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A47712 The fourth part of the reports of several cases of law argued and adjudged in the several courts at Westminster, in the time of the late Queen Elizabeths reign collected by a learned professor of the law, William Leonard, Esq. ... published by William Hughes of Grayes-Inn, Esq. ; with tables of the names of the cases, and of the matters contained in this book.; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster. Part 4 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1102; ESTC R19612 240,523 272

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which Ayliffe concessit Wray Chief Iustice was absent in the Star-Chamber Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XLV Harvey and Harveys Case Suit for Legacies Prohibition CLare Harvey libelled against Sebastian Harvey the Executor of Sir James Harvey their Father for a legacy bequeathed to him by his Father in his Will. By which he willed that after his death his Goods should be divided and parted betwixt his Children according to the laudable custom of London and averred in his libel that the Goods and Chattels whereof the Testator died possessed amounts to such a sum and that it belonged unto him being one of his children to demand so much Virtute Legationis praedict The Defendant came and prayed a Prohibition and Wray Chief Iustice conceived he ought to have it for here is not any legacy but the Testator setteth forth his meaning that his pleasure is that the custom of London should be observed in the disposition of his Goods and the said Clare is put to his Writ de rationabili parte Bonorum But yet afterwards a special Consultation was granted Pasc 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. XLVI Sandersons Case Leet NOte It was adjudged by the Court that Pound-breach is not inquirable in a Leet for it is not a common Nusans But Rhodes Serjeant said that excessive Toll is inquirable in a Leet Vide Book of Entries 390. XLVII Pasc 37 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Abatement of Writ IN a Quare Impedit by the Queen exception was taken to the Writ because the words were quod permittat ipsam praesentare ad Rectoriam de D. where it ought to be ad Ecclesiam the Court awarded that the Writ should be openly amended in Court by a Clerk of the Chancery Amendment XLVIII Pasc 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Pleadings IN a Writ of Entry for Disseisin the Tenant said that the House in demand is within the City of London and that the said City is an ancient City and that King Henry 3. concessit Civibus Civitatis praedict quod non implacitentur de terris tenementis suis c. extra Muros Civitatis praedict and said that he himself is a Citizen of London and demanded judgment of the Writ and to the Pleading he further said Sed illis rectum teneatur infra Civitatem praedictam secundum Consuetudinem Civitatis praedict Exception was taken to the Plea because the Tenant did not shew before that by their custom they ought to be impleaded And by the Opinion of the whole Court the Tenant ought to have shewed that the Citizens for their lands there ought to be impleaded in the Hustings c. And the general words in the Plea Sed illis rectum reneatur infra Civitatem praedictam secundum consuetudinem Civitatis praedict do not supply the defect aforesaid And afterwards it was awarded that the Tenant plead Ouster Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. XLIX Hunt and Sones Case AN Action upon the Case by W. Hunt against W. Sone Assumpsit 2 Leon. 107. Owen 42. 3 Cro. 118. 1 Roll. 29. 30. ibid. The Plaintiff declared Quod cum idem Hunt was seised in his Demesn as of Fee of certain lands and shewed the same in certain praedict Sone in consideration that the said Hunt permit the said Sone occupare terras praedict ab eodem die 20 Julij 27 Eliz. usque ad secundum diem Novembris which should be in Anno 1589. assumed and promised that he the said William Sone ad festum omnium Sanctorum proxime sequend 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ac ab inde annuatim durante dict termino 20 l. 5 s. ad festa Annunciationis Beatae Mariae ac omnium Sanctorum per aequales portiones solvend eidem Hunt bene fideliter contentare vellet at licet praedict W. Hunt permisit praefat Sone occupare terras praedict a dict 20 die Julij 27 Eliz. Usque ad secundum diem Novemb. 28 Eliz. Licetque etiam post dict 20 diem Julij 27 Eliz. ante praedict diem secund Novemb. An 28 Eliz. dict fest omnium Sanctorum An. 27. Supradict ac fest Annunciationis Beatae Mariae Virginis ac fest omnium Sanctorum 28 Eliz. praeterierunt praedict tamen W. Sone dict 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad praedict fest omnium Sanctorum proxime sequend post permissionem assumptionem praedict ac aliam 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad fest Annunciationis 28 Eliz. ac alia 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad fest omnium Sanctorum An. 28. Eliz. superdict nondum solvit The Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff entred into parcel of the Premises 6 October 28 Eliz. eadem occupare eundem Sone non permisit upon which they were at Issue and it was found for the Plaintiff it was moved in stay of Iudgment that the Plaintiff had no cause of Action before that all the Term was expired for it is an entire Assumpsit and cannot be severed by action and therefore it was said that if I promise to pay you 10 l. viz. at such a Feast 5 l. and at such a Feast other 5 l. there before the last day of payment no Action lieth for the sum of 20 l. is one sum entire But if I promise to pay another at Easter next 10 l. and at Midsummer as much here they are several Assumpsits and upon default of payment of the first sum an Action will lie without excepting the latter payment But at last the Court agreed That Iudgment notwithstanding that exception should be given for the Plaintiff and that the Declaration was good enough as well in respect of the Exception aforesaid as also that the word Licet was effectual enough to set forth the permission L. Hil. 31 and 32 Eliz In the Common Pleas. A. Disseised B. of two Acres of Land and leased one of them to C. at will and the other Acre to D. at will and they entred accordingly B the Disseisee by Lease leased both Acres to E. for years and entred into one of the Acres in the name of both and sealed and delivered the Lease to E. It was holden by the Court to be a good Lease to maintain an Ejectione firmae of both Acres LI. Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 2 Cro. 655 656 plus 2 Roll. 416. Johnson versus Smart cont A. Seised of certain Lands and having two Sons devised part of his Lands to his eldest Son in tail and the other part of his Lands to his younger Son in tail with this clause in the Will that if any of his Sons dyed without Issue that then the whole Land should remain to a stranger in Fee and dyed the Sons entred into the Lands devised to them respectively and the younger Son died without issue and he to whom the Fee was devised entred It was adjudged That this Entry was not lawful and that the eldest Son should have the Land by the implicative devise Mich. 32 Eliz. In the
23 Eliz. is If any Person do any thing to move the People to Sedition the same is Felony but then it must be Sedition against the Queen and of that Opinion was the whole Court. Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLV Ratcliffe and Shirleys Case THe Lady Ratcliffe brought an Action upon the Case against Shirley for these words Words My Lady Ratcliffe is a beggerly Lady and giveth thread-bare Coats she bought Sheep and cosen'd men of their money and she is as very a Thief as he that robbeth by the High-way Vpon Not Guilty the Iury found that the Defendant spake these words She is a worse Thief than he that robbeth by the High-way It was holden that the words found by the Verdict were actionable as well as if the Defendant had called the Plaintiff Thief generally But it seemed to the Court that upon that Verdict the Plaintiff should not have Iudgment for it may be that the Defendant dixit utrumque at several times and so several Causes of Action And it is not like to the Case 3 Ma. 118. where part of the words is found quoad alia verba non dixit and so expresly acquit him of the remnant so it is not here for this Verdict doth not acquit him of the other words and for that Cause Iudgment was stayed Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLVI Herne and Crowes Case IN an Action upon the Case by Herne against Crowe and declared that whereas certain Irish Merchants had imported Furs here into England which were offered to be sold in London which Furs the Defendant desired to buy but because he was a Foreigner he could not buy them without peril of forfeiture and then the Plaintiff was in communication with the Merchants to have bought them that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff promised to the Defendant that when he had bought the said Furs the Defendant should have such a quantity of the said Furs as he pleased upon equal price assumed and promised that he would speak no more with the said Merchants for the buying of the said Furs yet that notwithstanding he proceeded in the said bargain and offered to the said Merchants sixty pound more than any other by reason of which the Plaintiff could not have them for such reasonable price as he might have had them before It was holden by Wray Chief Iustice That the Declaration here was insufficient upon which the Defendant might have well demurred Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXLVII. Bakers Case A Writ of Partition by Baker Heir of Gertrudi Marquess of Exeter who devised all his Lands to Blunt by which the third part descend to the Plaintiff Estrepement and prayed a Writ of Estrepement and it was the Opinion of the Court that the Writ is not to be granted for the Plaintiff may have a more proper remedy upon the Statute Cum duo vel tres and in a Writ of Partition no Land is demanded CCXLVIII Mich. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Conditions A Man was bound in an Obligation that he should release all his right in Black Acre to the Obligor and in the performance of the said Condition he made such a Lease and delivered the same to C. to the use of the Obligor The Opinion of the whose Court was That the Condition was not performed because the Obligor had not the Lease in his own hands to plead but is put to his Writ of Derinue against C. which was not the intent of the Condition Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXLIX Seaman and Brownings Case SEaman brought Debt in an Obligation against Broshnin and others Executors of one Marshall The Condition was That whereas the said Marshall had sold certain Lands to the Plaintiff If the Plaintiff peaceably and quietly enjoyed the said Lands against the said Marshall c and assigned the breach That the said Marshall had entred upon them and cut down five Elms there upon which they were at Issue And it was found that a Servant of the said Marshall had entred and cut them and that in the presence of the said Marshall his Master and by his commandment It was the Opinion of the Court that the Condition was broken and that the Master was the principal Trespasser Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCL Babingtons Case HUmphrey Babington brought a Writ of Disceit and counted that T. S. was seized of Land and held the same of the Manor of Rodely which Manor is ancient Demeasn And that the said T. S. being so seized a Writ of Entre sur Disseisin was brought against him in which T. S. pleaded and lost and Iudgment was given against him Et quod ipse Humphridus extitit Dominus Manerii praedicti and concluded ad exhaeredationis ipsius Humphr●di periculum manifestum Exception was taken to the Count because the words are quod cum ipse existit Dominus Manerii praedicti where he ought to say further Amendment Et tempore Judicii praedicti existebat for if the Recovery was before he purchased the said Manor his Action doth not lye which Rhodes and Anderson concesserunt wherefore day was given to the Plaintiff to amend his Count. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCLI Sir William Pelhams Case THe Case was A. Tenant for life the remainder in tall to B. c. A by Deed indented and inrolled bargained and sold the Messuage so conveyed to W. P. in fee who suffered a common recovery in which A. is vouched and so a common recovery had and executed and this was before the Statute of 14 Eliz. And if the recovery should bind B. and his remainder in tail was the question or if it be a forfeiture Altham argued that here is a forfeiture 1. It is to see if a common recovery suffered by Tenant for life which here is the Bargainee be a forfeiture or no by the common Law 1 Leon. 264. it s not forfeited 2 Leon. 60 65. if no Execution be sued upon the same Recovery 2. If it be executed then if he in the remainder may enter for the forfeiture When the Tenant for life bargains and sells the Messuage although upon it an estate in fee be limited yet nothing passeth from him but what he may lawfully pass and that was the estate for life of the Bargainor for such an estate only he might lawfully pass and here the Vendee is but Tenant for the life of another and when of his own assent he suffers a common recovery and that without right it is a forfeiture By matter in Fait a particular Tenant may commit a forfeiture as well as by matter of Record By matter in Fait he cannot commit a forfeiture if not thereby the reversion be not pulled out of him in the reversion As if a Lessee for 10 years make a Lease for 1000 years it is not a forfeiture for by that the reversion is not touched but if he by matter of Record do
Common Pleas. LII Frice and Fosters Case IN Ejectione firmae the Plaintiff declared upon a Lease made 14 Jan. 30 Eliz. to have from the Feast of Christmas then last before for three years and upon the Evidence the Plaintiff shewed a Lease bearing date the 13 day of January the same year and it was found by Witnesses that the Lease was sealed and delivered upon the Land the 13 day of January Variance Whereupon Puckering and Cowper Serjeants moved on the part of the Defendant that for that variance between the Declaration and the Evidence of the Plaintiff that the Iury might be discharged Evidence good to maintain Issue But Anderson Chief Iustice said that the Evidence was good enough to maintain the Declaration for if the Lease was sealed and delivered the 13 of January it was then a Lease 14 January Quod caeteri Justiciarii concesserunt LIII Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield The Case was that A. seised of an Advowson in Fee Quare Impedit by Executors the Church voided the Bishop collated wrongfully A. dyed Collation it was holden that his Executors might have a Quare Impedit upon that disturbance and that by the equity of the Statute which gave an Action of Trespass to Executors of Goods carried away in the life of the Testator 4 E. 3. cap. 7. and that the Clerk should be removed at the suit of the Executors Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIV. Harvey and Thomas Case THe Case was that the Husband seised of Land in the right of his Wife made a Lease of it for years Fine by the Husband where avoids a Lease ê contra 1 Roll. tit Charge in Marg. 389. Plow Quaer 31. 261. ib. plus and afterwards he and his Wife conveyed the Land to a stranger by Fine the Husband died Wray Chief Iustice was of opinion that the Conusee should hold the Land discharged of the Lease Gawdy contrary In case of a Rent granted or a Recognizance acknowledged by the Husband the Conusee of the Fine shall avoid any of them But in this Case the Conusee meddles with the Land it self and an Estate in the Land is conveyed by the Husband which none but the Wife or her Heirs shall avoid and if the Wife after the death of her Husband accept the Rent upon such a Lease by that the Lease is confirmed Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench LV. Blaby and Estwicks Case IN Assumpsit It was moved in stay of Iudgment Assumpsit that one of the Defendants was dead after verdict but notwithstanding that Allegation Iudgment was given Attornment for the Court cannot take Notice of it judicially nor any of the Parties hath day in Court to plead it and therefore the Court is not to have regard to such Informations Wray It is not honourable for us upon such surmises which cannot be tryed to delay Iudgment and also the Party is not without remedy for he may have a Writ of Error 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVI Hore and Briddleworths Case HOre brought Trespass against Briddlesworth Quare clausum Domum suam fregit the Defendant pleaded and put the Plaintiff to a new Assignment i. e. a House called a Stable a Barn and another House called a Carthouse and Garnier And that was assigned for Error for that Assignment is not warranted by the Declaration Gawdy said it was good enough for Domus in the Declaration contains all things contained in the new Assignment but if the Declaration had been of a Close and the new Assignment of a Barn it had not been good Wray Chief Iustice Domus est nomen collectivum and contains many Buildings as Barns Stables c. And such was the Opinion of the Court. Mich 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVII Mans Case Prohibition MAn was sued before the Commissioners in Ecclesiastical Causes for an Incestuous Marriage viz. for marrying his Wives Sisters Daughter and although it be not expresly within the Levitical degrees yet because more farther degrees are prohibited the Archbishop of Canterbury and other the Commissioners gave Sentence against him Consultation upon which he sued a Prohibition upon the Stat. of 32 H. 8. c. 38. The Prohibition was general where it ought to be special that it be not within the Levitical degrees and therefore a Consultation was granted Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVIII Doylies Case Appeals IN an Appeal de Roberie against Doyly It was agreed by the Iustices that the Party robbed shall have an Appeal of Robbery 20 years after the Robbery committed and shall not be bound to bring it within a year and a day as in the Case of an Appeal of Murder Vide contr 22 Ass 97. vide Stamford 62. Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIX Ruishbrook and Pusanies Case THe Plaintiff brought Trespass for pulling down his Hurdles in his Close The Defendant justified by reason that one Beddingfield was Lord of the Mannor of D. and that the said Beddingfield and all those whose Estate he had in the said Mannor had had a free course for their sheep in the place where c. And that the Tenant of the said Close could not there erect Hurdles without the leave of the Lord of the Mannor and that the said Beddingfield let to the Defendant the said Mannor and because the Plaintiff erected Hurdles without leave c. in the said Close he cast them down as it was lawful for him to do The Plaintiff replyed of his own wrong without cause c. It was holden by the Iustices to be an ill Plea Traverse for the Plaintiff ought to have traversed the Prescription 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. LX. Par Marquess of Northamptons Case PAr Marquess of Northampton took to Wife the Lady Bourchier Heir of the Earl of Essex Leases by a Baron contrary to Act of Parliament void 3 Leon. 71. who levied a Fine of the Lands of the Lady sur Conusans de Droit c. with a Grant and Render to them for Life the remainder to the right Heirs of the body of the said Lady And afterwards by Act of Parliament ●5 H. 8. It was enacted That the said Lady should retain part of her Inheritance and dispose thereof as a Feme sole and that the said Marquess should have the residue and that he might lease the same by himself without the Wife for 21 years or lesser term yielding the ancient Rent being Land which had been usually demised c. The Marquess leased the same for 21 years and afterwards durante termino praedict he let the same Land to another for 21 years to begin after the determination of the former Lease It was moved that the last Lease was void for three Causes 1. Because the Marquess had but for Life and then it cannot be intended that the Statute would enable
taken to it because in the Margent was written Middlesex and in the Indictment they both were named of London and afterwards in the proceedings the words are That Weshbourn and Brown entred in such manner in Com. praedict and that is incertain what County is intended Middlesex or London but the Exception was not allowed for London before is not expressed to be accounted but only implyed Another Exception was because they had not any addition but it was not allowed for it appeared to the Court. And after it was moved upon the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 11 that no Restitution upon such Indictment should be granted if ●he party indeed had had the Occupation or had been in quiet possession for three years next before the day of the Indictment and in the Case at Bar the Master hath been in possession by three years but the Parties indicted being his Servants had been with him but for one year it was thereby holden by the Court that upon the matter Restitution should not be granted for the possession of the Master in this Case takes away all Restitution and that by the Statute Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXIX Canons and Osborns Case A. Seized of a Rent in Fee granted the same by Fine to B. to the use of C. It was moved to whom the Ter-tenant should attorn And by Walmesly Periam and Windham there needs not any Attornment to the Conusee because all the right of the Rent is out of the Conusor Attornment and transferred to Cestuy que use instantly And Walmesly cited this Case to have been lately adjudged A Reversion in Fee upon a Lease for years was granted by Fine to A. to the use of B. B. without Attornment brought an Action of Waste and it was adjudged that the Action did well lye CXXX Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Lease for years is made by Deed Indented rendring Rent and the Lessor covenants that the Lessee paying his Rent shall enjoy the Land demised for the whole term the Lessee did not pay the Rent and afterwards is ejected by a Title peramount By Walmesly and Windham Iustices that the Covenant is conditional and that the Lessee should not have advantage of it if he did not perform the Condition which is created by this word paying Periam Iustice was strongly to the contrary viz. that the word paying did not create a Condition Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXI Thetford and Thetfords Case THe Case was an Action of Debt for Rent reserved upon a Lease for years the Plaintiff declared that Land was given to A. and B. his Wife Leases and the Heirs of their Bodies and that he and his Wife leased for years to the Defendant Baron and Feme and that the Donees were dead and that the Plaintiff as Heir c. for Rent behind c. And upon Non dimiserunt the Iury found that the Husband and Wife dimiserunt by Indenture and that after the Husband died and the Wife entred and within the term died Agreement Disagreement Now upon this matter Anderson Iustice conceived clearly that the Iury have found for the Defendant scil Non dimiserunt for it is now no Lease ab initio because the Plaintiff hath not declared upon a Deed and also the Wife by her disagreement to it and Occupation of the Land after the Death of her Husband had made it to be the Lease of her Husband only Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXII Acton and Pitchers Case IN a Writ of second Deliverance by Acton against Pitcher Leases within 32 H. 8. It was moved if a Lease made by a Prebendary were within the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. because the said Statute speaks of men seized in the right of their Churches and a Prebendary is seized in right of his Prebend and not in right of the Church But it is the Opinion of the whole Court that he was within the Equity of the Statute Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXIII Curtises Case IN a Writ of Error it was holden in the Common Pleas Amendment that if a Writ of Error be brought and delivered to the Chief Iustice de Communi Banco and allowed by him under his hand that afterwards the Record cannot be amended by Prothonotary Attorney or Clerk of the Court although that no Record be entred upon the Roll upon which the Writ of Error is brought Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXIV Scots Case SCot brought a Formedon against A. who made default after default Resceit Anders 133. and now came B. and surmised to the Court that C. was seized of the Land in Demand and gave the same to A. in Tail the remainder to the said B. in Fee and prayed to be received and afterwards the Court upon advice ousted him of the Resceit 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXV Terrets and the Hundred of c. Case IN an Action upon the Statute of Huy and Cry against the Hundred of c. the Defendants pleaded Not Guilty Action upon Statute of Huy and Cry. And in Evidence the Plaintiff to prove that he was robbed offered to the Iury his Oath in verifying his Declaration which Anderson and Periam utterly refused to accept of but Windham Iustice affirmed that such an Oath had been accepted of in the Case of one Harrington Oaths where the Plaintiff could not have other Evidence to prove the Cause in respect of secresie for those who have occasion to travel about their occasions would not acquaint another what monies or other things which they have in their journey and we see that the Law doth admit of the Oath of the Party in his own cause where the Oath shall make an end of the cause as in Debt where the Defendant wageth his Law. Periam That 's an ancient Law but we will not make new Presidents for if such an Oath be accepted of us in this case by the same reason in all causes where is secrecy and no external proof whereupon would follow great inconvenience and although such an Oath hath been accepted of and allowed here yet the same doth not move us and we do not see any reason to multiply such Presidents The Declaration is that the Plaintiff was robbed of 10 l. de Denariis ipsius querentis and upon the Evidence it appeareth that the Plaintiff was Receivor of the Lady Rich and had received the said mony for the use of the said Lady And Exception was taken to the same by Shuttleworth but it was not allowed of for the Plaintiff is accomptable to the Lady Rich for the said mony And it was agreed that if he which was robbed after he had made Huy and Cry doth not further pursue the Felons yet his Action lyeth Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXVI Townsend and Pastors Case Feoffment by Coparceners Cestuy que uses NOte It was holden in the Common Pleas by
all the Iustices in the Case between Townsend and Pastor two Coparceners are in the use of a Manor after the Statute of 1 R. 3. the one of them enters and makes a Feoffment in Fee of the whole Manor that this Feoffment is not only of the moiety of the Manor whereof she might lawfully and by the said Statute make a Feoffment but also of another moiety by disseisin Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXVII Bulwer and Smiths Case BUlwer brought an Action upon the Case against Smith and declared how that H. H. had recovered against the Plaintiff in the Common Pleas 20 l. and before Execution died and that the Defendant knowing that at D. in the County of Norfolk malitiose deceptive machinans to Outlaw the Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment in the name of the said H.H. c. in performance of his said purpose at W. in the County of Middlesex took out a Capias ad satisfaciend in the name of the said H.H. against the now Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment directed to the Sheriff of London and Non est inventus being returned upon that took out an Exigent in the name of the said H.H. which Writ by the procurement of the Defendant was retorned and then the Plaintiff was Outlawed and afterwards the Defendant in the name of the said H. H. took out a Capias utlagatum against the Plaintiff directed to the Sheriff of Norfolk by force of which the Plaintiff was arrested and imprisoned for two months until he had gotten his Charter of Pardon by reason of which Outlawries the Plaintiff had forfeited all his Goods and Chattels and upon the said Declaration the Defendant did demur in Law and the principal cause of the demurrer was because that the Action might have been laid in Middlesex where the wrong began scil the Capias ad satisfaciend the Outlawry for this imagination at D. in the County of Norfolk set forth in the Declaration cannot give to the Plaintiff this Action But if divers conspire in one County for to indite one and they put the same in Execution in another County the Party aggrieved may lay his Action in which of the said two Counties he pleaseth 22 E. 4. 14. for a Conspiracy is more notorious than an imagination imaginatio est unius conspiratio plurimorum And in this Case the Deliverance of the Capias at D. in Norfolk is but accessary and the suing of the Process aforesaid at Westminster is the principal upon the part of the Plaintiff it was said that such an action might be laid in the County where the Plaintiff was wronged and the Plaintiff is not tied to lay his Action in the County where the original matter which was but conveyance to the said wrong was done A imprisoned upon a Capias ad satisfaciend in Middlesex escapes into Surrey the Action upon the escape shall be laid in Surrey Reteiner of a Servant in one County who departs in another County the Master shall lay his Action in which of the said Counties he will 15 E. 4. 18 19. 41 E. 3. 1. A Writ of Disceit was brought in the County of York and the Case was that in a Praecipe quod reddat of Land the Tenant shewed forth a Protection at Westminster the which was allowed for a year and within the year the Tenant stayed in the County of York upon his own occasions the said Writ of Disceit was holden to be well laid for there the wrong began notwithstanding that the Original i. e. the casting of the Protection was in Middlesex for the disceit is that the Tenant contrary to the pretence of the Protection continued at York for the Protection was quia Moraturus And always where the cause of the Action consists of two things whereof the one is matter of Record and the other is matter of Fact there the Action shall be laid in such County where the matter in fact may be more properly tried Vide 11 R. 2. Fitz. Action sur le Case 36 Br. Lieu 84. in the principal Case at Bar the Court was of Opinion that the Action was well brought in the County of Norfolk Another Exception was taken to the Declaration because the Plaintiff hath there set forth whereas his true name is John Bulwer by which name he now sues he was sued and outlawed by the name of John Buller and then the now Plaintiff upon that matter was never sued nor outlawed and then is not grieved by the Defendant but John Buller for here in his Declaration there is not any averment that John Bulwer and John Buller are one and the same and not divers Persons But the Exception was disallowed for the whole Court held that for As much as the Plaintiff hath declared that he by the name of John Buller was sued and Outlawed the same is an averment in Law c. and amounts to so much Another matter was objected because it appeareth in the Declaration that H. H. was dead before this Process was sued and then the Outlawry was erronious and so the Plaintiff is not at any mischief but that he may reverse the Outlawry by Error as in Conspiracy the Defendant pleads that the Indictment upon which the Plaintiff is arraigned is vitious and erroneous and so his life was never in jeopardy But as to that it was said by the Court that the erronious proceedings of the Defendant shall not give advantage to himself but because the Plaintiff was vexed by colour and reason of the Outlawry and put to his Writ of Error which cannot recompence the loss and damage by him sustained by reason of the Outlawry aforesaid it is reason that the Plaintiff have his Action wherefore Wray Chief Iustice ex assensu Sociorum gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff CXXXVIII Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. of Recusancy CErtain Persons were indicted upon the Statute 23 Eliz. for refusing to come to the Church and upon the same were Outlawed and now they came to the Kings Bench ready to make their submission and to conform themselves according to the said Statute and thereupon they prayed to be discharged But the Court would not receive such Submission but advised them to purchase their Pardon for the Outlawry and then to tender their Submission which they did accordingly and at another day came again and shewed to the Court their Pardon whereupon the Clerk of the Court asked them if they would conform themselves according to the said Statute who said they would wherefore they were discharged Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXIX Christian and Adams Case Action for words AN Action upon the Case was brought for speaking these scandalous words of the Plaintiff scil the Plaintiff did conspire the death of the Defendant it was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment that upon the matter the Action did not lye for the bare conspiring of the death of a man
Marchioness had devised all her Lands and had not left any thing to her Heir for which Case the Heir of the Marchioness entred into the third part of the Manor of Cauford of which the Lease upon which the Ejectione firmae was brought was made by the Lord Mountjoy to Insley and into the third part of the residue of the whole land now his meaning was That if the rent was not well passed by the name of the Manor then the same descended to the Heir which was sufficient for him For the Special Verdict found also That the rent was the third part of the value of the whole Land of the Marquess So that thereupon it may be collected That if a man hath three Manors some of them holden in Capite and of equal value and he deviseth two of them and suffereth the third to descend that the Devise is good for every part of the two Manors and the Heir shall not have the third part of each Manor Pasc 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXIII Spring and Lawsons Case ONe recovered in an Ejectione firmae and afterwards the Defendant made a new Lease for years and he who recovered ousted him and he brought an Ejectione firmae and the other pleaded the former Recovery It was holden a good bar by all the Iustices but Windham and Periam and by them the same is no Estoppel for the Conclusion shall be Iudgment if Action and not Iudgment if he shall be answered And although that it be an Action personal and in the nature of a Trespass yet the Iudgment is quod habeat possessionem termini sui during which Term the Iudgment is in force it is not reason that he should be ousted by him against whom he recovered for so Suits should be infinite and by Rhodes an Entry pendent the Writ shall abate it CLXIV Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. AN Action of Covenant was brought against one who had been his Apprentice The Defendant pleaded that he was within age The Plaintiff maintained his Action by the Custom of London where one by Covenant may bind himself within age Exception was taken to it that that was a Departure For 18 R. 2. an Infant brought an Action against his Guardian in Socage who pleaded that the Plaintiff was within age The Plaintiff did maintain his Declaration That by the Custom of such a place an Infant of 18 years might bring accompt against his Guardian in Soccage and it was there holden to be no departure Wray Chief Iustice was of Opinion that it was no departure for he said It should be frivolous to shew the whole matter in his Declaration viz. That he was an Infant and that by the Custom he might make a Covenant which should bind him But Quaere of the Matter and of his Opinion for that many learned Lawyers doubted much of it And vide the Case in 19 R. 2. of the Guardian in Soccage Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLXV Savage and Knights Case ERror was brought upon a Iudgment given in Leicester in Debt Tanfeild assigned Error because in that Suit there was not any Plaint for in all Inferior Courts the Plaint is as the Original at the Common Law and without it no Process can Issue forth and here upon this Record nothing is entred but only that the Defendant Summonitus fuit c. and because the first entry ought to be A. B. Queritur versus C. Clench a Plaint ought to be before any Process issueth and the Summons which is entred here is not a Plaint and for that Cause the Iudgment was reversed It was said That after the Defendant appeared a Plaint was entred But it was answered That that did not help the matter for there ought to be a Plaint out of which Process shall issue as in the Soveraign Courts out of the Original Writs 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVI Grindal Bishop of Yorks Case GRindal Archbishop of York made a Lease for one and twenty years another Lease for years of the same Land being in being not expired by four years and dyed and in time of vacation the Dean and Chapter confirmed it Clench It is a good confirmation A Bishop makes a Lease for years reserving the ancient rent but where it was payable at four Feasts of the year it is now reserved payable once in the year the same is within the Letter of the Statute but not within the intent the same Law if the Rent before was usually reserved to be paid upon the Land now it is reserved to be paid at any far remote place And he said that although his lease was in possession yet not to take effect before the four years of the former Lease are expired cannot be said an Estate within the Statute of 1 Eliz. whereby any Estate may pass before the commencement of it for he to whom it was made had but a right to have the Land and he could not surrender And he held that the second Lessee should pay the rent as well by the Contract as by the Estoppel Periam At the Common Law a Bishop with the Confirmation of the Dean and Chapter might have made a Feoffment Gift in Tail and a Lease for any Term of years and he spake much What shall be said the Possessions of a Bishop And therefore if a Bishop disseiseth another of certain Lands and makes a Lease thereof under the Seal of his Bishoprick it shall be now his Seal and it shall be his election in what capacity he will take and then this Land is to be reputed parcel of the Possession of his Bishoprick Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVII Hoo and Hoes Case JOhn Hoo brought a Writ of Intrusion against Richard Hoo depending which Writ the Demandant prayed Estrepement and had it and declared upon it scil That the Tenant after the Prohibition fecit Vastum Estrepementum in prosternendo c. To which the Tenant pleaded Not Guilty But the Plea was not allowed by the Court for there is no Issue in this Case but he might to plead Quod non fecit vastum c. after the Prohibition 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVIII Clinton and Bridges Case DEbt The Condition was for performance of an Award which was to pay 10 l. to the Plaintiff and to do divers other things The Defendant pleaded Quod perimplevit Arbitrium and shewed how the Plaintiff assigned for a Breach that the Defendant had not paid the 10 l. The Defendant rejoyned that he rendred it to the Plaintiff and he refused it It was the Opinion of Dyer that the same is a Departure for in the Bar the Defendant pleads that he hath performed the Award and shews how and now in the Rejoynder a Tender and Refusal which is not a performance of the Award although it is not any Breach of it 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CLXIX The Bishop of L's Case Tenures THe Case of the Bishop of
of Debt amounting to the sum of 80 l. Solubiles eidem querenti to be received by the Defendant at Roan in Normandy to his own use the Defendant promised to pay to the Plaintiff 60 l. and upon this matter Iudgment was given and now a Writ of Error was brought and assigned for Error because it is not shewed in the Declaration that the Bills were sealed or that they were made to the Plaintiff and here is not any consideration for the Defendant hath not any remedy to compel the Parties to pay the said debts if they refuse Godfrey If the mony be not paid at Roan to the Defendant he shall have an Action upon the Case for this is an Assumpsit in Law which Wray concessit for it is a mutual promise and agreement And it was argued to the contrary that here is not any sufficient consideration for it doth not appear that the Defendant hath any remedy for to recover the mony And 13 Eliz. it was holden that where the Plaintiff declared in an Action upon the Case that in consideration that he had delivered a Bill of Debt to the Defendant and hath made a Letter of Attorney upon it c. the Defendant promised to pay to the Plaintiff 20 l. and because that the Plaintiff notwithstanding that might release the debt or revoke the Letter of Attorney and so defeat the Defendant of the whole profit c. that the Action upon the matter did not lye Also for another cause the consideration is not sufficient for it is illegal because maintenance but if it was upon the consideration precedent it had been good enough As if J be indebted to A. and B. is indebted to me J. may assign to A. the debt which B. oweth me Golding Although the consideration be but of small value yet it is good enough And if A. in consideration B will assure to him the Manor of D. promise to pay to B. 100 l. although the Party hath not any interest or title to it yet it is good and also though the consideration be Executory yet it is valuable for if the mony be not paid at Roan the Defendant shall have an Action upon the Case against the Plaintiff It was also objected that upon the Declaration it doth not appear that the Defend if the two Bills be not paid may have an Action upon the Case against the Plaintiff for there is not any express Assumpsit on the Plaintiffs part that the monies due by the Bills to the Plaintiff shall be paid to the Defendant for if it had been so then it had been good for then there had been a reciprocal promise which is not here nor can be collected by any words in the Declaration Cook It doth not appear upon the Declaration by whom nor to whom the mony due by the two Bills shall be paid for it may be that they are due to the Defendant and then the delivery of the two Bills is not any consideration Quod Clench Gawdy concesserunt The Case was adjourned CCIV. Temps Roign Eliz. THe Case was A. enfeoffed B upon Condition that if he pay ten pound to the Feoffee his Executors and Assigns within three years next ensuing that then c. The Feoffee hath Issue three Sons whom he makes his Executors and dyeth before the day of payment The Ordinary commits Letters of Administration to J. S. during the minority of the Executors It was the Opinion of Dyer that it was the surest way for A. to pay the monies to the Executors no withstanding the administration committed to another for the Administrator in such Case is but a Bailiff or Receiver to the Executors and shall be accountable to them which Harper concessit And Manwood said That if in that Case the monies be paid to one of the Executors it is sufficient and the monies to be paid upon that conditional Feoffment are as a sum in gross and not in the nature of a Debt quod caeteri Justiciarii concesserunt CCV Temps Roign Eliz. A Lease is made of certain Lands for years Proviso that the Lessee shall not put his Cattel upon the Land from Michaelmass to St. Andrews Tide the Question was If this Proviso and Restraint shall reach for the whole Term or but to the first year Dyer Conditions are stricti juris and ought not to have liberal constructions therefore he conceived that the condition should be restrained to the first year and should not further extend Manwood If I be bound that I will not go to London between Easter and Michaelmas it shall not extend only to the first year after the date of the Obligation but for my whole life Hil. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCVI. Doughty and Prideaux Case ACtion upon the Case by Doughty against Prideaux upon these words Thou art a wicked and perjured Fellow 3 Leon. 269. and art forsworn in the Court of Star-Chamber as it appeareth by an Exemplification here under the Seal of that Court The Defendant justified by reason of a Bill exhibited in the said Court by one Brooks against the now Plaintiff for conspiring with another to endite the said Brook of certain Felonies and the Defendant now Plaintiff in his answer to his said Bill denied upon Oath the said Conspiracy and Sentence was given in the said Court against the now Plaintiff ubi revera such Conspiracy was The Plaintiff by Replication said That the said Brook was arraigned and endicted upon the said Indictment and prayed his Clergy whereupon it appeared that the said Brook was not legitimo modo acquiet ' and the same can be no Conspiracy in the now Plaintiff to prove the said Brook to be indicted And by Walmesley and Periam the Replication is not good for it may be that Brook was acquitted and yet that the Plaintiff conspired upon which a Writ of Conspiracy perhaps will not lye but an Action upon the Case without doubt for the Replication doth not prove that the Plaintiff did not conspire but that the Plaintiff was not punishable for such Conspiracy CCVII. Pasc 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Abbot made a Lease to three men for eighty years and in the end of the said Lease there was a clause Proviso That if they dyed within the said Term that then the Lessor might enter The Possessions of the Abby came to the King who granted the Reversion to J. S. who made a new Lease to J. D. for twenty and one years to begin after the Expiration Determination or Surrender of the former Lease The three Lessees dyed within the term If J. D. might enter before J. S. had entred was the Question It was the Opinion of the Iustices that he could not for it is in the Election of J. S. if he will take advantage of the Condition and defeat the Lease but that ought to be by Entry and none can make such Entry but the Lessor himself or by his express direction Trin. 31 Eliz. In
the Office. Vide Stanford Prerogat 54 55. and Vide 20 E. 4. 11. A. seized of a Mannor with an Advowson appendant is attainted of Treason the Church void the King without any Office shall have the presentment But admitting that it is not in the King without Office yet the Pardon of 23 Eliz. doth not extend to it For the words of the Pardon are Treasons Felonies Offences Contempts Trespasses Entries Wrongs Deceits Misdemeanors Forfeitures Penalties and Sums of Moneys and if by any of these words the matter be helped is to be considered and if any thing shall help it it is the word Forfeiture But I conceive that the same doth not extend to this matter for although it be an ample word yet it shall be construed to extend beyond the words accompanied with it which concern only personal things as Contempts Wrongs Trespasses as the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 10. which is penned by general words as Colledges Deans and Chapters Parsons Vicars and others having Spiritual Promotions that Statute doth not extend by construction to Bishops and they have Spiritual Promotion yet the Statute shall be construed to extend to the Parties named and other Inferiour Orders and Degrees and shall not be extended higher So in the Commission of the Peace ad diversas Felonias alia Malafacta c. those general words do not extend to Treason c. Vide for the Residue of this Case Venable and Harris's Case which was the same Case and is Reported in Leonard 2 Part fol. 122. Placito 169. Pasc 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXXIX Downhall and Catesoy's Case IN a Formedon by Downhall against Catesby 3 Leon. 267. the Parties were at Issue and it was tryed by Nisi prius It was moved in Bank because that some of the Iury did eat and drink before they gave their Verdict that the Court would not receive the Postea Curia that we cannot do for we not know whether your Information be true or not and this matter ought to be examined by the Iustices of Assize or Nisi prius before whom the Trial was and they are to certifie thereof and then we shall have good cause to stay the Entry of the Postea In that Case it was said If any of the Iurors eat and drink before their Verdict at their own Costs it doth not make the Verdict void but if at the Costs of the Plaintiff or Defendant it is otherwise CCXXX Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Sheriff took an Obligation of a Prisoner bailable upon condition that he should personally appear in the Kings Bench c. It was holden a good Condition not against the Statute of 23 H. 6. So if the Condition had been that he should appear for to answer contrary that he shall appear and answer for in the principal Case the word personally is not of substance for although he appears by Attorney yet the Condition is well performed and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Anderson reclamante Vide 27 Eliz. B. R. Sedford and Cutts Case 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXXXI Haselwoods Case THe Case of Haselwood A seized of Land is indebted to the King by Obligation and enfeoffed B. of his Land And the Case of Fleetwood 15 Eliz. was vouched where it was holden That in purchase the debtor of the King was lyable But by Pigot who was of Counsel with Haselwood the Obligation in this Case was made before the Statute of 33 H. 8. or otherwise he should be charged 32 Eliz. CCXXXII Sir William Pelhams Case SIr William Pelham was Surveyor of the Ordinances and delivered of the Kings money to Painter Clerk of the Ordnance It was holden That for that money the Queen might have Account against Painter See this Case before Sect. 81. Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXIV. Ognell and Vnderhills Case IN Replevin the Case was as appeared upon the pleading That Rob. Bouchier was seized of a certain Farm called Cruchefield Grange and leased the same to Sir William Raynsford for thirty years who dyed thereof possessed by reason of which the Interest thereof came to Raynsford as Executor of the said Sir William Raynsford who assigned the said Farm except a parcel of it called Hobbes to Sir Henry Bear for parcel of the term and afterwards assigned the said parcel called Hobbes for part of the term to Frekington and others and afterwards granted the residue of the said term not expired to the said Bear and Frekington and afterwards the said Rob. Bouchier granted a Rent-charge of 40 l. per annum percipiendum de omnibus terris renementis quibuscunque vocat the Grange of Cruchefield in the Parish of Stoneleigh in the County of Warwick nuper in tenura occupatione William Raynsford milit nunc in tenura occupatione Hen. Bear. Bouchier granted the reversion of Hobbes to Lewknor in Fee to whom Scarre releaseth all his right estate and demand in the said Land called Hobbes the Lease expired the rent behind Lewknor leased at will to R. the first Question was If the said Rent-charge shall be said issuing out of the said Lands called Hobbes for if c. then by that Release the rent is gone But the whole Court was clear of Opinion That the rent was not issuing out of Hobbes but out of the Lands then in the possession of Bear and not out of the Lands in the possession of Frekington Although it was objected by Walmesley Serjeant That the words in the Grant of the rent in tenura occupatione Bear shall be construed in the disjuncive quasi sive and then the Close called Hobbes although it was not in the Occupation yet it was in tenura of Bear. The Matter was at another day argued by Fenner Serjeant for the Plaintiff and he much relyed upon the word quibuscunque in the Grant of the Rent de omnibus terris quibuscunque commonly called Cruchefield Grange As if I grant to you all my Trees my Apple-trees shall not pass but if the Grant was omnes arbores meas quascunque they pass and that by the Emphasis of this word Quibuscunque So if I grant you Common for your Cattel in such a place none shall have Common but those which are Commonable shall have Common there contrary where the Grant is pro averiis quibuscunque And it was adjudged in the Chancery in the Case of the Bishop of Ely That where the said Bishop leased all the Demeasns of a Manor for years that by the said Lease the Park within the said Manor should not pass But perhaps if such a Lease had been Omnes singulas terras dominicales quascunque the Park would have passed And afterwards the Counsel of the Plaintiff seeing that the Court was of Opinion with the Defendant took Exception to the pleading The Defendant made Conusans ut Ballivus Administratoris of the Grantee of the Rent and doth not shew the Letters of Administration And as to
by a Writ of Right So if the Vouchee had entred and lost c. As to that Case we ought to consider That every Book reported in our Law is not Law But let us observe of what Authority the Case is truly it is the conceit of the Reporter himself for he puts the Case and resolves it but there is no Iudge or Serjeant named in the Case c. The other Case is 5 E. 4. 2. Note by Hendon clearly If my Tenant for life voucheth a stranger who entreth into the Warranty generally and doth not know how to bar the Demandant the Tenant shall recover in value and the reversion of him who hath in value shall be to me in lieu of my former reversion as release to Tenant for life shall enure to him in the reversion But that is but the Opinion of one Serjeant c. But I answer to these Books If the Demandant in such recovery have a good title so as the Tenant or the Voucher as Hendon saith know not how to bar the Demandant there such a Voucher of a Stranger is not a Forfeiture nor such recovery suffered thereupon for against his will and volens nolens he suffered it But if the Tenant had good matter to bar the Demandant and no good cause of Voucher that the vouching of a stranger or suffering of a recovery is a Forfeiture of his Estate And here in our Case the Defendant had not any title The Tenant or Vouchee had not any Warranty or cause of Voucher But the Tenant might have barred the Demandant if he pleased And he said That the Voucher only doth not make the Forfeiture but much rather the Recovery for when Iudgment is given and Execution had then is the Fee plucked out of him in the reversion 6 R. 2. If Tenant for life claimeth a Fee it is a Forfeiture but here Pelham hath done more for he hath gained Fee by the Iudgment therefore à Fortiori it shall be a Forfeiture But let us a little see what medlings or attempts by the particular Tenant are causes of a Forfeiture and what not 5 Ass 3. Where A. brings an Entry against Tenant for life by collusion to oust B. of his reversion supposing that the Tenant for life held of his Lease The Tenant confesseth the Action upon which Iudgment is given B enters and his entry adjudged lawful for that recovery is adjudged in Law but an Alienation to the disinherisin of him in the reversion and here it appears That such recovery by Covin is but an Alienation and without any strength of a recovery And he cited many other Cases cited before by Altham 14 E 3. Resceit 135. Where Tenant for life pleads in chief or prays in aid of a stranger where he might bar the Demandant and will not it is a Forfeiture And also 22 E. 3. 2. 27 E. 3. where Tenant for life in a Quid juris clamat Attorns unto the Conusee upon a Fine levyed by him who hath not any thing in the Land the same is a Forfeiture and yet that Attornment doth not divert the Reversion out of the Lessor 50 E. 3.7 8. Land was given by Fine in tail the remainder over to a stranger in Fee the Donee took a Wife and dyed without Issue the Wife accepted Dower assigned by a stranger he in the Remainder brought a Scire facias against the Wife that she is Tenant in Dower of the Assignment of a stranger and pleaded to the Title the Demandant recovered she hath lost her Dower for she hath not pleaded dutifully as she ought being a particular Tenant Temps H. 4. Tenant for life loseth his Land in a Recovery against him against his will and thereupon brings Quod ei deforceat and declares upon an Estate tail and recovers the same is a Forfeiture because he hath challenged a higher Estate c. 5 H. 7. Tenant for life joyns the Mise upon the meer Right 2 H. 6. Lessee for years being ousted brings an Assise and recovers 1 H. 7. Accepts a Fine of a stranger sur Conusans c. come ceo que il ad de son done All these are Forfeitures In our principal Case here the Tenant who suffered the Recovery did not plead at all to defend the Right but where he might have barred the Demandant he gave strength to his pretended Title and made it a perfect Title and by suffering the Recovery and Iudgment to pass had taken away the Reversion out of the Lessor to whom he owed Fealty and therefore it is a Forfeiture And without doubt it is apparent to the Court that the Demandant in this Recovery hath not any Title for the Recoverers in such Cases are but Assignees and Purchasors which appeareth by the Statute of 7 H. 8. cap. 4. which gives Distress and Avowry to Recoverers c. As to the inventing of Recoveries it was a necessary Device for it was to take away Estate tails which were the causes of grand Mischiefs and Inconveniencies in this Realm and it was great reason for Tenant in tail might by the Common Law alien his Land post prolem suscitat and then he had an Inheritance and might commit Waste But he was so restrained by the Statute of Westm 2. all the Realm and the Subjects of it were inveigled thereby Ioyntures of Wives Leases of Farmers Mortgages to Creditors Statutes and other Assurances defeated by their deaths which was against the Common Law and all Conscience These matters tending to the knowledge of the Iustices and the Mischiefs thereupon ensuing very frequent and that Tenant in tail was become a perillous Fellow and there was no safe dealing with him Then they taking into consideration that several Warranties and Assets and collateral Warranty without Assets for that in it self implyed Assets did bar him Icil. the Entail upon that consideration they grounded the practice and usage of common Recoveries so that by that means Tenant in tail has potestatem alienandi as he had at the Common Law because his authority was restored to him and injury done to no man But as to Tenant for life he never had potestatem alienandi And as to that which hath been said That the Recovery shall stand in force till after the death of the Tenant for life and in our Case here Tenant in tail is living certainly if the Law should be such great mischief would follow for then greater Ioyntresses the Widows of great Persons having allowed unto them great and sumptuous Houses and Lands furnished with Timber of great value might suffer such Recoveries and so having plucked the Fee out of the Heirs might commit Waste and the same should be dispunishable c. which should be an intolerable Mischief And so he concluded that this suffering of a Recovery was a Forfeiture and Iudgment was given accordingly CCLII Grendon and Albanies Case JOhn Grendon brought Trespass for breaking of his Close against Tho Albany And upon the pleading the Case
existen ' ut praefatur ad Warrantiam obligetur aut obligari debeat aut si idem Gilbertus aliquid pro nobis habeat aut dicere scivit quare Breve nostrum de Procedendo praefatae Eliz. in ea parte minime concederetur Qui quidem Gilbertus adtunc ibidem dixit quod praefat ' Tho. Norden non informavit praedict Gilbertum de aliquo per quod praedict Tristriamus in custodia nostra existen ' ullo modo obligetur ad warrantizand ' eidem nihil dixit aut dicere scivit potuit quia praedict Breve de Procedendo eidem Eliz. in ea parte concederetur Nos inde nolentes eidem Eliz. justiciam ulterius differre in hac parte Vobis Mandamus quod si coram vobis in placito praedict taliter sit processum allegat ' tunc in placito illo in redditione Judicii in eodem placito cum ea celeritate quam de jure secundum Legem Consuetudinem hujus Regni nostri Anglioe poteritis procedatis partibus praedict plenam celerem c. dicta allegatione non obstante Teste me ipsa c. Et super hoc eadem Eliz. petit Judicium Seisinam suam versus praedict Thomam Norden de tertia parte Tenementorum praedict cum pertinentiis Super quo visis c. Consideratum est c. Quod praedict Elizabetha recuperet seisinam suam versus praefatum Thomam Norden de tertia parte Tenementor ' praedictor ' Et quod idem Thomas expectet si praedict ' Tristriamus Tenementa praedict unde c. ei warrantizari debeat pro recompensatione valentiae tertiae partis praedict ' versus eundem Tristriamum ratione Warrant ' illius habend ' durant ' minore aetate sua Et donec manus dict' Dominae Reginae à possessione terrae ipsius Tristriami amoveantur Virtute Brevis istius mihi direct ' ultimo die c. habere feci infranominat ' Eliz. plenariam seisinam de tertia parte Messuagii viz. de una Aula parcell ' Messuagij praedict ac de una Camera sive Conclave in Messuagio praedict existent ' necnon de uno Solario ac de una parcell ' ambulatorij vocat ' a Gallery alia parcell ' dict' Messuagii necnon de tertia parte unius Molendini viz. de integro Molendino praedict ' per quemlibet tertium mensem quolibet anno durante vita c. occupand ' gaudend ' c. CCCXXIV Hil. 25 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Traverse IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared upon certain Corn which came to the hands of the Defendant and that he converted it and supposed the coming to be to his hands in London The Defendant said That he was seized of certain Lands in R. in Berks and that the Plaintiff did thereof him disseise and sowed the Lands and before severance he himself re-entred and took away the Corn as was lawful for him to do absque hoc that any Corn came to his hands in London and by the Opinion of the whole Court the Traverse was holden to be good Hil. 25 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCXXV Wingate and Sands Case EJectione firmae by Wingate against Sands It was moved upon Evidence That a Fine was levied and in one Term three Proclamations were made and before that the fourth Proclamation was made the Term was adjourned so as the fourth Proclamation could not be made the said Term It was agreed by the whole Court That by that adjournment the fourth Proclamation was not executed but should be supplyed the next Term in which the fifth Proclamation was to be made Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Star-Chamber CCCXXVI The Lord Cromwell and Townsends Case HEn Lord Cromwell Exhibited a Bill in the Star-Chamber against Roger Townsend Esq for that the said Townsend in an Action between James Tavernor Plaintiff and Ja. Cromwell Firmor of the said Lord Cromwell Defendant in Trespass in the favour or unlawful maintenance of the said Tavernor did procure a partial Iury to be retorned And upon the hearing of the Cause the matter given in Evidence was That the said Tavernor was a Copyholder of the said Lord Cromwell and that the said Lord pretending that the said Tavernor had forfeited Copyhold caused the said Ja. Cromwell to make an Entry in the right of the said Lord upon the said Tavernor upon which Entry Tavernor brought an Action of Trespass against the said Ja. Cromwell in which Action the parties were at Issue upon the Forfeiture and before any Venire Facias issued Tavernor hearing that one Steward who was Bayliff of the Liberty under the Earl of Arundel and who ought to have made the Pannel c. was purposed to have made the said Pannel not duly viz to have retorned in the same great Gentlemen of the Country who were Lords of Manors in favour of the said Lord Cromwell That he went to the said Roger Townsend who was then one of the principal Servants and Agents of the said Earl and shewed unto him That if those great Persons and Lords of Manors be returned for the trial of the said Issue peradventure they would not so easily appear for the Expedition of the said Parties as Gentlemen of an Vnder-Condition and also many of them being Lords of Manors and having customary Tenants and therefore not indifferent to try that Issue and prayed his Order to the said Steward for the making of an indifferent Pannel Vpon which said Conference with the said Steward for the making of an indifferent Pannel and shewing unto him that in doing and making of the same there was not convenient nor any equal course to retorn Knights Esquires or Lords but rather such sufficient Persons for the greater Expedition of Iustice and Indifference of Tryal And afterwards the said Tavernor exhibited a Petition shewing all the special matter and prayed him to give order for the making of an indifferent Pannel for the trial of that Cause which Petition was delivered to the Earl by the said Townsend in the name of the said Tavernor upon which the said Earl referred the said Matter and the ordering of the same to three of his chiefest Agents and Counsellors viz. Dicksey Townsend and Chrell and delivered to them the Book of the Freeholdry within the said Liberty who according to their Commission made a Pannel which was retorned and the Iury passed with the said James Cromwell in the right of the said Lord And if that intermedling of Townsend with the Matter ut supra c. especially his conference with the Bayliff be maintenance or not was the Question And by Anderson and Wray it was said for Law That because the said Townsend was in a manner a Servant to the said Earl who had the retorn of the Writs and one of his principal Counsellors and Agents and hearing ex insinuatione of the said Tavernor the misdemeanour of the
But all the Court held the contrary and that the Copy should bind the Feoffee and the ceremony of admittance was not necessary For otherwise every Copyholder in England might be defeated by the sole act of the Lord viz. his Feoffment But the Lord by his own act which shall be accounted his folly hath lost his advantages viz. Fines Heriots and such other Casualties Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXV Boxe and Mounslowes Case THomas Boxe brought an Action upon the Case against John Mounslowe That the Defendant slandred him in saying That the said Thomas Boxe is a perjured Knave and that he would prove the said Thomas Boxe had forsworn himself in the Exchequer c. and supposed the said words to be spoken in London 4 Feb. 28 Eliz. Et praedict ' Johannes Mounslowe per Johannem Lutrich Attornatum suum venit defendit vim injuriam quando c. Et dicit quod praedict ' Tho. Boxe actionem suam versus eum habere non debet quia dicit quod praedict ' Thomas Boxe being one of the Collectors of the Subsidies before the speaking of the said words viz. 27 28 Eliz. in Curia Scaccarij apud Westm ' did Exhibt a Bill against the said John Mounslowe containing That the said John being assessed in ten pounds in Goods the said Thomas Boxe came to him and demanded of him sixteen shillings eight pence which the said John Mounslowe did refuse to pay and that demand and refusal was supposed to be in London in Breadstreet Et pro verificatione praemisiorum ad●unc ibid ' Sacramentum Corporale per Barones praefat ' Thomae Boxe praestitit The said Thomax Boxe swore the said Bill in substance was true ubi revera the said John Mounflowe did not refuse per quod the said John Mounslowe postea viz. praedict tempore quo c. dixit de praefat ' Thoma Boxe praedict verba c. p●out ei bene Leuit The Plaintiff replyed that the Defendant spake the words de injuria sua propria absque causa per praefat Johannem Mounslowe superius allegata Et hoc petit quod inquiratur per Curiam praedict defendens similiter And a Ven●re Facias was awarded to the Sheriffs of London and it was found for the Plaintiff and damages 400 l. And now it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that there was no good Trial nor the Issue well joyned for the Issue doth consist upon 2 points triable in several Counties viz the Oath which was in the Exchequer and that ough to have been tryed in Middlesex and the matter which he affirmed by the Oath viz the demand and the refusal to pay the subsidy and that was alledged to be in London and is there to be tryed and the Issue viz. de 〈…〉 propria goeth to both for the ubi revera will not amend the Case as Penam Iustice said and both are material For the Defendant ought to prove that the Plaintiff made such Oath and also that the substance and matter of the Oath was not true for otherwise the Plaintiff cannot be proved perjured And therefore the Counties here if they might should have joyned in the Tryal And the Opinion of the Court was against the Plaintiff For Anderson and Wincham said That if this Issue could have been tryed by any one of the Counties without the other it should most properly and naturally have been tried in Middlesex where the Oath was made for the Perjury if any were was in the Exchequer But they said The Issue here was ill joyned because it did arise upon two points triable in several Counties which could not joyn whereas the Plaintiff might have taken Issue upon one of them well enough for each of them did go to the whole and if any of them were found for the Plaintiff that he had sufficient cause to recover Gawdy moved that it should be helped by the Statute of Ieofails which speaks of mis-joyning of Issues Anderson The Issue here is not mis-joyned For if the Counties could joyn the Issue were good but because that the Counties cannot joyn it cannot be well tryed But the Issue it self is well enough Windham and Rhodes were of the same Opinion but Periam doubted it Anderson said That if an Issue tryable in one Court be tryed in another and Iudgment given upon it it is Error And afterwards Lutrich the Attorney said That it was awarded that they should re-plead Nota quod mirum For first the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 30. speaks of mis-joyning of Process and not mis-joyning of Issues and admit that this Case is not within any of those Clauses each of them being considered by it self yet I conceive it is contained within the substance and effect of them being considered together Also I conceive it is within the meaning of both Statutes viz. 32 H. 8. cap. 30. 18 Eliz. cap. 14. for I conceive the meaning of both Statutes was to waste delays circuits of Actions and Molestations and that the party might have his Iudgment notwithstanding any defect if it were so that notwithstanding that defect sufficient title and cause did appear to the Court. And here the Plaintiff hath sufficient cause to recover if any of the points of the Issue be found for him For if it be found that the matter and substance of the Oath be found true which might be tryed well enough by those in London the Plaintiff had cause to recover Wherefore I conceive that the Verdict in London is good enough and effectual And note that Rhodes said that he was of Counsel in such a case in the Kings Bench betwixt Nevil and Dent. CCCLXVI Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 3 Leon. 103. THe Case was A. granted B. a Rent-charge out of his Lands to commence when J. S. dyes without Issue of his Body J. S. dyes having Issue and the Issue dyeth without Issue Dyer said That the Grant shall not take effect for J. S. at the time of his death had Issue and therefore the Grant shall not then commence and if he dyeth then not at all by Manwood And Dyer and Manwood said If the words had been to begin when J. S. is dead without Issue of his Body then such a Grant should take effect when the Issue of J.S. dyes without Issue c. And they said That if the Donee in tail hath Issue which dyeth without Issue the Formedon in Reverter shall suppose that the Donee himself dyed with Issue for there is an Interest And there is a difference betwixt an Interest and a Limitation For if I give Lands to A and B. for the term of their lives if either of them dyeth the Survivor shall hold the whole But if I give Lands to A. for the lives of B. and C. now if B. or C. dyeth the whole Estate is determined because it is but a Limitation and B. and C. have not any Interest CCCLXVII Temps Roign
20 Of omnia bona by an Executor what passeth 22 Of a Reversion by a Bishop 23 Of the Office of a Sheriff 33 Habeas Corpus WHere the cause of Commitment must be retorned upon it Where not 21 Heirs The second Son shall inherit the Land purchased by his eldest Brother notwithstanding the Attainder of the Father 5 Jeofails WHere upon a Jeofail the Court awarded a Repleader 19 Indictment Quare Clausum A. B. fregit held good notwithstanding A. had but a Lease at will of the Land. 6 De uno Equo for a Gelding not good But where Trespass is brought de Equo ellato and the Jury find a Gelding c. it is otherwise ibid. Upon Stat. 13 Eliz. c. 8. for being a Broker in an usurious Contract for which he incurred a Premunire 32 Upon Stat. 5 E. 6. against P. for drawing his Dagger in the Church against J. S. holden void for that it is not said he drew it with intent to strike the party 49 Upon Stat. 8 H. 6. two Exceptions taken to it but disallowed ibid. For stopping quandam viam valde necessariam quashed for want of the word Regiam and for that the party indicted had not any addition therein 121 Infant Makes a Lease for years and at his full age says to the Lessee God give you joy of it the Lease is thereby affirmed 4 If an Infant being in Execution sues a Writ of Error and is bailed the Recognisance shall be by his Bail only that he shall appear and if Judgment be affirmed that they pay the mony and not render his Body to Prison 6 Inmates Who shall be accounted Inmates upon the Stat. of 31 Eliz. 10 Interest Difference between an Interest and a Limitation 33 Judgment Shall not be stayed upon Allegation that one of the Defendants was dead after Verdict for the Court cannot take notice of it judicially nor any of the parties have day in Court to plead it besides the party is not without remedy for he may have a Writ of Error 15 If the Court may reverse their own Judgment Quaere 60 Reversed for Error in omitting the Costs the Jury gave 61 Jurors Where bound by confession of the parties where not 56 A Juror before the Retorn of the Pannel became a Minister of the Church and therefore prayed to be discharged according to the priviledge of those of the Ministry but it was not granted because he was a Lay man at the time of the Pannel made 190 Justice of Peace One cannot be Justice of Peace by Prescription 149 Lease OF a Manor c. with all the profits of a Wood except 40 Trees to the Lessor to take at his pleasure the Wood is not comprised within the Lease but the Lessee shall only have the profits as Pawnage Herbage c. 9 If a man makes a Lease of a Wood ad faciendum maximum proficuum meliori modo quo poterit the Lessee cannot thereby cut the Trees nor do waste 9 Made by a Corporation void for Misnosmer 11 Good to maintain an Ejectione firmae 14 Leases by a Baron contrary to Act of Parliament void 17 By Tenant at will if a disseisin 35 Leases made by Prebendaries within the Equity of the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 28. 51 Leet Pound breach is not inquirable there 12 But excessive Toll is ibid. Nobleman SHall be bound with Bayl in a Recognizance to render his Body 6 By 13 E. 1. if he hath not Goods or Lands his Body shall be taken in Execution ibid. Obligation Forfeited 18 Outlary How avoided by Plea in person 22 186 Payment OF Rent before the day by the Obligee doth not discharge him 4 Of a Debt generally by a Surety Executor to the Principal if it shall be as Executor or as Obligor Quaere ibid. Pleadings In a special Justification in Trover the place of Conversion may be traversed but where a Justification is general the County is not traversable at this day 4 It is no good Plea for the Tenant in a Writ of Entry sur disseisin to say that the House in demand is within the City of London whereof he is a Citizen and that King H. 3. concessit civibus c. quod non implacitentur c. extra muros Civitatis praed sed illis rectum teneatur infra Civitatem praed secundum cons Civit. praed For he ought to have shewed That the Citizens for their Lands there ought to be impleaded in the Hustings 13 In Trespass for pulling Hurdles c. the Defendant justified by Prescription to have a free course for Sheep in the place where c. and because the Plaintiff erected Hurdles without leave of the Lord of the Manor the Defendant cast them down prout c. the Plaintiff replyed of his own wrong without cause and held naught for he should have traversed the Prescription 17 Traverse of the place in Trover where good 22 Special Plea to an Assumpsit not good and why 31 Posse Comitatus It differs from Posse Manerij 87 Possessio Fratris Where it shall not be of Copyhold Lands 38 Previledge Denied to the Treasurer of the Records of the Kings Bench and why 81 Prohibition If the Parson Libels in the Spiritual Court against the owner of Lands for Tythes which he severed but a Stranger took and carried away no Prohibition shall issue for that he might plead the same matter in bar in the Spiritual Court. 7 To the Spiritual Court to stay a Suit commenced there for Tythes upon a Prescription shewed in the Kings Bench. 25 Granted to stay a Suit in the Court Christian commenced against an Executor by one for a Legacy bequeathed to him by his Father who willed his Goods should be parted amongst his Children according to the Custom of London 12 Upon claim of Property 150 Quare Impedit May be brought by Executors to remove a Clerk collated wrongfully in the life time of the Testator 15 Recognizance IF a Recognizor of a Recognizance acknowledged before a Master in Chancery dye before it be inrolled it may be inrolled at the Petition of his Executors 8 Common Recovery Feme not party to the Writ of Covenant not bound by Recovery 26 Remainder Where void 21 Resceit One prayed to be received in a Formedon and was ousted of it by the Court. 51 Reservation Of Rents upon a joint Lease 27 Difference between a Reservation and a Contract 29 Retorn Of the Sheriff where void 21 Sale. OF a Bayliwick of an Hundred is not within the Statute of 5 E. 6. c. 16. 33 Of Goods by the Sheriff upon Execution where good where not 20 21 Surrender If Lessee for years take a second Lease from Guardian in Soccage made in his name it is a surrender of the first Lease 7 What shall be said to be a surrender of a Term what not 30 Treason UPon Attainder of Treason who shall seize the Goods for the Queen 34 Tythes Unity no discharge of Tythes 47 Venire Facias GRanted de novo after Verdict for that the first Venire Facias was of K. only for that it ought to have been de Vicento de K. W. 85 Vesturam terrae He who hath Vesturam terrae cannot dig the Land. 43 Those who have Lot-Meadow viz. to change every year according to Lots have not any Freehold therein but only Vesturam terrae 43 Writ DE fama gestu what it is 40 FINIS