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A58086 Les termes de la ley; or, Certain difficult and obscure words and terms of the common laws and statutes of this realm now in use, expounded and explained Now corrected and enlarged. With very great additions throughout the whole book, never printed in any other impression.; Expositiones terminorum Legum Anglorum. English and French. Rastell, John, d. 1536. 1685 (1685) Wing R292; ESTC R201044 504,073 1,347

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the Statute of Mag. Charta cap. 14. speaks And therefore if a man be outragiously amerced in a Court not of Record as in a Court-Baron c. there is a Writ called Moderata Misericordia to be directed to the Lord or his Baily commanding them that they take moderate Amerciaments according to the quantity of the fault And of that see Fitzh N. B. fol. 75. A. and Moderata Misericordia after Misnomer MIsnomer is the Mistake of a Name or the using of one Name for another See Broke tit Misnomer Misprision MIsprision is when one knows that another hath committed Treason or Felony and will not discover him to the King or his Council or to any Magistrate but conceals the same Divers other offences are called Misprision as when a Chaplain had fixed an old Seal of a Patent to a new Patent of Non-residence this was held to be Misprision of Treason only and no counterfeiting of the Kings Seal So it is holden in 37 H. 8. Bro. tit Treason 3. in Fine but 2 H. 4. f. 25. A. it is adjudged contrary and Stamf. Pl. cor fol. 3. B. cites it Treason and so it is holden at this day And if a man know Money to be counterfeit and bring the same from out of Ireland hither and utter it in payment yet this is but Misprision of Treason and no Treason and so it is in divers like cases In all cases of Misprision of Treason the Party offendor shall forfeit his Goods for ever and the profits of his Lands for his life and his Body to Prison at the Kings pleasure And for Misprision of Felony or Trespass the Offendor shall be committed to Prison until he have found Sureties or Pledges for his Fine which shall be assessed by the discretion of the Iustices before whom he was convict And note That in every Treason or Felony is included Misprision and where any man hath committed Treason or Felony the King may cause him to be Indicted and Arraigned of Misprision only if he will See more hereof Stamf. lib. 1. cap. 39. Mittimus MIttimus is a Writ by which Records are transferred from one Court to another sometimes immediately as it appears in the Statute of 5. R. 2. cap. 15. as out of the Kings Bench into the Exchequer and sometimes by a Certiorari into the Chancery and from thence by a Mittimus into another Court as you may see in 28 H. 8. Dyer fol. 29. a b. 29 H. 8. Dyer fol. 32. a b. This word is used also for the Precept that is directed by a Iustice of Peace to a Goaler for the receiving and safe keeping of a Felon or other Offendor committed by the said Iustice to the Goal Moderata Misericordia MOderata Misericordia is a Writ that lies where a man is amerced in Court-Baton or County more then he ought to be then he shall have this Writ directed to the Sheriff if it be in the County or to the Bayliff if it be in Court-Baron commanding them that they amerce him not but with regard to the quantity of the Trespass and if they obey not this Writ then shall go forth against them a Sicut alias and Causam nobis significes and after that an Attachment Modus decimandi MOdus decimandi is Mony or other thing of value given annually in lie ● of Tithes The tryal of which appertains to the Common Law and not to any Court-Christian Ridley's view del Civil Law 141. In which he says There was one modus decimandi pro omnibus rebus per totum regnum Monstrans de Droit MOnstrans de Droit is a Suit in Chancery for the Subject to be restored to Lands and Tenements which he shews to be his Right but are by Office found to be in the possession of another that is lately dead by which Office the King is intitled to a Chattel Free-hold or Inheritance in the said Lands And this Monstrans de Droit is give by the Statutes of 34 E. 3. cap. 14. and 37 E. 3. cap. 13. See Coke lib. 4. fol. 54. B. in the Case of the Wardens and Commonalty of Sadlers Shewing of Deeds or Records SHewing of Deeds or Records is thus An Action of Debt is brought against A upon an Obligation by B or by Executors c. After the Plaintiff hath declared he ought to shew his Obligation and the Executor the Testament to the Court. And so it is of Records And the diversity between Shewing of Deeds or Records and Hearing of Deeds or Records is this He that pleads the Deed or Record or Declares upon it ought to shew the same and the other against whom such Deed or Record is pleaded or declared and is thereby to be charged may demand hearing of the same Deed or Record which his Adversary brings or pleads against him Monstraverunt MOnstraverunt is a Writ that lies for the Tenants in Ancient Demesne and is directed to the Lord him commanding not to Distain his Tenant to do other Service then he ought and they may have this Writ directed to the Sheriff that he suffer not the Lord to distrain the said Tenant to do other Service If the Tenants cannot be in quiet they may have an Attachment against the Lord to appear before the Iustices and all the names of the Tenants shall be put in the Writ though but one of them be grieved Also if any Land in ancient Demesne be in variance between the Tenants then the Tenant so grieved shall have against the other a Writ which is called of Right close after the Custome of the Mannor and that shall be alway brought in the Lords Court and thereupon he shall declare in the nature of what Writ he will as his case lies and this Writ shall not be removed but for a great cause or non-power of the Court. Also if the Lord in another place out of ancient Demesne distrain his Tenant to do other Service then he ought he shall have a Writ of Right called Ne Injuste vexes and it is a Writ of Right Patent which shall be tried by Battel or Grand Assise Mortdancester MOrtdancester See before in the Title Cosinage MOrtgage or Morgage MOrtgage or Morgage is when a Man makes a Feoffment to another on such condition that if the Feoffor pay the Feoffee at a certain day 40 li. of money then the Feoffor may re-enter c. In this case the Feoffee is called Tenant in Morgage And as a Man may make a Feoffment in Fee in Morgage so he may make a Gift in Tail or a Lease for Life or Years in Morgage And it seems the cause why it is called Morgage is for that it stands it doubt whether the Feoffoe will pay the mony at the day appointed or not and if he fail then the Land which he laid in gage upon condition of payment of the money is gone from him for ever and so dead to him upon condition but if he pay the mony then is the gage dead
but he may enter and his Entry is lawful by R. Thorpe chief Justice 28 E. 3. 96. 45 E. 3. 25. Tales TAles is a Supply of men impannelled upon a Iury or Inquest and not appearing or at their appearance challenged for the Plaintiff or Defendant as not indifferent and in this case the Iudge upon Petition grants a Supply to be made by the Sheriff of some nien there present equal in Reputation to those that are impanneled and hereupon the very act of supplying is called a Tales de circumstantibus This Supply may be one or more and of as many as shall either make Default or else be challenged by each party Stamf. Plac. Cor. l. 3. c. 5. Howbeit he that hath had one Tales either upon default or challenge though he may have another yet he may not have the latter to contain so many as the former for the first Tales ought to be under the number of the principal Pannel except in a cause of Appeal and so every Tales less then other until the number be made up of men present in Court and such as are without exception to the party or parties See Stamford in the place before where you may find some exceptions to this general Rule See Brook f. 105. and Coke l. 10. f. 99. Bewfages Case Talwood TAlwood is a term used in the Statutes of 34 35 H. 8 c. 3. and 7 E. 6. c. 7. and 43 Eliz. cap. 14. and signifies such Wood as is cut into shore Billets for the sizing whereof those Statutes were made Tax and Tallage TAx and Tallage are Payments as Tenths Fifteens Subsidies or such like granted to the King by Parliament The Tenants in Ancient demesne are quit of these Taxes and Tallages granted by Parliament except the King to tax Ancient demesne as he may when he thinks good for some great cause See Ancient demesne Tenant Paravail TEnant Paravail See Paravail Tender TEnder is an act done to save a penalty of a Bond and of Mony for Rent or Contract before Distress or Action brought and where it may be pleaded and where refusal is peremptory Vide Coke 1 Institut 207 208 211. uncore prist Tenure in Capite TEnure in Capite is where any hold of the King as of his Person being King and of his Crown as of a Lordship by it self in gross and in chief above all other Lordships And not where they hold of him as of any Mannor Honor or Castle except certain ancient Honors which appears in the Exchequer See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Term of years TO hold for term of years is but a Chattel in effect 〈◊〉 no Action is maintainable against the Termour for recovery of the Free-hold no Free-hold being in him A Lease for Term of years is a Chattel real and all Goods which are removeable are Chattels personal Testament TEstament is thus defined in Plowdens Commentaries A Testament is a Witness of the mind and is compounded of these two words Testatio and Mentis which so signifie Truth it is that a Testament is witness of the mind but that it is a compound word Aulus Gelius lib. 6. cap. 12. doth deny to an excellent Lawyer Servius Sulpitius and saith it is a simple word as are these Calceamentum Paludamentum Paviamentum and divers such like And much less is Agreeamentum a compound Word of Aggregatio and Mentium as is said before in the Title of Agreement for there is no such Latine word simple or compound but it may nevertheless serve well for a Law-Latine word And therefore thus it may better be defined A Testament is the true Declaration of our last Will in that we would to be done after our death c. Of Testaments there are two sorts namely a Testament in Writing and a Testament in Words which is called a Nuncupative Testament which is when a Man being sick and for fear lest death want of memory or speech should come so suddenly upon him that he should be prevented if he staid the writing of his Testament desires his Neighbors and Friends to bear witness of his last Will and then declares the same presently by words before them which after his decease is proved by Witnesses and put in writing by the Ordinary and then stands in as good force as if it had at the first in the life of the Testator been put in Writing except onely for Lands which are not devisable but by a Testament put in Writing in the Life of the Testator Thanus THanus is a word which sometimes signifies a Noble-man sometimes a Free-man a Magistrate an Officer or Minister Lambert in the word Thanus Skene saith it is a name of dignity and appears to be equal with the son of an Earl And Thanus was a Free-holder holding his Lands of the King and a man taken with the manner accused of Larceny no sufficient proof being brought against him must purge himself by the Oath of 27 men or 3 Thanes The Kings Thanage signifies a certain part of the Kings Lands or property whereof the rule and government appertains unto him who therefore is called Thanus for the Kings Demains and the Kings Thanage signifies one and the same thing Theftbote THeftbote is when a man takes any Goods of a Thief to favor and maintain him and not when a man takes his own Goods that were stoln from him c. The punishment in ancient time of Theftbote was of Life and member But now at this day Stamford saith it is punished by Ransom and Imprisonment But enquire farther for I think it is Felony Them THem that is That you shall have all the generations of your Villains with their Suits and Cattel wheresoever they shall be found in England except that if any Bond-man shall remain quiet one year and a day in any Priviledged Town so that he shall be received into their Communalty or Guild as one of them by that means he is delivered from Villenage Tithes TIthes See Dismes Title TItle is where a lawful cause is come upon a Man to have a thing which another hath and he hath no Action for the same as Title of Mortmain or to enter for breach of Condition Title of Entry TItle of Entry is when one seised of Land in Fee makes a Feoffment thereof upon Condition and the Condition is broken after which the Feoffor hath Title to enter into the Land and may so do at his pleasure and by his Entry the Free-hold shall be said to be in him presently And it is called Title of Entry because he cannot have a Writ of Right against his Feoffee upon Condition for his right was out of him by the Feoffment which cannot be reduced without Entry and the Entry must be for the breach of the Condition Toft TOft is a place wherein a House once stood but is now all fallen or pulled down Tol or Tolne TOl or Tolne is most properly a payment used in Cities Towns Markets and
to the Polls Challenge to the Array is where Exception is taken to the whole number as impannelled partially Challenge to or by the Poll is where Exception is taken to any one or more as not indifferent Challenge to the Iurors is also divided into challenge principal and challenge for cause that is upon cause or reason Challenge principal or peremptory is that which the Law allows without cause alledged or Examination as a Prisoner at the Bar arraigned upon Felony may peremptorily challenge to the number of twenty one after another of the Iury impanuelled upon him not alledging any cause at all but his own dislike and they shall be discharged and new put into their places and this is in favor of life But in the case of High Treason no peremptory challenge is allowed See 25 H. 8. cap. 3. And a difference may be observed between challenge principal and challenge peremptory because challenge peremptory seems only to be used in matters Criminal and meerly without any cause alledged more than only the Prisoner's fansie Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 124. and principal for the most part in Civil Actions and with the namning of some Exception which being found true the Law presently allows As for example if any party saith that one of the Iurors is the Son Brother Cousin or Tenant to the other party or married to his daughter this is a good and strong Exception if it be true without farther examination of the credit of the party challenged And of how large extent this Challenge of Kindred is does well appear in Plow fol. 425. Also in the Plea of the death of any man and in every Action real and also in every Action personal where the debt or damages amounts to 40 marks it is a good challenge to any of the Iury impanelled That he cannot dispend forty shillings by the year of his own Free-hold An. 11 H. 7. cap. 21. Challenge upon reason or cause is when the party alledges any such Exception against one or more of the Iurors which is not forthwith sufficient upon acknowledgment of the truth thereof but rather arbitrable and consiverable by the rest of the Iurors as if the son of the Iuror had married the daughter of the adverse party This Challenge by cause seems to be termed by Kitch fo 92. Challenge for favor or rather Challenge for favor is there said to be a Species of Challenge by cause Where you may also read what Challenges are commonly accounted for principal and what not Chamberdekins CHamberdekins are Irish Beggars which by the Statute of 1 H. 5. c. 8. were by a certain time within the said Statute limited to avoid this Land Champertie CHampertie is a Writ that lies where two men are impleading and one gives the half or part of a thing in plea to a stranger to maintain him against the other then the party grieved shall have this Writ against the stranger And it seems that this hath been an ancient grievance in our Realm For notwithstanding divers Statutes and a form of a Writ framed unto them yet Anno 4 E. 3. c. 11. it was enacted That where the former Statutes provided redresse for this only in the King's Bench which then followed the Court it should be lawful for the Iustices of the Common Pleas likewise and Iustices of Assise in their Circuits to enquire hear and determine these and such cases as well at the Kings Suit as at the Suit of the party Also it was ordained by the Statute of 33 H. 8. which was confirmed by the Statute of 37 H. 8. c. 7. That Iustices of Peace at their Quarter Sessions should have authority to enquire as well by the Oaths of 12 men as by the information given to them by any person or persons of the defaults contempts and offences committed against the Laws and Statutes made and provided touching Champerty Maintenance c. and to hear and determine the said faults and offences Champertors are they that move Pleas and Suits or cause to be moved by their own or oothers procurement and sue them at their own costs to have part of the Lands or gains in variance See the Stat. Articuli suꝑ chartas c. 11. Chance-medley CHance medley is when a man without any evil intent doth a lawful thing or that is not prohibited by Law and yet another is slain or comes to his death thereby as if a man casts a stone which hits a man or woman who after dies thereof or if a man shoots an arrow and another that passes by is killed and such like this manner of killing is Man-slaughter by misadventure or Chance-medley for which the offendor shall have his pardon of course as appears by the Statute of 6 E. 1. c. 9. and he shall forfeit his goods in such manner as he that kills a man in his own defence But in this case it is to be considered whether he that commits this Man-slaughter by Chance-medley was in doing a lawfull thing for if the act was unlawfull as to fight at Barriers or run at Tilt without the Kings commandment or cast stones in a High-way where men usually pass or shoot arrows in a Market-place or such like whereby a man is killed in all these cases it is Felony at least that is Manssaughter if not Murther for the Offendor being doing an unlawful act of his own will the Law shall construe his meaning and will herein by the success of the act As if two are fighting together and a third man comes to part them and is killed by one of the two without any malice forethought or evil intent in him that killed the man yet this is Murther in him and not Man-slaughter by Chance-medley or Misadventure because they two that fought together were in doing an unlawful act And if they were met with prepensed malice the one intending to kill the other then it is Murther in them both Chancery CHancery is a Court of Law at Westminster for Suits for and against Attorneys Clerks and Officers of this Court this part of it and also the intelments of Deeds Patents is of Record And there is also a Court for Equity and their proceedings therein are entred in English and the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the great Seal and Master of the Rolls are Iudges and the Writs are returnable there Coram Rege in Cancellaria Co. 4. Instit 78. Chapiter CHapiter is a Summary or content of all such matters as are enquirable before Iustices in Eyre Iustices of Assise or of the Peace in their Sessions so it is used 3 E. 1. c. 27. in these words And that no Clerk of any Iustice Escheator or Commissioner in Eyre shall take any thing for delivery of Chapiters but only Clerks of Iustices in their Circuits and likewise 13 E. 1. c. 10. in these words And when the time comes the Sheriff shall certifie the Chapiters before the Iustices in Eyre how many Writs he hath Also Britton uses it
who is therefore called the Incumbent of that Church because he doth bend all his study to the discharge of the Cure there Indicavit INdicavit is a Writ or Prohibition that lies for the Patron of a Church whose Clerk is Defendant in Court-Christian in an Action for Tithes commenced by another Clerk and extending to the fourth part of the Church or of its Tithes in which case the Suit belongs to the Kings Court by Westm 1. c. 5. Wherefore the Defendants Patron being like to be prejudiced in his Church and Advowson if the Plaintiff obtain in the Court-Christian has this means to remove it to the Kings Court Reg. orig fol. 35. and Britton c. 109. This Writ is not returnable but if they cease not their Suit he shall have an Attachment Inditement INditement See Enditement Indorsement INdorsement is that which is written upon the Back of a Deed as the Condition of an Obligation is said to be indorsed because it is commonly written on the Back of the Obligation Induction INduction is a lay act made by prescept of the Ordinary by which actual possession of the Church is given to the Rector or Vicar after his Presentation and Institution to it Infangtheef INfangtheef is a Priviledge or Liberty granted to Lords of certain Mannors to judge any Thief taken within their Fee Information INformation for the King is that which for a common person is called a Declaration and is not always done directly by the King or his Attorney but rather by some other man who sues 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 but no Action of Debt to recover it therefore it must be had by Information Ingrosser INgrosser comes of the French word Grosier that is one that sells by Whole-sale But in our Law an Ingrosser is one that buys Corn Grain Butter Cheese Fish or other dead Victuals with an intent to sell the same again And so he is defined in the Stat. of 5 E. 6. c. 14. made against such Ingrossing Inheritance INheritance See Enheritance Inhibition INhibition is a Writ to inhibit a Iudge to proceed farther in the Cause depending before him And there is another Writ where after the Kings Presentment to a Benefice he presents another and inhibiteth the Bishop to give Induction to the first Presentee Plo. Com. 528. See F. N. B. f. 39. where he puts Prohibition and Inhibition together Inhibition is most commonly a Writ issuing forth of an higher Court-Cheistian to a lower and inferiour upon an Appeal Anno 24 H. 8. c. 12. and Prohibition out of the Kings Court of Record at Westminster to a Court-Christian or to an inferiour Temporal Court Injunction INjunction is an interlocutory Decree out of the Chancery sometimes to give Possession to the Plaintiff for defect of Apparance in the Defendant sometimes to the ordinary Courts of the King and sometimes to the Court-Christian to stay Proceeding in a Cause upon suggestiou made that if the rigor of the Law take place it is against Equity and Conscience in that Case See West part 2. tit Proceedings in Chancery sect 25. Inlagary INlagary or Inlagation is a Restitution of one outlawed to the Kings Protection or to the benefit condition of a Subject Inlaugh INlaugh signifies him that is sub Lege in some Frank-pledge not out-lawed of whom see Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 11. Inmates INmates are those persons of one Family that are suffered to come and dwell in one Cottage together with another Family by which the poor of the Parish will be increased And therefore by the Statute of 31 Eliz. c. 7. there is a Penalty of ten shillings a Month set upon every one that shall receive or continue such an Iumate Inquisition INquisition See Enquest Inrolment INrolment is the Registring Recording or Entring of any Act or Deed in the Chancery or elsewhere as of a Recognizance Fine Statute or Deed indented by the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 16. by which a Freehold shall pass Instant INstant in Latine Instans is defined by the Logicians A thing not dividable in Time which is not any Time nor part of Time to which yet the parts of time are conjoyned and much considered in the Law and though it cannot be actually divided yet in consideration and conceit it may be divided and applied to several purposes as if they were several times whereof see in Plowdens Commentaries in the Case between Fulmerston and Stuard where the Statute of 31 H. 8. which Enacted That if an Abbot within a year before the Statute had letten Lands to one who at the time of making that Lease had the same Land to farm for a term of years then not expired that the Lessee should have that Land only for twenty one years is expounded And there it is debated That when the Termor takes the second Lease he surrenders his former term and so at the same instant of taking the second Lease the former term is expired And in the Case between Petit and Hales he who kills himself commits not Felony till he be dead and when dead he is not in being so as to be termed a Felon but at the instant is in the Law so adjudged And there are many other Cases in Law where the instant time that is not dividable in nature in the consideration of the mind and understanding of the Sages of the Law is divided upon which arise many arguments of great use and profound learning Institution INstitution is a Faculty made by the Ordinary by which a Vicar or Rector is approved to be Inducted to a Rectory or Vicarage Interdiction INterdiction has the same signification in the Common as in the Canon Law where it is thus defined Interdictio est Censura Ecclesiastica prohibens administrationem Divinorum And so it is used 22 H. 8. cap. 12. Intrusion INtrusion is a Writ that lies against him that enters after the death of Tenant in Dower or other Tenant for Life and holds out him in the Reversion or Remainder for which see Fitz. N. B. fol. 203. E. And every entry upon the possession of the King is called an Intrusion as where the Heir of the Kings Tenant enters after Office and before Livery this is called an Intrusion upon the King as appears in Stanf. Prerog fol. 40. and many other Books Intrusion INtrusion See Entrusion Inventary AN Inventary is a Catalogue or Recital in Writing of all the Goods and Chattels of one that is dead with the Valuation of them by four several persons which every Executor and Administrator ought to exhibit to the Ordinary at the time appointed Jointenans JOintenants are where two men come to any Lands and Tenements by one joynt Title as if a man give Lands to two men and to their Heirs Tenants in common are where two have Lands by several Titles or by Feoffment to two
yet this may well stand with the generality of the words that there was but one Cause depending between them for A generality implies no certainty And if the Arbitrement should be for this avoided then many Arbitrements might be avoided for the one might conceal a Trespass done or other cause of Action given him and so avoid the Arbitrement Also no party to any Arbitrement shall be by it bound unless the Award be delivered unto him as it is in Co. lib. 5. f. 103. See Co. l. 8. fol. 98. Arches ARches or the Court of the Arches is the chief and most ancient Consistory belonging unto the Archbishop of Canterb. and it is called from the Arches of the Church where the Court is kept namely Bow-Church in London And of this Cour ● mention is made in Stat. 24 H. 8. cap. 12. touching Appeals Arms. ARms in the understanding of the Law is extended to any thing that a man in his anger or fury takes into his hand to cast at or strike another Cromp. Justice of Peace fol. 65. a. Array ARray is the taking or ordering a Iury or Enquest of men that are impannelled upon any cause 18 H. 6. cap. 14. from whence comes the Verb to array a pannel Old N. B. f. 157. that is to set forth one by another the men that are impannelled The Array shall be quashed ibid. By Statute every Array in Assise ought to be made four dayes before Brook tit Pannel num 10. To challenge the Array Kitch 92. Arrain ARrain is to put a thing in order or in his place As one is said to arrain an Assise of Novel Disseisin in the County in which it ought to be brought for trial before the Iustices of that Circuit Old N. B. fol. 109. And in such sense Litt. hath used the same word The Lessee attains an Assese of Novel Disseisin Also a prisoner is said to be arraigned when he is indicted and put to his trial Arrerages ARrerages are Duties behind unpaid after the days and times in which they were due and ought to have been paid whether they be Rents of a Manor or any other thing reserved Arrest ARrest is when one is taken and restrained for his liberty None shall be arrested for Debt Trespass Detinue or other cause of Action but by virtue of a precept or commandment out of some Court But for Treason Felony or breaking of the Peace every man hath authority to arrest without warrant or Precept And where one shall be arrested for Felony it behoves that some Felony be done and that he be suspected of the same Felony or otherwise he may have against him that did so arrest him a Writ of False imprisonment And when any man shall be arrested for Felony he shall be brought to the Goal there to abide till the next Sessions to be indicted or delivered by Proclamation Arretted ARretted is he that is convented before any Iudge and charged with a crime Sometimes it is used for imputed or laid unto As no folly can be arretted to him that is within age Lit. cap. Remit This word may come of the Latiu word Rectus for Bacton hath this Phrase Ad rectum habere malefactorem so that he may be charged and put to his trial And in another place he saith Rectarus de morte hominis Assach ASsach seems to be a Brittish word and to signifie a strange kind of Excuse or Purgation by the Oaths of 300. men Anno 1 H. 5. cap. 5. Assart ASsart is an offence committed in the Forest by pulling up by the Roots the Woods which are thickets or coverts of the Forest and by making them as plain as the arable Land This Assart of the Forest is the greatest offence or trespass that can be done in the Forest to Vert or Venison containing in it Waste or more For where Waste of the Forest is nothing but the felling and cutting down of the Covert wood which may in time grow again an Assart is a pulling up by the root by which they can never grow again Man part 2. c. 9. num 1. A writ of Ad quod damnum may be awarded where a man will sue licence to assart his Land within the Forest and make it several for Tillage so that it is no offence if it be done by licence Regist orig fol. 257. Assault ASsault from the French Assaillir signifies a violent kind of injury offered to a mans person of a more large extent than Battery for it may be committed by offering a blow or by a terrifying speech Lamb. Eiren. lib. 1. cap. 3. Assayer ASsayer is an Officer of the Mint appointed by the Stat. of 2 H. 6. c. 12. to be present at the taking in of the Bullion as a party indifferent between the Master of the Mint and the Merchant to set the true value of the Bullion according to the Law Assets ASsets is in two sorts the one called Assets per discent the other Assets enter maines Assets ● discent is where a man is bound in an Obligation and dies secised of Lands in Fee-simple which descend to his Heir then his land shall be called Assets that is enough or sufficient to pay the same debt and by that means the Heir shall be charged as far as the Land so to him descended will stretch But if he have aliened before the Obligation be put in Suit he is discharged Also when a man seised of lands in tail or in the right of his wife aliens the same with warranty and hath in value as much Lands in Fee-simple which descends to his Heir who is also Heir in Tail or Heir to the woman now if the Heir after the decease of his Ancestor bring a Writ of Formedon or Sur cui in vita for the land so aliened then he shall be barred by reason of the Warranty and the land so descended which is as much in value as that which was sold and so thereby he hath received no prejudice Therefore this Land is called Assets per discent Assets enter maines is when a man indebted as before is said makes Executors and leaves them sufficient to pay or some commodity or profit is come unto them in right of their Testator this is called Assets in their hands Assignee ASsignee is he to whom a thing is appointed or assigned to be used paid or done and is always such a person who occupres or hath the thing so assigned in his own right and for himself And of Assignees there are two sorts namely Assignee in Deed and Assignee in Law Assignee in Deed is when a Lease is granted to a man and his Assignees or without that word Assignees and the Grantee gives grants or sells the same Lease to another he is his Assignee in Deed. Assignee in Law is every Executor named by the Testator in his Testament As if a Lease be made to a man and his Assignees as is aforesaid and he makes his Executors and dies without assignment of the
woman at such a place within such a Diocess and that she is dead and that he hath married another woman within the same Diocess or within some other Diocess and so is Bigamus Or if he have been but once married then to say that she whom he hath married is or was a Widow that is the Relict of such a one c. which shall be tried by the Bishop of the Diocess where the Marriages are alledged And being so certified by the Bishop the prisoner shall lose the Benefit of the Clergy But at this day by force of the Act made 1 E. 6. ca. 12. this is no Plea but he may have his Clergy notwithstanding So is Brook titulo Clergie Placito 20. to the same purpose By-laws BY-laws are Orders made in Court-Leets or Court-Barons by a common consent for the good of them that are the makers of them And they are called By-laws quasi Birlaws or Bawrlaws of the Dutch word Bawr that is a Countrey-man and so Bawrlaws or By-laws is as much as the Laws of Country-men Bilinguis BIlinguis in general is a man with a double tongue but is commonly used for that Iury which passes between an English man and an Alien whereof part ought to be Englishmen and part Strangers And for this cause it is enacted by the Statute of 28 E. 3. cap. 13. That if any variance chance to be about the packing of Wooll before the Mayor of the Staple between the Merchants or Ministers of the same thereupon to try the truth thereof Enquest shall be taken and if the one party and the other be Denizons it shall be tried by Denizons or if the one party be Denison and the other Alien the half of the Enquest or of the proof shall be Denizons and the other half Aliens Bill BILL is all one with an Obligation saving that when it is in English it is commonly called a Bill in Latin an Obligation Also a Declaration in writing that expresses either the grievance and wrong which the Complainant has suffered by the party complained of or else some fault by him committed against some Law or Statute of the Realm By a Bill we now ordinarily understand a single Bond without a Condition by an Obligation a Bond with a Penalty and Condition West part 2. Symbol tit Supplications sect 52. Billa vera BIlla vera is the Indorsement of the grand Inquest upon any Presentment or Indictment which they find to be probably true Blackmail BLackmail is a word used in the Statute of 43 Eliz. c. 13. and signifies a certainty of Money Corn Cattel or other consideration given by the poor people in the North of England to men of great name and alliance in those parts to be by them protected from such as usually rob and steal there Black rod. BLack Rod is the Huissier belonging to the most Noble Order of the Garter so called of the Black rod he carries in his hand He is also Huissier of the Lords house in Parliament Bloodwit BLoodwit is to be quit of Amerciaments for Blood-shedding and what Pleas are holden in your Court you shall have the Amerciaments thereof coming because Wit in English is Misericordia in Latin Bloody hand BLoody hand is the apprehension of a Trespasser in the Forest against Venison with his hands or other part bloody though he be not found chasing or hunting Of which see Manwood part 2. c. 18. Bockland BOckland in the Saxons time was that we at this day cail Free-hold Land or Land held by Charter and it was by that name distinguished from Folkland which was Copy-hold Land Bona notabilia BOna notabilia is where a man dies having goods to the value of five pound in divers Diocesses then the Archbishop ought to grant Administration and if any inferior Bishop do grant it it is void 37 H. 6. 27. 28 10 H. 7. 18. Dyer 305. Bordlands BOrdlands signifie the Demesns which Lords keep in their own hand ● for he maintenance of their Bord or Table Bracton l. 4. Tract 3. c. 9. num 5. Borow BOrow which with us signifies an ancient Town as appears by Littleton sect 164. is a word derived either of the French Burg id est Pagus or of the Saxon Borhoe id est ● ignus for that anciently the Neighbours of a Town became Pledges one for another and from thence comes Headborow for the chief Pledge or Borhoe-Aldere with us now called the Borow-holder or Bursholder Borow English BOrow English is a customary Descent of Lands or Tenements in some places whereby they come to the youngest son or if the owner have no issue to his youngest brother as in Edmunton Kitchin fol. 102. Borowhead BOrohead See Head-borow Bote. BOte is an old word signifying Help Succor Aid or Advantage and is commonly joyned with another word whose signification is doth augment as these Bridgebote Burgbote Firebote Hedgebote Plowbote divers other for whose significations look in their proper Titles Bottomry vulgo Bomry IS when a Master of a Ship in case of necessity doth engage his Ship for money for use of the Ship Bribor BRibor Fr. Bribeur i. Mendicus seems to signifie one that pilfers other mans goods Anno 28 E. 2. Stat. 1. Brief BRief Breve signifies most properly in our Law the Process that issues out of the Chancery or other Court commanding the Sheriff to summon or attach A. to answer to the Suit of B. c. But more largely it is taken for any Precept of the King in writing under Seal issuing out of any Court whereby he commands any thing to be done for the furtherance of Iustice and good order And they are therefore called Briefs because they briessy comprehend the cause of the action And some of them are Original and some judicial as you may see at large in the Register of Writs Broadhalpeny BRoadhalpeny in some Copies Broadhalfpeny that is to be quit of a certain custome exacted for setting up of Tables or Boards in Fairs or Markets and those that were freed by the Kings Charter of this Custome had this word put in their Letters Patents by reason whereof at this day the Freedom it self for brevity of speech is called Broadhalfpeny Broker BRoker seems to come of the French word Broieur id est Tritor he that grinds or breaks a thing into small pieces And the true trade of a Broker as it appears in the Statute made 1 Jac. c. 21. is to beat contrive make and conclude Bargains between Merchants and Tradesmen But the word is now also appropriated to those that buy and sell old and broken apparel and Houshold-stuff Brugbote BRugbote and in some copies Bridgebote is to be quit of giving aid to the repair of Bridges Bull. BULL is an Instrument so called granted by the Bishop of Rome and sealed with a Seal of Lead containing in it his Decrees Commandments or other Acts according to the nature of the thing for which it is granted And these
Money is not to be accounted Goods or Catals nor Hawks nor Hounds for they are ferae naturae But it seems that Money is not a Chattel because it is not in it self valuable but rather in imagination than in Deed. Catals are either real or personal Catals real are either such as do not immediately appertain to the person but to some other thing by way of dependance as a Box with writings of Laud the body of a Ward the Apples upon the tree or the Tree it self growing upon the ground Crom. fol. 33. b. Or else such as are issuing out of some thing immovable to the person as a Lease for Rent or term of years Personal may be so called in two respects The one because they belong immediately to the person of a man as a Horse c. The other because when they are wrongfully detained we have no other means for their recovery but personal Actions The Civilians comprehend these things and also Lands of all natures and tenures under the word Goods which are by them divided into Moveable and Immovable See Bract. lib. 3. c. 3. num 3 4. Cepi corpus CEpi corpus is a Return made by the Sheriff that upon an Exigend or other Writ he has taken the body of the party F N. B. fol. 26. Certificate CErtificate is a Writing made in some Court to give notice to another Court of something done there as a Certificate of the cause of Attaint is a transcript briefly made by the Clerks of the Crown Clerks of the Peace or Clerks of Assise to the Court of Kings Bench containing the tenor and effect of every Indictment Outlawry or Conviction and Clerk attainted made or declared in any other Court But note that this Certificate ought to be made by him that is the immediate Officer to the Court and therefore if the Commissary or Official of the Bishop certifie an Excommunication in bar of an action at the Common Law this is not good as was resolved in Coke lib. 8. fol. 68. but such Excommunication ought to be certified by the Bishop himself Yet the Certificate of an Excommunication by special Commissioners Delegates under their Common Seal was allowed and held good enough in the Common-place Dyer fol. 371. pla 4. Certification of Assise CErtification of Assise of Novel disseisin c. is a Writ awarded to re-examine or review a matter passed hy Assise before any Iustices and is used when a man appears by his Bailiff to an assise brought by another and loses the day and having some other matter to plead farther for himself as a Deed of Release or c. which the Bailiff did not plead or might not plead for him desires a better Examination of the Cause either before the same or other Iustices and obtains Letters Pa ● ents see their form F. N. B. 181. and then brings a Writ to the Sheriff to call the party for whom the Assise had passed and also the Iury which was impannelled upon the same Assise before the said Iustices at a day and place certain And it is called a Certificate because therein mention is made to the Sheriff that upon the parties complaint of the defective Examination or doubts remaining yet upon the Assise passed the King hath directed his Letters Patents to the Iustices for the better certifying of themselves whether all the points of the said Assise were duly examined or not Certiorari CErtiorari is a Writ that lies where a man is impleaded in a base Court that is of Record and he purposes that he may not have equal Iustice there then upon a Bill in the Chancery comprising some matter of Conscience he shall have this Writ to remove all the Record into the Chancery there to be determined by Conscience but if he prove not his Bill then the other party shall have a Writ of Procedendo to send again the Record into the base Court and there to be determined And it lies in many other cases to remove Records for the King as Indictments and others This Writ is also granted out of the Court of Kings Bench or Common Pleas to remove any Action thither out of Inferior Courts of Record and so the Plaintiff must declare and proceed in the Superior Court Also to certifie original writs or proceedings out of any Courts of Record into the Kings Bench where nullum tale Recordum is pleaded Also upon Writs of Error of a Iudgment in the Common Pleas each party may have this Writ to bring any of the Proceedings into the Kings Bench upon alledging Diminution as appears Coke Entr. 232 233 242. 2 Cro. 131 479. Cessavit CEssavit is a Writ that lies where my very Tenant holds of me certain Lands or Tenements yielding certain Rent by the year and the Rent is behind for two years and no sufficient Distress may be found upon the Land then I shall have this Writ by which I shall recover the Land But if the Tenant come into the Court before Iudgment given and tender the Arrearges and Damages and find Surety that he shall cease no more in payment of the said Rent I shall be compelled to take the Arrerages and the Damages and then the Tenant shall not lose the Land The heir may not maintain this Writ for Cessure made in the time of his Ancestor And it lies not but for Annual service as Rent and such other and not for Homage and Fealty Also there is another Writ called Cessavit de cantaria which lies where a man gives Land to a House of Religion to find for the soul of him his ancestors and his heirs yearly a Candle or Lamp in the Church or to say Divine Service feed the poor or other Alms or to do some other thing then if the said Services be not done in two years the Donor or his Heirs shall have this Writ against whosoever holds the things given after such Cessure See the Statute W. 2. cap. 41. Cession CEssion is when an Ecclesiastical Person is created Bishop or when a Parson of a Parsonage takes another Benefice without dispensation or otherwise not qualified c. In both cases their first Benefices are become void and are said to become void by Cession And to those that he had who was created Bishop the King shall present for that time whosoever is Patron of them And in the other case the Patron may present See 41 E. 3. 5. 11 H. 4. 37. Cestuy a que vie cestuy a que use CEstuy a que vie is he for whose life another holds an estate and cestuy a que use is he who is a Feoffee for the use of another Challenge CHallenge is an Exception taken either against Persons or Things Persons as in an Assise the Iurors or any one or more of them or in case of Felony by the Prisoner at the Bar against Things as a Declaration Old N. B. 76. Challenge made to the Jurors is either made to the Array or
Lessee pays the Rent to the Lessor and he receives it and puts it in his purse and afterwards upon review of it at the same time he finds that he hath received some counterfeit pieces aud thereupon refuses to take away the Money but re-enters for the Condition broken there his Entry is not lawful for when he hath accepted the Money this was at his peril and after this allowance he shall not take exception to any of it Collateral COllateral is that which comes in or adheres to the side of any thing as Collateral Assurance is that which is made over and beside the Deed it self For example if a man covenants with another and enters Bond for the performance the Bond is called Collateral Assurance because it is external and without the nature and essence of the Covenant And Crompton fol. 185. saith that to be subject to feeding the Kings Deer is collateral to the soil within the Forest In like manner we may say that the liberty to pitch Sheds or Standing for a Fair in the soil of another man is collateral to the land The private Woods of a common person within the Forest cannot be cut down without the Kings license for it is a Prerogative collateral to the soil Man part 1. pag. 66. Collateral Warranty See tit Warrantie Collation COllation is properly the bestowing of a Benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his own Gift or Patronage and differs from Institution in this for that Institution into a Benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion and Presentation of another who is Patron of the same Church or hath the Patrons right for that time Yet Collation is used for Presentation in 25 E. 3. Stat. 6. and there is a Writ in the Regist 31. b. called De Collatione facta uni post mortem alterius c. directed by the Iustices of the Common Pleas commanding them to direct their Writ to the 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 deceased for judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before he be admitted the King may give his Presentation to another Collusion COllusion is where an action is brought against another by his own agreement if the Plaintiff recover then such Recovery is called by Collusion And in some cases the Collusion shall be enquired of as in Quare impedit and Assise and such like which any Corporation or Body politick brings against another to the intent to have the Land or Advowson whereof the Writ is brought in Mortmain But in Avowry nor in any Action personal the Collusion shall not be inquired See the Stat. of Westm 2. c. 32. which gives the Quale jus and enquiry in such cases Colour COlour is feigned matter which the Defendant or Tenant uses in his barre when an Action of Trespass or an Assise is brought against him in which he gives the Demandant or Plaintiff a Shew at first sight that he hath good cause of Action where in truth it is no just cause but only a Colour and Face of a cause and it is used to the intent that the determination of the Action should be by the Iudges and not by an ignorant Iury of twelve men And therefore a Colour ought to be a matter in Law doubtfull to the common people As for example A. brings and Assise of land against B. and B. saith he himself did let the same land to one C. for term of life and afterward did grant the Reversion to A. the Demandant and after C. the Tenant for term of life died after whose decease A. the Demandant claiming the Reversion by force of the Grant whereto C. the Tenant for life did never atturn entred upon whom B. entred against whom A. for that Entry brings this Assise c. This is a good Colour because the common people think the land will pass by the Grant without Atturnment where indeed it will not pass c. Also in an Action of Trespass Colour must be given of which there are an infinite number one forexample 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 possessed 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 unto the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff supposing the property to be in A. B. at the time of the gift took them and and the Defendant took them from the Plaintiff whereupon the Plaintiff brings an Action that is a good Colour and a good Plea See more hereof in Doctor and Student l. 2. c. 13. Colour is for this cause viz. where the Defendant justifies by title in trespass or Assize if he do not give the Plaintiff Colour his plea amounteth only to not guilty for if the Defendant hath title he is not guilty 1 Co. 79. 108. Colour of Office COlour of Office is always taken in the worst part and signifies an act evilly done by the countenance of an Office and it bears a dissembling face of the right of the Office whereas the Office is but a vail to the falshood and the thing is grounded upon vice and the Office is as a shadow to it But by reason of the Office and by virtute of the Office are taken always in the best part and where the Office is the just cause of the thing and the thing is pursuing the Office Plo. in Dive Man case sol 64. a. Combat COmbat in our ancient Law was a formal Trial of a doubtful Cause or quarrel by the Sword or Bastons of two Champions See Glanvile l. 14. c. 1. Britton c. 22. and Dyer fol. 301. num 41. Commandment COmmandment is taken in divers significations sometimes for the Commandment of the King when by his mere motion and from his own mouth he casts any man into prison Stamf. Plac. Coron fol. 72. or of the Iustices And this Commandment of the Iustices is either absolute or ordinary Absolute as when upon their own authority or wisdom and discretion they commit any man to prison for a punishment Ordinary is when they commit one rather to be safely kept then for punishmenr and a man committed by such ordinary Commandment is bailable Placit Cor. fol. 73. Commandment is again used for the offence of him that wills another man to transgresse the Law or to do any such thing as is contrary to the Law as Murther Theft or such like Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 19. The Civilians call this Commandment Angelus de maleficiis Commendrie COmmandrie was the name of a Manor or chief Messuage with which Lands or Tenements were used belonging to the late Priory of S. John of Jerusalem untill they were given to King Henry the eighth by Statute made in the 32 year of his reign And he who
Winchester 13 Edw. 1. which appoints for the conservation of the Peace and view of Armour two Constables in every Hundred and Liberty and these are at this day called High Constables because the increase of people and offences hath again under these made others in every Town called Pe ● ie Constables who are of the like nature but of inferiour authority to the other Besides these there are Officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stan. 152. 1 H. 4. 13. Constable of the Exchequer 15 H. 3. Stat. 5. Constable of Dover Castle Camb. Brit. pag. 239. F. N. B. otherwise called Castellain Manw. part 1. cap. 13. of his Forest Law makes mention of a Constable of the Forest Customes and Services See Prescription CUstomes and Services is a Writ and lies where I or my ancestors after the limitation of Assise for which see the Title of Limitation in the Collection of Statutes were not seised of the Customes or Services of the Tenant before then I shall have this Writ to recover those Services Also the Tenant may have this Writ against his Lord but after the Tenant hath declared the Lord shall defend the words of the Declaration and replying shall say that he distrained not for the Customes whereof the Declaration is and then he shall declare all the Declaration of the Customes and Services and then the Tenant who was Plaintiff shall become Defendant and shall defend by Battel or great Assise Consultation COnsultation is a Writ whereby a Cause being formerly removed by Prohibition out of the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For if the Iudges of the Kings Court comparing the Libell with the Suggestion of the party find 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 the Regist Orig. fol. 44. untill fol. 58. Old Nat. Brev. fol. 32. Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 50. Contenement COntenement seems to be the Freehold-land that lies to the Tenement or Dwelling-house that is in his own occupation for in Magna Charta cap. 14. there are these words A Free-man shall not be amerced for a small fault but according to the quantity of the fault and for a great fault according to the manner thereof saving unto him his Conteuement or Free-hold And a Merchant shall also be amerced saving to him his Merchandizes and a Villain saving to him his Wainage Continual Claime COntinual claim is where a man hath right to e ● ter into certain lands whereof another is seised in Fee or Fee-tail and dares not enter for fear of death or beating but approaches as nigh as he dares and makes Claim thereto within the year and day before the death of him that hath the Lands if that he who hath the Land die seised and his Heir is in by discent yet he that makes such Claim may enter upon the Heir notwithstanding such discent because he hath made such Continual claim But such Claim must always be made within the year and the day before the death of the Tenant for if such Tenant do not die seised within a year and a day after such Claim made and yet he that hath right dares not enter then it behoves him that hath such right to make another Claim within the year and day after the first Claim and after such second Claim to make the third Claim within the year and day if he will be sure to save his Entry But if the Disseisor die seised within the year and day after the Disseisin and no Claim made then the entrie of the Disseisee is taken away for the year and day shall not be taken from the time of the title of the Entry to him grown but only from the time of the last Claim by him made as is aforesaid See more hereof in Littl. li. 3. c. 7. and see the Stat. 32 H. 8. cap. 33. Continuance COntinuance in the Common Law is of the same signification with Prorogatio in the Civil as Continuance until the next Assise Fitzh Nat. Brev. 154. f and 244. d. in both which places it is said That if a Record in the Treasury be alledged by the one party and denyed by the other a Certiorari shall be sued to the Treasurer and the Chamherlain of the Exchequer and if they do not certifie in the Chancery that such Record is there or that it is like to be in the Tower the King shall send to the Iustices repeating the said Certificate and commanding them to continue the Assise In this signification it is also used by Kitchen 202. and 119. also Anno 11 H. 6. cap. 4. Contract COntract is a Bargain or Covenant between two parties where one thing is given for another which is called Quid pro quo as if I sell my Horse for money or if I covenant to make you a Lease of my Mannor of Dale in consideration of twenty pound that you shall give me these are good Contracts because there is one thing for another But if a man make promise to me that I shall have xx s. and that he will be debtor to me thereof and after I ask the xx s. and he will not deliver it yet I shall never have any Action to recover this xx s. because this Promise was no Contract but a bare Promise and Ex nudo Pacto non oritur Actio But if any thing were given for the twenty shillings though it were but to the value of a peny then it had been a good Contract Contra forma Collationis COntra formam Collationis is a Writ that lies where a man hath given Lands in perpetual Almes to any of the late Houses of Religion as to an Abbot and Convent or other Soveraign or to the Warden or Master of any Hospital and his Covent to find certain poor men and to do other Divine Service if they alien the Lands then the Donor or his heirs shall have the said Writ to recover the Land But this Writ shall be alway brought against the Abbot or his successor and not against the Alienee although he be Tenant but in all other Actions where a man demands Free-hold the Writ shall be brought against the Tenant of the Land See the Stat. West 2. cap. 41. Contra formam Feoffamenti COntra formā Feoffamenti is a Writ that lies where a man before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum made 18 Edw. 1. infeoffed another by Deed to do certain Service if the Feoffor or his heirs distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed then the Tenant shall have this Writ commanding him not to distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed. But this Writ lies not for the Plaintiff who
have been taken for such as a man retains to speak for him in any Court as Advocates and Pledeurs to be another sort as Attorneys for one that is present himself but suffers another to speak for him Countours according to M. Horne are such Sergeants skilful in the Law which serve the common people to defend their Actions in Iudicature for their fee. Countee COuntee so called a comitando because they accompany the King was the most eminent and high dignity from the conquest untill the 11 year of King Ed. 3. when the Black Prince was created Duke of Cornwall and those who of ancient time were created Countees were of the Blood-Royal aud at this day the King in all his appellations stiles them by the name of Our most dear Cousin And for these causes the Law gives them high and great Priviledges and therefore their body shall not be arrested for Debt Trespasse c. because the Law intends that they assist the King with their counsel for the publick good and keep the Realm by their prowesse and valour Also for the same cause they shall not be put in Iuries although it be for the service of the Country And if issue be taken whether the Plaintiff or Defendant be a Countee or not this shall not be tried by the Countrey but by the Kings Writ Also the Defendant shall not have a day of favour against a Lord of the Parliament because he is intended to attend the publick And of ancient time the Countee was Praefectus or Praepositus Comitatus and had the charge and custody of the County and now the Sheriff hath all the authority for administration and execution of Iustice which the Countee had Cok. lib. 9. fol. 49. and therefore he is called Viscount Countenance COuntenance seems to be used for Credit or Estimation Old Nat. Brev. 111. in these words The Attaint shall be granted to poor men that will take their oaths they have not any thing whereof to make their Fine saving their Countenance In the same manner it is used 1 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 4. in these words Sheriffs shall charge the Kings Debtors with as much as they may levy with their oaths without abating the Debtors Countenance Countermand COuntermand is where a thing formerly executed is afterward by some act or ceremony made void by the party that hath first done it As if a man hath made his last Will whereby he devises his Land to J. S. and afterwards he infeoffs another of the same Land there this Feoffment is a Countermand to the Will and the Will as to the disposition of the Land is void If a woman seised of Land in fee makes a Will in writing and devises that if A. of B. survives her then she devises and bequeaths to him and his heirs her Land and afterward she entermarries with the said A. of B. there by taking him to husband and coverture at the time of her death the Will is Countermanded But if a Baroness widow retains two Chaplains according to the Statute and takes one of the Nobility to husband and afterwards the husband dies the Reteiner of those two Chaplains remains and they without new Reteiner may take two Benefices for their Reteiner was not determined nor countermanded by such Marriage If a woman makes a Lease at will and afterwards takes an husband this Marriage is no Countermand to the Lease without express matter done by the Husband after the Marriage to determine the Will Also if a Lease be made at will to a woman and she takes an Husband the Lease continues notwithstanding the Marriage and is no Countermand thereunto Counterplea COunterplea is when one brings an Action and the Tenant in his Answer and Plea vouches or calls any man to warrant his Title or prayes in aid of another who hath better Estate than he as of him that is in the Reversion or if one that is a stranger to the Action come and pray to be received to save his Estate if the Demandant reply thereto and shew cause that he ought not to vouch such a one or of such a one to have aid or that such a one ought not to be received this Plea is called a Counterplea to the Voucher Aid or Resceit as the case is But when the Voucher is allowed and the Vouchee comes in and demands what cause the Tenant hath and the Tenant shews his cause and the Vouchee pleads any thing to avoid the Warranty that is called a Counterplea in the Warranty Countie COuntie signifies as much as Shire both containing a compasse or portion of the Realm into which all its land is divided for the better government thereof and more easie administring of Iustice so that there is not any part of the Kingdom that lies not within some County and every County is governed by a yearly Officer whom we call Sheriff who among other duties belonging to his Office puts in execution all the Commandments and Iudgments of the Kings Courts that are to be executed within the compasse Fortesc ' cap. 24 Of these Counties there are four more remarkable than others called County Palatines as Lancaster Chester Durham and Ely an 5. El. c. 23. There was also the County Palatine of Hexam an 33 H. 8. cap. 10. but thereof quaere A County Palatine is of so high a nature that whereas all Pleas touching the life or maihem of a man called Pleas of the Crown are usually held and sped in the Kings name and cannot be passed in the name of any other the chief Governours of these by special Charter from the King heretofore did send out all Writs in their own name and did all things touching Iustice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other Counties onely acknowledging him to be their Superiour and Soveraigne But by the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 25. this power was much abridged which fee and Cromp. Jurisdict 137. Besides these two sorts of Counties there are also Counties corporate as appears by the Statute of 3 Ed. 4. 5. and these are certain Cities or ancient Boroughs of the Land upon whom the Princes of this Nation have bestowed such extraordinary Liberties as London York Chester Gloucester and many others County in another signification is used for the County Court which the Sheriff keeps every moneth within his charge either by himself or his Deputy See for this Dal ● on s Office of Sheriffs Of these Counties or Shires there are reckoned to be 37 in England besides the twelve in Wales Court COurt is diversly taken sometimes for the House where the King remains with his ordinary retinue and also the place where Iustice is judicially ministred of which you may find 32 several sorts in Cromp. Jurisd well described And of those the greater part are Courts of Record some are not and therefore accounted Base Courts in comparison of the others Besides these there are also Courts Christian so called because they handle matters chiefly
appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledge in Divinty cannot be well judged of being heretofore held by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome but after his ejection they held them by the Kings Authority by virtue of his Magistracy as the Admiral of England holds his Court whence it proceeds that they send out their Precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Iustices of the Kings Courts do and therefore as the Appeal from those Courts did lie to Rome now by the Stat. of 25 H. 8. cap. 19. it lies to the King in his Chancery Court-Baron COurt-Baron is a Court that every Lord of a Mannor hath within his own Precincts Of this Court and Court-Leet Kitch hath writ a learned Book This Court as it seems in Cok. lib. 4. fol. 26. fs twofold And therefore if a man having a Mannor in a Town grants the inheritance of all the Copyholds therein to another this Grantee may hold a Court for the customary Tenants and accept of Surrenders to the use of others and make Admittances and Grants The other Court is of Free-holders which is properly called the Court-Baron wherein the Suitors that is the Free-holders are Iudges whereas of the other Court the Lord or his Steward is Iudge Coutheutlaugh COutheutlaugh is he that wittingly receives a man utlawed and cherishes or hides him in which case he was in ancient time subject to the same punishment as the man utlawed was Br. l. 3. tr 2. c. 13. nu 2. It is compounded of couth i. known and utlaw outlawed as we now call them Cranage CRanage is a liberty to use a Crane for drawing up wares or Goods out of any Ship Boat or Barge at any Creek or Wharf and to make profit of it It is used also for the Money that is taken for that work Creditor CReansor or Creditor comes of the French Coryance that is Confidence or perswasion and it signifies him that trusts another with any Debt be it money wares or other things This word is used in the Old N. B. in the Writ of Audita querela f. 66. a. Creek CReek is that part of a Haven from whence any thing is landed or disburthened out of the Sea And this word is used in the Stat. 5 El. cap. 5. and 4 H. 4. cap. 20. c. Croft CRoft is a little Close or Pightle adjoyning to an House used either for pasture or arable as the owner pleases And it seems to be derived from the old word Creaft that is Handicraft because these lands are for the most part manured with the best skill of the owner Cucking-stool CUcking-stool is an Engin invented for the punishment of Scolds and unquiet women and it was called in old time a Tumbrell as appears by Lamb. in his Eirenarc l. 1. c. 12. And by the Cases and Iudgements in Eire in the time of Ed. 3. a Pillory and a Tumbrell are appendant to a Leet without which right cannot be administred to the parties within the view Keloway fol. 140. b. And in the Stat. 51 H. 3. ca. 6. it is called Trebuchett Cui ante divortium CUi ante divortium is a Writ that lies when Alienation is made by the husband of the wifes Land and after Divorce is had between them then the woman shall have this Writ and the Writ shall say Whom she before the Divorce might not gain-say Cui in vita CUi in vita is a Writ that lies where a man is seised of Lands in Fee-simple Fee-tail or for life in right of his wife and aliens the same and dies then she shall have this Writ to recover the Land And note That in this Writ her Title must be shewed whether it be of the purchase or inheritance of the woman But if the husband alien the right of his wife and the husband and the wife die the wifes Heir may have a writ of Sur cui in vita Cuinage CUinage See Cuynage Cuntey CUntey cuntey is a kind of Trial as appears by Bract. in these words The matter in this case shall be ended by Cuntey cuntey as between coheirs l. 4. tr 3. cap. 18. And again in the same place In a Writ of right the business shall be determined by cuntey cuntey And thirdly l. 4. tr 4. c. 2. The cause shall be tried by Writ of right neither by Battel nor by the great Assise but by Cuntey cuntey only which seems to be as much as by ordinary Iury. Curfew CUrfew comes of two French words Couvrir to cover and Feu Fire It is used with us for an evening Peal by which the Conqueror willed every man to take warning for the taking up his Fire and putting out his Light So that in many places at this day when a Bell is customably rung toward Bed-time it is said to ring Curfew Curia avisare vult CUria avisare vult is a Deliberation which the Court purposes to take upon any difficult point of a Cause before Iudgement be resolved on For which see the New Book of Entries verbo Curia c. Curia claudenda IS a Writ or Action to compell another to make a Fence or Wall which the Defendant ought to make between his land and the Plaintiffs Currier CUrrier is one that dresses or liquors Leather and is so called of the French word Cuir id est Corium Leather The word is used in all the Statutes made for the good making of Leather as in 1 Jac cap. 22. c. Cursiter CUrsiter is an Officer or Clerk belonging to the Chancery who makes out Original Writs 14 15 H. 8. cap. 8. They are called Clerks of Course in the Oath of Clerks of the Chancery appointed anno 18 Ed. 3. Stat. 5. There are of them twenty four to each of whom is allotted certain Shires into which they make out such Original Writs as are by the subject required and are a Corporation among themselves Curtesie of England CUrtesie of England is where a man takes a wife seised in Fee-simple or Fee-tail general or seised as Heir of the tail special and hath issue by her male or female be the issue dead or alive if the wife die the husband shall hold the Land during his life by the Law of England And it is called Tenant by the Curtesie of England because this is not used in any other Realm but only in England If the Infant was never alive then the husband shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie but if the issue be born alive it suffices If the woman be delivered of a Monster which hath not the shape of mankind this is not Issue in Law But though the issue hath some deformity or defect in the hand or foot and yet hath humane shape if suffices to make the husband Tenant by the Curtesie And in some cases the time of the birth is material and in some not Therefore if a man marries a woman Inheritrix who is great with child by him
shall have the Land but for term of life for those words will carry no greater Estate If one will that his son J. shall have his Land after the death of his wife here the wife of the Devisor shall have the Land first for term of life So likewise if a man devise his goods to his wife and that after the decease of his wife his son and heir shall have the House where the goods are there the son shall not have the House during the life of the wife For it doth appear that his intent was that his wife should have the House also for her life notwithstanding it were not devised to her by express words If a Devise be to J. N. and to the Heirs females of his body begotten after the Devisee hath issue a son and daughter and dies here the daughter shall have the Land and not the son and yet he is the most worthy person and Heir to his father but because the Will of the dead is that the daughter should have it Law and Conscience will so also And herein the very Heathens were precise as appears by those Verses of Octavius Augustus which Donatus reports he made after Virgil at his death gave commandment that his Books should be burnt because they were imperfect and yet some perswaded that they should be saved as indeed they happily were to whom he answered thus Let Faith and Law be kept and what last Will Commandeth to be done we must fulfill Devoire DEvoire is as much as to say a Duty It is used in the Statute of 2 R. 2. ca. 3. where it is provided That all the Western Merchants being of the Kings amity shall pay all manner Customs and Subsidies and other Devoires of Caleis See the Stat. 5 Ejusdē Regis cap. 2. Devorce DEvorce or Divorce Divortium dictum est Diversitate mentium quia in diversas partes eunt qui distrahunt Matrimonium or else from the verb Diverto which signifies to return back because after the Devorce between the husband and wife he returns her again to her father or other friends or to the place from whence he had her And though Devorce was never approved of by the Divine Law but contrariwise prohibited as appears by this precept Let no man separate that which God hath joyned together yet in all ages and well-governed Common-wealths it hath been used and permitted As at this day with us there are divers causes for which the husband and wife may be devorced as first causa Praecontractus Therefore if a man marry with a woman precontracted and hath issue by her this issue in Law and in truth bears the surname of his father but if after the husband and wife be devorced for the Precontract there the issue hath lost his surname and is become a Bastard and nullius filius Cok. lib. 6. fol. 66. Devorce may be causa Frigiditatis and therefore if a man be married to a woman and after they are devorced causa Frigiditatis and then the man takes another wife and hath issue by her yet this issue is lawfull because that a man may be habilis inhabilis diversis temporibus and by the Devorce causa Frigiditatis the Marriage was dissolved a vinculo Matrimonii and by consequence either of them might marry again Cok. lib. 5. fol. 98. b. Also a man may be devorced causa Impubertatis or Minoris aetatis and in this case if two are married infra annos nubiles and after full age Devorce is had between them this dissolves the Marriage and the woman may arraign an Assise against the Husband for the Lands or Tenements given with her in Frank-marriage 19 lib. Assise Pla. 2. So Devorce may be had causa Professionis causa consanguinitatis causa Fornicationis and for many other causes too long to be now recited It is requisite that in the sentence of Devorce the Cause thereof be shewed because some Devorce dissolves the Matrimony that is to say a vinculo Matrimonii bastards the issue and barrs the wife of Dower and some a mensa thoro the which dissolves not the Matrimony nor barrs the Woman of Dower nor bastards the issue Devorce is a Iudgement spiritual and therefore if there be cause ought to be reversed in the Spiritual Court See Cok. lib. 7. Kenns Case If a Woman Copiholder of certain Land durante viduitate sua according to the Custome of the Mannor sows the Land and before the severance of the Corn takes a husband the Lord shall have the Emblements and not the husband But if a Lease be made to the husband and wife during the Coverture and the husband sows the Land and afterward they are devorced causa Praecontractus the husband shall have the Emblements and not the Lessor Dicker DIcker is a word used in the Statute of 1 Jacobi cap. 22. and it signifies the quantity of Ten Hides of Leather And it seems to come from the Greek word Decas which signifies Ten. Diem clausit extremum DIem clausit extremum is a Writ that lies where the Kings Tenant that hold in Chief dies then this Writ shall be directed to the Escheator to enquire of what Estate he was seised who is next Heir and his age and of the certainty and value of the Land and of whom it is holden and the Inquisition shall be returned into the Chancery which is commonly called The Office after the death of that persō And there is another Writ of Diem clausit extremum awarded out of the Exchequer after the death of an Accountant or Debtor of his Majestie to levy the Debt of his Heir Executor Administrators lands or goods Dietus datus DIes datus is a Respite given to the Tenant or Defendant before the Court Brook Tit. Continuance Dieta rationabilis DIeta rationabilis is sometimes used for a Reasonable Days journey as Bract. l. 3. patt 2. cap. 16. It hath in the Civil Law other significations which need not be here mentioned See Vocabul utriusque Juris Dieu son act DIeu son act these are words oftentimes used in our Law and it is a Maxime That the Act of God shall prejudice no man And therefore if a House fall down by Tempest or other Act of God the lessee for life or years shall not only be quit in an Action of Waste brought against him but hath by the Law a special interest to take timber to build the House again if he will for his habitation Cok. lib. 4. 63. lib. 11. 82. a. In like manner when the Condition of an Obligation consists of two parts in the disjunctive and both are possible at the time of the Obligation made and afterwards one of them becomes impossible by the Act of God the Obligor is not bound to perform the other part for the Condition shall be taken beneficially for him Coke lib. 5. 22. Dignitie Ecclesiastical DIgnitie Ecclesiastical is a phrase of speech used in the Statute of 26 Hen. 8.
Soccage the Widow is sped of her Dower rather in the Soccage-Lands as the fairest part Of this see Littl. lib. 1. cap. 5. Enfranchisement ENfranchisement is when a man is incorporated into any Society or Body politick So if an Alien born be made Denizon of England he is said to be enfranchised and he that is made a Citizen of London or other Town Corporate because he is made partaker of those Liberties which belong to the Corporation whereinto he is enfranchised And when a man is enfranchised into a City or Borough he hath a Free-hold in his Freedome for his life and with others in their politick capacity hath Inheritance in the Land of the said Corporation wherefore the thing which shall be the cause of his Dis-infranchisement ought to be an Act or Deed and not only an Endeavouring or enterprising whereof he may repent before it be put in execution And what shall be sufficient cause to dis-infranchise a Free-man and what not see Cok. lib. 11. in Bagg's Case fol. 98. Englesherie ENglesherie or Englecerie is an old word which signifies the being an Englishman For in ancient time as appears by Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 15. fol. 134. if a man had been slain or murthered he was accounted to be Francigena which word implies every Alien until Englesherie were proved that is until it was made manifest that he was an Enlish-man The original whereof was this Kanotus the Danish King having established his Estate here in peace at the request of our Barons discharged the Land of his Armies wherein he reposed his greatest safety upon this condition That the Barons would give consent to a Law That whosoever should ● ill an Alien and was apprehanded and could not acquit himself should be liable to Iustice ● But if the Man-slaier escayed the Town where the man was slain should forfeit sixty six Marks to the King and if ● he Town was not able to pay it then the Hundred should forfeit and pay this to the King 's own Tteasury and farther That every man murthered should be accounted Francigena unless Englesherie were proved and how it should be proved see Bracton in the same chap. num 7. Also see Horn's Mirrour of Justices l. 1. cap. of the Office of Coroners and Fleta l. 1. c. 30. This Englesherie for the abuses and grievances which were afterwards perceived to arise therefrom was utterly abolished by Stat. An. 14. E. 3. c. 4. See Coke l. 7. f. 16. Calvin's Cafe Enheritance ENheritance is such Estate in Lands or Tenements or other things as may be inherited by the Heir whether it be estate in Fee-simple or Tail by Discent from any of his Ancestors or by his own Purchase And it is divided into Enheritance Corporate and Enheritance Incorporate Enheritance Corporate are Mesuages Lands Meadows Pastures Rents and such like that have substance in themselves and may continue always And these are called Corporal things Enheritance Incorporate are Advowsons Villains Ways Commons Courts Fishings and such like that are or may be appendant or appurtenant to Enheritance Incorporate The Eldest part ENitia or Einecia pars is that Part which upon Partition among Coparceners falls to the Eldest Sister or ancientest Coparcener as it appears by Littleton sect 245. And it is called Enitia pars from the French word Eigne or Aisne that is the First-born Enquest ENquest is that Inquiry which is made by Iurors in all Causes civil or criminal touching the matter in Fact And such Inquiry is either ex officio which are called Inquests of Office and are traversable or at the mise of the parties This word is used in the Statutes of 25 E 3. c. 3. 28 E. 3. c 13. and almost in all Statutes that speak of Trials by Iurors Entendment ENtendment is an usual word in our Law when a thing is in doubt then by Entendment it shall sometimes be made good As if an Inquisition be found before a Coroner that a man was murthered at A. which is a Liberty and is not said in the Inquisition at A within the Liberty of A yet it shall be good by Entendment for peradventure the Liberty may extend beyond the Town but that the Town if self shall be presumed to be out of the Liberty of the Town is a captious construction wherefore the Inquisition shall be good by Entendment Coke l. 5. f. 121. See Kitch f. 224. Enterpleader ENterpleader is when in any Cause a matter happens which of necessity ought to be discussed before the principal Cause can be determined For example Two persons be found Heir to Land by two several Offices in one County by this the King is in doubt to whom he shall make Livery for which cause before Livery made he will have them interplead and thereby determine who is the right Heir See Coke l. 7. f. 45. Stam. Prer c. 19. Brooke tit Enterpleader Also there is another sort of Interpleader in Detinue in divers cases which see Rast Entries 213. Entire Tenancie ENtire Tenancie is that which is contrary to Several Tenancy and signifies a Sole possession in one man where the other signifies Ioynt or common in more See Brooke Several Tenancies and the Old Book of Entries under this Title Entrie ENtrie is where a man enters into any Lands or Tenements or takes possession of them Also there are divers Writs of Entry which are in divers manners One is a Writ of Entrie sur Disseisin which lies where a man is disseised he or his Heir shall have this Writ against the Disseisor or any other after Tenant of the Land And if the Disseisor alien and die seised then the Writ of Entrie shall be against the Heir and the Alienee in the Per viz. in which the Tenant hath no Entry but by such a one naming the Disseisor who him hath disseised c. If the Heir or Alienee die seised or alien to another then the Writ shall be in the Per and Cui viz. to which the Tenant hath no Entry but by such a one naming the Heir or Alienee of the Disseisor to whom such a one naming the Disseisor did let it who by force disseised him c. And if Land be conveyed over to many or if the first Disseisor be disseised then the Writ of Entry shall be in the Post viz. that the Tenant hath no Entry but after the Disseisin which the first Disseisor made to the Demandant or his Ancestor See Entre en le Per. Entrie in the Per Cui and Post A Writ of Entrie in the Per lies where a man is disseised of his Free-hold and the Disseisor aliens or dies seised and his Heir enters then the Disseisee or his Heir shall have the said Writ against the Heir of the Disseisor or against the Alienee of the Disseisor but living the Disseisor he may have an Assise if he will and the Writ of Entry shall say In quod A non habet Ingressum nisi per B qui illud
to have and tohold the one half to one and his Heirs aud the other half to another and his Heirs in all these cases none of them knows his several If there be two or three Ioyntenants and one hath Issue and dies then he or those Ioyntenants that overlive shall have the whole by Survivorship If two Iointenants by agreement make Partition between them by Deed then they are several Tenants But if one Ioyntenant grant that which belongs to him to a Strang ●● then the other Ioyntenantand the Stranger are Tenants in common And though two Tenants in common be seised throughly and of the whole and none knows his several yet if one die the other shall not make the whole by Survivorship but the Heir of him that dies shall have the half And so if there be three Ioyntenants and one of them makes a Feoffment of his part to another and the Feoffee dies then his Heir shall have the third part and the other two are Ioyntenants as they were because they two are seised by one joynt Title Also if Lands be given to the baron and his wife and the husband aliens and dies the wife shall recover the whole But if they were Ioyntenants before the Coverture then he shall recover but the half If Land be given to the husband and his wife and a third person if the third person grant that which belongs to him the one half passes by this Grant for that the baron and his wife are but one person in Law and in this case they have right but to half Also if two Ioyntenants are of Lands in a Town that is Borough-English where Land is devisable and one by his Testament devises that which belongs to him to a Stranger and dies this Devise is void and the other shall have the whole by Sutviver for that the Devise may not take effect till after the death of the Devisor and immediately after the death of the Devisor the right comes to the other Ioyntenant by Surviver who claims nothing by the Devisor but in his own right by Surviver But otherwise it is of Parceners seised of Lands devisable causa qua supra Journies accounts JOurnies accounts Dietae computatae is a term in the Law which is understood thus If a Writ be abated without the default of the Plaintiff or Demandant he may purchase a new Writ which if it be purchased by Journies accounts that is within as little time as he possibly can after the Abatement of the first Writ then this second Writ shall be as a Continuance of the first and so shall ouste the Tenant or Defendant of his Voucher Plea of Non-tenure Ioyntenancy fully administred c. or any other Plea which arises upon matter hapning after the date of the first Writ And fifteen days have been held a convenient time for the purchase of the new Writ See for this Writ by Journies accounts Spencers Case Coke lib. 6. fol. 9. b. Joynture JOynture is an Estate and Assurance made to a Woman in consideration of Marriage for term of her life or otherwise as is mentioned in the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. whether it be before or after Marriage And if it be after then she may at her liberty after the death of her husband refuse to take or have the Lands so assured for her Ioynture and demand her Dower at the Common Law But if it be made before Marriage then she may not refuse such Ioynture nor have Dower according to the Common Law unless that when she brings her Writ of Dower the Defendant pleads such a Plea as will not bar her of her Dower as if he say in Bar that her husband was not seised of such Estate whereof she might be endowed or any such Plea and doth not shew that she hath a Ioynture made c. and therefore demands Iudgment of that Action or any such like Plea c. And this was the opinion of Master Brograve at his Reading in Grays-Inn in Summer An. 1567. 18 Eliz. upon a Branch of the Statute made 27 H. 8. cap. 10. concerning Joyntures and Dowers And of those things whereof a Woman may be endowed she may have Ioynture as of Mines Vesturam terrae Woods Towns Is ● es Meadows and such like Also of an Advowson Reversion depending upon an Estate for Life Wind-mill high Chamber Rectory and such other and they are called Tenements Also of a Villain for he is an Hereditament And of all these profit may come to the woman But of those things whereof no profit will come but rather a charge a Ioynture cannot be made See Coke lib. 4. fol. 1. Vernons Case Jurisdiction JUrisdiction is a Dignity which a Man hath by a power to do Iustice in Causes of complaint made before him Juris utrum JUris utrum is a Writ that lies for the succeeding Incumbent of a Benefice to recover the Lands or Tenements belonging to the Church which were aliened by his Predecessor And see of this Fitz. N. B. fol. 48. R. and see after in the Title Utrum Juror JUror is one of those 24 or 12 men which are sworn to deliver a truth upon such Evidence as shall be given them touching the matter in question of which see Fitz. Nat. B. fol. 165. D. and the Statute 16 and 17 Car. 2. cap. for returning able and sufficient Jurors Justice seat JUstice seat is the highest Court that is held in a Forrest and it is always held before the Lord Chief Iustice ●● Eyre of the Forrest upon m●●ning 40 ● ays before And 〈◊〉 the Iudgments are always given and the Fines see for Offences that were presented at the Courts of Attachments and the Offenders indicted at the Swainmotes See concerning this Court Manwoods Forrest Laws cap 2 ● fol. 238. b. Justices in Eire JUstices in Eire See Eire Justicies JUsticies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some special Cases in his County-Court of which he cannot by his ordinary power hold Plea there And of this you may see Precedents in Fitzh N. B. fol. 117. C. in Account and fol. 152. B. in Annuity and fol. 119. G. in Debt and many others And it is called a Justicies because it is a Commission to the Sheriff to do a man right and it requires no Return or Certificate of what he hath done K. Keelage KEelage in Latine Killagium is a Custom paid at Hartlepool in Durham for every Ship coming into that Port. R of Parl. 21 E. 1. Kiddle KIddle or Kidel is a Dam or Wear in a River All Kidels shall from henceforth be utterly put down in the Thames and Medway and throughout all England except upon the Sea-coast Mag. Char. cap. 24. KIngs silver Kings silver is the Money which is due to the King in the Court of Common Pleas for a License there granted to any man to pass a Fine Coke lib. 6. fol. 39 43. Kintal KIntal is a Weight
of this Sect. Lord in Grosse LOrd in Grosse is he who is Lord without a Mannor as the King in respect of his Crown Fitz. Nat. Brev. fol. 5. A man makes a Gift in tail of all his Land to hold of him and dies his Heir hath nothing but a Seignory in Gross Lotherwit LOtherwit is that you may take amends of him who doth deffle your Bondwoman without your licence Lushburgh LUshburgh was a counterfeit Coin in the time of E. 3. made beyond Seas in likeness of English Moneys and brought in to deceive the King and his Subjects And therefore it is declared to be Treason by the Stat. of 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 2. for any man to bring it into the Realm knowing it to be false M. Maegbote MAEgbote was a a Recompence for a Kinsman slain Maihem or Maime MAihem or Maime is where by the wrongful act of another any Member is hurt or taken away whereby the party is made unperfect to fight As if a Bone be taken out of the Head or broken in any other part of the Body or Foot or Hand or Finger or Joynt of a Foot or any Member be cut or by some Wound the Sinews be made to shrink or the Fingers made crooked or if an Eye be put out Fore-teeth broken or any other thing hurt in a mans Body by means whereof he is made the less able to defend himself or offend his enemy But the cutting off of an Ear or Nose or breaking of the Hinder-teeth or such like is no Maihem because it is rather a deformity of Body then diminishing of Strength and that is commonly tryed by the Justices beholding the party And if the Justices stand in doubt whether the hurt be a Maihem or not they use and will of their own discretion take the help and opinion of some skilful Chirurgeon to consider thereof before they determine upon the Cause Mainpernable MAinpernable that may be mainprised or delivered to Mainpernors See the Statute of Westm 1. Cap. 15. what persons may be mainpernable what not Mainprise MAinprise is when a man is arrested by Capias the Iudge may deliver his body to certain men to keep and to bring before him at a certain day and these are called Mainpernors and if the party appear not at the day assigned the Mainpernors shall be amerced Maintenance MAintenance is where any man gives or delivers to another that is Plaintif or Defendant in any Action any sum of money or other thing to maintain his Plea or takes great pains for him when he hath nothing therewith to do then the party grieved shall have against him a Writ called a Writ of Maintenance Manbote MAnbote signifies a Pecuniary Compensation for the killing a man Lambert Mandamus MAndamus is a Writ that goes to the Escheator for the finding of an Dffice after the death of one that died the Kings Tenant and it is all one with the Writ of Diem clausit extremum but that the Diem clausit extremum goes out within the year after the death and the Mandamus goes not out till after the year and in case where there was never any Diem clausit extremum sued out or was not sued out with effect Fitz. N. B. 253. B. C. See the Stat. 12 Car. 1. cap. 24. Also there is another sort of Mandamus granted upon Motion in the Kings Bench one to the Bishop to admit an Executor to prove a Will or to grant Administration Stiles Reports 78. Another to command Corporations to restore Aldermen and others to Offices out of which they are unjustly put out Look 11 Report James Bag 's Case Mannor MAnnor is compounded of divers things as of a House Arable Land Pasture Meadow Wood Rent Advowson Court-Baron and such like which make a Mannor And this ought to be by long continuance of time the contrary whereof mans memory cannot discern for at this day a Mannor cannot be made because a Court-Baron cannot now be made and a Mannor cannot be without a Court-Baron and Suiters and Freeholders two at the least for if all the Free-holds except one escheat to the Lord or if he purchase all except one there his Mannor is gon for that it cannot be a Mannor without a Court-Baron as is aforesaid and a Court-Baron cannot be holden but before Suiters and not before one Suiter and therefore where but one Free-hold or Freeholder is there cannot be a Mannor properly although in common speech it may be so called Mansion MAnsion Mansio is most commonly taken for the chief Messuage or Habitation of the Lord of a Mannor the Mannor-house where he doth most reside his Capital Messuage as it is called of which the Wife by the Statute of Mag. Chart cap. 7. shall have her Quarentine Munucaptio MAnucaptio is a Writ that lies for him who is arrested or indicted of Felony and offers sufficient Sureties for his Appearance but the Sheriff or he whom it concerns will not suffer him to be bailed then he shall have his Writ to command them to suffer him to be bailed See of this Fitz. N. B. fol. 249. G. Manumission MAnumission is the making a Bond-man free and may be in two sorts the one is a Manumission expressed the other a Manumission implied Manumission expressed is where the Lord makes a Deed to his Villain to Infranchise him by this word Manumittere which is as much to say as to let one go out of another mans hands or power The manner of Manumitting or Infranchising in old time most usually was thus The Lord in presence of his Neighbors took the Bondman by the Head saying I will that this Man be free and therewith shoved him forward out of his hand and by this he was free Manumission implied without this word Manumitere is when the Lord makes an Obligation to his Villain to pay him money at a certain day or sues him where he might enter without Suit or grants him an Annuity or Leases Lands to him by Deed for years or life and in divers like cases the Villain thereby is made free Marchers MArchers are the Noble-men dwelling on the Marches of Wales or Scotland who in ● imes past had their private laws as if they had been Kings and therefore in the Statutes of 2 H. 4. c. 28. 26 H. 8. cap. 6. 27 H. 8. cap. 26. and 1 E. 6. cap. 10. they are called Lord Marchers Marches MArches are the bounds and Limits betwixt us and Wales or Scotland so called either from the German word March which signifies a Frontire or Border or else from the French word Marque that is a Sign or Token of Distinction these being the notorious Distinctions of two divers Countries Of these you shall read in the Statutes of 4 H. 5. cap. 7. 22 E. 4. cap. 8. 24 H. 8. cap. 9. and others Marshal MArshal is a general word for many Officers in England as the Lord or Earl Marshal of whom mention is made in the Statutes
Serjeantie TO hold by Petit Serjeantie is as if a man held Lands or Tenements of the King yielding him a Knife a Buckler an Arrow a Bow without string or other like Service at the will of the first Feoffor and there belongs not Ward Marriage or Relief And mark well that a man may not hold by Grand or Petit Serjeanty but of the King See the Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 24. Piccage PIccage is the payment of money or the money paid for the breaking of the ground to set up Booths and Standings in Fairs Picle or Pitle PIcle or Pitle seems to come from the Italian Picco ● o Parvus and signifies with us a little small Close or Inclosure Pillory PIllory is an Engine of punishment ordained by the Statute of 51 H. 3. for the punishment of Bakers but now used for many other Offendors and is called in Latine Collistrigium Pipowders PIpowders is a Court which is incident to every Fair for the determination of differences upon Bargains and disorders therein See more hereof Crom. Jurisd fol. 229. Coke lib. 10. fol. 73. Piscary PIscary is a Liberty of Fishing in another mans waters or his own Placard PLacard is word used in the Statutes of 33 H. 8. cap. 6. 2 3 Ma. cap. 9. and it signifies a Licence to use unlawful Games or to shoot in a Gun Plaintiff PLaintiff is he that sues or complains in an Assise or in an Action personal as in an Action of Debt Trespass Disceit Detinue and such other Pledges PLedges are Sureties either real or formal which the Plaintiff finds to prosecute his suit Pleading PLeadings are all the Sayings of the parties to Suits after the Count or Declaration namely that which is contained in the Bar Replication and Rejoynder and not that contained in the Count it self and therefore defaults in the matter of Count are not comprised within Mispleading or insufficient Pleading nor are remedied by the Statute of Jeofails 32 H. 8. but only the Mispleading or insufficient Pleading committed in the Bar Replication and Rejoynder are there provided for But see those now remedied also by the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 13. Plenartie PLenartie is when a Benefice is full directly contrary to Vacation which signifies the being void of a Benefice Stamf. Prerog cap. 8. fol. 32. Plevyn See Replevyn Pluralities PLuralities are where a Uicar or Rector has two or more Ecclesiastical Benefices For which see Stat. 21. H. 8. cap. 13. Policy of Assurance POlicy of Assurance is a course taken by Merchants for the assuring of their Adventures upon the Sea by giving a certain proportion in the Hundred for securing the safe return of the Ship and so much Merchandize as is agreed upon And of this you may read in the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 12. Vpon which an Action lies at the common Law or in the Court by the Kings Patent sitting at the Royal Exchange in London the Iudges of which are Civilians common Lawyers and Merchants Pone POne is a Writ whereby a Cause depending in the County-Court is removed into the Common-Pleas See for this Old N. B. fol. 2. a. Pontage POntage is a word mentioned in many Statutes as in Westm 1. cap. 25. 1 H. 8. cap 9. 39 Eliz. cap. 24. and it signifies sometimes the Contribution that is gathered for the Repairing of a Bridge sometimes the Toll paid by the Passengers to that purpose Portgreve See Viscount Portmoot POrtmoot is a word used in the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 15. and signifies a Court kept in a Haven-Town Possessio Fratris POssessio Fratris is where a man hath a son and a daughter by one Woman and a son by another Venter and dies the first son enters and dies without Issue the daughter shall have the Land as Heir to her brother although the second son is Heir to the father Litt. Sect. 8. Possession POssession is twofold either actual or in Law Actual Possession is when a man actually enters into lands or tenements to him discended or otherwise Possession in Law is when Lands or Tenements are descended to a man and he hath not as yet really actually and in Deed entred into them And it is called Possession in Law because in the eye and consideration of the Law he is deemed to be in Possession since he is Tenant to every mans Action that will sue concerning the same Lands or Tenements Post diem POst diem is the Return of a Writ after the day assigned for its Return Postd ● sseisin POstdisseisin Look for that before in the Title Assise Postea POstea is the Record of the proceedings upon a Trial by a Writ of Nisi prius which is returned after the Trial by the Iudge before whom it was tried into the Court where the first Suit began to have Iudgment there given upon the Verdict and it is called the Postea because it begins with Postea die loco c. Poundage POundage is a Subsidie to the value of 12 d. in the pound which is granted to the King by every Merchant as well Denizen as Alien for all manner of Merchandize carried out and brought in And of such Subsidies see the Statute 1 2 Ed. 6. cap. 13. 1 Jac. cap. 33. 14 Car. 2. cap. 24. Also by Stat. 29 El. cap. 4. every Sheriff is allowed poundage for levying Debt or Damages by Execution Pounds POunds are in two sorts the one Pound open the other close Pound open is every place wherein a Distress is put whether it be common Pound or Back-side Court Yard Pasture or else whatsoever whereto the Owner of the Distress may come to give them meat without offence for their being there or his coming thither Pound close is such a place where the owner of the Distress may not come to give them meat without offence as in a Close house or whatsoever else place Preamble PReamble takes his name of the preposition prae before and the verb ambulo to go so joyned together they make the compound verb praembulo to go before and hereof the first part or beginning of an Act is called the Preamble of the Act which is a Key to open the minds of the makers of the Act and the mischiefs which they intend to remedy by the same As for example the Statute made at Westm the first the 37 chap. which gives an Attaint the Preamble of which is thus Forasmuch as certain people of the Realm doubt very little to give false Verdicts or Oaths which they ought not to do whereby many people are disherited and lose their right It is provided c. Prebend and Prebendary PRebend and Prebendary are terms often used in our Books and they come of the Latine praebeo Prebend is that portion which every member or Canon of the Cathedral Church receives in right of his place for his maintenance and Prebendary is he that hath such a Prebend Precipe or Praecipe in capite PRecipe in capite
hath or might have against him Bracton l. 5. tract 5. ca. 9. nu 9. Quo jure QUo jure is a Writ that lies where a man hath had Common of Pasture in anothers Several within the time of memory then he to whom the Several belongs shall have this Writ to charge him to shew by what Title he claims the Common Quo minus QUo minus is a Writ that lies where a man hath granted to another Housebote and Heybote in his wood and the Grantor makes such waste and destruction that the Grantee cannot have his reasonable Estovers then the Grantee shall have the aforesaid Writ which is in nature of a Writ of Waste And note that Housebote is certain Estovers to mend the House and Heybote certain Estovers to mend Heyes and Hedges There is another Writ called a Quo ● inus in the Exchequer which any Termor or Debtor to the king shall have against any other for Debt or Trespass in the Excheques Office called the Common Pleas by which the Plaintiff shall surmise that for the wrong which the Defendant doth him he is less able to pay the King his Debt or Term which is surmised to give Iurisdiction to the Court of Exchequer to hear and determine the cause of the Suit between them which otherwise should be determined in another Court Quo warranto QUo warranto is a Writ that lies where a man usurps to have any Franchise upon the King then the King shall have this Writ to make him come before his Iustices to shew by what Title he claims such Franchise Quod ei deforceat QUod ei deforceat is a Writ that lies where Tenant in Tail Tenant in Dower or Tenant for Life loses by Default in any Action then he shall have this Writ against him that recovers or against his Heir if he think he hath better right than he who recovered See the Statute West 2. cap. 4. Quod permittat QUod permittat is a Writ that lies where a man is disseised of his Common of Pasture and the Disseisor aliens or dies seised and his Heir enters then if the Disseisee die his Heir shall have this Writ Quod permittat Habere Chiminum Rast Entr. 538. Co. Entr. 526. Estoverium turbarum F. N. B. 124. Passagium ꝑ aquam Rast Entr. 538. Liberam chaceam 2 Institut 654. Liberum raurum F. N. B. 124. Liberam faldam Ibid. 6. E. 4. 1. Liberam piscar c. Ibidem Prosternere Domum murum sepem 5 Coke 100. Ripam c. 9 Coke 53. R. Ran. RAn signifies so open a Spoiling of a man that it cannot be denied Lambert Arch. fol. 125. Ranger RAnger comes from the French word Rang that is Ordo vel Series and signifies an Officer of the Forrest that is appointed to walk every day through the Purlieu whereof he is Ranger to drive back the wilde Beasts into the Forrest again to see hear and inquire of Offenders there and to present their Offences See Manwood cap. 20. fol. 185. c. Ransome RAnsome signifies properly the Sum that is paid for the redeeming of one that is taken Captive in War But it is also for a Sum of money paid for the pardoning of some great Offence as in the Statute of 1 H. 4. cap. 7. and in other Statutes Fine and Ransome going together 23 H. 8. cap. 3. and elsewhere Rape RApe hath two significations The first is when it is taken for part of a County as Sussex is divided into six parts which by a peculiar name are called Rapes Cambd. Britan. pag. 225. and these parts in other Countries are called Hundreds Tithings Lathes or Wapentakes In the other sense it is the violent Deflouring a Woman against her will and this offence is Felony as well in the Principal as in his Aidors See 11 H. 4. c. 13. 1 Ed. 4. c. 1. West 2. c. 13. Crōpt Just of Peace f. 43 44. Rationabili parte bonorum RAtionabili parte bonorum is a Writ that lies for the Wife against the Executors of her Husband to have the third part of his Goods after Debts paid and Funeral expences discharged But whether this Writ lies by the Common Law or only by the Custom of some Countries is a question in our Books See F. N. B. fol. 122. L. Rationabilibus divisis RAtionabilibus divisis is a Writ that lies where there are two Lordships in divers towns and one nigh the other and any parcel of one Lordship or Waste hath been incroched by little parcels then the said Lord from whom the parcel of Ground or Waste hath been incroched shall have this Writ against the Lord that hath so incroched Ravishment de Gard. RAvishment de Gard is a Writ that lies for the Gardian by Knights Service or in Soccage against him that takes from him the Body of his Ward And of this see F. N. B. fol. 140. E. c. Rebutter REbut ● er is when one by Deed or Fine grants to warrant any Land or Hereditament to another and he who made the Warranty or his Heir s ● es him to whom the Warranty is made or his Heir or Assignee for the same thing now if he who is so sued pleads the said Deed or Fine with Warranty and demands Iudgment if the Plaintiff shall be received to demand the thing which he ought to warrant against that Warranty by Fine or Deed aforesaid comprehending such Warranty such Pleading of the Warranty is called a Rebutter This word is also a denomination of a Plea which followeth a Rejoynder And after the Rebutter followeth the Surrebutter See Cokes Entries fol. 284. Recaption REcaption is a second Distress of one former distrained for the self-same cause and that during the Plea grounded upon the former Distress It is also the name of the Writ or Remedy that the Law gives him who is thus twice distrained for one thing the form and use of which Writ you may see in Fitz. N. B. fol. 71. E. c. Recluse REcluse is one that by reason of his Order in Religion may not stir or depart out of his House or Cloister And of such Littleton speaks sect 434. Recognizance REcognizance is an Obligation made before a Master of the Court of Chancery for a Debt or to perform Covenants or an Order or Decree of the Court upon which an Extent issues if the Condition be not performed But no Capias lies upon it against the Cognizors or his Executors Quaere vide 2 Len. 84. Recordare REcordare is a Writ directed to the Sheriff to remove a Cause out of an inferior Court as a Court of Ancient Demesne Hundred Court or County Court into the Kings Bench or Common Pleas. And of this see Fitz. N. B. fol. 70. B. Record REcord is a Writing or Parchment wherein are Enrolled Pleas of Land or Common Pleas Deeds or Criminal Proceedings in any Court of Record But in Courts not of Record as Admiralty Courts Christian Courts Baron c. Their
and not retornable And if the Sheriff do it not then there shall go forth another Writ Sicut alias and afterward another Writ Sicut pluries vel causam nobis significes which shall be retornable And if the Sheriff yet make no Replevin then there shall issue an Attachment directed to the Coroners to attach the Sheriff and to bring him before the Iustices at a certain day and farther that they make execution of the first Writ Replication REplication is when the Defendant in any Action makes an Answer and the Plaintiff replies to that that is called the Replication of the Plaintiff Reprises REprises are Deductions Payments and Duties that go yearly and are paid out of a Mannor as Rent chare Rent seck Pensions Corrodies Annuities Fees of Stewards or Bailiffts and such like Reprieve REprieve comes from the French Repris that is taken back so that to reprieve is properly to take back or suspe ● d a Prisoner from the Execution and proceedings of the Law for that time Requests REquests is a Court held in the Kings Palace before the Master of the Requests by Petition and it seems is a Court of Equity Rere County REre County is a word used in the Statutes of Westm 2. cap. 39. and 2 E. 3. c. 5. and seems by those Statutes to be some publick place which the Sheriff appointed for the receiving of the Kings mony after his County Court was done Resceit REsceit is when any Action is brought against the Tenant for term of life or years and he in the Reversion comes in and prays to be received to defend the Land and plead with the Demandant And when he comes it behoves that he be alway ready to plead with the Demandant In the same manner a Wife shall be received for the default of her Husband in an Action brought against them both And Tenant for years shall be received to defend his Right where in an Action brought against the Tenant of the Free-hold he pleads faintly Rescous REscous is a Writ that lies when any man takes a Distress and another takes it again from him and will not suffer him to carry the Disress away this is a Rescous upon which he may have this Writ and shall recover dammages Also if one distrain Beasts for dammage Feasant in his Ground and drives them in the High way to Impound them and in going they enter into the House of the owner and he withholds them there and will not suffer the other to impound them that withholding is a Rescous Also if a Sheriff takes my Debtor by an Execution or by mesne Process and J. S. rescue him out of the Custody of the Sheriff I may have an Action of Rescous against J. S. for this wrong and recover Dammages and Debt Reservation REservation is taken divers ways and hath divers natures As sometimes by way of exception to keep that which a man had before in him As if a Lease be made for years of Ground reserving the great Trees growing upon the same now the Lessee may not meddle with them nor with any thing that comes of them so long as it abides in or upon the Trees as Mast of Oak Chesnut Apples or such like but if they fall from the Trees to the ground then they are by right the Lessees for the Ground is let to him and all thereupon not reserved c. Sometimes a Reservation doth produce and bring forth another thing which was not before As if a man Lease his Lands reserving yearly for the same xxli c. And divers other such Reservations there be And note that in ancient time their Reservations were as well in Victuals whether Flesh Fish Corn Bread Drink or what else as in Money until at last and that chiefly in the Reign of King Henry 1. by agreement the Reservation of Victuals was changed into ready Money as it hath hitherto continued Residence REsidence comes from the Latine Residere and is all one with Resiance but that this word Residence is oftner appropriated to the Continuance of a Parson or Vicar upon his Church or Benefice and so it is used in the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 13. Resignation REsignation is where an Incumbent of a Church resigns or leaves it to the Ordinary who did admit him to it or to his Successors which differs from Surrender since by that he to whom the Resignation is made hath no interest in the thing so resigned but he to whom the Surrender is made hath by that the thing it self Restitution REstitution is when a Iudgment is reversed by Error then a Writ of Restitution shall issue to restore to the Defendant in the Action what he hath lost And there is a Writ of restitution of stolen goods upon conviction of the Thief which is made at the Sessions or Assises on the Statute of 21 H. 8. 11. Noy rep 128. Resummons REsummons is a Second Summons of a man to answer an Action where the first Summons is defeated by the Demise of the King or such other cause And of this see Coke lib. 7. fol. 29. b. Also if a Terr-tenant returned upon a Scire facias or Defendant in another Action plead non-age and the Plea stays until c. When he comes of full age the Plaintiff upon a suggestion may have a Scire facias or resummons And so when a Plea is staid by pleadiny Protection Excommunication or such other disability Resumption REsumption is a word used in the Statute of 31 H 6. c. 7. and is there taken for the Taking again into the Kings hands such Lands or Tenements as upon false suggestion or other error he had made Livery of to an Heir or granted by Patent to any man Retraxit REtraxit is the Preterperfect tense of Retraho to pull back and is when the party Plaintiff or Demandant comes in proper person into the Court where his Plea is and saith he will not proceed any farther in the same c. this will be a Bar to the Action for ever Reve or Reeve REeve is an Officer more known in ancient time then at this day for almost every Mannor had then a Reeve and yet still in many Copyhold-Mannors where the old custom prevails the name and office is not altogether forgotten And it is in effect that which now every Bayliff of a Mannor practises although the name of Bayliff was not then in use amongst us being siuce brought in by the Normans But the name of Reeve anciently called Greeve which Particle Ge in continuance of time was altogether left out and lost came from the Saxon word Geresa which signifies a Ruler And so indeed his Rule and Authority was large within the compass of his Lords Mannor and among his men and Tenants as well in matters of Government in peace and war as in the skilful use and trade of Husbandry For as he did gather his Lords Rents pay Reprises or Duties issuing out of the Manor set the Servants
ustome of the Mannor and the Monstraverunt to discharge them when their Lord distrains them to do other Services than they ought This Writ of Monstraverunt ought to be brought against their Lord and these Tenants hold all by one certain Service and are free Tenants of Ancient Demesne Soccage in base Tenure is where a man holds in Ancient Demesne that may not have the Monstraverunt and for that it is called the base Tenure Sockmans SOckmans are the Tenants in Ancient Demesne that held their Lands by Soccage that is by Service with the Plow and therefore they are called Sockmans which is as much to say as Tenants or men that hold by Service of the Plow or Plow-men For Sok signifies a Plow And these Sockmans or Tenants in Ancient Demesne have many and divers Liberties given and granted them by the Law as well those Tenants that hold of a common person as those that hold of the King in Ancient Demesne as namely to be free from paying Toll in every Market Fair Town and City throughout the whole Realm as well for their Goods and Chartels that they sell to others as for those things that they buy for their Provision And thereupon every of them may sue to have Letters Patents under the Kings Seal directed to his Officers and to the Mayors Bayitffs and other Officers in the Realm to suffer them to be Toll-free to be exempt from Leets and Sheriffs Turns also to be quit of Pontage Murage and Passage as also of Taxes and Tallages granted by Parliament except that the King tax ancient Demesne as he may at his pleasure for some great cause to be free from payments toward the expences of the Knights of the Shire that come to the Parliament And if the Sheriff will distrain them or any of them to be contributary for their Lands in Ancient Demesne then one of them or all as the case requires may sue a Writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him that he do not compel them to be contributary to the expences of the Knights And the same Writ doth command him also that if he have already distrained them therefore that he redeliver the same Distress Also that they ought not to be impannelled nor put in Iuries and Enquests in the Country out of their Mannor or Lordship of Ancient Demesne for the Lands that they held there except that they have other Lands at the Common Law for which they ought to be charged And if the Sheriff do return in Pannels then they may have a Writ directed to him De non ponendis in Assisis Juratis And if he do the contrary there lies an Attachment against him And so it is also if the Bailiffs of Franchises that have return of Writs will return any of the Tenants which hold in Ancient Demesue in Assises or Iuries Sodomy SOdomy in the Indictment for this offence it is said Rem veneream habuit peccatum illud Sodomiticum inter Christianos non nominandum felonice commisit Spoliation SPoliation is a Suit for the Fruits of a Church or for the Church it self it is to be sued in the Spiritual Court and not in the Temporal And this Suit lies for one Incumbent against another where they both claim by one Patron and where the right of the Patronage doth not come in question or debate As if a Parson be created a Bishop and hath dispensation to keep his Benefice and afterward the Patron presents another Incumbent which is instituted and inducted now the Bishop may have against that Incumbent a Spoliation in the Spiritual Court because they claim both by one Patron and the right of the Patronage doth not come in debate and because the other Incumbent came to the possession of the Benefice by the course of the Spiritual Law that is to say by Institution and Induction so that he hath c ● lour to have it and to be Parson by the Spiritual Law for otherwise if he be not instituted and inducted c. Spoliation lies not against him but rather a Writ of Trespass or an Assise of Novel disseisin c. So it is also where a Parson who hath a Plurality doth accept another Benefice by reason whereof the Patron presents another Clerk who is instituted and inducted now the one of them may have Spoliation against the other and then shall come in debate whether he has a sufficiene Plurality or not And so it is of Deprivation c. The same law is where one saith to the Patron that his Clerk is dead whereupon he presents another there the first Incumbent who was supposed to be dead may have a Spoliation against the other And so it is in divers other like cases whereof see Fitz. Natura Br. f. 36. G. c. Stablestand STablestand is a term of the Forrest Laws when one is sound standing in the Forrest with his Bow bent ready to shoot at any Deer or with his Grey-hounds in a Lease ready to slip See Manw. Forest Laws cap. 18. fol. 133. b. Stallage STallage signifies money paid for pitching Stalls in Fairs or Markets or the right of doing it Standard STandard See Estandard Stannary STannary are Courts by ancient custom held in Cornwal for suits concerning the Trade of Tin Statute-Merchant TO hold by Statute-Merchant is where a man acknowledges to pay mony to another at a certain day before the Mayor Bailif or other Warden of any Town that hath power to make execution of the same Statute and if the Obligor pay not the Debt at the day and nothing of his Goods Lands or Tenements may be found within the Ward of the Mayor or Warden aforesaid but in other places without then the Recognisee shall sue the Recognisance and Obligation with a Certification to the Chancery under the Kings Seal and he shall have out of the Chancery a Capias to the Sheriff of the County where he is to take him and to put him in prison if he be not a Clerk till he have made satisfaction for the Debt And one quarter of a year after he is taken he shall have his Land delivered to himself to make gree to the party for the Debt and he may sell his Land while he is in prison and his sale shall be good And if he do not make satisfaction within a quarter of a year or if it be returned that he is not found and if he be not a Clerk then the Recognisee may have a Writ out of the Chancery called Extendi facias directed to any Sheriff to extend his Lands and Goods and to deliver the Goods to him and to scise him in his Lands to hold them to him his Heirs and Assigns till the Debt be levied or payed and for that tune he is Tenant by Statute-Merchant Note that in a Statute-Merchant the Recognisee shall have Execution of all the Lands which the Recognisor had the day of the Recognisance made and any time after by force of the
Fairs for Goods and Cattel brought thither to be brought and sold and is always to be paid by the Buyer and not by the Seller except there be some Custom otherwise There are divers other Tols as Turn Tol which is where Tol is paid for Beasts that are driven to be sold although they be not sold indeed Tol travers is where one claims to have a half peny or such like Tol of every Beast driven over his ground Through Toll is where a Town prescribes to have certain Toll for every Beast that goes through their Town or for every score or hundred which seems not to be so unreasonable a Prescription or Custome as some have thought though it be through the Kings High-way as they call it where every man may lawfully go if there be one thing for another As if there be a Bridge or such like commodity provided at the cosls and charges of the Town for the ease of Travellers that drive that way whereby their Iourney is either shortned or bettered why then may not Toll be lawfully and with good reason demanded of them c. But divers Citizens and Townsmen are free from paying Toll by grant of the King or his Ancestors or do claim the same by Prescription or Custom So also Spiritual persons and Religious men were quit of paying Toll for their Goods and Merchandizes bought and sold c. But now the Statute of 21 H 8. cap. 3. wills that they shall not Merchandize Also Tenants in ancient demesne ought to be quit throughout the whole Realm of paying Tol as appears before in the Title Sockmans And in all cases where Tol is demanded of them that should go buy and sell Toll-free there the party or parties grieved may have a Writ De essendo quietum de Tolonio directed to him or them that so demand Toll contrary to the grant of the King or his Progenitors or contrary to Custom or Prescription Tolt TOlt comes from the Latine tollo and is a Writ by which a Cause depending in a Court-baron may be from thence removed into the County Court before the Sheriff See of this Fitz. Nat. Brev. fol. 3. F. and Old Natura Brevium fol. 2. a. Tonnage TOnnage is a Custom or Impost paid unto the King for Merchandize carried out or brought in in Tuns or such like Vessels according to a certain rate in every Tun And of this you may read in the Statutes of 12 E. 4. cap. 3. 6 H. 8. c. 14. 1 E. 6. c. 13 and 1 Jac. c. 33. but especially 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. Totted TOtted is a term used in the Statute of 42 E. 3. c. 9. and signifies a Note to be made in the Estreat-Roll that goes out of the Exchequer to the Sheriff of all such Debts as are paid unto the Sheriff to that they be not again demanded of the party nor the King deceived See the Statute Transcript TRanscript this most commonly signifies the certification of a Record upon a Writ of Error from the Kings Bench in Ireland unto the K. B. in England or from that Court unto the Exchequer Chamber for the Record it self is not certified but a Transcript But out of C. B. and other inferior Courts the Record is quite taken away by the Writ of Error and remains in B. R. Co. Ent. 2. 24 37. Travers TRavers sometimes signifies to Deny sometimes to Overthrow or undo a thing done For the first Westm p. 2. sect 54. speaking of an Answer to a Bill in the Chancery saith It is that which the Defendant pleads or says in bar to avoid the Plaintiffs Bill or Action either by confession and avoiding or by denying and traversing the material points of it And again Sect. 55 A Replication is the Plaintiffs speech or Reply to the Defendants Answer which must affirm and pursue his Bill and confess and avoid deny or traverse the Defendants Answer and the formal words of this Travers are Without that ● in Latine Absque hoc See Kitch fol. 227. The other signification is found in Stamf. Prerog cap. 20. the whole Chapter who speaking of Traversing an Office saith That it is nothing else but to prove that an Inquisition taken of Goods or Lands by the Escheator in defective and untruly mads So Traversing an Indictment is to take Issue upon the chief matter of it which is nothing else but to make contradiction or deny the point of the Indictment As in a Presentment against A for a High-way overflows with Water for default of scowring of a Ditch which he and they whose Estate he hath in certain Land there have used to scowr and cleanse A may traverse either the matter that is to say That there is not any High-way there or that the Ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may traverse the Cause That he hath not the Land c. or that he and those whose Estate c. have used to scowr the Ditch Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. pag. 521. of Travers See the whole Chapter Kitch ● ol 240. and the Old Book of Entries the word Travers Treason TReason is in two manners that is to say grand Treason and petit Treason as it is ordai● ed by the Statutes And therefore look the Statutes and Stamford lib. 1. cap. 2. Treasure trove TReasure trove i. Treasure found is when any Money Gold Silver Plate or Bullion is found in any place and no man knows to whom it belongs then the Property thereof appertains to the King But if any Mine of Metal be found in any ground that alway pertains to the Lord of the Soil except it be a Mine of Gold or Silver which shall be alway to the King in whose ground soever it be found Trespass TRespass is a Writ or Action of Trespass whereof there are two sorts The one Vicountiel so called because it is directed to the Sheriff and is not Returnable but to be determined in the County The Form whereof differs from the other because it hath not these words Quare vi armis c. Fitz N. B. fol. 85. g. The other is directed to the Sheriff also but is returnable in the King Bench or Common Plea and hath always in it their words Quare vi armis or else it shall abate as it appears in Fitz. N. B. fol. 86. h if it be not a Trespass upon the Case and then the words Vi armis are left out and in lieu thereof the Writ shall say in the end of it Contra pacem c as appears in Fitz. Nat. Brev. fol 92. c. And yet in some cases Trespass upon the Case shall be Vi armis also though not in the point of the Action or the causa causata yet in the Conveyance to the Action or the causa causante as is well distinguisht in the Count de Salops Case in Coke lib. 9. fol. 50. b. Trial. TRial there are many kinds of it as of matters in Fact which shall be tried by the
Iurors matters in Law by the Iustices matters of Record by the Record it self A Lord of Parliament upon an Indictment of Treason or Felony shall be tried by his Peers without any Oath upon their Honors and Allegiance but in Appeal at the Suit of any Subject they shall be tried per probos legales homines If Ancient Demesne be pleaded of a Mannor and denied this shall be tried by the Record of the Book of Dooms-day in the Exchequer An Apostata shall be certified by the Abbot or other Religious Governor to whom he owed Obedience General Bastardy Excommengement Lawfulness of Marriage Profession and divers other matters Ecclesiastical shall be tried by the Bishops Certificate And a great number of other Trials there are whereof see Coke lib 9. the Case of the Abbot of Scrata Marcella fol. 23. By Witnesses De morte viri in Dower where the Tenant pleads That the Husband of the Demandant is alive Ra ● En. 128. Tronage TRonage is a certain Toll taken for Weighing Westm 2. cap. 25. 13 Edw. 1. Trover TRover is an Action which a Man hath against another that having found any of his Goods refuses to deliver them upon Demand See the Old Book of Entries word Trover Tumbrel TUmbrel see in the Title Cuckingstool and see the Statute of 51 H. 3. cap. 6. for the use of it Turbary TUrbary from the old Latine word Turba which was use ● for a Turf is an interest of digging Turfs upon a Common And you shall find an Assise brought of such a Common of Turbary in 5 Ass pl. 9. 7 E. 3. fol. 43. b. Sheriffs Turn SHeriffs Turne is a Court of Record in all things that pertain to the Turn and it is the Kings Leet through all the County and the Sheriff is Iudge And whosoever hath a Leet hath the same Authority within the Precinct as the Sheriff hath within the Turn This Court is to be kept twice in every year once after Easter and again after Michaelmas and that within one moneth after each Feast Anno 31 Edw. 3. cap 15. From this Court are exempted only Archbishops Bishops Abbots Priors Earls Barons all Religious men and women and all such as have Hundreds of their own to be kept This Court is appertaining and incident to the Office of the Sheriff and ought not to be reserved therefrom and the Sheriff is to appoint Clerks under him in this Court such as he will at his peril answer for But he cannot prescribe to take any thing for the keeping of his Turn because he is an Officer removeable See Coke l. 4. 33. l. 6. 2. and Daltons Book of Sheriffs tit Sheriffs Turn V. Vacation VAcation See Plenartie Vagabonds VAgabonds are idle and unprofitable men punishable by the Statute 39 Eliz. 4. 1 Jac. 7. 25. Value of Marriage VAlore Maritagii is a Writ that lay for the Lord against his Ward to recover against him the Value of his Marriage at his full age for that he was not Married by his Lord within age And this Writ lay although the Lord never rendered unto the Ward any convenient Marriage See Palmers Case Coke l. 5. f. 126. b. and the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. Venditioni exponas VEnditioni exponas is a Iudicial Writ directed to the Sheriff to sell Goods seised by a Fleri facias Venew or Visne VEne ● or Visne is a term used in the Statute of 35 H. 8. c. 6. and often in our Books and signifies a Place next to that where any thing that comes to be tried is supposed to be done And therefore for the better discovery of the truth of the matter in Fact upon every Trial some of the Iury must be of the same Hundred or sometimes of the same Parish or Neighborhood in which the thing is supposed to be done who by Intendment may have the best knowledge of the matter See Coke 6 Book f. 14. a. Arundels Case Venire facias VEnire facias it is a Process directed to the Sheriff or to the Coroners if the Sheriff be challenged to summon a Iury to try an Issue joined between party and party or the King and a Subject and it is also a Process upon an Audita Querela or upon an Indictment in the Kings Bench or Venire facias ad computandum against Tenant by Elegit Verderor VErderor is an Officer in the Kings Forrest chosen by the Free-holders of the County where the Forrest is by a Writ directed to the Sheriff to do it as appears by the Books of the Register and of the Nature of Writs and they are called in Latine Viridarli of the word Viridis in English Green in French Verd for a great part of their Office is touching the Verd to wit the Wood and Grass growing in the Forrest for which see more in the Charter and Laws of the Forrest Verge VErge is the Compass about the Kings Court their Bounds the Iurisdiction of the Lord Steward and of the Coroner of the Kings House so that he cannot intermeddle in the County forth of the Verge because his Office extends not thereunto as the Coroner of the County cannot intermeddle within the Verge which is exempted out of his Office by the Common Law And it seems against reason that their Offices and Iurisdictions being several should intermeddle one within the Iurisdiction of the other And this Verge seems to be twelve miles See 13 R. 2. Stat. 1. c. 3. F. N. B. f. 241. Britton f. 86. Fleta l. 2. c. 2. Coke l. 4. f. 46. 33 H. 8. c. 12. Verge in another signification is used for a Stick or Rod by which one is admitted Tenant and holding it in his hand takes the Oath of Fealty to the Lord of the Mannor and for that cause is called Tenant by the Verge See Old N. B. f. 17. Littl. l. 1. c. 10. Vert or Verd. VErt comes of the French Verd and signifies with us in the Forrest Laws every thing that doth grow and bears a green Leaf within the Forrest And it is divided into Over Vert and Neather Vert. Over Vert is the Great Woods and Neather Vert is the Vnder Woods There is also in Forrests a Vert called Special Vert and that is all Trees that grow in the Kings own Woods within the Forrest and all Trees that grow there in other Mans Woods if they be such Trees as bear Fruit to feed the Deer which are called Special Vert because the destroying of such Vert is more grievoufly punished then the destruction of other Vert is See Manwoods Forrest Laws c. 6. f. 52. a. Vicountiels VIcountiels are Farms so called for which the Sheriff pays certain Rent to the King and makes the best profit he can of them See the Stat. 33 34 H. 8. c. 16. View VIew is when an Action real is brought and the Tenane knows not well what Land it is that the Demandant asks then the Tenant shall pray
21 Jac. cap. 17. at 8 l. per Cent. and now by the Statute of 12 Car. 2. c. 17. it is reduced to 6 l. per Cent. Utlary UTlary is when an Exigent goes forth against any man to appear in any Court to make Answer to any Action or Indictment and Proclamation made in five Counties then if the Defendant appear not the Coroner shall give Iudgment that he shall be out of the Protection of the King and out of the aid of the Law By such an Utlary in Actions Personal the party Outlawed shall forfeit all his Goods and Chattels to the King And by an Utlary in Felony he shall forfeit as well all his Lands and Tenements that he hath in Fee-simple or for term of his life as his Goods and Chattels Also though a man be outlawed yet if any Error or Discontinuance be in the Suit of the Proces the party shall have advantage thereof and for such cause the Vtlary shall be reversed and adnulled If the party Defendant be over the Sea at the time of the Vtlary pronounced that is a good cause of Reversal If an Exigent be awarded against a man in one County where he dwells not yet an Exigent with Proclamation shall go forth to the County where he dwells or else if he be thereupon Outlawed the Utlary may be reversed as it appears by the Statute An 6 4 H. 8 c. 4. And if a man be outlawed in Action personal at the Suit of another and after he Purchase his Chatter of Pardon of the King such Charter shall never be allowed till he hath sued a Writ of Scire facias to warn the party Plaintiff and if he appear then the Defendant shall answer him and bar him of his Action or else make Agreement with him Utlaw UTlaw See Waive Utlepe UTlepe signifies the Escape of Theives Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47. Utrum UTrum is a Writ that lies when the Right of any Church is allened and holden in Lay-fee or translated into the possession of any other Church and the Alienor dies then his Successor shall have the said Writ whereof an Enquest shall be charged to try whether it be the Free alms of the Church or Lay-fee And note well that none that have Covent or Common Seal may maintain this Writ but a Writ of Entre sine assensu Capitull for the Alienation made by his Predecessor W. Wage WAge is the Giving Security for the performing of any thing as to wage Law and to wage Deliverance which see before in Gage None wages Law against the King Brook tit Chose en Action num 6. See Law Waife WAife is when a Thief hath feloniously stolen Goods and being nearly followed with Hue and Cry or else overcharged with the burthen or trouble of the Goods for his ease sake and more speedy Travelling without Hue and Cry flies away and leaves the Goods or any part of them behind him c. then the Kings Officer or the Reeve or Bayliff to the Lord of the Mannor within whose Iurisdiction or Circuit they were left who by Prescription or Grant from the King hath the Franchise of Waife may seise the Goods so waived to their Lords use who may keep them as his own proper Goods except the Owner come with fresh Suit after the Felon and sue an Appeal or give in Evidence against him at his Arraignment upon the Indictment and he be attainted thereof c. In which cases the first Owner shall have Restitution of his Goods so stollen and waived And though as hath been said Waife is properly of Goods stollen yet it may be also of Goods not stollen As if a man be pursued with Hue and Cry as a Felon and he flies and leaves his own Goods c. these shall be taken as Goods waived and forfeit as if they had been stollen But see Foxleys Case Coke l. 4. l. 109. b. that these are not Goods waived but Goods of Fugitives which are not forfeited till it be found before the Coroner or otherwise of Record that he fled for the Felony Waive WAive is a Woman that is Outlawed and she is called Waive as left out or forsaken of the Law and not an Outlaw as a man is for Women are not sworn in Leets to the King nor to the Law as men are who therefore are within the Law whereas Women are not and for that cause they cannot be said Outlawed insomuch as they never were within it See Fitz. N. B. fol. 161. A. But a man is called utlaw because he was once sworn to the Law And now for contempt he is put out of the Law and is called utlaw as one should say without benefit of the Law Wapentake WApentake is all one with that which we call Hundred as appears by Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. in the end Lambert in his Explication of Saxon Words word Centuria saith That this word Wapentake is more especially used at this day in the Countries beyond the River Trent And in the Laws of King Edward by him set forth num 33. it is most plain in these words And what the English term Hundred the foresaid Counties call Wapentake The Statutes An. 3 H. 5. cap. 2. and An. 9 H. 6. cap. 10. and An. 15 H. 6. cap. 7. make mention of Stainctife Wapentake and Friendless Wapentake in Craven in the County of York See Roger Hoveden part poster Annal. fol. 346. Warden WArden is of the same signification with the French Gardein and therefore of this see more in the Title Gardein But it is the most usual word in English for him that hath the Custody and Charge of any person or thing by Office as Wardens of the Fellowships in London Anno 14 H. 8. cap. 2. Warden Courts An. 31 H. 6. c. 3. Warden of the Marches An. 4 H. 7. cap. 8. Ferry Warden An. 18 Eliz. c. 10. An. 27 Eliz. c. 26. Wardens of the Peace Anno 2 Edw. 3. c. 3. Wardens of the West Marches Cambden Brit. p. 606. Warden of the Forrest Manwood part 1. p. 111 112. Warden of the Alnage An. 18 H. 6. c. 16. Warden of the Kings Armor in the Tower An. 1 E. 4. c. 1. Chief Warden of the Forrest Manwood part 1. pag. 42 43. Warden of the Kings Wardrove Anno 5 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. Wardens of the Tables of the Kings Exchange Anno 9 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. c. 7. and Anno 9 Hen. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 4. Warden of the Rolls of the Chancery Anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 1 5. Wardens and Communalty of Lands contributory to Rochester Bridge Anno 18 Eliz. cap. 17. and Wardens of the Stannary Courts 4 Instit 230. Wardmote WArdmote is a term mentioned in the Stat. of 32 H. 8. c. 17. and signifies a Court that is kept in every Ward in London and is usually called the Warmote-Court or the Wardmote-Inquest Warrantie WArrantie See Garrantie Warrantia chartae WArrantia chartae is a Writ that lies