas Waste of the Forest is but the Felling and Cutting down the Coverts which may grow again Assart is a Plucking them up and Destroying them which is confirmed out of the Red Book in the Exchequer in these words Assarta verò occasiones nominantur quando Forestae nemora vel Dumeta pascuis latibulis ferarum oportuna succiduntur Quibus succisis radicitus avulsis terra subvertitur excolitur And again out of Register of Writs fol. 257. in the Writ Ad quod Damnum sent out in case where a Man sues for a Licence to Assart his Grounds in the Forest and to make it several for Tillage So that it is no offence if done with Licence To this Bracton may be added Lib. 4. cap. 38. who saith That these words Boscus efficitnr Assartum signifie as much as Redactus ad culturam Of this you may read more in Cromp. Jursid fol. 203. and in Charta de Foresta Anno 9 Hen. 3. cap. 4. where it is written Assert not Assart And in Manwood part 1. pag. 171. That which we call Assartum is elswhere termed Disboscatio Quietus de Essartis we finde in a Charter of Priviledge granted by Henry the First to the Abbot of Rames Sect. 198. And in Pat. 18 Edw. 3. pag. 1. m. 19. Et quibusdam Sartis quae sartaverunt homines ipsius Ecclesiae c. Assart was also anciently used for a parcel of Land assarted as appears by this Charter of Roger Earl of Mortimer Sciant praesentes futuri quod ego Rogerus de Mortuo mare Dedi concessi Ade Pistori pro servitio suo tresdecem acras terrae super Mughedone inter pratum quod fuit Petri Budelli viam quae vadit per medium Mughedone Dedi etiam eidem Ade Duo Asarta en la Hope quae appellantur Ordrichesruding Aldicheruding in quibus Asartis continentur quinque acrae ad eandem mensuram tresdecem acrarum super Mughedone Ad tenendum de me haeredibus meis sibi haeredibus suis in feo do haereditate libere quiete Reddendo inde annuatim mihi haeredibus meis ille haeredes sui duos solidos ad Festum Sancti Michael pro omni servitio salvo servitio Domini Regis Ut autem haec mea Donatio concessio firma sit stabilis eam hac cartā meā
to the Hundred of Egerdon This in ancient Records is called Certum Letae See Common Fine Certificat Lat. Is used for a Writing made in any Court to give notice to another Court of any thing done therein For example a Certificat of the cause of Attaint is a Transcript made briefly by the Clerk of the Crown Clerks of the Peace or of Assise to the Court of Kings Bench containing the Tenor and Effect of every Indictment Outlary or Conviction or Clerk attainted made or pronounced in any other Court Anno 34 H. 8. cap. 14. Broke fol. 119. Certification of Assise of Novel Disseisin c. Certificatio Assisae novae Disseisinae c. Is a Writ granted for the reexamining or review of a matter passed by Assise before any Justices Of which see Reg. of Writs f. 200. And the New Book of Entries verbo Certificat of Assise This is used when a Man appearing by his Bailiff to an Assise brought by another hath lost the day and having something more to plead for himself as a Deed of Release c. which the Bailiff did not or might not plead for him desires a farther examination of the cause either before the same Justices or others and obtains Letters Patent to them to that effect The Form of which Letters see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 181. and that done brings a Writ to the Sheriff to call both the party for whom the Assise passed and the Jury that was empaneld on the same before the said Justices at a certain day and place And it is called a Certificat because therein mention is made to the Sheriff that upon the parties complaint of the Defective Examination or Doubts yet remaining upon the Assise pa●sed the King hath directed His Letters Patent to the Justices for the better certifying themselves whether all Points of the said Assise were duly examined Of this read Bracton lib. 4. cap. 19. num 4. and Horns Mirror lib. 3. Certificando de recognitione Stapulae Is a Writ directed to the Major of the Staple c. commanding him to certifie the Lord Chancellor of a Statute Staple taken before him in case where the party himself detains it and re●use h 〈…〉 bring it in Reg. of Writs fol. 152. b. The like may be understood of Certificando de Statuto Mercatorio fol. 148. And De Certificando in Cancellariam de Inquisitione de Idemptitate nominis fol. 195. And Certificando quando Recognitio c. And Certificando quid actum est de brevi super Statutum Mercatorium fol. 151. And Certificando si loquela Warrantiae fol. 13 Certiorari Is a Writ issuing out of the Chancery to an Inferior Court to call up the Records of a Cause there depending that conscionable Justice may be done therein upon complaint made by Bill that the party who seeks the said Writ hath received hard dealing in the said Court See the divers Forms and Uses of it in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 242. As also the Register both Original and Judicial in the Tables verbo Certiorari Crompton in his Justice of Peace fol. 117. says This Writ is either returnable in the Kings Bench and then hath these words Nobis mittatis or in the Chancery and then hath in Cancellaria nostra or in the Common Bench and then Justiciariis nostris de Banco Cessavit Is a Writ that lies in divers Cases as appears by Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 280. Upon this general ground i. That he against whom it is brought hath for two years neglected to perform such Service or to pay such Rent as he is tied to by his tenure and hath not upon his Land or Tenements sufficient Goods or Cattle to be distrained See Fleta lib. 5. cap. 34. sect visa sunt See Cessavit de Cantaria Cessavit de feodi firma Cessavit per biennium in Reg. of Writs fol. 237 238. And New Book of Entries verbo Cessavit It lies not but for Annual Service as ●eat and such like not for Homage or Fealty Cesses Anno 22 Hen. 8. cap. 3. Seems to signifie Assessments or Taxes Cesse or Ceasse in Ireland is an exaction of Provision of Victuals at a certain rate for the Deputies Family and the Soldiers in Garison Sir Rich. Bakers Chron. fol. 376. Cession Cessio A ceasing yielding up or giving over Si un Farson ou Dean en Angliterre prist un Evesquery en Ireland ceo fait le primier Esglise void per Cession Latches Rep. fol. 234. Ratione vacationis Prioratus praedicti per Cessionem Fratris Rogeri de Wellington ultimi Prioris c. Claus 13 Edw. 3. pag. 1. m. 38. Cessor Lat. A loyterer or idle fellow but we use it for him who ceaseth or neglects so long to perform a duty belonging to him as he thereby incurs the danger of Law and is liable to have the Writ Cessavit brought against him Old Nat. Br. fol. 136. And note where it is said The Tenant cesseth without any more words is to be understood that the Tenant ceaseth to do what he ought or is bound to do by the Tenure of his Lands or Tenement Cessure or Cesser Is also used for a ceasing giving over or departing from Westm 2. cap. 41. Cestui qui vie in true French Cestui a vie de qui Is he for whose life any Land or Tenement is granted Perkins tit Grants 97. Cestui que use an Abstract of the Fr. Cestui al use de qui Is an usual phrase signifying him to whose use any other Man is enfeoffed in any Lands or Tenements See the New Book of Entries verbo Uses And in Replevin fol. 508. colum 3. and verbo Trespass fol. 606. and fol. 123. a b. col 3. num 7. Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 1. and Coke lib. 1. fol. 133. Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Cestui qui trust Is he who hath a trust in Lands or Tenements committed to him for the benefit of another Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Chafewax Is an Officer in Chancery that fits the Wax for the Sealing of the Writs and such other Instruments as are there made to be issued out So in France Calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chaffers Anno 3 Edw. 4. cap. 4. Seem to signifie Wares or Merchandize for Chaffering is yet used for buying and selling Chaldron or Chalder of Coals Contains Thirty six Bushels heape up and according to the Bushel sealed for that purpose at Guildhal in London Annis 16 17 Car. 2. cap. 2. It is written Chawdren Anno 9 Hen. 5. cap. 10. perhaps from the Fr. Chaud i. hot Challenge from the Fr. Chalenger i. sibi asserere Is used for an Exception taken either against persons or things Persons as in Assise to the Jurors any one or more of them or in case of Felony by the Prisoner at the Bar Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Things as against a Declaration Old Nat. Br. fol. 76. Challenge
Herauld That if any Man shall deny or gain-say the Kings title to the Crown he is there ready to defend it in single Combat c. Which being done the King drinks to him and sends him a gilt Cup with a Cover full of Wine which the Champion drinks and hath the Cup for his Fee This Office ever since the Coronation of King Richard the Second when Baldwin Frevile exhibited his Petition for it was adjudged from him to Sir John Dymock his Competitor both claiming from Marmion as producing better Records and Evidence and hath continued ever since in the worthy family of Dymock who hold the Mannor of Scrivelsby in Lincolnshire hereditarily from the Marmions by Grand Sergeanty viz. That the Lord thereof shall be the Kings Champion as abovesaid Camd. in part Fin. Mich. 1 Hen. 6. Accordingly Sir Edward Dymock performed this Office at the Coronation of His Majesty King Charles the Second 23 April 1661. Chancellor Cancellarius This Officer in late times is greatly advanced not onely in our but in other Kingdoms For he is the chief Administrator of Justice next to the Soveraign All other Justices in this Kingdom are tied to the Law and may not swerve from it in Judgment but the Chancellor hath the Kings absolute power to moderate the Written Law governing his Judgment by the Law of Nature and Conscience and ordering all things juxta aequum bonum Wherefore Stanford in his Praerog cap. 20. fol. 65. says The Chancellor hath two powers one absolute the other ordinary meaning that though by his ordinary power in some cases he must observe the form of proceeding as other Inferior Judges yet in his absolute power he is not limitted by the Written Law but by Conscience and Equity according the Circumstances of Matter And though Polydor Virgil an alien undertaking to write the History of England supposed he did not mistake when he makes our William the Conqueror the Founder of our Chancellors yet our industrious Antiquary Mr. Dugdale can shew us his Error in the many Chancellors of England long before that time which are mentioned in his Origines Juridiciales and Catalogue of Chancellors whose great Authorities under their Kings were in all probability drawn from the reasonable Customs of Neighbor Nations and the Civil Law He that bears this Magistracy is called The Lord Chancellor of England and is made so Per traditionem magni Sigilli sibi per Dominum Regem and by taking his Oath And by the Statute 5 Eliz. cap. 18. the Lord Chancellor and Keeper have one and the same Power and therefore since that Statute there cannot be a Lord Chancellor and Lord Keeper at one and the same time but before there might and hath been Yet see Keeper See Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12 13. and Cokes 4 Instit fol. 78 79. Divers Inferior Officers are also called Chancellors As Chancellor of the Exchequer Anno 25 Hen 8. cap. 16. Whose Office hath been thought by many to have been created for the qualifying extremities in the Exchequer He sits in the Court and in the Exchequer Chamber and with the rest of the Court orders things to the Kings best benefit He is always in Commission with the Lord Treasurer for letting the Lands that came to the Crown by the dissolution of Abbeys or otherwise and hath by the Statute of 33 Hen. 8. cap. 39. power with others to compound for the Forfeitures upon Penal Statutes Bonds and Recognizances entred unto the King He hath also a great Authority and Jurisdiction in the manage and dispose of the Royal Revenue and concerning the First Fruits as appears by the Acts for uniting them to the Crown Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster Anno 3 Edw. 6. cap. 1. and Anno 5 Ejusdem cap. 26. Whose Office is principal in that Court to judge and determine all Controversies between the King and His Tenants of the Dutchy-Land and otherwise to direct all the Kings Affairs belonging to that Court Chancellor of the Order of the Garter Stows Annals pag. 706. Chancellor of the Universities Anno 9 Hen. 5. cap. 8. and Anno 2 Hen. 6. cap. 8. Chancellor of the Court of Augmentations 27 Hen. 8. cap. 27. 32 Ejusdem cap. 20. 33 Ejusdem cap. 39. Chancellor of the First Fruits 32 Hen. 8. cap. 45. Chancellor of Courts 32 Hen. 8. cap. 28. Chancellor of the Diocess 32 Hen. 8. cap. 15 c. Chance medley from the Fr. Chance i. Lapsus and Mesler i. Miscere Signifies the casual slaughter of a Man not altogether without the fault of the slayer Stanf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1 cap. 8. calls it homicide by misadventure West calls it Homicide mixt Part. 2. Symbol tit Indictments Sect. 5. and there defines it thus Homicide mixt is when the Killers ignorance or negligence is joyned with the Chance As if a Man lop Trees by a Highway side by which many usually travel and cast down a bough not giving warning to beware of it by which bough one passing by is by chance slain In this case he offends because he gave no warning that the party nigh have taken better heed See Skene verbo Melletum who says this is called Chaudmelle in Scotland Chancery Cancellaria Is the Grand Court of Equity and Conscience moderating the rigor of other Courts most strictly tied to the Letter of the Law whereof the Lord Chancellor of England is the chief Judge Crompt Jurisd fol. 41. or else the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal since the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 18. The Officers belonging to this Court are the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal who is sole Judge here the Master of the Rolls anciently called Gardein des Rolls who in the Lord Chancellors absence heareth Causes and gives Orders 4 Instit fol. 97. Twelve Masters of the Chancery who are Assistants and sit by turns on the Bench the Six Clerks who have each of them about Fifteen Clerks under them in nature of Atturneys in the Court Two chief Examiners who have five or six Clerks a piece One chief Register who hath usually four or five Deputies The Clerk of the Crown the Warden of the Fleet the Usher Sergeant at Arms and Crier of the Court the Cursiters and their Clerks the Clerks of the Petty-Bag the Clerk of the Hanaper the Comptroller of the Hanaper the Clerk of Appeals the Clerk of the Faculties the Scaler the Chafe-Wax the Clerk of the Patents Clerk of Presentations Clerk of Dismissions Clerk of Licences to alienate Clerks of the Enrolments Clerks of the Protections Clerk of the Subpenas Clerk of the Affidavits c. which see described in their several places See Cokes 4 Inst fol. 82. Changer Is an Officer belonging to the Kings Mint whose Function cheifly consists in exchanging Coyn for Bullion brought in by Merchants or others Anno 2 Hen. 6. cap. 12. where it is written after the old way Chaungeour Chantry See Chauntry Chapel Capella Fr. Chapelle i. aedicula Is of two sorts
enters also into the Rolls the Awarding of these Writs and makes all the continuance from the going out of the Habeas Corpora until the verdict be given Clerk of the Pipe Clericus Pipae Is an Officer in the Exchequer who having all Accompts and Debts due to the King delivered and drawn out of the Remembrancers Offices charges them down into the great Roll who also writes Summons to the Sheriff to levy the said Debts upon the Goods and Cattels of the Debtors and if they have no Goods then he draws them down to the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer to write Estreats against their Lands The ancient Revenue of the Crown remains in charge before him and he sees the same answered by the Farmers and Sheriffs He makes a charge to all Sheriffs of their Summons of the Pipe and Green Wax and sees it answered upon their Accompts He hath the drawing and ingrossing all Leases of the Kings Land In Henry the Sixths time he was called Ingrossator Magni Rotuli Clerk of the Hamper or Hanaper Clericus Hanaperii Is an Officer in Chancery Anno 2 Edw. 4. cap. 1. otherwise called Warden of the Hamper in the same Statute whose Function is to receive all the Money due to the King for the Seals of Charters Patents Commissions and Writs as also Fees due to the Officers for enrolling and examining the same with such like He is tied to attendance on the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper daily in the Term time and at all times of sealing having with him Leather Bags wherein are put all Charters c. After they are sealed those Bags being sealed up with the Lord Chancellors Private Seal are delivered to the Comptroller of the Hamper who upon receipt of them doth as you shall read in his Office This Hanaper represents a shadow of that which the Romans termed Fiscum which contained the Emperors treasure Clerk of the Pleas Clericus Placitorum Is an Officer in the Exchequer in whose Office all the Officers of the Court upon especial Priviledge belonging unto them ought to sue or to be sued upon any Action c. See the Practice of the Exchequer pag. 86. and 4 Inst fol. 107. Clerk of the Treasury Clericus Thesaurariae Is an Officer belonging to the Common Pleas who hath the charge of keeping the Records of the Court and makes out all the Records of Nisi Prius hath the Fees due for all searches and hath the certifying all Records into the Kings Bench when a Writ of Error is brought Also he makes all Exemplications of Records being in the Treasury He is taken to be the servant of the Cheif Justice and removeable at his pleasure whereas all other Officers are for term of life There is also a Secundary or Under-Clerk of the Treasury for Assistance who hath some allowances And likewise an Under-Keeper who always keeps one Key of the Treasury door and the cheif Clerk of the Secondary an other so as the one cannot come in without the other Clerk of Essoyns Clericus Essoniorum Is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common Pleas who keeps the Essoyn-Rolls and hath for entring every Essoyn six pence and for every Exception to Bar the Essoyn in case where the party hath omitted his time six pence He hath also the providing of Parchment and cutting it out into Rolls and marking the numbers upon them and the delivery out of all the Rolls to every Officer and the receiving them again when they are written and the binding and making up the whole Bundles of every Term and this he doth as Servant to the chief Justice For the chief Justice is at charge for the Parchment of all the Rolls for which he is allowed as the chief Justice of the Kings Bench besides the penny for the Seal of every Writ of Priviledge and Utlary the seventh penny taken for the Seal of every Writ under the Green Wax or Petit Seal in the Court of Kings Bench and Common Pleas respectively the said Lord Chief Justices having annexed to their several Offices or places the custody of the said Seals belonging to each Court Clerk of the Outlaries Clericus Utlagariarum Is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common Pleas being onely the Servant or Deputy to the Kings Atturney General for making out Writs of Capias Utlagatum after Outlary the Kings Atturnies name being to every one of those Writs And whereas seven pence is paid for the Seal of every other Writ betwixt party and party there is but a penny paid for the Seal of this Writ because it goes out at the Kings Suit Clerk of the Errors Clericus Errorum In the Court of Common Pleas does transcribe and certifie into the Kings Bench the Tenor of the Records of the Cause or Action upon which the Writ of Error made by the Cursitor is brought there to be adjudged and determined The Clerk of the Errors in the Kings Bench does likewise transcribe and certifie the Records of such Causes in that Court into the Exchequer if the Cause or Action were by Bill If by Original the Lord Chief Justice certifies the Record into the House of Peers in Parliament by taking the Transcript from the Clerk of the Errors and delivering it to the Lord Keeper there to be determined according to the Statutes 27 Eliz. 8. and 31 Eliz. 1. The Clerk of the Errors in the Exchequer does Transcribe the Records certified thither out of the Kings Bench and prepares them for Judgment in the Court of Exchequer to be given by the Justices of the Common Pleas and Barons there See 16 Car. 2. cap. 2. and 20 Eiusdem cap. 4. Clerk of the Sewers Clericus Suerarum Is an Officer appertaining to the Commissioners of Sewers writing all things that they do by vertue of their Commission for which see Sewers And see the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 9. Clerk Comptroller of the Kings House whereof there are two Is an Officer in the Court that hath Authority to allow or disallow the charges and demands of Pursuivants Messengers of the Green-cloth or other like He hath also the over-sight and controlling of all Defects and Miscarriages of any the Inferior Officers and to sit in the Counting-house with the Superior Officers viz. The Lord Steward Mr. Treasurer Comptroller and Cosserer either for correcting or bettering things out of Order This Officer is mentioned Anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Clerk of the Nichils or Nihils Clericus Nihilorum Is an Officer in the Exchequer who makes a Roll of all such sums as are nihiled by the Sheriffs upon their Estreats of Green-wax and delivers the same into the Lord Treasurers Remembrancers Office to have execution done upon it for the King See the Stat. 5 Rich. 2. cap. 13. Stat. 1. and Practice of the Exchequer pag. 101. See Nihil Clerk of the Check Is an Officer in the Court so called because he hath the Check and Controlment of the Yeomen of the Guard and all other
revoked When a Parson is made Bishop there is a Cession of his Benefice by the Promotion but if the King gives him power to retain his Benefice he shall continue Parson and is said to hold it in Commendam Hob. Rep. fol. 144. Latches Rep. fol. 236 237. See Ecclesia commendata in Gloss x. Scriptor Comminalty Fr. Communauté Includes all the Kings Subjects So in Art super Chartas 28 Edw. 1. cap. 1. Tout le Commune d'Engleterre signifies all the People of England 2 Inst fol 539. Commissary Commissarius Is a Title of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction appertaining to such a one as exerciseth Spiritual Jurisdiction in places of the Diocess so far distant from the cheif City as the Chancellor cannot call the Subjects to the Bishops Principal Consistory without their too great molestation This Commissary is by the Canonists called Commissarius or Officialis foraneus Lyndwoods Provin cap. 1. And is ordained to this special end that he supply the Bishops Jurisdiction and Office in the out places of the Diocess or else in such Parishes as are peculiar to the Bishop and exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Arch-deacon For where either by Prescription or Composition Arch-deacons have Jurisdiction within their Arch-deaconries as in most places they have this Commissary is but superfluous and oft-times vexations to the people Therefore the Bishop taking Prestation Money of his Arch-Deacons yearly Pro exteriori Jurisdictione as it is ordinarily called does by super-onerating their circuit with a Commissary not onely wrong Arch-deacons but the poorer sort of Subjects much more Cowel and see 4 Inst fol. 338. Commission Commissio Is with us as much as delegatio with the Civilians and is taken for the Warrant or Letters Patent which all Men exercising Jurisdiction either ordinary or extraordinary have to authorise them to hear or determine any cause or action Of these see divers in the Table of the Reg. of Writs and see Broke tit Commission yet this word is sometimes extended farther then to Matters of Judgment as the Commission of Purveyors or Takers Anno 11 Hen. 4. cap. 28. which seems to be null by the Statute for taking away Purveyance Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. The High Commission Court which was founded upon the Statute 1 Eliz. cap. 1. is also abolished by Act of Parliament 17 Car. 1. cap. 11. and that again explained by another Act 13 Car. 2. cap. 12. Commission of Association mentioned 18 Eliz. cap. 9. Is a Commission under the Great Seal to associate two or more learned persons with the several Justices in the several Circuits and Counties in Wales Commission of Anticipation Was a Commission under the Great Seal to collect a Subsidy before the day Anno 15 Hen 8. Cokes 12 Rep. fol. 120. Comission of Rebellion Commissio Rebellionis Is otherwise called a Writ of Rebellion and Issues when a Man after Proclamation issued out of the Chancery and made by the Sheriff to present himself under pain of his allegiance to the Court by a certain day appears not And this Commission is directed by way of command to certain persons three two or one of them to apprehend or cause to be apprehended the party as a Rebel or contemner of the Kings Laws wheresoever they finde him within the Kingdom and bring or cause him to be brought to the Court upon a day therein assigned The Form of it you have in West Tract Touching proceedings in Chancery Sect. 24. Commissioner Commissionarius Is he that hath Commission as Letters Patent or other lawful Warrant to execute any Publick Office as Commissioners of the Office of Licences of Alienation West Part. 2. Symb. Tit. Fines Sect. 106. Commissioners in Eyr Anno 3 Edw. 7. cap 26. With many such like Committée Is he or they to whom the consideration or ordering of any matter is referred either by some Court or Consent of Parties to whom it belongs As in Parliament a Bill being read is either consented to and passed or denied or neither but referred to the consideration of some certain persons appointed by the House farther to examine it who thereupon are called a Committee Committee of the King West pa. 2. Symb. tit Chancery Sect. 144. This word seems to be strangely used in Kitchin fol. 160. where the Widdow of the Kings Tenant being dead is called the Committee of the King that is one committed by the ancient Law of the Land to the Kings care and protection Commoigne Fr. A Fellow-Monk that lives in the same Convent 3 Part. Instit fol. 15. Common Commune i. quod ad omnes pertinet Signifies that Soil or Water whereof the use is common to this or that Town or Lordship as Common of Pasture Commune Pasturae Bracton lib. 4. cap. 19. 40. Commun of Fishing Commune Piscariae Idem lib. 2. cap. 34. Common of Turbary Commune Turbariae i. Of digging Turves Idem lib. 4. cap. 41. Common of Estovers Commune Estoveriorum Kitchin fol. 94 c. Common is divided into Common in Gross Common Appendant Common Apportenant and Common per cause de Vicinage i. By reason of Neighborhood Common in Gross Is a liberty to have Common alone that is without any Land or Tement in another Mans Land to himself for life or to him and his heirs and it is commonly passed by Deed of Grant or Specialty Old Nat. Br. fol. 31. 37. Common Appendant and Common Appurtenant are in a manner confounded as appears by Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 180. And are defined to be a Liberty of Common Appurtaining to or Depending on such or such a Freehold which Common must be taken with Beasts Commonable as Horses Oxen Kine and Sheep being accounted fittest for the Ploughman and not of Goats Geese and Hogs But some make this difference That Common Appurtenant may be severed from the Land whereto it pertains but not Common Appendant which according to Sir Edw. Coke lib. 4. fol. 37. had this beginning When a Lord enfeoffed another in Arabic Lands to hold of him in Soccage the Feoffce to maintain the service of his Plough had at first by the Curtesie or Permission of the Lord Common in the Wastes of his Lord for his necessary Beasts to ear and compost his Land and that for two Causes one for that as then it was taken it was tacitly implied in the Feoffment by reason the Feoffee could not Till nor Compost his Land without Cattle and Cattle could not be sustained without Pasture and so by consequence the Feoffee had as a thing necessary and incident Common in the Wastes and Land of the Lord. And this appears by the ancient Books Temp. Ed. 1. tit Common 24. and 17 Edw. 2. tit Common 23. and 20 Edw. 3. tit Admeasurement 8. and by the rehearsal of the Statute of Merton cap. 4. The second reason was for maintenance and advancement of Tillage which is much regarded and favored by the Law Common per cause de Vicinage i. Common by reason of Neighborhood Is
a Liberty that the Tenants of one Lord in one Town have to Common with the Tenants of another Lord in another Town Those that challenge this kinde of Common which is usually called Intercommoning may not put their Cattel into the Common of the other Town for then they are distrainable but turning them into their own Field if they stray into the Neighbor Common they must be suffered provided they do not surcharge either Common Common of Pasture the Civilians call Jus compascendi Common Bench Bancus Communis from the Sax. banc i. A Bank or Hillock and metaphorically a Bench High Seat or Tribunal The Court of Common Pleas was anciently so called Anno 2 Edw. 3. cap. 11. because saith Camden in his Britan pag. 113. Communia Placita inter subditos ex jure nostro quod Commune vocant in hoc disceptantur that is the Pleas or Controversies between common persons are there tryed And the Justices of that Court in Legal Records are termed Justiciarii de Banco Coke on Littl. fol. 71. b. See Common Pleas. Common Fine Finis Communis Is a certain sum of Money which the Resiants within the view of some Leets pay to the Lord thereof called in divers places Head-silver in others Cert-money or Certum Leta and Head-pence and was first granted to the Lord towards the charge of his purchase of the Court Leet whereby the Resiants had now the ease to do their Suit-Royal neerer home and not be compelled to go to the Sheriffs Turn As in the Mannor of Sheapshead in Com. Leic. every Resiant pays 1 d per Poll to the Lord at the Court held after Michaelmas which is there called Common Fine There is also Common Fine of the County for which see Fleta lib. 7. cap. 48. and the Statute of 3 Edw. 1. cap. 18. But the Clerk of the Market shall take no Common Fine Anno 13 Rich. 2. cap. 4. For Common Fine the Lord cannot distrain without a prescription Godfreys Case in Sir Edw. Cokes 11 Report Common Pleas Communia Placita Is the Kings Court now constantly held in Westminster Hall but in ancient time moveable as appears by Magna Charta cap. 11. 2 Edw. 3. cap. 11. and Pupilla oculi Parte 5. cap. 22. But Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith That until Henry the Third granted the Great Charter there were but two Courts in all called the Kings Courts viz. The Exchequer and the Kings Bench which was then called Curia Domini Regis and Aula Regis because it followed the Court or King and that upon the Grant of that Charter the Court of Common Pleas was erected and setled in one place certain viz. Westminster Hall amd therefore after that all the Writs ran Quod sit coram Justiciariis meis apud Westm whereas before the party was commanded by them to appear Coram me vel Justiciariis meis simply without addition of place as he well observes out of Glanvile and Bracton the one writing in Henry the Second's time before this Court was erected the other in the later end of Henry the Third's time who erected this Court. All Civil Causes both Real and Personal are or were in former times tryed in this Court according to the strict Law of the Realm and by Fortescu cap. 50. it seems to have been the onely Court for Real Causes The Cheif Justice thereof is called the Lord Cheif Justice of the Common Pleas accompanied with three or four Judges Assistants or Associats who are created by Letters Patent and as it were enstalled or placed on the Common Bench by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Chief Justice of the Court as appears by Fortescu cap. 51. who expresseth all the circumstances thereof The rest of the Officers belonging to this Court are The Custos Brevium three Prothonotaries otherwise called Prenotaries Chirographer 14 Filazers 4 Exigenters Clerk of the Warrants Clerk of the Juries or Jurata Writs Clerk of the Treasury Clerk of the Kings Silver Clerk of the Essoyns Clerk of the Outlaries Clerk of the Errors Whose distinct Functions read in their places See Common Bench and 4 Inst fol. 99. Common Day in Plea of Land Anno 13 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 17. Signifies an Ordinary day in Court as Octabis Hillarii Quindena Pasche c. Which you may see in the Statute of 51 Hen. 3. concerning general days in the Bench. Common Intendment Is Common Understanding or Meaning according to the Subject Matter not strained to an exotick sense Bar to Common Intendment is an Ordinary or General Bar which commonly disables the Declaration of the Plaintiff Of Common Intendment a Will shall not be supposed to be made by Collusion Coke on Littl. fol. 78. b. See Intendment Commons House of Parliament Is so called because the Commons of the Realm that is the Knights Citizens and Burgesses representing them do sit there Crompt Jurisd 9. Common Law Communis Lex Hath three significations First It is taken for the Laws of this Realm simply without any other Law joyned to it As when it is disputed what ought of right to be determined by the Common Law and what by the Spiritual Law or Admirals Court or the like Secondly For the Kings Court as the Kings Bench or Common Pleas onely to shew a difference between them and the Base Courts as Customary Courts Court Barons County Courts Pipowders and such like As when a Plea of Land is removed out of Ancient Demesn because the Land is Frank-fee and pleadable at the Common Law that is in the Kings Court and not in Ancient Demesn or any other Base Court Thirdly and most usually by the Common Law is understood such Laws as were generally taken and holden for Law before any Statute was made to alter the same As neither Tenant for Life nor for Years were punishable by the Common Law for doing Waste till the Statute of Glouc. cap. 5. was made which gives an Action of Waste against them But Tenant by the Curtesie and Tenant in Dower were punishable for it before the said Statute See Law Commorth See Comorth Commore Br. Cwmmwd i. Provincia In Wales is half a Cantred or Hundred containing Fifty Villages Stat. Walliae 12 Edw. 1. and 21 Hen. 8. cap. 26. It signifies also a great Seignory and may include one or divers Mannors Coke on Littl. fol. 5. Commune See Comminalty Communi Custodia Is a Writ that did lie for that Lord whose Tenant holding by Knights-service died and left his eldest Son under age against a Stranger that entred the Land and obtained the Ward of the Body Old Nat. Br. fol. 89. But this Writ is become obsolete since Wardships were taken away by the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Communication Communicatio A talking consultation or conferring with Where there is onely a Parley betwixt two and no perfect Agreement that is no such Contract between them as on which to ground an Action it is called a Communication Communia placita non
the devil or some evil spirit to know any secret or to effect any purpose Anno 5 Eliz. cap. 16. The difference between Conjuration and Witchcraft seems to be because the one endeavors by Prayers and Invocation of Gods powerful names to compel the divol to say or do what he commands him the other deals rather by friendly and voluntary conference or agreement with the devil or familiar to have her or his desires served in lieu of blood or other gift offered him ospecially of his or her Soul And both these differ from Enchantments or Sorc●ries because those are personal conferences with the Divel as is said and these are but Medicines and Ceremonial Forms of words called commonly Charms without Apparition Cowel Consanguineo Is a Writ which see in the Reg. of Writs de Avo. Pro avo Consanguineo fol. 226. Conservator of the Truce and safe Conducts Conservator induciarum salvorum Regis Conductuum Was an Officer appointed in every Sea-Port under the Kings Letters Patent and had forty pound for his yearly stipend at the least His charge was to enquire of all offences done against the Kings truce and safe Conducts upon the main Sea out of the Franchises of the Cinque Ports as the Admirals of Custom were wont and such other things as are declared Anno 2 Hen. 5. cap. 6. Touching this matter also see the Statute of 4 Hen. 5. cap. 7. Conservator of the Peace Conservator vel custos Pacis Is he that hath an especial charge by vertue of his Office to see the Kings Peace kept Which Peace Lambert defines to be a with-holding or abstinence from that injurious force and violence which boisterous and unruly persons are in their nature prone to use towards others were they not restrained by Laws and fear of punishment He farther adds that before the time of King Edward the Third who first erected Justices of Peace there were sundry persons who by the Commmon Law had interest in keeping the Peace Of those some had that charge as incident to the Offices they bore and so included in the same that they were called by the name of their Office onely others had it simply as of it self and were thereof named Custodes Pacis Wardens or Conservators of the Peace The former and later sort he again subdivides in his Eyren lib. 1. cap. 3. The Corporation of the great Level of the Fens does consist of one Governor Six Bailiffs Twenty Conservators and Commonalty as by the Act of Parliament 15 Car. 2. cap. 17. appears The Chamberlain of Chester is a Conservator of the Peace in that County by vertue of his Office 4 Inst fol. 212. And Petty Constables are by the Common Law Conservators of the Peace c. Conservators of the Priviledges of the Hospitalers and Templers c. Westm 2. cap. 43. See 4 Inst fol. 341. Consideration Consideratio Is the material cause the Quid pro quo of any Contract without which no Contract binds This Consideration is either expressed as if a Man bargain to give Five pounds for a Horse or implied as when the Law it self inforces a Consideration as if a Man come into a Common Inn and there stay some time taking Meat and Lodging or either for himself and his Horse the Law presumes he intends to pay for both though there be no express Contract betwixt him and his Host and therefore if he discharge not the House the Host may stay his Horse Fulb. Paral. tract Contracts fol. 6. Consistory Consistorium Signifies as much as Praetorium or Tribunal It is commonly used for a Council-House of Ecclesiastical Persons or the place of Justice in the Court Christian a Session or Assembly of Prelates Every Archbishop and Bishop of every Diocess hath a Consistory Court held before his Chancellor or Commissary in his Cathedral Church or other convenient place of his Diocess for Ecclesiastical Causes See 4 Inst fol. 338. Sciatis vos omnes caeteri mei fideles qui in Anglia manent quod Espicopales Leges quae non bene secundum Sanctorum Canonum praecepta usque ad mea tempora in Regno Anglorum fuerunt communi Concilio Archiepiscoporum meorum caeterorum Episcoporum Abbatum omnium Principum Regni mei emendendas judicavi Propterea mando Regia Authoritate praecipuo ut nullus Episcopus vel Archi-Deaconus de Legibus Episcopalibus amplius in Hundret placita teneant nec causam quae ad regimen animarum pertinet ad judicium secularium hominum adducant c. This Law made by the Conqueror seems to give the original of the Bishops Consistory as it sits with us divided from the Hundred or County-Court wherewith in the Saxon time it was joyned And in the same Law of his is further added Hoc etiam defendo ut nullus laicus homo de Legibus quae ad Episcopum pertinent se intromittat c. Seldens Hist of Tithes pag. 413 414. Consolidation Consolidatio Is used for the combining and uniting two Benefices in one Broke tit Union and Anno 37 Hen. 8. cap. 21. This word is taken from the Civil Law where it signifies properly an uniting of the possession occupation or profit with the property As if a Man have by Legacy Usum-fructam fundi and afterwards buy the Property or Fee-simple as we call it of the Heir this is called a Consolidation See Union and Unity of Possession Conspirators Are according to the Statute those that do confeder or ●ind themselves by Oath Covenant or other Aliance that every of them shall aid and hear the other falsly and maliciously to indite or cause to indite or falsly to move or maintain Pleas And also such as cause Children within age to Appeal Men of ●elony whereby they are imprisoned and sore grieved and such as retain Men in the Countrey with Liveries or Fées to maintain their malicious enterprises And this extendeth as well to the takers as to the givers And Stewards and Bailiffs of great Lords which by their Seigniory Office or Power undertake to hear or maintain Quarrels Pleas or Debates that concern other Parties then such as touch the estate of their Lords or themselves Anno 33 Edw. 1. Stat. 2. 2 Part. Inst ●ol 384. and 562. Conspiracy Conspiratio Though both in Latin and French it be used for an Agreement of Men to do any thing either good or bad yet in our Law-Books it is always taken in the evil part Anno 4. Edw. 3. cap. 11. 3 Hen. 7. cap. 13. 1 Hen. 5. cap. 3. and 18 Hen. 6. cap. 12. As also New Book of Entries verbo Conspiracy In which places Conspiracy is taken more generally and confounded with Maintenance and Champerty but in a more special signification it is used for a Confederacy of two at the least falsly to endite one or to procure one to be endited of Felony And the punishment of it upon an Indictment of Felony at the Kings suit anciently was That the
party attainted lose his Frank-Law to the end he be not empannel'd upon Juries or Assizes or such like employments for testifying the truth and if he have to do in the Kings Court that he make his Atturney and that his Lands Goods and Chattels be seised into the Kings hands his Lands estreaped if he finde no better favor his Trees raced and his Body committed to prison 27 Lib. Assis 59. Cromptons Just of Peace fol. 156. b. This is called Villanous Judgment or Punishment See Villanous Judgment But if the party grieved sue upon the Writ of Conspiracy then see Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 114. D. 115. I. Conspiracy may be also in Cases of less weight As Conspiracies made by Victualers touching selling of Victuals shall be grievously punished See 37 Hen. 8. 23. and 3 Part. Inst fol. 143. Conspiratione Is a Writ that lies against Conspirators Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 114. d. Cromptons Jurisd fol. 209. See also the Register fol. 134. Constable Constabularius Is a Saxon word compounded of Cuning or Cyng and Staple which signisie the stay and hold of the King Lamb. Duty of Constables num 4. But I have seen it derived from Comes Stabuli which seems more probable because we had this Officer and many others from the Caesarean Laws and Customs of the Empire as well as from the Saxons This word is diversly used First for the Constable of England of whose great Dignity and Authority we may finde many proofs in the Statutes and Chronicles of this Realm His Function consists in the care of the common Peace of the Land in Deeds of Arms and Matters of War Lamb. ubisupra With whom agrees the Statute of 13 Rich. 2. cap. 2. Stat. 1. which says To the Court of the Constable and Marshal it appertains to have Conusance of Contracts and Deeds of Arms and of War out of the Realm and also of things that touch War within as Combats Blasonry of Arms c. But it may not meddle with Battel in Appeals nor generally with any other thing that may be tryed by the Law of the Land See Fortescu cap. 32. and 4 Inst fol. 123. Out of this High Magistracy of Constable of England says Lambert were drawn those Inferior Constables which we call Constables of Hundreds and Franchises and first ordained by the Statute of Winchester Anno 13 Edw. 1. which appoints for conservation of the Peace and view of Armor two Constables in every Hundred and Franchise which in Latin are called Constabularii Capitales High Constables because continuance of time and increase both of People and Offences hath under these made others in every Town called Petit-Constables in Latin Sub-Constabularios which are of like nature but of Inferior Authority to the other The making of a Petty Constable belongs to the Lords of divers Mannors Jure Feudi Of these read Smith de Rep. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 22. Besides these there are Officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 152. Anno 1 Hen. 4. cap. 13. Constable of the Exchequer Anno 51 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. Constable of Dover Castle Cam. Britan. pag. 239. Fitz Nat. Br. fol. 240. But these are Castellani properly as Lambert Notes though confounded in name with the other See the Statute Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 38. Manwood par 1. cap. 13. mentions a Constable of the Forest Constat Lat. Is the name of a kinde of Certificate which the Clerk of the Pipe and Auditors of the Exchequer make at the request of any person who intends to plead or move in that Court for discharge of any thing Anno 3 4 Edw. 6. cap. 4. and 13 Eliz cap. 6. The effect of a Constat is the certifying what does constare upon Record touching the matter in question and the Auditors Fee for it is 13 s. 4 d. A Constat is held to be Superior to a Certificat because this may erre or fail in its Contents that cannot as certifying nothing but what is evident upon Record Also the Exemplification under the Great Seal of the Inrolment of any Letters Patent is called a Constat Coke on Littl. fol. 225. b. The difference between a Constat Inspeximus Vidimus you may read at large in Pages Case Cokes fifth Report Consuetudinibus Servitiis Is a Writ of Right Close which lies against the Tenant that deforceth his Lord of the Rent or Service due to him Of this see more in Old Nat. Br. fol. 77. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 151. and Reg of Writs fol. 159. Consultation Consultatio Is a Writ whereby a Cause being formerly removed by Prohibition from the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For if the Judges of the Kings Court upon comparing the Libel with the suggestion of the party finde the suggestion false or not proved and therefore the Cause to be wrongfully called from the Court Christian then upon this Consultation or Deliberation they Decree it to be returned again whereupon the Writ in this Case obtained is called a Consultation Of this you may read Reg. of Writs fol. 44 45. Usque 58. Old Nat. Br. fol. 32. Fiiz Nat. Br. fol. 50. The Statute of the Writ of Consultation Anno 24 Edw. 1. and 2 Part. Inst fol. 105. Contenement Contenementum As Salvo contenemento suo Mag. Cha. cap. 14. Signifies his Countenance Credit or Reputation which he hath together with and by reason of his Freehold and in this sence does the Statute of 1 Edw. 3. and Old Nat. Br. use it where Countenance is used for Contenement The Armor of a Soldier is his Countenance the Books of a Scholler his Countenance and the like Coke 2 Part. Inst fol. 28. Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 1. num 3. And Sir Henry Spelman says Contenementum est ●stimatio conditionis forma qua quis in Repub. subsistit Contingent Use Is a Use limited in a Conveyance of Land which may or may not happen to Vest according to the contingency expressed in the Limitation of such Use See Chudleighs Case in Cokes 1 Rep. Continuance Is as Prorogatio in the Civil Law For example Continuance until the next Assise Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 154. F. and 244. D. in both which places it is said if a Record in the Treasury be alleaged by the one party and denied by the other a Certiorari shall be sued to the Treasurer and the Chamberlain of the Exchequer who if they certifie not in the Chancery That such a Record is there or that it is likely to be in the Tower the King shall send to the Justices repeating the Certificate and will them to continue the Assise In this signification it is likewise used by Kitchin fol. 202. and 199. And Anno 11 Hen. 6. cap. 4. And Continuance of a Writ or Action is from one Term to another in case where the Sheriff hath not returned or executed a former Writ issued out in the said
15. this County Palatine of Hexham was stript of its Priviledge and reduced to be a part of the County of Northumberland The cheif Governors of these Counties Palatines by special Charter from the King did heretofore send out all Writs in their own names and did all things touching Justice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other Counties onely acknowledging him their Superior and Soveraign But by the Statute 27 Hen. 8. cap. 24. This power is much abridged to which I refer the Reader as also to Cromp. Jurisd fol. 137. and 4 Instit fol. 204 221. Besides these Counties of both sorts there are likewise unto some Cities some Territory or Lands or Jurisdiction annexed as the County of Middlesex by King Henry the First to the City of London The County of the City of York Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Chester Anno 43 Eliz. cap. 15. Canterbury Lamb. Eiren. lib. 1. cap. 9. Norwich Worcester Coventry Exeter c. The County of the Town of Kingston upon Hull 32 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Newcastle upon Tine c. The County of the Town of Haverford West 35 Hen. 8. cap. 16. County is in another signification used for the County Court which the Sheriff keeps every Moneth either by himself or his Deputy Anno 2 Edw. 6. cap. 25. Cromp. Jur. fol. 221. Bracton lib. 3. cap. 7. and lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. The word Comitatus is also used for a Jurisdiction or Territory among the Feudists County Court Curia Comitatus Is by Lambert otherwise called Conventus and divided into two sorts one retaining the general name as the County Court held every Moneth by the Sheriff or his Deputy the Under-Sheriff The other called the Turn held twice every year of both which you may read in Cromp. Jurisd fol. 231. This County Court had in ancient times the cognition of great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2 3 4. by Bracton and Britton in divers places and by Fleta lib. 2. cap. 62. but was abridged by Magna Charta cap. 17. and much by 1 Edw. 4. cap. unico It had also and hath the Determination of certain Trespasses and Debts under Forty shillings Britton cap. 27. 28. Counting-House of the Kings Houshold Domus Computus Hospitii Regis Commonly called the Green-Cloth in respect of the Green-cloth on the Table where sit the Lord Steward the Treasurer of the Kings House the Comptroller Master of the Houshold Cofferer and two Clerks Comptrollers for daily taking the Accompts of all Expences of the Houshold making provisions and ordering payment for the same for the good Government of the Kings Houshold Servants and for paying the Wages of those below Stairs Vide 39 Eliz. cap. 7. and 4 Inst fol. 131. Courratier Fr. A Horse-courser 2 Inst fol. 719. Coursitour See Cursiter Court Curia Signifies the Kings Palace or Mansion and more especially the place where Justice is judicially administred of which you may finde Thirty two several sorts in Cromptons Jurisdictions well described whereof most are Courts of Record some not and therefore are accounted Base Courts in comparison of the rest Besides these there are also Courts Christian Smith de Rep. Angl. lib. 3. cap. 6. which are so called because they handle matters especially appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledge in Divinity cannot be well judged of being held heretofore by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope because he challenged the superiority in all Causes Spiritual but since his ejection they hold them by the Kings Authority Virtute Magistratus sui as the Admiral of England doth his Court Whereupon 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 lie to Rome now by the Stat. 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. it lies to the King in his Chancery Court Baron Curia Baronis Is a Court which every Lord of a Mannor who in ancient times were called Barons hath within his own Precincts Barons in other Nations have great Territories and Jurisdiction from their Soveraigns But here in England what they are and have been heretofore see in Baron Of this Court and Court Leet read Kitchin Sir Edward Coke lib. 4. among his Copihold Cases fol. 26. b. says That this Court is twofold after a sort and therefore if a Man having a Mannor grant the Inheritance of the Copiholders to another the Grantee may keep a Court for the Customary Tenants and accept Surrenders to the use of others and make both Admittances and Grants the other Court is of Freeholders which is properly called the Court Baron wherein the suters that is the Freeholders are Judges whereas of the other the Lord or his Steward is Judge Court of Py-powders See Py-Powders Court of Requests Curia Requisitionum Was a Court of Equity of the same nature with the Chancery but inferior to it principally instituted for the relief of such Petitioners as in conscionable Cases addressed themselves by Supplication to His Majesty Of this Court the Lord Privy Seal was chief Judge assisted by the Masters of Requests and had beginning about 9 Hen. 7. according to Sir Julius Caesars Tractate on this subject Mich. 40 41 Eliz. in the Court of Common Pleas it was adjudged upon solemn Argument That this Court of Requests or the Whitehal was no Court that had power of Judicature c. See 4 Part. Inst fol. 97. Court of the Legat Was a Court obtained by Cardinal Woolsey of Pope Leo the Tenth in the Ninth year of Henry the Eighth wherein he had power to prove Wills and dispence with Offences against the Spiritual Laws c. And was but of short continuance Court Christian Curia Christianitatis So called because as in the Secular Courts the Kings Laws do sway and decide Causes so in Ecclesiastical Courts the Laws of Christ should rule and direct for which Cause the Judges in those Courts are Divines as Archbishops Bishops Arch-Deacons c. Linwoods words are these In Curia Christianitatis i. Ecclesiae in qua servantur Leges Christi cum tamen in foro regio serventur Leges mundi 2 Part. Inst fol. 488. See before in Court Court of Delegates See Delegates Court of Chivalry Curia Militaris Otherwise called the Marshal Court the Judges of it are the Lord Constable of England and the Earl Marshal of England This Court is the Fountain of the Marshal Law and the Earl Marshal is both one of the Judges and to see execution done See Constable and 4 Part. Instit fol. 123. JEhan filz frere uncle au Roys Duc de Bedford d'Anjou Conte Richemond de Kendal Conestable d'Angleterre a nostre treschere Cousin Jehan Due de Norfolk Mareshal d'Angleterre salus Nous vous mandons chargeons qui vous facez arrestre venir devant nous ou nostre Lieutenant a Westminster a la Quinsiesm du Saint
commanded every Man to take warning for raking up his fire and putting out his light So that in many places at this day where a Bell is customably rung towards Bed-time it is said to ring Curfeu Hil. 3 Rich. 2. Coram Rege Rot. 8. London Curia See Court Curia advisare vult Is a Deliberation which the Court sometimes takes before they give Judgment in a Cause wherein there seems to be any point of difficulty for which see the New Book of Entries on this word Curia claudenda Is a Writ that lies against him who should fence and enclose his ground if he refuse or defer to do it Reg. of Writs fol. 155. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 127. New Book of Entries verbo Curia claudenda Curia Penticiarum Id est Curia in civitate Cestriae coram Vice-comite ibidem in Aula Penticia ejusdem Civitatis Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. It is probable this Court was originally held under a Pentice or Shed covered with Bords and thence took denomination Curnock Is four Bushels or half a Quarter of Corn. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. Cursitors Clerici de cursu Of these there are in the Chancery twenty who make out original Writs and are a Corporation of themselves and to every Clerk are appointed certain Counties 2 Inst fol. 670. Curtesie of England Jus Curialitatis Angliae Is where a Man takes a Wife seised of Land in Fee-simple Fee-tail general or as Heir in Tail special and hath issue by her Male or Female born alive if the Wife die the Husband shall hold the Land during his life by the Law of England And he is called Tenant by the Curtesie of England because this Priviledge is not allowed in any other Realm except in Scotland where it is called Curialitas Scotiae See more upon this word in the Terms of the Law Curteyn Curtana Was the name of King Edward the Confessors Sword which is the first Sword that is carried before the Kings of England at their Coronation Matth. Paris in Hen. 3. And it is said the point of it is broken which may argue an emblem of Mercy Curtilage Curtilagium Hortus olitorius vel ubi olera leguntur A Gardin Yard Backside or as they call it in Herefordshire a Fold Persoluat decimam Lactis hortorum Curtilagiorum Lanae c. Provinciale Angl. lib. 3. tit de Decimis Et si in Curtilagio alicujus bladum seminaretur decimam garbam illius bladi sicut in campis percipiet Inq. 36 Hen. 3. Mihi dici videtur Curtilagium says Spelman à Curtillum ago scil locus ubi curtis vel curtilli negotium agitur It is mentioned Anno 4 Edw. 1. cap. unico Anno 35 Hen. 8. cap 4. and 39 Eliz cap. 2. See Coke vol. 6. fol 64. a. and Bulstrodes Rep. 2 par fol. 113. Custode admittendo Custode amovendo Are Writs for the admitting or removing of Guardians Reg. of Writs in indice Custodes libertatis Angliae Authoritate Parliamenti Was the stile or title in which Writs and other Judicial Proceedings did run in the Rump time that is from the Decollation of King Charles the First till the Vsurper Oliver was declared Protector c. mentioned in the Statute of 12 Car. 2. cap. 3. Custom Consuetudo hath the same signification with us as with the Civilians being by both accounted a part of the Law Consuctudo quandoque pro lege servatur saith Bracton in partibus uhi fuerit more utentium approbata longavi enim temporis usus consuetudinis non est vilis authoritas Lib. 1. cap. 3. Custom is a Law or Right not written which being established by long use and the consent of our Ancestors and those of our Kinred that are Ultra Tritavum hath been and daily is practised So that allowing the Father to be so much older then his Son as pubertas or the years of generation require the Grand-father so much elder then him and so forth usque ad tritavum we cannot say this or that is a Custom except we can justifie it hath continued so one hundred years For tritavus must be so much elder then the party that pleads it yet because that is hard to prove it is enough for the proof of a Custom if two or more witnesses can depose they heard their Fathers say it was a Custom all their time and that their Fathers heard their Fathers also say it was so in their time If it be to be proved by Record the continuance of one hundred years will suffice Sir Jo. Davies Rep. in Praef. fol. 32. Custom is either general or particular General is that which is currant through England whereof you shall read divers in Doctor and Student lib. 1. cap. 7. Particular is that which belongs to this or that Lordship City or Town Custom differs from Prescription that being common to more Prescription for the most part particular to this or that Man Again Prescription may be for a far shorter time than Custom viz. for five years or less Out of our Statute you may have greater diversity which see collected in Cowels Institutes tit de usucap longi temp praescript Custom is also used for the Tribute or Toll called Tonnage and Poundage which Merchants pay to the King for carrying out and bringing in Merchandise Anno 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 21. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. In which signification it is Latined Custuma Reg. of Writs fol. 138. a. and 4 Inst fol. 29. And lastly for such services as Tenants of a Mannor ow to their Lord. Custom-house Is a House in London where the Kings Customs are received and the whole business relating thereunto transacted Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. Customary Tenants Tenentes per consuctudinem Are such Tenants as hold by the Custom of the Mannor as their special Evidence See Copihold Custos brevium Is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common Pleas and made by the Kings Letters Patent whose Office is to receive and keep all the Writs retornable in that Court and put them upon Files every return by it self and to receive of the Protonotaries all the Records of Nisi Prius called the Postea's For they are first brought in by the Clerks of the Assise of every Circuit to the Protonotary who entered the Issue in that matter to enter the Judgment And four days after the return thereof which is allowed to speak in Arrest of Judgment the Protonotary enters the Verdict and Judgment thereupon into the Rolls of the Court and afterwards delivers them over to the Custos Brevium who binds them into a bundle and makes entry also 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 lovied The Fines after they are engrossed are thus divided between the Custos brevium and the Chirographer this always keeps the Writ of Covenant and the Note the
Cosoning and New Book of Entries verbo Disceit Decenna and Decenniers See Deciners Decennary Decennaria The Limits or Compass of ten Friburghs See Deciners Deceptione Is a Writ that lies properly for one that receives harm or dammage by him that does any thing deceitfully in the Name of another Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 95. And is either Original or Judicial as appears by Old Nat. Br. fol. 50. where you may read the use of both to this effect This Writ of Deceit when it is Original lies where deceit is used to a Man by another by not sufficiently performing a Bargain or Promise or by using some Guile whereby he may be disinherited or evil intreated c. And when Judicial it lies out of the Rolls of Record as in the Case where scire facias is sent to the Sheriff that he warn a man to be before the Justices at a certain day and the Sheriff returns the Writ served whereas the Party was not warned whereby he that sues the scire facias recovers then the Party who ought to have been warned shall have the said Writ against the Sheriff See Reg. of Writs fol. 112. and Reg. Judicial in the Table verbo Deceptione Decies tantum Is a Writ that lies against a Juror who hath taken Money for giving his Verdict called so of the effect because it is to recover ten times so much as he took It lies also against Embracers that procure such an Enquest Anno 38 Ed. 3. ca. 13. Reg. of Writs fol. 188. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 171. New Book of Entries verbo Decies tantum Decimation Decimatio the punishing every tenth Souldier by Lot was termed Decimatio Legionis Also a tithing or paying the tenth part What Decimation was in the late Usurpers time 1655 is still in the Memory of many good Subjects of this Realm See Tenths Decimis solbendis pro possessionibus alienigenarum Is a Writ or Letters Patent yet extant in the Register which lay against those that had farmed the Priors aliens Lands of the King for the Rector of the Parish to recover his Tyth of them Reg. of Writs fol. 179. Deciners alias Decenniers alias Doziners Decenarii Decearchi Signifie in the Ancient Monuments of our Law such as were wont to have the oversight and check of the Friburghs for Maintenance of the Kings Peace And the limits or compass of their Jurisdiction was call'd Decenna Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 15. of whom you may also read Fleta lib. 1. ca. 27. And Reg. of Writs fol. 98. b. These seemed to have large Authority in the Saxons time taking knowledge of Causes within their Circuit and redressing Wrongs by way of Judgment and compelling Men thereunto as you may read in the Lawes of K. Edward the Confessor published by Lambert Numb 32. In later times I find mention of them as in Britton ca. 12. who sayes in the Kings Person for so he Writes his whole Book We will that all those who are 14 years old shall make Oath That they shall be sufficient and loyal to Us and neither be Felons nor assenting to Felons And We will That all Profess themselves to be of this or that Dozein and make or offer Surety of their Behaviour by these or those Doziners except Religious Persons Clerks Knights eldest Sons and Women Yet the same Author in his 29th Chap. sayes all of 12 years old and upwards are punishable for not coming to the Sheriffs Turn except Earles Prelates Barons Religious persons and Women Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 37. has these words The like Law is where the Dozeniers make Presentment that a Felon is taken for Felony and delivered to the Sheriff c. And Kitchin fol. 33. thus Religious persons Clerks Knights or Women shall not be Deceniers A Dozein seems now to extend so far as every Leet extends because in Leets onely this Oath is Ministred by the Steward and taken by such as are twelve years old and upwards dwelling within the Precinct of the Leet where they are sworn Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 261. a. The particulars of this Oath you may read in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. who sets down fifteen years for the age of those that are to be sworn to the Kings Peace but afterwards names twelve years See Inlaugh We may note out of the Premisses a diversity between the ancient and these modern times in this Point of Law and Government as well in the age of those who are to be sworn as also that Decennier is not now used for the chief Man of a Dozein but for him that is sworn to the Kings Peace and lastly That now there are no other Dozeins but Leets and that no Man ordinarily gives other security for keeping the Kings Peace but his own Oath and that therefore no Man answers for anothers transgression but every Man for himself See Frank-pledge and 2 Part. Inst fol 73. Declaration Declaratio Is properly the shewing forth or laying down in writing the Cause of Action in any sute at Law wherein the party supposes to have wrong This in an Action Real is properly called a Count which ought to contain Demonstration Declaration and Conclusion In Demonstration are contained three things viz. Who complains against whom and for what matter In the Declaration there ought to be comprised how and in what manner the Action rose between the parties when what day year and place and to whom the Action shall be given And in the Conclusion he ought to aver and proffer to prove his sute and shew the damage he hath sustained by the wrong done him Terms de la Ley. Decretals Decretales Are a Volume of the Canon Law so called or Books containing the Decrees of sundry Popes or a Digestion of the Canons of all the Councils that pertained to one Matter under one Head Dedi as if it be said in a Feoffment I. S. hath Given granted c. It is a Warranty in Law to the Feoffee and his Heirs Coke on Littl. fol. 384. a. Dedimus Potestatem i. We have given power Is a Writ whereby Commission is given to one or more private persons for the speeding of some Act appertaining to a Judge The Civilians call it Delegationem And it is granted most commonly upon suggestion that the party who is to do something before a Judge or in a Court is so weak he cannot travel It is used in divers Cases as to take a Personal Answer to a Bill of Complaint in Chancery to examine witnesses in a Cause depending in that Court to levy a Fine c. West part 2. Symbol tit Fines sect 112. and divers other as you may see in Fitz Nat. Br and in the Table of the Reg. of Writs verbo Dedimus Potestatem Déed Factum Is an Instrument written in Parchment or Paper consisting of three things viz. Writing Sealing and Delivery and comprehending a Contract or Bargain between party and party Of which there are two sorts Deeds Indented and Deeds
Poll which names arise from the form or fashion of them the one being cut in and out in the top or side which we call Indented the other being plain A Deed Indented is a Deed consisting of two parts or more for there are Tripartite and Quadripartite Deeds in which it is expressed That the parties thereto have to every part thereof interchangably set their several Seals The cause of their Indenting is that it may appear they belong to one business or contract A Deed Poll or polled anciently called Charta de una parte is a plain Deed without Indenting as if we should say The Indenting is polled or cut off and is used when the Vendor for example onely Seals and there is no need of the Vendees sealing a Counterpart by reason the nature of the Contract is such as it requires no Covenant from the Vendee unless in such case the Vendor will out of caution or curiosity have a Counterpart to see upon any occasion what Covenants himself hath given See Coke on Littl. fol. 35. b. Déemsters or Demsters from the Saxon dema i. a Judge or Umpire All Controversies in the Isle of Man are decided without Process Writings or any Charges by certain Judges whom they chuse from among themselves and call Déemsters Camd. Brit. tit British Islands Deer-Hays Are Engins or great Nets made of Cords to catch Deer Anno 19 Hen. 7. cap. 11. De essendo quietum de Tolonio Is a Writ that lies for those who are by priviledge freed from the payment of Toll which read at large in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 226. De expensis militum Is a Writ commanding the Sheriff to levy four shillings per diem for the expences of a Knight of the Shire And a like Writ De expensis Civium Burgensium to levy two shillings per diem for every Citizen and Burgess of Parliament 4 Inst fol. 46. De facto Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Which is actually done done indeed Default Fr. Defaut Is an Offence in omitting that which we ought to do Of this Bracton hath a whole Tract lib. 5. tract 3. By whom it appears that Default is most notoriously taken for non-appearance in Court at a day assigned Of this you may also read Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. and Coke on Littl. fol. 259. b. Defeizance of the Fr. Desfaire i. to undo or defeat Signifies a Condition relating to a Deed as to a Recognizance or Statute which being performed by the Recognizor the Deed is disabled and made void as if it never had been done The difference between a Proviso or Condition in Deed and a Defeizance is That those are inserted in the Deed or Grant this is usually in a Deed by it self Of which you may read West at large Par. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 156. Defend Fr. Defendre Signifies in our ancient Laws and Statutes to prohibit or forbid As Usuarios defendit quoque Rex Edwardus ne remanerent in Regno LL. Ed. Conf. cap. 37. 5 Rich. 2. cap. 7. Of which thus Chaucer Where can you say in any manner age That ever God defended Marriage And in 7 Edw. 1. we have a Statute entituled Statutum de defensione portandi arma c. It is defended by Law to Distrain in the Highway Coke on Littl. fol. 161. To this day in divers parts of England we say God defend instead of God forbid And the Fench Moneth is more truly called the Defence Moneth i. the Forbidden Moneth See Fench Moneth Defendant Defendens Is he that is sued in an Action Personal as Tenant is he who is sued in an Action Real See Impediens Defendemus Is a word used in Feofments and Donations and hath this force that it binds the Donor and his Heirs to defend the Donce if any Man go about to lay any servitude on the thing given other then is contained in the Donation Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See Warranty Defender of the Faith Defensor fidei Is a peculiar title given to the Kings of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain Christianissimus to the King of France and Advocatus Ecclesiae to the Emperor Which title was given by Pope Leo the Tenth to King Henry the Eighth for writing against Martin Luther in behalf of the Church of Rome and the Bull for it bears date Quinto Idus Octobr. 1521. which may be seen at length in the Lord Herberts History of Henry the Eighth fol. 105. Deforcement Deforciamentum Matth. Paris fol. 422. Quicunque deforciaverit eis dotem de ipso deforciamento convicti fuerit id est Per vim abstulerit A withholding Lands or Tenements by force from the right owner See Deforceor and Coke on Littl. fol. 331. b. Deforciant Anno 23 Eliz. cap. 3. The same with Deforceor Deforceor Deforciator of the Fr. Forceur i. expugnator Is one that overcomes and casts out by force and differs from Disseisor First in this because a Man may disseise another without force which is called Simple Disseisin Britton cap. 53. Next because a Man may deforce another that never was in possession For example if more have right to Lands as Common Heirs and one entring keeps out the rest the Law says He deforceth them though he do not disseise them Old Nat. Br. fol. 118. And Littleton cap. Discontinuance fol. 117. says He who is inseoffed by the Tenant in Tail and put in Possession by keeping out the Heir of him in Reversion being dead doth deforce him though he did not disseise him because he entered when the Tenant in Tail was living and the Heir had no present right A Deforceor differs from an Intruder because a Man is made an Iutruder by a wrongful entry onely into Land or Tenement void of a Possessor And a Deforceor is he that holds out the right Heir as abovesaid Bracton lib. 4. cap. 1. Degrading See Disgrading Delegates Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Are Commissioners so called because delegated or appointed by the Kings Commission under the Great Seal to sit upon an Appeal to the King in the Court of Chancery in three Cases First When a Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause by the Archbishop or his Official Secondly When any Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause in places exempt Thirdly When a Sentence is given in the Admiral Court in Sutes Civil and Marine by order of the Civil Law 4 Part. Inst fol. 339. Anno 8 Eliz. cap. 5 Deliverance See Replegiare Delf from the Sax. delfan to dig or delve Is a Quarry or Mine where Stone or Coal is dug Anno 31 Eliz. cap. 7. And in a Charter of Edward the Fourth there is mention of a Mine or Delf of Copper Camd. Demain or Demesn Dominicum Gallis Domanium Italis Demanium Accipitur multipliciter says Bracton Est autem Dominicum quod quis habet ad mensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands Anglicè i. Dominicum ad mensam Item dicitur Dominicum
attributed to Justices of Circuit Pl. Cor. fol. 15. and Bailiffs at large See Justices in Eyre and Bailiff See Eyre Errour Error Signifies more specially an Error in Pleading or in the Proces Broke tit Errour Whereupon the Writ which is brought for remedy of this over-sight is called a Writ of Error in Latin De Errore Corrigendo thus defined by Fitz. Nat. Er. fol. 20. A Writ of Error doth also lie to redress false Judgment given in any Court of Record as in the Common Bench London or other City having power by the Kings Charter or Prescription to hold Plea of Debt or Trespass above xxs. This is borrowed from the French practice which they call Proposition d'Erreur whereof you may read in Gregorius de Appell pag. 36. In what diversity of Cases this Writ lies see the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 9. R●g of Writs in the Table and Reg. Judicial fol. 34. There is likewise a Writ of Error to Reverse a Fine West par 2. Symbol tit Fin●s 151. New Book of Entries verbo Error For preventing Abatements of Writs of Error upon Judgments in the Exch●qu●r see 16 Car. 2. cap. 2. and 20 Ejusdom cap. 4. And for Redressing and Prevention of Error in Fines and Recoveries the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 3. for Inrolling them Errore corrigendo See Error Escambio from the Span. Cambiar to change Is a Licence granted to one for the making over a Bill of Exchange to another over Sea Reg. of Writs fol. 194. a. For by the Statute of 5 Rich. 2. cap. 2. Merchant ought to Exchange or return Money beyond Sea without the Kings License Escape from the Fr. Eschapper i. Effugere Signifies a violent or privy evasion out of some lawful restraint For example if the Sheriff upon a Capias directed to him take one and endeavor to carry him to the Goal and he by the way either by violence or slight breaks from him this is called an Escape Stamf. lib. 1. cap. 26 27. Pl. Cor. names two kindes of Escape voluntary and negligent Voluntary is when one Arrests another for Felony or other crime and afterward lets him go In which Eseape the party that permits it is by Law guilty of the fault committed by him that escapes be it Felony Treason or Trespass Negligent Escape is when one is Arrested and afterward escapes against his will that arrested him and is not pursued by fresh suit and taken again before the party pursuing hath lost the sight of him Read Cromptons Justice fol. 36. Eschange or Exchange Escambium Hanc terram cambiavit Hugo Briccuino quod modo tenet Comes Moriton ipsum Scambium valet duplum Domesday See Exchange Escheat Esehaeta from the Fr. Escheoir i. cadere accidere Signifies any Lands or other profits that casually fall to a Lord within his Mannor by way of Forfeiture or by the Death of his Tenant leaving no Heir general nor special Mag. Charta cap. 31. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 143. T. Escheat is also used sometimes for the place or circuit in which the King or other Lord hath Escheats of his Tenants Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. Pupilla ocull par 2. cap. 22. Escheat thirdly is used for a Writ which lies where the Tenant having Estate of Fee-simple in any Lands or Tenements holden of a Superior Lord dies seised without Heir general or special In which case the Lord brings this Writ against him that possesseth the Lands after the death of his Tenant and shall thereby recover the same in lieu of his services Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 144. In the same sence as we say The Fee is Escheated the Feudists use Feudum Aperitur See Coke on Littl. fol. 92. b. Escheator Escaetor Was an Officer appointed by the Lord Treasurer who observed the Escheats due to the King in the County whereof he was Escheator and certified them into the Chancery or Ex●hequer and found Offices after the Death of the Kings Tenants which held by Knights-service in Capite or otherwise by Knights-service he continued in his Office but one year nor could any be Escheator above once in three years Anno 1 H. 8. cap. 8. 3 Ejusdem cap. 2. See more of this Officer and his Authority in Crom. Just of Peace Fitzberbert calls him an Officer of Record Nat. Br. fol. 100. because that which he certified by vertue of his Office had the credit of a Record Officium Escaetriae is the Escheatorship Reg. of Writs fol. 259. b. This Office having its cheif dependence on the Court of Wards is now in a manner out of date See 4 Inst fol. 225. Escbequer Scaccarium from the Fr. Eschequier i. Abacus tabula lusoria Is a Court of Record wherein all Causes touching the Revenue of the Crown are heard and determined and wherein the Revenue of the Crown is received Pol Virgil lib. 9. Hist Angl. says the true word in Latin is Statarium and by abuse called Scaccarium Camden in his Britan pa. 113. saith This Court or Office took name A Tabula ad quam Assidebant the Cloth which covered it being parti-coloured or Chequered We had it from the Normans as appears by the Grand Custumary cap. 56. where it is thus described The Eschequer is called an Assembly of High Justiciers to whom it appertains to amend that which the Bailiffs and other Inferior Justiciers have misdone and unadvisedly judged and to do right to all men without delay as from the Princes Mouth This Court consists of two parts whereof one is conversant especially in the Judicial Hearing and Deciding all Causes pertaining to the Princes Coffers anciently called Scaccarium Computorum the other is called the Receipt of the Exchequer which is properly employed in the receiving and payment of Money The Officers belonging to both these you may finde named in Cam. Brit. cap. Tribunalia Angliae to whom I refer you The Kings Exchequer which now is setled at Westminster was in divers Counties of Wales Anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 5. 26. See Orig. Juridiciales fol. 49. and 4 Part. Inst fol. 103. Escuage Scutagium from the Fr. Escu i. a Buckler or Shield Signifies a kinde of Knights-service called Service of the Shield the Tenant holding by it was bound to follow his Lord into the Scotish or Welsh Wars at his own charge For which see Chivalry Escuage is either uncertain or certain Escuage uncertain is properly Escuage and Knights-service being subject to Homage Fealty and heretofore Ward and Marriage so called because it was uncertain how often a man should be called to follow his Lord into those Wars and what his charge would be in each journey Escuage certain is that which yearly pays a certain Rent in lieu of all Services being no further bound then to pay his Rent be it a Knights Fee half or the fourth part of a Knights Fee according to the quantity of his Land and this loseth the nature of Knights-service though it hold the name of Escuage being in
Is a Writ which a Man indicted or a Trespass before Justices of Peace or in a Court of any Franchise and imprisoned for it may have out of the Kings Bench thereby to remove himself thither at his own costs and to answer the cause there Fitzh Nat. Br. fol. 250. And the order in this case is first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chancery directed to the said Justices for removing the Indictment into the Kings Bench and upon that to procure this Writ to the Sheriff for the causing of his body to be brought at a day Reg. Jud. fol. 81. where you shall finde divers cases wherein this Writ is allowed Habeas Corpora Is a Writ that lies for the bringing in a Jury or so many of them as refuse to come upon the Venire facias for the tryal of a Cause brought to issue Old Nat. Br. fol. 157. See great diversity of this Writ in the Table of the Reg. Judic and the New Book of Entries verbo Habeas Corpora Habendum Is a word of course in a Conveyance in every of which are two principal parts the Premisses and the Habendum The Office of the first is to express the name of the Grantor the Grantee and the thing granted The Habendum is to limit the estate so that the general implication of the estate which by construction of Law passeth in the Premisses is by the Habendum controlled and qualified As in a Lease to two persons the Habendum to one for life the Remainder to the other for life alters the general implication of the Joyntenancy in the Freehold which should pass by the Premisses if the Habendum were not Coke vol. 2. Bucklers Case fol. 55. See Use Habere facias Seisinam Is a Writ Judicial which lies where a Man hath recovered Lands in the Kings Court directed to the Sheriff and commanding him to give him Seisin of the Land recovered Old Nat. Br. fol. 154. whereof see great diversity in the Table of the Reg. Judic This Writ is issuing sometimes out of the Records of a Fine executory directed to the Sheriff of the County where the Land lies and commanding him to give to the Cognizee or his Heirs Seisin of the Land whereof the Fine is levied which Writ lieth within the year after the Fine or Judgment upon a Scire Facias and may be made in divers Forms West part 2. Symb. tit Fines sect 136. There is also a Writ called Habere facias seisinam ubi Rex habuit annum diem vastum which is for the delivery of Lands to the Lord of the Fee after the King hath taken his due of his Lands who was convict of Felony Reg. of Writs fol. 165. Habere facias visum Is a Writ that lies in divers cases as in Dower Formedon c. Where a View is to be taken of the Lands or Tenements in question See Fitz. Nat. Br. in Indice verbo View Bracton lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 8. and Lib. 5. part 2. cap. 11. See View Haberjects or Haubergets Haubergettae A kinde of Cloth Una sit latitudo pannorum tinctorum russatorum Haubergettarum scil Duae ulnae infra listas Mag. Charta cap. 26. Habillements of War Anno 31 Eliz. cap. 4. Armor Harness Utensils or Provisions for War without which Men have not ability to maintain War 3 Part. Instit fol. 79. Hables Is the Plural of the French Hable signifying a Sea-Port or Haven The word is used 27 Hen. 6. cap. 3. Hadbote Sax Was a recompence or satisfaction for the violation of Holy Orders or violence offered to persons in Holy Orders Sax. Dict. Hade of Land Hada terrae S●rsum reddidit in manus Domini duas acras terrae continens decem Seliones duas Hadas Anglice Ten Ridges and two Hades jacen● in t terr Maner de Orleton Anno 16 Jac. Haerede deliberando ali● qui habet custodiam terrae Was a Writ directed to the Sheriff willing him to command one that had the body of him who was Ward to another to deliver him to him whose Ward he was by reason of his Land Reg. of Writs fol. 161. b. Haerede abducto Is a Writ that lay for the Lord who having by right the Wardship of his Tenant under age could not come by his body being conveyed away by another Old Nat. Br. fol. 93. See Ravishment de Gard and Haerede rapto in Reg. of Writs fol. 163. Haeretico comburendo Is a Writ that lay against him that was an Heretick viz. Who having been once convict of Heresie by his Bishop and having abjured it fell afterwards into it again or into some other and was thereupon committed to the Secular power Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 269. This Writ lies not at this day according to Sir Edward Coke in his 12 Rep. fol. 93. Hafne Courts Hafne is a Danish word and signifies with us a Haven or Sea-Port Letters Patent of Richard Duke of Glocester Admiral of England 14 Aug. Anno 5 Edw. 4. have these words Ulterius dicunt quod dicti Abbas Conventus praedecessores sui habent habere consueverunt per idem tempus in praedictis villis Bancaster Ringstead cum Hulmo quasdam Curias Portus vocatas Hafne Courts tenendas ibidem ad placitum Abbatis c. Haven or Port-Courts 4 Inst fol. 147. Haga Sax. Haeg i. Domus a House In Domesday tit Sussex Terra Rogerii num 11. Radulfus tenet unam Hagam de xii Denar Willielmus quinque Hagas de quinque Sol c. An ancient anonymous Author expounds Haga to be Domus cum Shopa Cum novem praefatae Civitatis habitaculis quae patria lingua Hagan appellari solent Charta Ethelredi Regis in Auctario Matth. Paris fol. 240. Coke on Littl. fol. 56. b. See Haw Hagbut See Haque and Haquebut Haia A Hedg and sometimes taken for a Park or Enclosure Vallatum fuit inclausatum fossato Haia palatio Bracton lib. 2. cap. 40. num 3. Hence Haiement for a Hedg-fence Rot. Inq. 36 Edw. 3. in Scac. de Foresta ●aiebote from the Fr. Haye i. sepes and the Sax. Bote i. compensatio Is used for a permission or liberty to take Thorns and Freeth to make or repair Hedges Halsfange See Pillory and Healfang Half-mark Dimidia Merkae Is a Noble Fitzherbert in Nat. Br. fol. 5. says That in case a Writ of Right be brought and the Seisin of the Demandant or his Ancestor alleaged the Seisin is not traversable by the Defendant but he may tender the Half-mark for the enquiry of this Seisin which is in plainer terms that the Defendant shall not be admitted to deny that the Demandant or his Ancestor was seised of the Land in question and to prove his denial but that he shall be admitted to tender Half a Mark in Money to have an Enquiry made whether the Deinandant c. were so seised or not And in this signification we read the same words in the Old English Nat. Br. fol.
adulteration of Wines in which last use it is prohibited by Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 25. Issue Exitus Hath divers applications sometime being used for the Children begotten between a Man and his Wife sometime for Profits growing from Amercements or Fines sometimes for Profits of Lands or Tenements Westm 2. An. 13 Ed. 1. ca. 39. Sometime for that point of matter depending in Suite whereon the parties joyn and put their Cause to the Trial of the Jury And in all these it has but one signification which is an effect of a Cause preceding as Children are the effect of the Marriage the Profits growing to the King or Lord from the punishment of any mans Offence is the effect of his Transgression the point referr'd to 12 Men is the effect of pleading or process Issue in this last signification is either general or special General Issue seems to be that whereby it is referr'd to the Jury to bring in their Verdict whether the Defendant have done any such thing as the Plaintiff lays to his charge For example if it be an Offence against any Statute and the Defendant plead not culpable this being put to the Jury is called the General Issue See Doctor and Student fo 158. b. The Special Issue then must be that where special matter being alledged by the Defendant for his defence both parties joyn thereupon and so grow either to a demurrer if it be quaestio juris or to a Trial by the Jury if it be quaestio facti An. 4 Hen. 8. ca. 3. See the New Book of Entries verbo Issue and 18 Eliz. ca. 12. Itinerant Itinerans i. That takes a journey Those were anciently called Iustices itinerant who were sent with Commission into divers Counties to hear such causes specially as were termed Pleas of the Crown See Iustices in Eyre Judaism Iudaismus The Custom Religion or Rites of the Iews This word was often used by way of exception in old Deeds as Sciant Quod ego Rogerus de Morice dedi Willielmo Harding pro tribus marcis argenti unum croftum Habend de me heredibus meis sibi haeredibus ejus vel ejus assignatis eorum heredibus cuicunque quocunque vel quandocunque dictum Croftum dare vendere legare invadiare vel aliquo modo assignare voluerint in quocunque statu fuerint libere quiete integre bene in pace excepta Religione Judaismo c. Sine dat The Stat. De Iudaismo was made 18 Edw. 1. At which Parliament the King had a Fifteenth granted him Pro expulsione Iudaeorum Iudaismus was also anciently used for a Morgage Pro hac autem donatione dederunt mihi dicti Abbas Canonici sex Marcas Sterl ad acquietandam terram praedictam de Judaismo in quo fuit impignorata per Rob. fratrem meum c. Ex magno Rot. Pipae de Anno 9 Edw. 2. Judgment Iudicium quasi juris dictum The very voice of Law and Right and therefore Iudicium semper pro veritate accipitur The ancient words of Iudgment are very significant Consideratum est c. because Iudgment is ever given by the Court upon consideration had of the Record before them and in every Judgment there ought to be three persons Actor Reus Iudex Of Iudgments some are final and some not final c. See Coke on Littl. fol. 39. a. Judicium Dei The Judgment of God so our Ancestors called those now probibited Tryals of Ordael and its several kindes Si se super defendere non posset Judicio Dei scil Aquâ vel ferro fieret de eo justitia LL. Divi Edw. Confess cap. 16. See Spelm. Gloss on this word Judgment or Tryal by the Holy Cross long since disused See Cressy's Church-History fol. 960. Jugum terrae In Domesday contains half a P o 〈…〉 and. Jun 〈…〉 ia from juncus A Soil where Rushes grow Coke on Littl. fol. 5. Cum Piscariis Turbariis Juncariis communibus Pasturis ad Messuagium praedictum pertin Pat. 6 Edw. 3. pa. 1. m. 25. Jura Regalia See Regalia Jurats Iurati Anno 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 30. As the Major and Iurats of Maidstone Rye Winchelsey Tenterdon c. are in the nature of Aldermen for Government of their several Corporations and the name is taken from the French where among others there are Major Iurati Suessenses c. Vide Choppin Doman Fran. lib. 3. Tit. 20. sect 11. p. 530. So Iersey hath a Bailiff and Twelve Iurats or sworn Assistants to govern the Island Cam. Romene● Marsh is incorporate of one Bailiff xxiiii Iurats and the Commonalty thereof by Charter Dat. 23 Febr. 1 Edw. 4. See Mr. Dugdale Hist of Imbanking and Draining fol. 34. b. Jury Iurata from Iurare to swear Signifies Twenty four or twelve Men sworn to inquire of the matter of Fact and declare the Truth upon such Evidence as shall be delivered them touching the matter in question of which Iury who may and who may not be impaneld see Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 165. There are two manner of Tryals in England one by Battel the other by Assise or Iury. See Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 5 6 7. who adds a third by Parliament The Tryal by Assise be the Action Civil or Criminal Publick of Private Personal or Real is referred for the Fact to a Iury and as they finde it so passeth the Judgment which by Bracton lib. 2. cap. 7. is called Regale beneficium c. This Iury is not onely used in Circuits of Justices but in other Courts and Matters of Office as if the Coroner enquire how a subject found dead came to his end he useth an Enquest the Justices of Peace in their Quarter Sessions the Sheriff in his County and Turn the Bailiff of a Hundred the Steward of a Court Leet or Court Baron if they enquire of any offence or decide any Cause between party and party do it by the same manner So that where it is said all things are tryable by Battel or Assise Assise in this place is taken for a Iury or Enquest empanelled upon any Cause in a Court where this kinde of Tryal is used This Iury though it pertain to most Courts of the Common Law yet is it most notorious in the half-yearly Courts of the Justices Itinerants or of the Great Assises and in the Quarter Sessions where it is usually called a Iury and that in Civil Causes whereas in other Courts it is oftener termed an Enquest and in the Court Baron a Iury of the Homage In the General Assise there are usually many Iuries because there are many Causes both Civil and Criminal commonly to be tryed whereof one is called the Grand Iury or Great Enquest and the rest Petit Iuries whereof it seems there should be one for every Hundred Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. The Grand Iury consists ordinarily of Twenty four grave and substantial Gentlemen or some of them of the better sort of Yeomen chosen
indifferently out of the whole County by the Sheriff to consider of all Bills of Indictment preferred to the Court which they do either approve by writing upon them Billa Vera or disallow by writing Ignoramus such as they approve or finde as they term it if they touch life and death are farther referred to another Iury to be considered of because the Case is of such importance but others of less moment in Trespass or for misdemeanors are upon their allowance without more ado fined by the Bench except the party Traverse the Indictment or challenge it for insufficiency or remove the Cause to a higher Court by Certiorari in which two former Cases it is referred to another Iury and in the later transmitted to the higher Court Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 7. And presently upon the allowance of this Bill by the Grand Enquest a Man is said to be indicted such as they disallow are delivered to the Bench by whom they are forthwith cancelled The Petit Jury in Criminal Causes consists of Twelve Men at least and being impanelled do bring in their Verdict either guilty or not guilty whereupon the Prisoner if he be found guilty is said to be Convict and accordingly afterward receives his Judgment and Condemnation or otherwise is acquitted Those that pass upon Civil Causes real are so many as can conveniently be had of the same Hundred where the Land or Tenement in question lies or four at the least And they upon due examination of the Matter bring in their Verdict either for the Demandant or Tenant Of this see Fortescu cap. 25 26 27. According to which Judgment passeth afterwards in the Court where the Cause first began and the reason hereof is because these Justices of Assise are in this Case for the ease of the Countrey onely to take the Verdict of the Jury by vertue of the Writ called Nisi Prius and so return it to the Court where the Cause is depending See Nisi Prius and Enquest Juridical Days Dies Juridici Days on which the Law is administred days in Court See Dies Juris utrum Is a Writ which lies for the Incumbent whose Predecessor hath alienated his Lands or Tenements the divers uses whereof see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 48. Jurisdiction Jurisdictio Is an Authority or Power which a Man hath to do justice in Causes of Complaint made before him Of which there are two kindes the one which a Man hath by reason of his Fee and by vertue thereof does right in all Plaints concerning the Lands of his Fee the other is a Jurisdiction given by the Prince to a Bailiff Which Division I have in the Custumary of Normandy cap. 2. which is not unapt for the practise of our Commonwealth for by him whom they call a Bailiff we may understand all that have Commission from the Prince to give Judgment in any Cause See Sir Edw. Cokes Pr●●mium to his 4 Inst Jus Coronae the Right of the Crown Is part of the Law of England and differs in many things from the General Law concerning the Subject Vid. Coke on Littl. fol. 15. b. Jus Curialitatis Angliae See Curtesie of England Jus Patronatus Is the Right of presenting a Clerk to a Benefice See the New Book of Entries verbo Jure Patronatus in Quare impedit fol. 465. col 3. Justes Fr. Jouste i. Decursus Were contentions between Martial-men and Persons of Honor with Spears on Hors-back by way of exercise Anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Edictum Regis Edw. 1. prohibendo sub forisfacturd omnium quae forisfactae possint quod non Torneant Bordeant Adventuras Querant Justus faciant seu ad arma presumant fine Licentia Regis Pas 29 Edw. 1. Essex 101. Justice Justiciarius Signifies him that is deputed by the King to administer justice and do right by way of Judgment The reason why he is called Justice and not Judex is because in ancient time the Latin word for him was Justicia and not Justiciarius as appears by Glanvil lib. 2. cap. 6. and Hoveden fol. 413. a● Secondly Because they have their Authority by deputation as Delegates to the King and not Jure Magistratus and therefore cannot depute others in their stead the Justice of the Forest onely excepted who hath that liberty especially given him by the Statute 32 Hen. 8. cap. 35. For the Chancellor Marshal Admiral and such like are not called Justiciarii but Judices Of these Justices we have divers sorts in England the manner of their Creation with other Appurtenances read in Fortescu cap. 51. These in Mag. Char. cap. 12. and other Statutes are called Justicers Cheif Justice of the Kings Bench Capitalis Justicia vel Iusticiarius Banci Regii Hath the Title of Lord whilest he enjoys his Office and is called Capitalis Iusticiarius because he is the cheif of the rest His Office is specially to hear and determine all Pleas of the Crown that is such as concern offences committed against the Crown Dignity and Peace of the King as Treasons Felonies Mayhems and such like which you may see in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. per totum And in Stanf. Pleas of the Crown He also with his assistants hears all Personal Actions incident to his Jurisdiction See Sir Edw. Cokes 4 Inst fol. 74. who says The Cheif Iustice of this Court was anciently created by Letters Patent but now by Writ in this form Rex c. I. K. militi salutem Sciatis quod constituimus vos Justiciarium nostrum Capitalem ad Placita coram nobis tenenda durante bene placito nostro Teste c. Of the ancient Dignity of this Cheif Iustice thus Liber niger siscalis cap. 4. In Scaccario residet im● praesidet primus in regno Capitalis scilicet Justicia In the time of King Iohn and others of our ancient Kings it often occurs in Charters of Priviledges Quod non ponatur respondere nisi coram nobis vel Capitali Justicia nostra The Oath of the Iustices see in the Stat. 18 Edw. 3. stat 4. And in Origines Iuridiciales a Catalogue of all the Lord Cheif Iustices of England See Kings Bench. Cheif Justice of the Common Pleas Hath also the Title of Lord whilest he enjoys his Office and is called Dominus Iusticiarius Communium Placitorum who with his Assistants did originally and do yet hear and determine all Causes at the Common Law that is all Civil Causes as well personal as real between common persons wherefore it was called The Court of Common Pleas in distinction from The Pleas of the Crown or the Kings Pleas which are special and appertaining to him onely This Court was appointed to be in a setled place and not as other Courts to follow or attend the Kings Court or Palace as appears by the Stat. 9 Hon. 3. cap. 11. Of its Jurisdiction see 4 Inst fol. 99. The Iustices Oath see 18 Edw. 3. stat 4. Justice of the Forest Iusticiarius Forestae Is also a
Lord by his Office and hath the hearing and determining all offences within the Forest committed against Venison or Vert of these there are two whereof the one hath Jurisdiction over all the Foresta on this side Trent the other over all beyond The cheifest point of their Jurisdiction consists in the Articles of the Kings Charter called Charta de Foresta made 9 Hen. 3. See Cam. Britan. pag. 214. The Court where this Iustice sits is called the Iustice Seat of the Forest held once every three years See Manwood par 1. pag. 121. 154. He is also called Iustice in Eyre of the Forest This is the onely Iustice that may appoint a Deputy by Stat. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 35. Justice of Assise Iusticiarii ad capiendas Assisas Are such as were wont by special Commission to be sent as occasion was offered into this or that County to take Assises for the ease of the people And it seemes the Iustices of the Common Pleas had no power to take Assises until the Statute of 8 Rich. 2. cap. 2. for by that they are enabled thereto and to deliver Goals And the Iustices of the Kings Bench have by that Statute such power affirmed unto them as they had One hundred years before Of later years it is come to pass that these Commissions Ad capiendas Assisas are executed in the Lent and long Vacation when the Iustices and Lawyers are most at leasure to attend them Hence the matters accustomed to be heard by more general Commission of Iustices in Eyre are heard all at one time with the Assises which was not so of old as appears by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 7. num 2. Yet no Iustice of either Bench nor any other may be Iustice of Assise in his own Countrey Anno 8 Rich. 2. cap. 2. and 33 Hen. 8. cap. 24. And these who are in one word called Iustices of Assise and twice every year go the circuit by two and two through all England have one Commission to take Assises another to deliver Goals another of Oyer and Terminer c. See Assise and Cromp. Iuris fol. 210. That Iustices of Assise and Iustices in Eyre did anciently differ appears Anno 27 Edw. 3. cap. 5. And that Iustices of Assise and Iustices of Goal Delivery were divers is evident by Anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. The Oath taken by Iustices of Assise is all one with that taken by the Iustices of the Kings Bench. Old Abridgment of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum Justices of Oyer and Terminer Justiciarii ad audiendum terminandum were Justices Deputed upon some special or extraordinary occasion to hear and determine some particular Causes Fitz. in his Nat. Br. saith The Commission of Oyer and Terminer is directed to certain persons upon any Insurrection heinous Demeanor or Trespass committed And because the occasion of granting this Commission should be maturely weighed it is provided by the Statute 2 Edw. 3. cap. 2. That no such Commission ought to be granted but that they shall be dispatched before the Iustices of the one Bench or the other or Iustices Errants except for horrible Trespasses and that by special favor of the King The Form of this Commission see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 110. Justices in Eyre Justiciarii itinerantes alias Errantes alias Perlustrantes are so termed of the old French word Erre i. iter as a grand Erre i. magnis itineribus proverbially spoken These in ancient time were sent with Commission into divers Counties to hear such Causes specially as were termed the Pleas of the Crown and that for the ease of the Subject who must else have been hurried to the Courts at Westminster according to their several Jurisdictions if the Cause were too high for the County Court These Justices according to Gwin in his Preface to his Reading were anciently sent but once in seven years with whom Horn in his Mirror of Justices seemes to agree Lib. 2. cap. Queux point estre actors c. And Lib. 3. cap. De Justices in Eyre where he also declares what belonged to their Office but that they were sent oftner see Orig. Iuridiciales They were instituted by Henry the Second Cam. Brit. pag. 104. and were much like in some respect to the Iustices of Assise at this day although for Authority and manner of proceeding far different Coke on Littl. fol. 293. b. Justices of Goal Delivery Iusticiarii ad Goalas deliberanda● Are such as are sent with Commission to hear and determine all Causes appertaining to those who for any offence are cast into the Goal part of whose authority is to punish such as let to Mainprise those Prisoners who by Law are not bailable Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 151. These probably in ancient time were sent into the Counties upon this several occasion But afterwards Iustices of Assise had this in Commission also Anno 4 Edw. 3. cap. 3. Their Oath is all one with other of the Kings Iustices of either Bench. Justice of the Hundred Iusticiarius Hundredi Erat ipse Hundredi Dominus qui Centurio Centenarius Hundredique Aldermannus appellatus est Praeerat omnibus Hundredi Friborgis cognovitque de causis majusculis quae in eisdem finiri non potuerunt Spelm. Justicements from Iustitia All things belonging to Justice Coke on Westm 1. fol. 225. Justices of Laborers Were Iustices appointed in former times to redress the frowardness of Laboring men who would either be idle or have unreasonable wages Anno 21 Edw. 3. cap. 1. 25 Ejusdem cap. 8. And 31 Ejusdem cap. 6. Justices of Nisi Prius Are now all one with Iustices of Assises For it is a common Adjournment of a Cause in the Common Pleas to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Iusticiarii venerint ad eas partes ad capiendas Assisas Upon which Clause of Adjournment they are called Iustices of Nisi Prius as well as Iustices of Assises by reason of the Writ or Action they have to deal in Their Commission you may see in Cromp. Iuris fol. 204. Yet he makes this difference between them because Iustices of Assise have power to give Judgment in a Cause and Iustices of Nisi Prius onely to take the Verdict But in the nature of both their Functions this seems to be the greatest difference that Iustices of Nisi Prius have Jurisdiction in Causes Personal as well as Real whereas Iustices of Assise in strict acception deal onely in the Possessory Writs called Assises Cowel Justices of Trail-baston Were Justices appointed by King Edward the First Anno 1305. upon occasion of great disorders in the Realm during his absence in the Scotish and French Wars They were so called according to Holinshed of trailing or drawing the Staff of Justice or for their summary proceeding according to Coke 12 Rep. fol. 25. where it is said they were in a manner Iustices in Eyre and their Authority founded on the Statute of Ragman What their Office was take from a coetaneous Author
Circa haec tempora processit in publicum novae inquisitionis breve quod anglicè dicitur Trail-baston contra Intrusores Conductitios hominum vapulatores conductitios seisinae captores pacis infractores raptores incendiarios murduratores pugnatores Multi hoc perempti multi redempti multi noxii pauci innoxii sunt inventi Adeo quidem rigidè processit huju●●●ertionis justitia quod pater proprio filio non parceret c. dira multa Hist Roffens fol. 200. de Anno 1305. By means of which Inquisitions many were punished by Death many by Ransom many fled the Realm which was there●y quieted and the King gained great riches towards the support of his Wars See Matth. Westm in Anno 1305. We finde also a Commission of Trail-baston coram Rogero de Grey Sociis suis Justic apud St. Albanum Anno Regni Regis Edw. tertii post Conquestum 5. See Spelm. Gloss verbo Trail-baston Justices of the Pavilion Justiciarii Pavilonis Are certain Judges of a Pyepowder Court of a most transcendent Jurisdiction anciently authorised by the Bishop of Winchester at a Fair held on S. Giles Hill near that City by vertue of Letters Patent granted by Edward the Fourth Episcopos Wynton successores suos a tempore quo c. Justiciarios suos qui vocantur Justiciarii Pavilonis cognitiones placitorum aliorum negotiorum eadem Feri● Durante nec non claves partarum custodiam praedictae Civitatis nostrae Wynton pro certo tempore Feriae illius nonnullas alias libertates immunitates consuetudines habuisse c. See the Patent at large in Prynnes Animad on 4 Inst fol. 191. Justices of the Peace Justiciarii ad pacem Are those who are appointed by the Kings Commission to attend the Peace of the County where they dwell of whom some for special respect are made of the Quorum because some business of importance may not be dispatched without the presence or assent of them or one of them See Quorum The Office and Power of these is various and grounded upon several Statutes too long to recite They were called Guardians of the Peace till the Thirty sixth year of Edward the Third cap. 12. where they are called Justices Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 19. pag. 578. See Shepherds Sure Guide for I. of Peace Justices of Peace Within Liberties Justiciarii ad pacem infra Libertates Are such in Cities and other Corporate Towns as those others of the Counties and their Authority or power is all one within their several Precincts Anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 25. Justiciar Fr. Justicier A Justice or Justicer The Lord Bermingham Justiciar of Ireland Baker fol. 118. Justicies Is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some special Cases in his County Court of which by his ordinary power he cannot hold Plea there Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 117. Kitchin fol. 74. says That by this Writ the Sheriff may hold Plea of a great sum whereas of his ordinary authority he cannot hold Pleas but of sums under Forty shillings with whom Crompton agrees fol. 231. It is called a Justicies because it is a Commission to the Sheriff Ad justiciandum aliquem to do a Man justice or right and requires no Return or Certificate of what he hath done Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. makes mention of a Iusticies to the Sheriff of London in a case of Dower See the New Book of Entries verbo Iusticies Justification Iustificatio Is a maintaining or shewing a good reason in Court why one did such a thing which he is called to answer As to justifie in a cause of Replevin Broke tit Replevin Justificators Iustificatores Will. Rex Angliae H. Camerario Justificatoribus suis omnibus suis fidelibus Norf. salutem Inquirite per Comitatum quis justiùs hujusmodi forisfacturam haberet tempore Patris mei five Abbas Ramesiae five antecessor W. de Albenio Et si Comitatus concordaverit quod Abbas rectius praedictam forisfacturam debet habere tunc praecipio ut C. solidi quos Radul Passel implacitavit sine mora Abbati reddantur T. Episcopo Dunelmensi Sir Henry Spelman leaves it thus without explication Iustificators seem to signifie Compurgators or those that by Oath justifie the Innocency Report or Oath of another as in the case of Waging Law also Jury-men because they justifie that party on whose behalf they give their Verdict K. KAlender-Moneth Mentioned in the Stat. 16 Car. 2. cap. 7. Consists of Thirty or thirty one days according to the Kalender A Twelve-moneth in the singular number includes all the year but Twelve-moneths shall be computed according to Twenty eight days to every Moneth See Coke lib. 6. fol. 61. b. Catesbies Case and see Computation Kantref Brit. In Wales it signifies a Hundred Villages Le premer Conquereur des treis Kantrefs de la tere de Breckenoch estoit Bernard de Nefmarche Norman Mon. Angl. 1. pa. fol. 319. b. See Cantred Karle Sax. A Man and sometimes a Servant or a Clown Hence the Saxons called a Seaman a Buscarle and a Domestick Servant Huscarle This word is often found in Domesday Seldens Mare Clausum and other ancient Records from hence by corruption comes our modern word Churle Karrata faeni Mon. Angl. 1. par fol. 548. b. A Cart load of Hay See Carecta Kay Kaia Caya Sax. caeg Area in littore onerandarum atque exonerandarum navium causa e compactis tabulis trabibusque clavium instar firmata A Wharf to Land or Ship Goods or Wares at The Verb Caiare in old Writers signifies according to Scaliger to keep in or restrain and so is the Earth or Ground where Kays are made with Planks and Posts Kayage Kaiagium Portorium quod Kaiae nomine exigit Telonarius The Money or Toll paid for Loading or Unloading Wares at a Kay or Wharf Rot. Pat. 1 Edw. 3. m. 10. and 20 Edw. 3. m 1. Kedel Anno 12 Edw. 4. cap. 7. See Kiddle Kéeper of the Great Seal Custos magni Sigilli Is a Lord by his Office stiled Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England and is of the Kings Privy Council through whose hands pass all Charters Commissions and Grants of the King under the Great Seal Without which Seal many of those Grants and Commissions as to divers particulars are of no force in Law the Kings Great Seal being as the Publick Faith of the Kingdom in the high esteem and reputation justly belonging and attributed thereunto This Lord Keeper by the Statute 5 Eliz. cap. 18. hath the same Place Authority Preheminence Jurisdiction Execution of Laws and all other Commodities and Advantages as the Lord Chancellor of England hath Both these great Officers cannot properly be at the same time since the said Statute but before they might Yet Sir Francis Bacon was made Lord Keeper 7 Martii 1616. The Lord Chancellor Egerton then living but died the next day He is made Lord Keeper of the Great Seal Per
Wil. Dugdale Arm. And in another Deed xx Acras terrae Marlatas Marled Lands Marque from the Sax. Mearc i. Signum Signifies in our ancient Statutes as much as Reprisals as Anno 4 Hen. 5. cap. 7. Marques and Reprisals are used as Synonima and Letters of Marque in the same signification See Reprisals Marquis or Marquess Marchio qui regionis limitem incolit Is a Title of Honor next before an Earl and next after a Duke Marchiones Walliae viz. Rogerus de Mortuo-mari Jacobus de Audeley Rogerius de Clifford Rogerius de Leyburn Hamo Extraneus ille de Turbervilla cum pluribus aliis qui de bello praedicto de Lewes nuper fugerunt c. Mat. Westm in Anno 1264. pag. 225. Marshal See Mareshal Martial Law Is the Law that depends upon the just and arbitrary power and pleasure of the King or His Lieutenant in time of Wars For though the King does not in time of Peace make any Laws but by consent of the Three Estates in Parliament yet in Wars by reason of the great dangers rising from small occasions he useth absolute power in so much as His word goes for Law Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 3. See Law of Arms. Mast Glans Pessona Glandis nomine continentur glans castanea faginr ficus nuces alia quaeque quae edi pasci poterunt praeter herbam Bracton lib. 4. 226. See Pessona Master of the Rolls Magister Rotulorum Is an assistant to the Lord Chancellor of England in the High Court of Chancery and in his absence heareth Causes there and gives Orders Crompt Jur. fol. 41. His title in his Patent is Clericus parvae bagae Custos Rotulorum as also Domus Conversorum Because the place where the Rolls of Chancery are now kept was anciently the House for Habitation of those Jews who were converted to Christianity But his Office hath that title from the safe keeping of the Rolls of all Patents and Grants that pass the Great Seal and of all Records of the Court of Chancery c. He is called Clerk of the Rolls Anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 2. And in Fortescu cap. 24. And no where Master of the Rolls until 11 Hen. 7. cap. 20. And yet cap. 25. Ejusdem he is also called Clerk In which respect Sir Tho. Smith lib. 2. cap. 10. says He may not unfitly be called Custos Archivorum He hath the bestowing of the Offices of the Six Clerks the Clerks of the Pettibag Examiners of the Court and the Clerks of the Chappel Anno 14 15 Hen. 8. cap. 1. See Roll. Master of the Mint Anno 2 Hen. 6. cap. 14. Is now called the Warden of the Mint whose Office is to receive the Silver of the Goldsmiths and to pay them for it and to oversee all the rest belonging to his Function Master of the Court of Wards and Liberies Was the cheif Officer of that Court named and assigned by the King to whose custody the Seal of the Court was committed c. Anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 33. But this Court with the Officers and Appurtenances thereof is abolished by 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Master of the Horse Is he that hath the Rule and Charge of the Kings Stable being an Office of high account and always bestowed upon some Nobleman of great merit and is mentioned Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. and 1 Edw 6. cap. 5. This Officer under the Emperors of Rome was called Comes sacri Stabuli Master of the Posts Was an Officer of the Kings Court who had the appointing placing and displacing of all such thorough England as provided Post-horses for the speedy passing of the Kings Messages Letters Pacquets and other business and is mentioned Anno 2 Edw. 6. cap. 3. But now by Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 34. One General Letter Office or Post Office is setled in London the Master of which Office is appointed by the King by Letters Patent with Rates and Rules prescribed in the said Act for carrying Subjects Letters Master of the Armory Is he that hath the care and over-sight of His Majesties Armor and mentioned 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Master of the Jewel House Is an Officer in the Kings Houshold of great credit having charge of all Plate used for the King or Queens Table or any great Officer in Court and of all Plate remaining in the Tower of London of Chains and loose Jewels not fixed to any garment Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Master of the Kings Houshold Magister Hospitii Regis Is otherwise called Grand Master of the Kings Houshold and is called Lord Steward of the Kings most Honorable Houshold Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 39. But Primo Mariae and ever since he is called Lord Steward of the Kings Houshold under whom there is a Principal Officer of the Houshold called the Master of the Houshold of great Authority as well as Antiquity Master of the Ordnance Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Is a great Officer to whose care all the Kings Ordnance and Artillery is committed Masters of the Chancery Magistri Cancellariae Are assistants in the Chancery to the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper and Master of the Rolls Of these there are some Ordinary and some Extraordinary of Ordinary there are twelve whereof the Master of the Rolls is accompted one whereof some sit in Court every day throughout each Term and have referred to them at the Lord Chancellors or Master of the Rolls discretion the Interlocutory Reports for stating Accompts computing damages and the like taking of Oaths Affidavits and Acknowledgments of Deeds and Recognisances The Extraordinary do act in all the Countrey Ten Miles from London by taking Recognisances and Affidavits Acknowledgments of Deeds c. for the case of the Subject Master of the Kings Musters Is a Martial Officer in all Royal Armies most necessary as well for the maintaining the Forces compleat wel-armed and trained as also for prevention of such Frauds as otherwise may exceedingly waste the Princes Treasure and extreamly weaken the Forces c. mentioned 2 Edw. 6. cap. 2. And Muster-Master-General Anno 35 Eliz. cap. 4. Master of the Wardrobe Magister Garderobae Is a great Officer in Court having his habitation belonging to that Office called the Wardrobe near Puddle-Wharf in London He has the charge and custody of all former Kings and Queens ancient Robes remaining in the Tower and all Hangings Bedding c. for the Kings Houses He has also the charge and delivery out of all Velvet or Scarlet allowed for Liveries c. Of this Officer mention is made Anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. Masura terrae Sunt in eisdem masuris 60 Domus plus quam ante fuerunt Domesday In Fr. Masure de terre is a quantity of ground containing about four Oxgangs Matter in Deed and matter of Record Differ thus according to Old Nat. Br. fo 19. The first seems to be nothing else but some truth or matter of Fact to be proved though not by
sort of Money so it were Silver and the reason is there given because those two Shires Monetarios de antiqua institutione non habent Moneyers are now also taken for Banquers or those that make it their Trade to turn and return money Monger Seems to be a little Sea-vessel which Fishermen use Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 11. Monopoly from the Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vendo Is an Institution or allowance of the King by his Grant Commission or otherwise to any person or persons of or for the sole buying selling making working or using of any thing whereby any person or persons are restrained of any freedom or liberty that they had before or hindred in their lawful Trade which is declared illegal by 21 Jac. ca. 3. Except in some particular cases which see in 3 Inst fo 181. Monstrans de droit i. Shewing of ones right Signifies a writ issuing out of the Chancery to be restored to Lands or Tenements that indeed are mine in right though by some Office found to be in possession of one lately dead See Stamf. Praer ca. 21. at large and Cokes Rep. lib. 4. fo 54. Wardens of the Sadlers Case Monstraverunt Is a Writ that lies for Tenants that hold freely by Charter in ancient Demaine being distreined for the payment of any Toll or Imposition contrary to the liberty which they do or should enjoy Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 14. Month or Moneth Sax. Monath Shall be understood to consist of 28 dayes See Coke lib. 6. fo 61. b. And see Kalendermoneth Moot from the Sax. Motian to treat or handle Is well understood at the Inns of Court to be that exercise or arguing of Cases which young Barrasters and Students perform at certain times for the better enabling them for practise and defence of Clients Causes The place where Moot-cases were argued was anciently called a Moot-hall from the Sax. Motheal In the Inns of Court there is a Bailiff or Surveyor of the Moots who is yearly chosen by the Bench to appoint the M●otmen for the Inns of Chancery and to keep accompt of performance of Exercises both there and in the House See Orig. Juridiciales fo 212. Mootmen Are those that argue Readers Cases called also Moot-cases in the Houses of Chancery both in Terms and in Vacations Cokes Rep. 3 Part in Proaemio Moratur or Demoratur in Lege Signifies as much as he Demurrs because the Party goes not forward in pleading but rests or abides upon the Judgment of the Court in the point who deliberate and take time to argue and advise thereupon Whensoever the Counsel learned of the Party is of opinion that the Count or Plea of the adverse party is insufficient in Law then he Demurrs or abides in Law and refers the same to the Judgment of the Court Coke on Lit. fo 71. b. See Demurrer Moriam Is all one in signification with the French Morion i. Cassis a headpiece and that from the Italian Morione Anno 4 5 Phil. Mary ca. 2. now called a Pot. Morling alias Mortling Signifies that Wool which is taken from the Skin of a dead Sheep whether dying of the rot or being killed Anno 4 Edw. 4. cap. 2. 3. and 27 Hen. 6 cap. 2. This is written Morkin Anno 3 Jac. cap. 18. Morling or Shorling Anno 3 Edw. 4. cap. 1. 14 Car. 2. cap. 18. See Shorling Mortdancester See Assize Mortgage Mortuum vadium vel Mortgagium from the French Mort i. Mors and Gage i. Pignus Signifies a Pawn of Land or Tenement or any moveable thing laid or bound for Money borrowed peremptorily to be the Creditors for ever if the Money be not paid at the day agreed on And the Creditor holding such Land on such Agreement is in the mean time called Tenant in Mortgage Glanvile lib. 10. cap. 6. defines it thus Mortuum vadium dicitur illud cujus fructus vel reditus interim percepti in nullo se acquietant Thus it is called a Dead Gage because whatsoever profit it yields yet it redeems not it self by yielding such profit except the whole sum borrowed be likewise paid at the day the Morgagee by Covenant being to receive the profits till default of payment He that lays this Pawn or Gage is called the Morgager and he that takes it the Morgagee This if it contain excessive Usury is prohibited Anno 37 Hen. 8. cap. 9. Mortmain Manus Mortua i. Dead Hand From the. Fr. Mort i. Mors and Main i. Hand Signifies an Alienation of Lands or Tenements to any Corporation Guild or Fraternity and their Successors as Bishops Parsons Viccars c. which may not be done without Licence of the King and the Lord of the Mannor or of the King alone if it be immediately holden of him The reason of the name proceeds from this that the services and other profits due for such Lands should not without such Licence come into a Dead Hand or into such a Hand as it were Dead and so dedicate unto God or pious uses as to be abstractedly different from other Lands Tenements or Hereditaments and is never to revert to the Donor or any Temporal or common use Mag. Charta cap. 36. and 7 Edw. 1. commonly called the Statute of Mortmain 18 Edw. 3. stat 3. cap. 3. and 15 Rich. 2. cap. 5. Which Statutes are something abridged by Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 5. whereby the gift of Land c. to Hospitals is permitted without obtaining of Licences of Mortmain Hottoman in his Commentaries De verbis Feudal verbo Manus mortua says thus Manus mortua locutio est quae usurpatur de iis quorum possessio ut ita dicam immortalis est quia nunquam haeredem habere desinunt Qua de causa res nunquam ad Priorem Dominum revertitur nam Manus pro possessione dicitur Mortua pro immortali c. And Skene says That Dimittere terras ad Manum Mortuam est idem atque dimittere ad multitudinem sive universitatem quae nunquam moritur The President and Governors for the poor within the Cities of London and Westminster may without Licence in Mortmain purchase Lands c. not exceeding the yearly value of 3000 l c. Stat. 14. Car. 2. cap. 9. Mortuary Mortuarium Is a gift left by a Man at his death to his Parish Church in recompence of his Personal Tythes and Offerings not duly paid in his life time A Mortuary is not properly and originally due to an Ecclesiastical Incumbent from any but those onely of his own Parish to whom he ministers Spiritual Instruction and hath right to their Tythes But by Custom in some places of this Kingdom they are paid to the Incumbent of other Parishes in the Corps of the Dead Bodies passage through them See the Statute 21 Hen. 8. cap. 6. before which Statute Mortuaries were payable in Beasts Mortuarium says Lindwood sic dictum est quia relinquitur Ecclesiae pro anima defuncti
quando aliquod super Dominum Regem injuste occupatur ut in Dominicis Regis vel in viis publicis obstructis vel in aquis publicis transversis a recto cursu vel quando aliquis in civitate super regiam plateam aliquid aedificando occupaverit generaliter quoties aliquid fit ad nocumentum Regii Tenementi vel Regii viae vel Civitatis And by Crompton in his Juris fol. 152. thus Pourpresture is properly when a Man takes to himself or encroaches any thing which he ought not whether it be in any Jurisdiction Land or Franchise and generally when any thing is done to the Nusance of the Kings Tenants See Kitchin fol. 10. And Manwood par 1. pag. 269. Par. 2. cap. 10. Some Authors make three sorts of this offence one against the King the second against the Lord of the Fee the third against a Neighbor by a Neighbor● See 2 Inst fol. 38. 272. Pour seis●r terres la femme que tient en Dower c. Was a Writ whereby the King seised the Land which the Wife of his Tenant in Capite deceased had for her Dowry if she married without his leave and was grounded on the Statute of the Kings Prerogative cap. 3. See Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 174. Poursuivant from the Fr. Poursuivre i. Agere persequi Signifies the Messenger of the King attending upon Him in Wars or at the Council Table or Exchequer or in His Court or at His Chamber to be sent upon any occasion or message as for the apprehension of a party accused or suspected of any offence Those that are used in Marshal Causes are called Pursuivants at Arms whereof there are four of special names which see in the word Herald Stow speaking of Richard the Third his end hath these words pag. 784. His Body was naked to the Skin not so much as one Clout about him and was trussed behinde a Pursuivant at Arms like a Hog or a Calf c. Pourveyor Provisor from the Fr. Pourvoire Providere Prospicere Signifies an Officer of the King or Queen that provides Corn and other Victual for their House Mentioned in Magna Charta cap. 22. and other Statutes but the Office is restrained by Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 24. See Pourveyance and Achat Pourveyance Fr. Pourvoyance Is the providing Corn Fuel Victual and other necessaries for the Kings House By Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. it is provided That no person or persons vp any Warrant Commission or Authority under the Great Seal or otherwise by colour of buying or making provision or Purveyance for His Majesty or any Quéen of England for the time being or that shall be or for His their or any of their Houshold shall take any Timber Fuel Cattle Corn Grain Malt Hay Straw Uictual Cart Carriage or other thing whatsoever of any the Subjects of His Majesty His Heirs or Successors without the full and frée consent of the owner or owners thereof had and obtained without Menace or Enforcement c. See The Antiquity of Praeemption and Pourueyance c. And 3 Inst fol. 82. Power of the County Posse Comitatus According to Lambert in his Eiren. lib. 3. cap. 1. fol. 309. co 〈…〉 in s the Aid and Attendance of all Knights Gentlemen Yeomen Laborers Servants Apprentises and Villains and of other young Men above the age of fifteen within the County because all of that age are bound to have Harness by the Statute of Winchester But Women Ecclesiastical Persons and such as are decrepit or labor with any continual infirmity shall not be compelled to attend For the Stat. 2 Hen. 5. cap. 8. says That persons able to travel shall be assistant in this service which is used where a Possession is kept upon a forcible Entry or any force or rescue used contrary to the Command of the Kings Writ or in opposition to the execution of Justice Powldavis See Poledavis Poynings Law Is an Act of Parliament made in Ireland by Henry the Seventh and so called because Sir Edward Poynings was Lieutenant there when it was made whereby all the Statutes in England were made of force in Ireland which before that time were not neither are a●y now in force there which were made in England since that time See Cokes 12 Rep. fol. 109. Hill 10 Jac. Pray in Ayd See Ayd Pratum falcabile A Meadow or Mowingground Jur. dicunt quod praedicta placea a tempore quo Fuit Pratum falcabile usque ad praedictum annum quod praedictus W. illud aravit Trin. 18 Edw. 1. in Banco Rot. 50. Prebend Praebenda Is the Portion which every Member or Canon of a Cathedral Church receives in right of his place for his maintenance Canonica Portio is properly used for that share which every Canon or Prebendary receives yearly out of the common stock of the Church and Praebenda is a several Benefice rising from some Temporal Land or Church appropriated towards the maintenance of a Clerk or Member of a Collegiat Church as the Prebends of Keyton and Coupes at Maldon and is commonly sirnamed of the place whence the profit arises Prebends are either Simple or with Dignity Simple Prebends are those that have no more but the Revenue towards their maintenance Prebends with Dignity are such as have some Jurisdiction annexed to them according to the divers Orders in every several Church Of this see more in the Decretals tit De Praebendis Dignitat Praebenda Was also in old Deeds used for Provender See Corody Prebendary Praebendarius Is he that hath such a Prebend so called a Praebendo auxilium consilium Episcopo Precariae Days works which the Tenants of some Mannors are bound to give the Lord in Harvest which in some places are corruptly called Bind days for Biden days from the Sax. Bidan to pray or intreat Baldwinus una bovata pro ii s. Dimd ii Gallinas xx Ova iv Precarias in Autumpno cum uno homine bis arare bis herciare semel falcare semel foenum levare c. Mon Angl. 2 par fol. 539. a. See Bederepe Prece partium Is when a Sute is continued by the Prayer Assent or Agreement of both Parties Anno 13 Edw. 1. cap. 27. Precept Praeceptum Is commonly taken for a Commandment in Writing sent out by a Justice of Peace or other-like Officer for the bringing a Person or Records before him of which you have example of divers in the Table of the Register Judicial And sometimes for the command or provocation whereby one Man incites another to commit Felony Theft or Murder Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 105. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 19. calls it Praeceptum or Mandatum whence we may observe three diversities of offending in Murder Praeceptum Fortia Consilium Praeceptum being the instigation used before hand Fortia the Assistance in the Fact as helping to binde the party murdered or robbed Consilium advise either before or in the Deed. Praceptories Praeceptoriae Anno
5 Hen. 4. ca. 14. is termed a cheif Clerk of that Court He of the Kings Bench Records all Actions Civil as the Clerk of the Crown Office does all Criminal Causes in that Court Those of the Common Pleas since the Order of 14. Jac. upon an Agreement made betwixt the Prothonotaries and Filacers of that Court who before did enter all Declarations and Pleas whereunto a Serjeants hand was not required do enter and enrol all manner of Declarations Pleadings Assises Judgments and Actions They make out all Judicial Writs except Writs of Habeas Corpus and Distringas Jurator for which there is a particular Office not much beyond the memory of Man erected called The Habeas Corpora Office They also make out Writs of Execution and of Seisin Writs of Priviledge for removing Causes from other Inferior Courts of Record in case where the party hath cause of Priviledge Writs of Procedendo of Scire Facias in all Cases and Writs to enquire of Damages and all Process upon Prohibitions and upon Writs of Audita Quaerela and False Judgment Cum multis aliis They enter and enrol all common Recoveries and may make Exemplifications of any Record in the same Term before their Rolls are made up and brought into the Treasury of Records in that Court Pro partibus Liberandis Is a Writ for the Partition of Lands between Co-heirs Reg. of Writs fol. 316. Property Proprietas Is the highest right that a Man hath or can have to any thing and no ways depending upon another Mans curtesie Which none in our Kingdom can properly be said to have in any Lands or Tenements but onely the King in right of his Crown Because all the Lands throughout the Realm are in the nature of Fee and hold either mediately or immediately of the Crown This word nevertheless is used for that right in Lands and Tenements that common persons have because it imports as much as arile Dominium though not Directum See Fee Prophecies Prophetiae Are in our Statutes taken for wizzardly fore-tellings of Matters to come in certain hidden and enigmatical Speeches whereby great commotions have been often caused in this Kingdom and great attempts made by those to whom such Speeches promised good success though the words are mystically framed and point onely at the Cognizance Arms or some other quality of the parties Anno 3 Edw. 6. ca. 15. And 7 Ejusdem ca. 11. And 5 Eliz. ca. 15. But these for distinction sake are called Fond False or Phantastical Prophecies 3 Inst fol. 128. Propounders The 85 Cha. of Cokes 3 Institutes is entituled Against Monopolists Propounders and Projectors where it seems to be used onely as a Synonima to Monopolists Proprietary Proprietarius Is he that hath a property in any thing Quae nullius arbitrio est obnoxia But it was heretofore most commonly used for him that hath the Fruits of a Benefice to himself and his Heirs or Successors as in time past Abbots and Priors had to them and their Successors See Appropiation Proprietate Provanda Is a Writ that lies for him who would prove a property before the Sheriff Reg. of Writs fol. 83. 85. For where a Property is alleaged a Replegiare properly lies not Brook Property 1. Pro rata i. Pro proportione Anno 16 Car. 2. ca. 6. Pro rata portionis See Oneranda pro rata portionis Prorogue Prorogo To prolong defer or put off to another day to continue Anno 6 Hen. 8. cap. 8. The difference between a Prorogation and an Adjournment or Continuance of the Parliament is That by the Prorogation in open Court there is a Session and then such Bills as passed in either House or by both Houses and had no Royal assent to them must at the next Assembly begin again For every several Session of Parliament is in Law a several Parliament but if it be but adjourned or continued then is there no Session and consequently all things continue in the same state they were in before the Adjournment 4 Inst fol. 27. Prosecutor Is he that followeth a Cause in an others name See Promooters Protection Protectio Is generally taken for that benefit and safety which every subject denizen or alien specially secured hath by the Kings Laws Anno 25 Edw. 3. cap. 22. And it is used specially for an Exemption or Immunity given by the King to a person against Sutes in Law or other vexations upon reasonable causes him thereto moving which is a Branch of His Prerogative And of this Protection Fitzherbert Nat. Br. fol. 28. makes two sorts The first he calls a Protection cum clasula Volumus Whereof he mentions four particulars 1. A Protection Quia profecturus for him that is to pass over Sea in the Kings service 2. Quia moraturus for him that is abroad in the Kings service upon the Sea or in the Marches Anno 7 Hen. 7. cap. 2. 3. For the Kings Debtor that he be not sued nor attached till the King be paid his debt Anno 15 Edw. 3. And 4. in the Kings service beyond Sea or on the Marches of Scotland Anno 1 Rich. 2. cap. 8. Reg. of Writs fol. 23. And Britton cap. 123. The second form of Protection is Cum clausula Nolumus which is granted most commonly to a Spiritual Company for their Immnnity from having their Cattle taken by the Kings Ministers But it may also be granted to a single person Spiritual or Temporal Protection extends not to Pleas of Dower Quare Impedit Assise of Novel Disseisin Darrein Presentment Attaints nor Pleas before Justices in Eyre See New Book of Entries on this word Proto-Forestarius Was he whom our ancient Kings made cheif of Windsor Forest to hear all causes of death or mayhem there Cam. Brit. pag. 213. A kinde of a Lord Cheif Justice in Eyre Protest Protestari Hath two divers Applications one is by way of cautel to call witness as it were or openly to affirm That he doth either not at all or but conditionally yeeld his consent to any act or unto the proceeding of a Judge in a Court wherein his Jurisdiction is doubtful or to answer upon his Oath further then he is by Law bound Reg. of Writs fol. 306. b The other is by way of complaint to Protest a Mans Bill As if I pay money to a Merchant in France taking his Bill of Exchange to be repaid in England by his Factor or Assignee if at my coming I finde not my self satisfied but either delaid or denied then I go into the Exchange and Protest that I am not paid or satisfied by him And thereupon if he hath any Goods within the Realm the Law of Merchants allows me satisfaction out of them Protestation Protestatio Is as Iustice Walsh defines it a defence of safeguard to the party that makes it from being concluded by the Act he is about to do that Issue cannot be joyned upon it Plowden fol. 276. b. It is a Form of pleading when one does not directly affirm nor
patent seems to be extended farther in use then the original intention For a Writ of right of Dower which lies for the Tenant in Dower is patent as appears by Fitzherb Natura Brevium fo 7. E. The like may be said in divers other cases of which see also the Table of Reg. of Writs verbo Recto This Writ is properly tryed in the Lords Court between Kinsmen who claim by one title from their Ancestor But how it may be thence removed and brought either to the County or Kings Court see Fleta lib. 6. ca. 3 4 5. Glanvile seems to make every Writ whereby a Man sues for any thing due unto him a Writ of Right lib. 10. ca. 1. lib. 11. ca. 1. lib. 12. ca. 1. Recto de dote Is a Writ of Right of Dower which lies for a Woman that has received part of her Dower and proceeds to demand the Remnant in the same Town against the Heir Of this see more in Old Nat. Br. fo 5. and Fitz. fo 7. E. Reg. of Writs fo 3. and New Book of Entries verbo Droyt Recto de dote unde nihil habet Is a Writ of right which lies in case where the Husband having divers Lands or Tenements has assured no Dower to his Wife and she thereby is driven to sue for her Thirds against the Heir or his Guardian Old Nat. Br. fo 6. Reg. of Writs fo 170. Recto de rationabili parte Is a Writ that lies alwayes between privies of Blood as Brothers in Gavelkind or Sisters or other Coparceners as Nephews or Neeces and for Land in Fee-simple For example if a Man Lease his Land for Life and afterwards dies leaving issue two Daughters and after the Tenant for life likewise dies the one Sister entring upon all the Land and so deforcing the other the Sister so deforced shall have this Writ to recover her part Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 9. Reg. of Writs fo 3. Recto quando Dominus remisit Is a Writ of right which lies in case where Lands or Tenements that are in the Seigneury of any Lord are in demand by a Writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the Prayer of the Demandant or Tenant shall send to the Court of the King his Writ to put the Cause thither for that time saving to him at other times the right of his Seigneury then this Writ issues out for the other party and has its name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This Writ is close and must be returned before the Justices of the Common-Bank Old Nat. Br. fo 16. Reg. of Writs fo 4. Recto de advocatione Ecclesiae Is a Writ of right lying where a man has right of Advowsen and the Parson of the Church dying a stranger presents his Clerk to the Church and he not having brought his Action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within six Moneths but suffer'd the Stranger to usurp upon him Which Writ he onely may have that claims the Advowsen to himself and his heirs in Fee And as it lies for the whole Advowsen so it lies also for the half the third or fourth part Old Nat. Br. fo 24. Reg. of Writs fo 29. Recto de custodia terrae haeredis Is a Writ which by the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. is become useless as to Lands holden in Capite or by Knight-service but not where there is Guardian in Socage or appointed by the last will and Testament of the Auncestor The form of it see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 139. Reg. of Writs fo 161. Recto sur disclaimer Is a Writ that lies where the Lord in the Court of Common-Pleas does avow upon his Tenant and the Tenant Disclaims to hold of him upon which Disclaimer he shall have this Writ and if the Lord aver and prove that the Land is holden of him he shall recover the Land for ever Old Nat. Br. fo 150. which is grounded on the Statute of Westm 2. ca. 2. Rector Lat. Signifies a Governor And Rector Ecclesi● parochialis Is he that has the Charge or Cure of a Parish-Church qui tantum jus in Ecclesia parochiali habet quantum Praelatus in Ecclesia Collegiata It has been over-ruled that Rector Ecclesiae parochialis is he that has a Parsonage where there is a Vicaridge endow'd and he that has a Parsonage without a Vicaridge is called Persona But the distinction seems to be new and subtile It is certain Bracton uses it otherwise lib. 4. Tract 5. ca. 1. in these words Et sciendum quod Rectoribus Ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios ut Personae Where it is plain that Rector and Persona are confounded Note also these words there following Item dici possunt Rectores Canonici de Ecclesiis praebendatis Item dici possunt Rectores vel quasi Abbates Priores alii qui habent Ecclesias ad proprios usus See Vicar Rectory Rectoria Is taken pro integra Ecclesia parochiali cum omnibus suis juribus praedi is decimis aliisque proventuum speciebus Spelm. Rectus in Curia i. Right in Court Is he that stands at the Bar and no man objects any offence against him Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. ca. 3. Reddendum Is used substantively for the clause in a Lease c. whereby the Rent is reserved to the Lessor Coke lib. 2. Cromwels case fo 72. b. Reddition Redditio Is a judicial confession and acknowledgment that the Land or thing in demand belongs to the Demandant or at least not to himself Anno 34 35 Hen. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379. 380. Redemptions Redemptiones Mulctae gravissimae utpote quae pro aestimatione capitis ipsius delinquentis impinguntur Anglice Ransomes See Misericordia Redisseisin Redisseisina Is a Disseisin made by him who once before was found and adjudged to have disseised the same Man of his Lands or Tenements for which there lies a special Writ called a Writ of Redisseisin Old Nat. Br. fo 106. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 188. See New book of Entries on this word The punishment for Redisseisin see in the Stat. 52 Hen. 3. ca. 8. Redmans or Radmans Domesday in fine Cestrescire Tit. Lanc. Blacburn Hundret Rex E. tenuit Peneverdant Ibi 11 Car. sunt in Dominio 6 Burgenses 3 Radmans 8 Vil. 4 Bovar These Redmans may be the same in signification as the Rod or Rad Knights Men which by the Tenure or Custom of their Lands were to ride with or for the Lord of the Mannor about his business or affairs Redubbors or Adubbors Are those that buy stoln Cloth and to the end it may not be known turn it into some other Colour or Fashion Briton ca. 29. and see 3 Inst fo 134. Re-entry From the Fr. Rentrer i. Rursus intrare Signifies the resuming or re-taking that possession which we had lately foregone As if I make a Lease of Land or
Par. 1. Pa. 178. Reprisels Reprisalia From the Fr. Reprise i. Recaptio vel captio rei unius in alterius satisfactionem Is all one in the Common and Civil Law Reprisalia est potestas pignorandi contra quemlibet de terra debitoris data Creditori pro injuriis damnis acceptis Vocab utriusque Juris This among the Ancient Romans was called Clarigatio In the Statute 27 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. ca. 17. it is called Law of Marque because one destitute of Justice in another Territory redresseth himself by the goods belonging to Men of that Territory Reprises Fr. Resumptions or takings back We use it for deductions and duties which are yearly paid out of a Mannor or lands as Rent-charges Pensions Fees or Stewards or Bailiffs c. Therefore we say the Mannor of Dale yields 40 l. per annum ultra Reprizas besides all Reprises Requests Curia Requisitionum See in Court The place where this Court was held was anciently called Camera alba Rot. Parl. Anno 17 Edw. 3. Resceit Receptio Is an admission or receiving a third person to plead his right in a cause formerly commenced between other two New Book of Entries verbo Resceit As if Tenant for life or years brings an Action he in the Reversion comes in and prayes to be received to defend the Land and to plead with the Demandant See Brook Tit. Resceit fo 205. and Perkins Dower 448. Resceit is also apply'd to an admittance of Plea though the controversie be onely between ●two Brook tit Estoppel Coke on Litt. fo 192. b. Resceit of homage Receptio Homagii Is the Lords receiving Homage of his Tenant at his admission to the Land Kitchin fo 148. See Homage Rescous Rescussus From the Fr. Rescousse i. Liberatio redemptio Is an illegal taking away and setting at liberty a Distress taken or a person arrested by Process or course of Law which is a Rescouse in Deed And where a man has taken a Distress and the Cattel distreined as he is driving them to the Pound happen to go into the House of the owner if he that took the distress demand them of the owner and he deliver them not this is a Rescous in Law Coke on Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. Sect. 237. It is also used for a Writ which lies for this fact called Breve de rescussu whereof you may see both the form and use in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 101. Reg. of Writs fo 125. and New Book of Entries verbo Rescous This in some cases is Treason upon matters of Treason and in some Felony in cases of Felony Cromp. Justice fo 54. b. Rescussor Is he that commits such a Rescous Crokes Rep. 2 Part fo 419. Reseiser Reseisire Is a taking again of Lands into the Kings hands whereof a general Livery or Ouster le main was formerly missued contrary to order of Law Stamf. Praerog 26. See Resumption Reservation Reservatio A providing for store as when a man departs with his Land but reserves or provides for himself a rent out of it for his own livelihood Sometimes it serves to reserve a new thing and sometimes to except part of the thing in esse that is granted See Perkins Reservations per totum Resiance Resiantia From the Fr. Reseant vel resseant i. Resident Signifies a Mans aboad or continuance in a place Old Nut. Br. fo 85. Whence also comes the participle resiant that is continually dwelling or abiding in a place Kitchin fo 33. It is all one in truth with residence but that custom ties this onely to persons Ecclesiastical Veteri autem jure nostro etiam Scotico aliud significat utpote morbum validum seu veteranum quo quis exire de suis aedibus prohibetur Essonium igitur quod de malo lecti nuncupatur hoc est excusatio quod ratione infirmitatis sistere se in foro non valeat essonium nuncupant de reseantisa Glanvile lib. 1. ca. 11. Quandoque intervenit Essonium ex infirmitate de reseantisa Ubi in margine notatur Essonium de reseantisa idem valet quod essonium de malo lecti Et Galli apertius dixerunt Exoine de mal resseant Spelm. Residence R 〈…〉 tia Is peculiarly used both in the Canon and Common-Law for the continuance or aboad of a Parson or Vicar upon his Benefice The defalt whereof except the party be qualify'd and dispensed with is the loss of ten pounds for every moneth Anno 28 Hen. 8. ca. 13. Resignation Resignatio Is used particularly for the yielding up a Benefice into the hands of the Ordinary otherwise called renunciatio by the Canonists And though it signifie all one in nature with the word Surrender yet it is by use restrained to the yielding up a Spiritual Living as aforesaid and Surrender to the giving up Temporal Lands into the hands of the Lord. And a Resignation may now be made into the hands of the King as well as of the Diocesan because he has Supremam Authoritatem Ecclesiasticam as the Pope had here in times past Plowden Casu Gr●ndon fo 498. Resort or Ressort Fr. Is a word used properly in a Writ of Tayle or Cousenage as Descent is in a Writ of right In French it signifies the Authority or Jurisdiction of a Court. Salvo tamen tam ressorto quam aliis jure nostro jure etiam alieno Lit. Pat. Philip le Hardy R. Franc. Respectu computi vicecomitis habendo Is a Writ for the respiting a Sheriffs account upon just occasion directed to the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer Reg. fo 139 and 179. Respite Respectus Is used for a delay forbearance or continuation of time Praecipio tibi quod poni facias in respectum usque ad aliquem terminum competentem Glanvile lib. 12. ca. 9. in Brevi Regis Respite of Homage Respectus Homagii Is the forbearance of Homage which ought first of all to be performed by the Tenant holding by Homage but it had the most frequent use in such as held by Knight-service in Capite who did pay into the Exchequer every fifth Term some small Summ of Money to be respited the doing their Homage see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. whereby this Respite of Homage is taken away as a charge incident or arising from Knight-service c. Respondeat superior Where the Sheriffs are removable as in London for insufficiency responde●t superior that is the Mayor and Commonalty of London Pur insufficiency del Bailiff d'un Libertie respondeat Dominus libertatis 44 Ed. 3. 13. See 4 Inst fo 114. Responsalis qui Responsum defert Is he that appears for another in Court at a day assigned GIanvile lib. 12. ca. 1. But Fle●a lib. 6. ca. 11. makes a difference between Atturnatum Essoniatorem Responsalem as if Essoniator came onely to alledge the cause of the parties absence be he the demandant or tenant and Responsalis came for the Tenant not onely to excuse his absence but to signifie what trial he meant to
Book so called because it was of old kept at Winchester among other Records and Monuments of the Kingdom See Domesday Some say there was a more ancient Record or Book of like nature with Domesday but made long before by King Alfred called Rotulus Wintonia Rouge Cross See Herald Roundlet See Runlet Rout Fr. Route i. A company or number Which signifies an Assembly of three persons or more going forcibly to commit an unlawful act though they do it not and is the same which the Germans yet call Rot meaning a Band or great company of Men gathered together and going to execute or are executing indeed any Riot or unlawful act See the Stat. 18. Edw. 3. stat 1. and 2 Rich. 2. cap. 6. It is a Rout whether they put their purpose in execution or no if they go ride or move forward after their meeting Brook tit Riot 4. 5. So as a Rout seems to be a special kinde of unlawful Assembly and a Riot the disorderly fact committed generally by any unlawful Assembly Howbeit two things are common both to Rout Riot and Unlawful Assembly The one that three persons at the least be gathered together the other that they being together do disturb the Peace either by words shew of arms turbulent gesture or actual violence c. See Lamb. Eiren. lib. 2. cap. 5. See Riot and Unlawful Assembly Royal Assent Regius Assensus Is that Assent or Approbation which the King gives to a thing formerly done by others as to the election of a Bishop by Dean and Chapter which given then he sends a Special Writ to some person for the taking of Fealty The form whereof you may see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 170. C. And to a Bill passed in both Houses of Parliament Cromp. Jur. fol. 8. Which Assent in Parliament being once given the Bill is Endorsed with these words Le Roy Veult i. It pleaseth the King If he refuse to agree to it then thus Le Roy Averisa i. The King will Advise upon it Royalties Regalia vel Regalitates Are the Rights of the King otherwise called the Kings Prerogative some of which are such as the King may grant to common persons some so high as may not be separated from his Crown Privative as the Civilians term it though some may be Cumulative Vide Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. And Mathaeum de Afflictis upon the title of the Feuds Quae sint Regalia where are set down Twenty five particulars or several sorts of Royalties See Prerogative and Regalia Rudge-washed Kersey Is that which is made of Fleece-wool washed onely on the Sheeps back Anno 35 Eliz. cap. 10. Runcinus from the Ital. Runzino Is used in Domesday for a Load-horse or Sumpter-horse and sometimes a Cart-horse which Chaucer calls a Rowney Rune from the Sax. Rununge i. A Course or Running A Water-course so called in the Marshes of Sommersetshire Hist of Imbanking and Draining fol. 106. a. Runlet alias Roundlet Is a certain Measure of Wine Oyl c. containing Eighteen Gallons and a half Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 13. Rural Deanes Decani Rurales Sunt Decani Temporales ad aliquod ministerium sub Episcopo vel Archiepiscopo exercendum constituti qui nec habent Institutionem Canonicam secundum Doctores Hos eosdem esse existimo qui in LL. Edouardi Confess cap. 31. Decani Episcoporum appellantur See Dean Each Diocess hath in it one or more Arch-Deaconries for dispatch of Ecclesiastical business and every Arch-Deaconry subdivided into Rural Deanries fewer or more according to the bigness and extent thereof Heylins Cosmog fol. 304. These were anciently called Archi-Presbyteri Decani Christianitatis See Dean Rusca When the King himself says Domesday tit Cestre came in person to Chester every Carrucata yielded him two hundred Hesta's and one Tun of Ale and one Rusca of Butter Quaere What the quantity was Rusca apum is a Hive of Bees S. SAbbatum in Domesday is used for Peace Postquam Willielmus Rex advenit sedebat in Sabbato Willielmus Mallet fecit suum Castellum de Eia c. Tit. Sudsex Sac Saca vel Sacha Is a Royalty or Priviledge which a Lord of a Mannor claims to have in his Court of holding Plea in Causes of Debate arising among his Tenants and Vassals and of imposing and levying Fines and Amerciaments touching the same But Rastal and some others define Sac to be the forfeiture it self In the Laws of King Edward set forth by Lambert fol. 144. it is written Sacha Sacha autem est si quilibet aliquem nominatim de aliquo calumniatus fuerit ille negaverit forisfactura probationis vel negationis si evenerit sua erit Which may be called the Amerciament paid by him who denies that which is proved against him to be true or affirms that which is not true Fleta says Sake significat acquietantiam de secta ad Comitatum Hundredum lib. 1. cap. 47. Sac is a Saxon word and signifies Causa lis certamen as we still say For Christs sake 1. Pro causa Christi See Keilweys Rep. fol. 145. Praecipio ut S. Benedictus de Ramefia ita bene libere habeat Socam Sacam suam c. Breve Hen. 2. Justiciariis de Norfolc V. Saka Sacaburth alias Sacabere Is he that is robbed or by theft deprived of his Money or Goods Britton cap. 15. 29. With whom agrees Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 32. num 2. Furtum vero manifestum est ubi latro deprehensus sit seisitus de aliquo latrocinio sc Hondhabend Backberend insecutus fuerit per aliquem cujus res illa fuerit qui dicitur Sacaburth c. It may come from ●ac or ●aca i. lis causa prosecutio and burh pignus quia res furtiva sit quasi causa pignus hoc est furti Symbolum Spelman But Sir Edward Coke says Sacabere or Sakebere is derived of Sak and Bere that is He that did bear the bag 3 Inst fol. 69. Saccus cum brochia Was a Service or Tenure of finding a Sack and a Broach to the King for the use of his Army Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 6. and lib. 2. tract 1. cap. 6. See Brochia Sacerborgh or rather Sickerborgh Securus Plegius A sufficient Pledge or Cautioner Skene See Sacaburth Sack of Wool Saccus Lanae Contains Twenty six Stone and a Stone Fourteen pounds Anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. cap. 2. See Sarplar In Scotland it is Twenty four Stone and the Stone Sixteen Pound Sacrafield Rents Are certain small Rents paid by some Tenants of the Mannor of Chuton in Com. Somerset to Sir Charles Waldegrave Lord thereof but why so called Quaere Sacramento Recipiendo quod vidua Regis se non maritabit sine licentia Regis Was a Writ or Commission to one for the taking an Oath of the Kings Widow that she shall not marry without the Kings Licence Reg. of Writs fol. 298. a. Sacrobarra Lib. MS. de Officio
Coronatoris Inquirendum est per 12 Juratos pro Rege super Sacramentum suum quod fideliter presentabunt sine ullo concelamento omnes fortunas ●i fortuito occisos abjurationes Appella Murdra Sacrobarra felonias factas per quos quot c. Quaere If Sacrobarra be not the same with Sacrilegia Safe Conduct Salvus Conductus Is a security given by the Prince under the Broad Seal to a stranger for his quiet coming in and passing our of the Realm Touching which you may see the Statutes Anno 15 Hen. 6. cap. 3. 18 Ejusdem cap. 8. 28 Hen. 8. cap. 1. and the Form of it in Reg. of Writs fol. 25. Safe-guard See Salva-guardia Safe-pledge Salvus Plegius Is a Surety given for a Mans appearance against a day assigned Bracton lib. 4. cap. 2. num 2. Where it is also called Certus Plegius Sagibaro alias Sachbaro The same we now call Justiciarius It signifies as much as Vir causarum vel causis litibus praepositus LL. Inae Regis Anglo-Saxonis cap 6. MS. Sagitta Barbata A Bearded Arrow Reddendo inde annuatim pro omni servitio sex Sagittas Barbatas ad Festum Sancti Michaelis c. Carta Hugonis de Logiis sine Dat. Sailing Ware Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 8. Seems to be Canvas or such kinde of Cloath as Sails for Ships are made of Saka Hoc est Quod Prior habet emendas amerciamenta de transgressionibus hominum suorum in Curia sua litigantium tam liberorum quam Villanorum Reg. Priorat de Cokestord See Sax. Salary Salarium Is a recompence or consideration made to a Man for his pains or industry bestowed on another Mans business The word is used Anno 23 Edw. 3. cap. 1. Salet Is a Head-peece Anno 4 5 Phil. Mar. From the Fr. Salut i. Salus Mentioned also 20 Rich. 2. cap. 1. viz. Sallet or Scul of Iron c. Otherwise called a Moriam or Pot. Salarium Lat. Custom paid for Salt Camden Salina A Salt-pit or Vate a House or place where Salt is made In Herbagiis Piscariis in Salinis Fabricis in minariis ferreis c. Carta 17 Edw. 2. num 28. Salique Law Lex Salica De terra Salica nulla portio haereditatis mulieri veniat sed ad virilem sexum tota terrae hereditas perveniat c. Was an ancient Law made by Pharamund King of the Franks Part of which appears to have been borrowed by our Henry the First in compiling his Laws as Cap. 89. Qui hoc fecerit secundum Legem Salicam moriatur c. Salmon Pipe Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 7. Is an Engin to catch Salmons or such like Fish Salmon Sewse Seems to be the young Fry of Salmon Quasi Salmon issue Anno 13 Rich. 3. stat 1. cap. 19. Saltatorium A Deer-leap Clamat habere liberum Parcum suum apud Halton cum duobus Saltatoriis in eodem Pl. apud Cestriam 31 Edw. 3. Saltus Highwood See Boscus Salva Guardia Is a Protection given by the King to a stranger fearing the violence of some of His Subjects for seeking His Right by course of Law the form whereof see in Reg. of Writs fol. 26. Salvage Money Is a recompence allowed by the Civil Law in lieu of all damages sustained by that Ship that rescues or saves another which was set upon by Pyrates or Enemies Salute Salus Was a Coin made by our King Henry the Fifth in France after his Conquests there whereon the Arms of France and England were quarterly stamped Bakers Chron. fol. 187. Sanctuary Sanctuarium Is a place priviledged by the Prince for the Safe-guard of Offenders lives being founded on the Law of Mercy and upon the great Reverence Honor and Devotion which the Prince bears to the place whereunto he grants such Priviledge See Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 2. cap. 38. P. Bonifacius 5. jussit Aras Ecclesias esse asyla reis says Platina Among all other Nations our ancient Kings of England seem to have attributed most to these Sanctuaries permitting them to shelter such as had committed both Felonies and Treasons So that within forty days they acknowledged their fault and submitted themselves to banishment During which time if any Layman expelled them he was excommunicated if any Clerk he was made irregular But after forty days no Man might relieve them See New Book of Entries verbo Sanctuary and Fleta lib. 1. cap. 29. How by degrees they have been taken away See the Statutes 26 Hen. 8. cap. 13. and 28 Ejusdem cap. 7. 32 Ejusdem cap. 12. and 33 Ejusdem cap. 15. 1 Edw. 6. ca. 12 2 Ejusdem ca. 2. 33. and 5 Ejusdem cap. 10. See Abjuration Saint Johns of Beverley in Yorkshire had an eminent Sanctuary belonging to it which the Saxons called Fridstol q. Sedes Pacis So had St. Martins le Grand in London 21 Hen. 8. cap. 16. And Rippon had the like for which see Frodmortel Sand-gavel Is a payment due to the Lord of the Mannor of Rodely in Com. Gloc. for Liberty granted to the Tenants to dig Sand for their uses Taylors Hist of Gavelkind fol. 113. Sarplar of Wool Sarplera Lanae otherwise called a Pocket Is half a Sack a Sack eighty Tod a Tod two Stone and a Stone fourteen Pound See Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. This in Scotland is called Serpliathe and contains eighty Stone See Skene verbo Serpliathe and 3 Part Inst fo 96. Sasse Annis 16 17 Car. 2. ca. 12. is a kind of Wear with Floudgates most commonly in Navigable and Cut Rivers for the damming and loosing the stream of Water as occasion requires for the better passing of Botes and Barges to and fro This in the West of Englad is called a Luck and in the River Lee less properly a Turnpike and in some places a Sluce Saterdays-stop Is a space of time in which of old it was not lawful to take Salmons in Scotland and the North of England that is from Evensong on Saturday till Sun-rising on Munday MS. Sauer default i. To excuse a defalt which is properly when a man having made defalt in Court comes afterwards and alleadges good cause why he did it as Imprisonment at the same time or the like New Book of Entries on this word Saunkefin from the Fr. Sang i. Sanguis Fin. Finis Is a word used by Britton ca. 119. for the determination or final end of the lineal Race or descent of a Kindred Saxonlage or Seaxenlage Seaxenlaga lex Saxonum See Merchenlage Scandalum Magnatum Is the special name of a Scandal or wrong done to any high Personage of the Realm as Prelates Dukes Earles Barons or other Nobles as also the Lord Chancellour Treasurer Steward of the House Clerk of the Privy-Seal Justice of either Bench or other great Officers by false newes or Messages whereby Debates and Discords betwixt them and the Commons or any scandal to their persons may arise Anno 2 Rich. 2. ca. 5.
be in every liberty that has view of Frankpledge for the correction and cooling of Scoldes and unquiet Women Kitchin fo 13. See Cucking-stool Item si aliquis qui in libertatem nostram per assensum consensum Comburgensium nostrorum admissus fuerit fecerit aliquod delictum per quod ad penam publicam seu vile Judicium ut ad Collistrigium vel Tumbrellum vel aliquod aliud hujusmodi adjudicatus fuerit pro perjuro reputabitur ipso facto amittet libertatem suam MS. Codex de LL. Statutis Corfuetud Burgi villae Mountgom fo 11. Tun Is a measure of Oyl or Wine containing twelve score and twelve Gallons or four Hogsheads Anno 1 Rich. 3. ca. 12. 2 Hen. 6. ca. 11. and 12 Car. 2. ca. 4. a Tun of Timber is 40 solid feet a Load 50. Tun-greve Sax. Tungeraefa i. Villae praepositus A Reeve or Bailiff qui in villis quae dicimus Maneriis Domini personam sustinet ejusque vice omnia disponat moderatur Spelman Tunnage al. Tonnage tunnagium tonnagium Is a Custom or Impost due for Merchandise brought or carried in Tuns and such like vessels from or to other Nations after a certain rate for every Tun An. 12 Edw. 4. ca. 3. 6 Hen. 8. ca. 14. 1 Ed. 6. ca. 13. 1 Jac. ca. 33. 12 Car. 2. ca. 4. It is sometimes used for a duty due to the Mariners for unloading their Ship arrived in any Havens after the rate of so much a Tun. Tunnage and Poundage began in the 45th of Edward the third Cottoni posthuma fo 172. See 4 Inst fo 32. Turbary turbaria from turba a turf Is a right or interest to dig turves on another mans ground Kitchin fo 94. And Common of Turbary is a liberty which some Tenants have by prescription to dig turves on the Lords Waste Turbaria is sometimes also taken for the ground where turves are digged Turn turnum Is the Sheriffs Court kept twice every year viz. within a Moneth after Easter and Michaclmas Mag. Charta ca. 35. 3 Edw. 3. ca. 15. From this Court are exempt onely Arch-bishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earls Barons all Religious men and women and all such as have Hundreds of their own to be kept Anno 25 Hen. 3. ca. 10. Britton ca. 29. calls it Tour i. ambitus circuitus It is a Court of Record in all things that pertain to it it is the Kings Leet through all the County and the Sheriff is Judge and this Court is incident to his Office See Cromp. Jur. fo 230. and 4 Inst fo 260. Turney or Tournement Fr. Tourney i. Decursorium Signifies a Martial exercise of Knights or Gentlemen fighting on horseback one with another in disport and is thus defined Torneamenta dicuntur nundinae vel feriae in quibus milites ex condicto convenire ad ostentationem virium suarum audaciae temere congredi solent This word is used in the Statute 24 Hen. 8. ca. 13. but the thing it self is now disused Turno vicecomitum Is a Writ that lies for those that are called to the Sheriffs Turn out of their own Hundred Reg. of Writs fo 174. Twaite Signifies a wood grubbed up and turned to Arable Coke on Litt. fo 4. b. Twa nights geste Hospes duarum noctium If he did harm to any his Host was not answerable for it but himself Hoveden parte poster fo 345. b. See Third-nights-awn-hine Twelve men duodecim homines legales otherwise called the Jury or Enquest is a number of twelve persons or upwards to twenty four by whose Oath as to matters of Fact all Trials pass both in Civil and Criminal Causes through all Courts of the Common Law in this Realm In Civil Causes when proof is made of the matter in question the point of the Fact on which they are to give their verdict is deliver'd likewise to them which we call the Issue then they are put in mind of their Oath to do right and are by the Judges summing up the evidence sent out of the Court by themselves to consider upon the Evidence on both sides untill they are agreed which done they return to the Court and deliver their verdict by the Mouth of their Foreman according to which if the matter be not arrested or staid by the discretion of the Judge or the Court the Judgment passeth In Causes Criminal there are two sorts of Enquests one called the Grand Enquest the other the Enquest of life and death The first is so called either because it consists of sixteen at the least or else because all causes Criminal or Penal first pass through them whereas the other Enquest is especially appointed for one or few matters touching life and death Those of the Grand Enquest are called by Bracton 12 Milites because they were wont to be Knights if so many could be had And their Function is to receive all Presentments of any Offence and accordingly to give their general opinion of them by writing either these words billa vera upon the Bill of Presentment which is an Inditement of the Party presented or else Ignoramus which is a doubting of the Fact presented Of this read more in Inditement Assise Jury See the Statute 35 Hen. 8. ca. 6. 37 ejusdem ca. 22. 2 Ed. 6. ca. 32. 5 Eliz. ca. 25. Tymber of skins Is 40 skins Book of Rates fo 18. Tympeny Abbas Monachi Rading Sint quieti de tributis lastagiis stallagiis de Thething-peny Tympeny de summonitionibus de Assisis super assisis c. In Memorand Scacc. de Anno 20 Ed. 3. in t Record de Trin. Rot. 3. I find it elsewhere written Tinpeny Mon. Angl. 1 Par. fo 419. a. Quaere U. VAcation Vacatio Is all the time respectively betwixt the end of every Term and beginning of the next when such times began and ended in our Ancestors dayes See Hovedens Annals Par post fo 343. a. where you shall find that this intermission was called Pax dei Ecclesiae Also the time from the death of a Bishop or other Spiritual person till the Bishoprick or other Dignity be supplyed with another is called Vacation Westm 1. ca. 21. 14 Edw. 3. ca. 4. 5. See Plenarty Uaccarie alias Uaccharie Vaccaria al. Vaccharia and Vacheria Is a House or place to keep Cowes in Fleta lib. 2. ca. 41. Domus sive locus quo vaccae aluntur vel quo negotium quod ad eos attinet perficitur Spelm. A Dairy-house Without warrant no Subject may have a Vaccary within the Forrest Crom. Jur. fo 194. But in the Stat. 37 Hen. 8. ca. 16. Vacchary seems to be a special name of a certain compass of ground within the Forest of Ashdown Uaga See Waga Uagabond Vagabundus One that wanders about and has no certain dwelling an idle Fellow Rogues Vagabonds and sturdy Beggars mentioned in divers Statutes De Vagabundis aliis hominibus mendicantibus qui se