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A44485 The booke called the mirrour of justices made by Andrew Horne ; with the book called the diversity of courts and their jurisdictions ; both translated out of the old French into the English tongue by W.H. Horne, Andrew, d. 1328. 1646 (1646) Wing H2789; ESTC R23979 152,542 367

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that they come to the Lords And if any one denieth his service which he ought to do it may be said by the Lords that wrongfully he denieth either part or the whole and that to his wrong and so further count of seisin by his owne hand and that such is his right c. as after shall be said And the Tenant may choose to try his Right by his owne body or by another or joyne issue upon the Grand Assise And pray Conusans whether hee hath the better right to hould such land specified discharged of such service as he houldeth or the said A. to have the same Land indemesure as he claimeth And if the Defendant will try his Right by the body of another Then yee are to distinguish For if the Action be personall the Suit need not be present and if the Action bee Reall and the Tenant hath his Champion present Then may the Plain●ife offer his Champion against the Champion of the defendant or he shalloose his Covenant or his Writ And if the Defendant have nochampion then are the parties adjournable if they have joyned Battle that they have their Champions ready at the next Court as appeareth in the case of Saxeling to whom Hustan was bounded in a Bond of 10. li. by a writing Obligatory made at Rome which the said Hunstan denyed That it was not his deed To which Saxeling by way of Replication Answered That hee wrongfully denyed the same and that wrongfully for that he sealed it with his Seale or with the Seale of another which he borrowed of him such a day such a yeare and at such a place and that if he would deny it he was ready to prove it by the body of A. who saw it or by O. and C. who saw the same and if any hurt come to them he was ready to prove the same by another who could prove the same And so it appeareth that it is not needfull to have present Suit in such personall Actions the first day but the Parties may bee ad●●urned as it is said And if any one who cannot bee a fit witnesse or who is a Champion bee offered by one of the parties to combate who was not named before to make the Battle and the adverse partie there challenge him and demand Iudgement of the default in such such case the Iudgement is to be given against the profferer And if any ill happen to any of their Champions where by they cannot combate according to their proffer none is resceiveable to try the battle for him but only his eldeft sonne Lawfully begotten as by some is said And if the Tenants champion be va●●uished The Tenant thereby looseth all Homage and all Alliance and all Oathes of Fealty and all Homage betwixt him and the Lord and the Lord is to enter therein and to hold the same in demesue as if he had recovered by the Grand Assise And if the champion of the Lord be vanquished that them the Iudgement be that the Tenant hold his Land for ever quit of the service in the demand And if the King doth any wrong to any of his free men who hould of him in chiefe the same course is to be holden The Earles of Parliaments and the Commons have Iurisdiction to heare such causes and determine them because the King cannot by himselfe nor by his Iustices determine the Causes nor pronounce their Iudgment where the King is a partie And as the Lords may challenge their Tenants of wrong Or Injuries done to them against the Articles of their Fealtie In the like manner are the Lords challengeable of wrongs and Injuries done by them to their Tenants And if the Lords do not appeare to answer their Tenants Then are the Tenants to be adjudged that●they doe no service for their Lands till the Lords have Answered CHAP. IIII. SECT 12. Of punishments PVnishment is a satisfaction for a Trespasse or an Offence There are two kinds of punishments Voluntarie and Violent Volantatie is that which bindeth the doer of his owne accord as it is in his Compromises to compell the people to keepe their Bargaines But with such punishments the Law medleth not with Of violent punishment wherewith the Law medleth there are two kindes Corporall and Pecaniarie Of Corporall some are Mortall and some Veniall Of Mortall some are by beheading some by drawing some by hanging some by burning alive some by falling from dangerous places and otherwise according to Auncient priviledges and Vsuages The Offences which require punishment of death are the mortall Offences Of Veniall punishments some are by losse of Member As the Fellony of Mayhem in case of wrong Of Member some by the losse of hand as it is of false Notories and of cutters of Purses with the Larcine of lesse then 12. d. and more then 6. d. which King Rich. changed some by cutting out of Tongues as it used to be of false witnesses some by beating some by Imprisonment some by losse of all their moveable goods and not moveable as of false Iudges and it is of userers attainted of usury after their decease but not if they bee attainted thereof in their life for then thy loose but only their moveables because by pennance and Repentance they may amend and have Heires Some by exile and abjuration of their Christianity or of the Realme of the Towne of the Mannor or the Land and their friends as it is of those who are attainted in personall Actions Venialls who are not able to make satisfaction Some by Banishment as it is in contempts in personall Actions Venialls some by other Corporall paines as it appeareth after its place And although one offend indeed or in word in all judgements upon personall Actions 7. things are to bee weighed in the ballance of Conscience that is to say 1. The cause 2. The petson 3. The place 4. The time 5. The Quality 6. The Quantity 7. The end 1. The cause whether it be mortall or veniall 2. The person the plaintiffe and defendant 3. The place whether in Sanctuary or not 4. The time whether in day or in the night 5. The Quality of the Trespaffe 6. The Quantity appeareth in it selfe 7. The end whether the taking were in manner of distresse by a justisiable importment Or in manner of Larine By Allienation unjustifiable CHAP. IIII. SECT 13. Of Insamous Persons ALL those who are rightfull attained of an Offence whereupon corporall punishment followeth are infamous Infamous ar all those who offend mortally or Fellouously all those who are perjured in giving false witnesse All false Iudges All false Vsurours and all those who are attainted of personall trespasses to whom open pennance is joyned by enjudgment of Law Those who Imprison a Free-man against his will or blemith the credit of his Franchise by extortion or by any purchase Those who also bring attaints and cannot prove the perjury whereby honest Iurours are slandered And those who indite or Appeale a man who is innocent of
Seale in case where it should make those Officers inobedient of right and to the King and should charge others to doe such Commandement 63 It is abuse to put these words in Writs Nisi captus sit per speciale perceptum nostrum vel Capitalis Justiciarii nostri vel pro forresta nostra c. for no speciall Commandement ought to exceed the Common Law 64 It is abuse to suffer the Judges to be Plaintiffes for the King 65 It is abuse that Aliens or others who have not sworne fealty to the King or infamous persons or Indicted or Appealed of mortall Crime or who have not an able Commission or after any wrong done or after Judgement given be suffered to have Jurisdiction or to Judge out of the points specified in their Commissions 66 It is abuse that in Appeales by Pleaders are the P●aces and the Countries and the houres of the daies and that it is against the Peace since every offence is against the Peace and such other words needlesse 67 It is abuse to abate sufficient Appeales according to the Statute of Gloucester 68 It is abuse that the remediall Writs are saleable and that the King Commands the Sheriffe that he take Sureties to his use for the Writ for and by the Purchase of these Writs one may destroy his eremy wrongfully and because that such Fines and Penalties ●un in Estreates though they doe nothing but hurt to the Purchasor theref 69 It is abuse that Forraigners are not receiveable in Actions by Su●●ties of Freemen who have not wherewith to finde Pledges 70 It is abuse to distreire in personall Actions where the profit of the Issues comes to the King and no profit accrueth to the Plaintiffes 71 It is abuse that any Plaint is received to be heard without Sureties present to testifie the Plaint to be true 72 It is abuse that it is said that Villinage is not a Franck Tenement and that an Assize lyeth not of an ejection for term of years as well as it doth of a Franck Tenement for terme of life or in Fee for a Villaine and a Slave are not all one either in name or signification for as much as every Free-man may hold in Villinage to him and his Heires performing the services and charges of the Fees 73 It is abuse to hold that seisin accrued not to the Purchasor when the Donor left his goods for as a Contract of Marriage is good by the consent of the wills of men and women although that one of them repent and after the Marriage would withdraw himselfe but he cannot thereby dissolve the Contract so as well it sufficeth to make the Contract by the delivery of seisin as by the celebration of the Marriage although the Purchasor have no other seisin by taking the Esplees nor any Deed. nor writing to testifie the bargaine and if it were that a Woman after the Marriage were ravished and consented thereto and the Husband repleeve her and the ravisher answering to the Contract say That the Husband had no right nor action because he was never sully seised by taking the Esplees nor had no Deed or said that he was never out of seisin of the Woman because she was clothed with his Robes and by her robe she remained in his seisin this Exception nothing availeth him to excuse his wrong no more then in this case If a man buy a Horse and agree with the seller and the seller deliver the ●●ne to the buyer notwithstanding that the seller repent of the bargaire and forceably take backe the Horse although the buyer hath no Action for the same because he remained alwaies seised thereof at will such Exception is not good 74 It is abuse to thinke that Contracts for goods not moveables are otherwise then for moveable goods 75 It is abuse to thinke that seisin accrueth not as soone to a Purchaser of his Purchase as to an Heire of his Inheritance since the Law requires but three things in Contracts 1. The agreement of the Wills 2. Satisfaction to the Donor 3. Delivery of the possession and gift If a trans●●tation of seisin be given to the Purchaser by the Donor at the houre of one of the Clocke and the Purchaser dyeth at the houre of three of the Clocke he dyeth as well seised of the Tenement as he should be of a Woman or a Horse though the Donor have not departed with and removed his Chattels and it shall never be a good Plea for him to say That the Free-hold after the transmutation of seisin by a simple Livery remained in the Donor after this Livery of the Tenement but if the agreement of the Donot be not performed according to the Contract then he may 〈…〉 thereby 76 It is abuse to 〈…〉 at are cannot recover a 〈…〉 P●●●entments to Church 〈…〉 since many Reasons 〈…〉 to Reddissesors 77 It is abuse that 〈◊〉 are not granted in Chancery without difficulty to Attaint all false Jurours as well in all other Actions Personalls realls and mixt as in Assizes brought 78. It is abuse to drive a Distresse out of the Hundred 79 It is abuse to make the view of the Distresse to Bayliffes in that a Plaint will suffice and a Court and that he is yet seised thereof 80 It is abuse that we doe not sue for a Tortious Distresse by way of Felony and that one attaint not these Robbers at the Kings Suit 81 It is abuse that vicious Contracts are by agreements maintaied by Law as forbidden of offence Is not Usury an offence is not Imprisonment an offence how can one binde himselfe to Usury or to Imprisonment or a Disseisin if he doe not offend 82 It is abuse that Advowsons of Charters are aliened by Law for yeares in Morgage or to ferine or are partible 83 It is abuse that Leases of Fermes are not longer then forty yeares since continuance of seisin by length of time doth dis-inherit no man 84 It is abuse that no Land is let to ferme or in Fee or for yeares rendring Rent by the yeare more then the fourth part 85 It is abuse to Oat-law a man for a default in case where the principall cause is not felony 86 It is abuse that Auditors are appointed by the Lords to heare Accompts without the assent of Bayliffes 87 It is abuse that Bayliffes have no recovery of damage from Tortious Auditors 88 It is abuse that regard is had to the persons when such Law is not for Bayliffes against their Lords a●e contra in the right of Debts due by the one to the other 89 It is abuse that a man may challenge one for his Neise to whom he never found sustinance in as much as a Villaine is not a Villaine but so lorg as he remaireth in custody and since none cara challenge his Villain for Villinage though he be in his custody if he finde not sustenance to his Villaine or send him to some Land in his Mannour where he may gaine his living
Ports and such places which have Counsans of Pleas and also in Court Barons in which Courts is Iustice done according to Law c. And although they of the Cinque Ports ought to be empleaded of their Lands within the jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports yet that holdeth onely where the Tenant sheweth the same and taketh advantage thereof if he be impleaded in the Kings Courts of things which are within that jurisdiction but if the Tenant be sued in the Common Pleas for Lands within the Cinque Ports if the demandant doth recover by default or if the Tenant appeare and plead any matter which is found against him so that the demandant hath judgement for to recover the Land that judgement shall bind him for ever c. But the Tenant might have alleadged That the Land was within the Cinque Ports and by such Plea the Kings Courts should be outed of the jurisdiction c. And so it is of Lands within an ancient demeasne if a Writ be brought thereof in the Common Pleas if the Tenant appeareth and pleadeth and doth not take exception to the jurisdiction and the Plea be found against him so that the demandant recovereth the Tenant shall not reverse the judgement by a Writ of Errour because the Tenant might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and it should have been allowed c. But yet the Lord may reverse that judgement by a Writ of deceit and shall make the Land ancient demeasne as it was before c. And if one hath Counsans of Pleas in a Towne or in a Mannor and a Writ is brought in the Common Pleas of the same Land and the Tenant pleadeth and judgement is given against him the recovery is good for it is within the power of the King and the Writ of the Common Pleas doth take place there and if the Bayliffe or Lord doth not demand Cognusans the judgement is good But in another Action the Bayliffe shall have Cognusans for that the nature of the Lard is not changed and so see that where a man hath counsans of Plea c. it ought to be demanded by the Bayliffe or the Lord and the Tenant shall not demand the same if he be impleaded in the Kings Court but of the ancient demeasne there it behoveth the Tenant to shew the same and plead to the jurisdiction c. if he will have advantage thereof c. And so note that in the Cinque Ports there is such a liberty that the Lands and Tenements are pleadable there before the Barons c. and yet if one be impleaded at the Common Law of Lands within the Cinque Ports the Barons shall not have Counsans of the Plea but the Tenant may plead the same to the jurisdiction in abatement of the Writ c. The Court Baron NOte also that there is another Court which is called Court Baron in which Court the Suitors are the Judges and not the Steward and they hold plea of Contracts within the jurisdiction c. and yet it is said by some That the Defendant shall not shew that the Contract was made out of the jurisdiction and pray that the Plaintiffe be examined as in a Court of Pipowder The Judges of the Court Baron have Authority to hold plea before them of Debt upon Contracts or Detinue but not of detinue of Charters nor Actions of debt upon a judgement in a Court of Record but otherwise I thinke it is of a recovery in the same Court nor shall they hold plea of Maintenance forgery of false Deeds of deceit not of Decies tantum not of pleas of Accompts for they have not authority to assigne Auditors They shall not hold plea of Debt above the summe of forty shillings unlesse it be by prescription and they shall not hold plea of Free-hold by plaint but by a Writ of right they may But if a judgement be given of Free-hold upon a plaint it is said it is good untill it be reversed by a Writ of false judgement tamen quaere c. And note for what Suit a man shall be judged in a Court Baron and it is said That it is where a man is seised of Lands in Fee-simple and which he holdeth by service of Suit at the Lords Mannour that Suit is properly Suit-service and for such Suit he shall be judged in a Court Baron and for no other Suit as it is said c. And quaere also when erronious judgements are given how they shall be reversed viz. when by Writ of false judgement and when by a Writ of Errour And some say That in all Courts where the party might remove the plea by a Recordare upon a judgement given in such Courts a Writ of false judgement lyeth as in ancient Demeasne Court Baron County Court and Hundred but in other Courts which are of Record the plea shall be removed by a Certiorare and upon judgement given in such Courts which are of Record it shall be reversed by a Writ of Errour c. And if a man recovereth in a Court of Record by erronious judgement and Sueth not Execution some say That a Writ of Errour lyeth and the party shall have a Supersedeas if he will prey the same but if a man hath judgement in a Court Baron and taketh not forth Execution no Writ of false judgement lyeth Quaere the reason thereof and what the Law is in that case And note that sometimes the Sheriffe is Judge as in Reddisseisin Wast and Admeasurement and the Processe shall be served by the Baily as is said And note that the Sheriffe is an Officer ●o the Kings Court to execute the Processe thereof yet sometimes the Coroner is the Officer to the Court where defect is found in the Sheriffe c. so that he cannot by Law indifferently execute the Processe as for divers apparent causes yet if the Sheriffe dyeth the Processe shall not goe to the Coroner but shall stay till another Sheriffe is chosen c. And because the Sheriffe is an Officer appointed by the Law to attend the Kings Courts a man shall not take an Averment against the returne of the Sheriffe directly and the reas●n is because where Justice ought to be ministred and executed those who have the Government of the Law ought to repose trust and confidence in some person and if every one might averre against that which the Sheriffe doth then Justice should not be executed but should for ever be delayed c. The meanes and the remedy how a man may come to his due and to that which is wrongfully kept from him and that is by plea and this word is generall and hath divers effects implyed therein and may be divided into divers branches viz. Into pleas of the Crowne as appeales of Death Robbery Rape Felony and divers other things c. and into Actions reall whereby Lands Tenements Rents and other hereditaments are demanded as Writs of right Formed on c. Or Actions
when they may and know to whom they doe belong Into this offence fall all those who take wrongfull or outragious Tole in Markets Ciries Boroughs Townes Mills or elsewhere and those who take pavage murage chinniage carriage or other manner of Customes more then they ought to doe Into this offence fall those Bailiffes who doe enquire in Turnes and viewes of Franck-pledges of more Articles then of personall offences of wrongs done to the King and his Crown and of wrongs done to the common people those who by extortion take monies or Fines for Beaupleader or for which the Jurours are not charged and those who amerce any of their owne heads without reasonable affirment of the people sworne thereunto Into this offence fall those who unjustly distraine and those who sell distresses for the Kings debt within the 15. daies Into this offence fall all those Officers of the Exchequer and others who forbid to make Acquittances under the Exchequer Seale to every one for so much as he hath paid and who oftner then once cause a debt to be leavied who to take Rewards whereby the Townes doe not in due manner according to the Constitution of Winchester or who suffer that the people be not surnished with Armes according to Common appointment Into this offence fall all stealers of others Venison and of Fish in Ponds and of Conies Hares Pheasants Partriges being in Warrens otherfowl Doves and Swans of the Eires of all manner of birds Into this offence fall all the Sheriffs Bailiffes and other the Kings Officers who unjustifiable by extortions take money of the people as for defaults unjustifiable or for sheaves or other Custome unalowable or for Plea whereof the Judge hath no jurisdiction and those who take mony to put men out of Pannells of Juries and put others in Into this offence fall all those who take Lands Tenements Horses or other things and use them beyond the appointed for the loane of them and those who by the authority of their Bailiffes make unjustifiable Collections for monies or other provisions or Corne in Sheaves for Scottalls or other Feastivalls or doe to the people other unlawfull grievance in the like case And those sworn Officers who cause Fines or Amercements or other m●nner of duty to be oftentimes leavied upon one man without making restitution and those officers who take of other then of the King or of their Lords to doe their Office and those who oftner then twice in the yeere hold Sheriffes Turnes or who oftner then once in the yeere hold views of Frank-pledges in one Court and those who by unjustifiable Articles amerce the people and those who at Mills or Markets take outragious Tole and those who amerce the people by Presentments not made by the whole Decenry or by others then of Free-men Into this offence fall they who doe any thing upon another Inheritance by evill covetousnesse or for hatred Into this offence fall Counters who take outragious Sallary or not deserved or who are attainted of ill defence or of other discontinuance and those who deny their Seales in Judgement and those who make Contracts which are forbidden Into this offence sall Usurers who lend mony or other things through covetousnesse to take the forfeiture And those who rob or steale the Marriages of others or run away with others Wives or villaines with the goods of others And all Fore-stallers by whom Victuals or Cattell are made deare They are Fore-stallers who within any Towne or Franchise buy to engrosse and unlawfnlly to sell more deare and those Butchers who sell unwholsome flesh for wholsome and those Fish-mongers who buy and sellagainst the established Law and all those of what Mysteries soever they be who doe deceitfully in their trade or Mysteries CHAP. 1. SECT 11. Of Hamsockne or Burglary BUrglary by an ancient Ordinance is a mortall offence for the Law is That every one be at peace in his owne house This offence is not done only by breaking of a house but is also done by a fellonious assault of Enemies in time of peace upon those who are in their houses with intent to repose there in peace whether the assault be to kill or to reb or to beat those who are in rest within their houses And although it be that these offenders doe not accomplish their purpose if neverthelesse they make any breaking by their assault of the doores windowes or walkes to enter felloneously they are guilty of this crime Into this offence fall all those who felloniously force their entry into anothers house and therein doe any violence against the peace although they doe not break the house and that as well in the day time as the night and those who diffeise the people in such case or cast them our of their houses and out of their peaceable possessions wrongfully CHAP. 1. SECT 12. RApe is done two waies that is to say of things and of Women This offence is here put because King E. 1. by his Statute made it mortall which is more grounded upon the will then upon diseretion for one fortis Whoredome another Fornication another Adultery another Incest and another Rape but to speake properly we are to distinguish of the offences whereof the first offence is greater then the other Whoredome is the deslouring of a married woman felloniously Fornication is to ravish women not Married Adultery is to ravish anothers wife Incest is to ravish Cousens Parents or Affines Rape is properly the taking away of a woman for the desire of Marriage Rape neverthelesse according to the meaning of the Statute is taken for one proper word given for every enforcement of a woman of what condition soever she be CHAP. 1. SECT 13. Of the Office of the Coroners TO Coroners anciently were enjoyned the keeping of the Pleas of the Crown which extend now but to Fellonies and Adventures There are 2 kinds of Coroners Generall and Speciall To the Office of generall Coroners it belongeth to receive the Appeales of all the County of Fellonies done within the yeere to award the Exigents of Contempts and to pronounce the Judgements of Out-lawries and more to enquire in what Pledge they were or Decenery or of whom Mainprized and in whose Ward Speciall Coroners are Coroners of Liberties and of priviledged places To the Office of the one and the other it doth belong to view the Carcases of the dead by Felony or by mischance or to see the burnings and the wounds and the other fellonies that is to say every one in his Bailiwick and to see Treasure tothe● and Wreaks of the sea and to take the acknowledgements of Felony and to give the Abjuration to flyers to sanctuary and to take the Enquests of Felonies hapning within their Bailiwicks As to the view of the Carcase of the body of a man it is his office that so soone as he shall be certified thereof to send to the Hundred of the place to summon sufficient able men of the
outragious Distresse in another Fee or in the Market for a forraign contract Of all Bridges broken and Causies wayes common Bridges and who ought for to repaire hem Of the makers of Cloathes dwelling out of great Towns in places forbidden Of Tanners and Curriers of Leather Of Butchers and who sell unwholsome flesh for that which is sound and of all those who sell corrupt Wine for sound Wine or Beare Ale raw and not well brewed for that which is good and wholsome Of small La eines Of cutters of Purses And of those who suffer people to use any Mysterie for reward or Fee Of Receivers of Thies-boot Of makers and baunters of false Dice Of outragious Tole-takers and of all other deceivers Of all manner of Conspiraters And of all other Articles availeable for the destruction of offenders And the Presentments are to be sealed with the Seales of the Jurours so that none by fraud doe increase or diminish them and that which cannot be redressed there by these Presentments is presentable at the Sheriffes first Turne and those things which the Sheriffes cannot redresse are to be presented by the Sheriffes into the Exchequer All those who are Presented for any offence which is mortall and banished Persons who are returned and their receivers and those who are not in allegiance under the King are to be seised upon and their goods to be seised into the Kings hands And although it be so that the Bailiffe can not heare and determine any Action at the Leete neverthelesse if any one present be grieved by any wrongfull Presentment and complain thereof or if the Bayliffe or Steward have a suspition that the Jurours be in some case perjured by concealing of any offence which is Presentable or of any offender It is lawfull for the Bayliffes or Stewards by twelve more disereet men to enquire of the truth thereof without delay and although that the last Jurours joy that the first are perjured neverthelesse because that no Decenery or Jurour is not attestable with lesse then two Juryes and because the latter Jurie is not taken but ex officio of the Bayliffe and not in the nature of an Attaint the first Jurours are not to be taken Attainted but are onely to be amerced And if any one profer himselfe to sweare fealty to the Kings he is first to be pledged in some Franck-pledgs and put in the Decenety and afierwards sworne to the King and then he is forbidden to offend and common with offenders and he is to be enjoyned to be obedient to his chiefe pledge And to take this Oath in those Views is none exempted who is past the age of 21. yeeres man or woman Clerke nor Lay-man except Alliens Strangers Mossengers or Merchants and those who are in custody At these Viewes of Turnes and viewes of Franck-pledges Essoignes hold where the absence of those who cannot be there is excusable and such Essoignes are adjournable to the next Courts following that the Essoigners have their Warrants The Contents of the Second Chapter OF Actions Of Judges Of Plaintiffes Of Rewards or Fees Of Pleaders or Countees Of Attachments Appeales and to whom Appeale is given Of Goales and Goaters Of Bayles in Appeales Of the Appeale of Majesty Appeale of falsifying Of Appeales of Tredson Of Appeales of burning Of the Appeales of murder Of the Appeales of Robbery and Larcine Of the Appeale of Burglary Of the Appeale of Imprisonment Of the Appeale of Mayhorn Of the Appeale of wounding Of the Appeale of Rape Of reall offences at the Kings Suit Of offences personall at the Kings Suit Of veniall offences and personall Suits Of the Assize of Novel dissesin Of Distresses Of Contracts Of villinage and Neifitie Of Summons Of Essoignes Of Atturnies CHAP. II. CHAP. II. SECT 1. Of Actions WHen it is said that Kings and Princes have the Government and Correction of Offenders with aide of the Prelates and to that intent they are Gods Vicegerant on Earth and to doe the same they have Jurisdiction over the offenders by paines and cheifly those offenders which are under their Jurisdiction neverthelesse Kings cannot not ought not to take notice of the offences of others without Actions of Accusers which well appeareth by the example which God shewed when he was in his Consistory and demanded who was the Accuser of the woman-sinner and because none presented himselfe an Accuser against her to give us a perpetuall example that right Judgement cannot be given without there be three persons at the least viz. a Judge a Plaintiffe and a Defendant God said to the woman-sinner That she should goe in peace or quiet since it belongeth not to a Judge to be both Judge and Plaintiffe and therefore it behooveth to speake of Actions and who are and may be Judges and who Plaintiffes and who Defendants An Action is nothing else but a lawfull demand of right and there are three manner of Actions which have their Introductions by Writs and by Plaints in manner as followeth viz. Personall Reall and Mixt. CHAP. II. SECT 2. Of Judges ALthose who are not forbidden by Law may be Judges To women it is forbidden by Law that they be Judges and thence it is that seme Coverts are exempted to doe Suit in inferiour Courts On the other part a villaine cannot be a Judge by reason of the two estates which are repugnants Persons attainted of false Judgement cannot be Judges nor Infants nor any under the age of 21. yeares nor infected persons nor Ideots nor mad-men nor deafe nor dumbe nor parties in the Pleas nor men excommunicated by the Bishop nor criminall persons for God when he was upon Earth entred into the Consistory where a sinner was to be judgeed to death when God wrote upon the ground and said to the Suiters who came to Judge her Who of you is without sinne and there gave a Judgement as an example to Judges who take upon them every day to Judge the people whereby he taught them That none should take upon themselves so high and noble a ●alling as to sit in the Seate of God to Iudge offenders when they themselves are guilty and Condemnable And those who are not of the Christian Faith cannot be Iudges not those who are out of the King Allegiance next those who have no Commission from the King cannot be Iudges not none whose Authority is repealed not any one after Iudgement is given in the Cause an example thereof appeateth in the Writ of Right Et●nist ficeris viceconnes faciat not none after death or the Returne none whose warrant is vicious not any one if his superiout will not have him A Iudge Commissary hath not power to Iudge but according to the points and within the words of his Commission and the originall Writ no more then the Arbitrary Iudge hath power to goe beyond the points of his submission CHAP. 2. SECT 3. PLaintiffes are those who pursue their right against others by plaint All may be Accusers or Plaintiffes
who are not forbidden by the Law Infected Persons I●iots Infants within age cannot accuse or be Plaintiffes without their Guardians nor Criminall Persons nor an Out-lawed exiled or banished Person nor a woman wayve nor a villaine without his Lord nor a Feme Covert without her Husband nor religious Persons without their Soveraignes nor Persons Excommunicate nor deafe nor dumbe Persons without their Guardians nor the Iudges of the Cases whereof they are Iudges nor any one who is nor of the Kings Allegiance so as he hath been more then forty daies within the Realme except Approvers who are suffered to accuse criminally people of his own condition in favour of the peace How lawfull men ought to complaine They ought in friendly manner to shew their offenders that is to say their Trespassours that they reconcile or amend themselves towards them and if they will not doe so and the Cause be Criminall then yee are to distinguish for if any one seeke revenge then it behoveth him to bring his Action by Appeale of Felony and if he seeketh only repa●ation of damages then he behoveth to bring his Action by Writ which is to containe the name of the King and of the Parties and the name of the Judge and of the County and the Plaint in the demand if the damages or the demand exceed forty shillings and if not then a Plaint sufficeth without a Writ And because all Suites of the Plaintiffes could not be determined upon the first preferring of the Suits nor the Suiters or Plaintiffes presently releeved in their Suits Therefore Kings used to goe from County to County every seaven yeeres to enquire of Offences and Trespasses and of wrongs done to themselves and to the Crowne and to the Common people and of all wrongs errours and negligences of their Officers and of all false Judgements of paines pardoned or wrongfully Iudged or outrag●ously of Out-lawes returned and of their Receivers of the valewes of Counties out of Hundreds Towne● Manners and of moveable goods which belong to the King and to the Crowne of the Lands of Idiets of alienators of Fees of offences against the Kings Inhibition of Priviledges and Franchises prejudiciall to the Kings of Bridges and High-wa●e● and of all other needfull Articles and they used to doe right to all Persons by themselves or by their Chiefe Justices and now Kings doe the same by the Iustices Commisfaries in Eyre assigned to hold all Pleas. Infante of such Eyres are Sheriff Turnes needfull and viewes of Franck-pledges and when the people by such Enquests were indicted of any mortall offence the King used to Condemnethem without Answers which usage still remaineth in Almaine but of pitty and mercy and because that man by reason of his frailty cannot keepe himselfe from sinne if he abstaine not from it by the Grace of God it was accorded that no Appelee or Indicter should be condemned without answer And Kings had no Jurisdiction but of mortall offences and of the rights of the Crowne and of their owne rights and of the wrongs of their Ministers and of wrongs done against Common Law and Common Ordinances and the Articles of Eyres CHAP. 2. SECT 4. Of Rewards and Fees KIngs used to give Rewards to the cheife of the Stock and to all those who faithfully served them and from the Rewards of Kings others tooke example to reward their servants and because no Free-man was bouden to serve against his will by reason whereof none were bound to serve the King or any other but by the service of his Fee or by reason of his Residence or dwelling in another Fee some are bound to serve the King for a certainty by the yeare And it is not lawfull for those Officers who take wages certaine of the King to take any wages of the people But the Iudges who serve the King it is lawfull for them to take twelve pence of the Plaintiffe after the hearing of the Cause and no more although there be two Iudges or two Plaintiffes in one Action and the Pleader six pence and a Knight sworne a witnesse foure pence and every Iurour foure pence and the two Sumners foure pence Nevertheresse in the time of King Henry the 1. It was Ordained and assented unto That Iurours sworne upon Enquests of Office as in Assizes Recognisances of Assizes Redissessins ●ertisicates of Assize and Attaints and other the like should not take Fees because they did the same Ex officio and to answer these monies and the damages are the Defendants chargeable if Iudgement be given against them And to those who followed any Suit for the Kings profit and were not any of his Ministers ●ing Henry the ● gave to them the twentieth part of the profit with their reasonable ●o●● In like manner the Iudge was not to heare the Plaintiffes Cause if he put not in security to answer his Adversaries damages if he complaine of him wrongfully CHAP. II. SECT 5. Of Countorr or Plaaders THere are many who know not how to defend their Causes in Iudgement and there are many who doe and therefore Pleaders are necessary so that that which the Plaintiffes or Actors cannot or know not how to do by themselves they may doe by their Serjeants Atturnies or friends Countors are Serjeants skilfull in the Lawes of the Realme who serve the common people to declare and defend Actions in Iudgement for those who have need of them for their fees Every Pleader of others Causes ought to have a regard to foure things 1. That there be a person receiveable in Iudgement that he be no Heretique Excommunicate Person nor Criminall nor a man of Religion nor a woman nor within the Orders of a Subdeacon nor a Benificed Clerke who hath cure of Soules nor under the age of 21. yeares nor Iudge in the same Cause nor attainted of falsity in his place 2 Another thing is That every Countor is chargeable by Oath that he shall doe no wrong not falsity contrary to his knowledge but shall plead for his Cliant the best he can according to his understanding 3 The third thing is that he put no false Dilatories into Court not false Witnesses not move or offer any false corruptions deceits leasings or false lyes not consent to any such but truly maintaine his Clyents cause so that it faile not by any negligence or default in him not by any threatning hurt or villany disturbe the Judge Plaintiffe Serjeant or any other in Court whereby he hinder the right or the hearing of the Cause 4 The fourth thing is as his Sallery concerning which four things are to be regarded 1. The greatnesse of the Cause 2. The paines of the Serjeant 3. His worth as his Learning eloquence and gists 4 The usage of the Court. A Pleader is suspendable when he is attainted to have received sees of two Adversaries in one Cause and if he say o● doe any thing in dispite or contempt of the Court and if he fall under any of the
Ex officio to compell them to salvation the King used every seaven yeares to goe through all Shires in his Realme to make enquiry according as before is said further in aide of such Eyres were Coroners Sheriffes Turnes Viewes of Franck-pledges and other Enquests to enquire of those offenders as is said But because some are wrongfully slandered King Henry the 1. Ordained that none should be arrested nor imprisoned for slander of mortall offence before he were thereof endicted by the Oathes of honest men before those who had Authority to take such Indictments and then they were first to be seised upon by their bodies and goods as in Appeales and to be kept in prison till they cleared them of the infamy before the King or his Justices Of the Crime of Majesty in no kind was any Indictment but of Heresie or Romery whereof if any were indicted and brought to Judgement let there be an indictment for the King by some of his people in this manner according to that which is found in the Roles of ancient Kings I say Sebourge there is defamed by good people of the sinne of Heresie because that he of evill Art and beliefe forbidden and by Charmes and Enchantments he tooke from Brighten by name c. the flower of his Alc whereby he lost the sale thereof so that Judgement be not given of lesse then three persons or thus Molling who is there defamed by good people that such a day he denied his Baptisme and caused himselfe to be circumcised and became a Iew or a Saracen or offered or sacrificed to Mahomet in contempt of God to the Damnation of his Soule and this offence he did feloniously c. and so in every like Case for the King and if he will deny it I am ready to prove it upon him for the King as to the King it belongeth to doe that is to say according as an Infant within age Of falsifying thus I say for the King that Mimunde there is defamed c. for that he such a day c. falsifyed the Kings Seale or his Money in such a kind or such c. Of Trespasses Indictments now cease of Burnings thus I say c. that Seabright there is defamed c. for that at such a day c. he set a fire such a house or goods c. Of Murder thus I say c. that such a one with such a weapon struck Agole in such a part of his body by which stroke he is killed c. The degrees of Accessories are to be shewed after the Principalls according to their right Of Larcine in this manner I say that Cutbert there c. robbed such a man knowne or unknowne of his Horse or of other kind of goods c. or feloniously stole or was consenting to the offence of such Theeves knowne or of unknowne Theeves by taking of Theef-hoot which is a recept of Larcine which he wittingly took to suffer such a one to passe or to stop Suit or wrongfully to procure his pardon CHAP. II. Sect. 23. Of Offences personall at the Kings Suit A Personall offence is divived into two branches whereof the one extendeth to Persons and the other to Goods The Veniall offence which extends to Persons is divideable into great offences and small offences and although the King have Counsans of all offences yet he reserveth only the ordering of all grosse offences to himself and the Counsance of the lesser he leaves to all those men who have Courts within their Demesnes and upon this division of offences hath the King established the Peace so as such Lords Bayliffs have the ordering of the Peace for smal offences The Veniall offences Personall are these Perjury when one telleth a lye against the King and Perjury of his Officers The mortall offences not declared feloniously as Imprisonment Mayheim Wounding Battery are to be shewed without Appeales Allienation of old treasure sound Diffesin Reddisseisin and many others the declarations of Personall offences venialls infamatories are to be declared at the Kings Suit in this manner I say for our Lord the King that Y there is Perjured and lyed against the King that whereas the said I was the Kings Chancellour and was sworne that he should not sell not deny right not remediall Writ to any Plaintiffe the said Y such a day c. and sold to such a one a Writ of Attaint or other remediall Writ and would not grant it him for lesse then halfe a marke c. Or thus whereas he was one of his Iudges assigned and was sworne to doe Iustice c. he in this manner in such a Court gave Iudgement or awarded against such a Party or released such a Party or usurped such Iurisdiction upon the King or made himselfe Iudge Coroner or Sheriffe Bayliffe or other Minister of the Kings without Warrant or thus whereas he was Channcellor of the Exchequer c. he forbad to give an Acquittance of so much as such a one had paid of the Kings debt under the Exchequer Seale or delayed to give an Acquittance from such a day till such a day and would not give an Acquittance unlesse he bought it for so much or thus for that he holdeth Plea against the Kings forbiding or in prejudice of the King and his Crowne and the rather seeing it belongeth not to any Ecclesiasticall Judge to hold secular Pleas but only of Testamentary and of Matrimony or thus he disturbed the giving of Judgement or surceased so to do justice by negligence or by his consent In this manner are the Presentments to be made at the Kings Suit of Personall wrongs of all his Ministers great and small and also against all others not his Ministers of all wrongs done to the King by those who have sworne fealty to him CHAP. II. SECT 24. Of Veniall Trespasses and Personall Suits TO those who have cause of Action and will not pursue revenge according to their rights by Actions of Trespasse to recover damages for the Trespasses neverthelesse ye are to distinguish where the Trespasse is done to the person of a man and where to his goods And if to a mans person every one may have an Action to whom the Trespasse is done except those who can maintaine no Action without their Guardians And if to the goods then ye are to distinguish whether to his proper goods or to the goods which he hath with others in common And if to the proper goods then to distinguish if proper to a man or belonging to another thing as to the Crowne or to any Church If to a man then to distinguish if to a man free of himselfe or to a man who is in ward And if to a man free of himselfe he hath severall Actions and if proper to any other in ward the Action belongeth to the Guardian If to a man in ward the Action belongeth to the Guardian or to the next of Kin Parent Affine or Alley of his name to the use of
Summonable none is to be summoned for a personall offence not any one who is not a Free-holder 3 A man is not summonable in all places for no man is summonable nor bounden to receive Summons out of the Fee of the Party who causeth the Summons nor elsewhere but in the Mannour appendant to such a Court where he ought to Answer nor in all places of the Mannour but only at the Tenement in demand 4 How farre one is summonable not out of the Fee of the Court where one is to answer 5 At whose charges at the charges of those who are the first causers of the Summons except in Juries and Enquests taken ex officio for no Free-man is compelable to travell and appeare in Judgements at his owne charges notwithstanding that the Law requireth that every Tenant obey the Summons of his Lord. 6 How often one is summonable but once in one cause neverthelesse re-summoned holdeth place in some case 7 Who may and ought to be Summonors no man is compellable to be a Summonor if he will not agree to it neverthelesse all those may be Summonors who will that are not forbidden by the Law Women not Villaines nor infants nor any infamous Person not any one who is not a Free holder cannot be a Summoner 8 It is a reasonable Summons when it is testified by two loyall free Witnesses Neighbours to the Person or to the House or Tenement contained in the Writ with warning given of the day place party Judge of the Cause and a reasonable respite at least of fifteen daies to provide his Answer and to appeare in Judgement In Juries neverthelesse nor Enquests there need not be so full time or respite given CHAP. II. SECT 30. Of Essoignes ESsoigne is an excuse of a default by any hinderance in comming to the Court and lyeth as well for the Plaintiffe as for the Defendant The Law of every Essoigne is That the cause of the hinderance be enrolled with the name of the Essoigner so that if the diverse Party or his Atturney or Essoignor will traverse the Cause he is to be received so to doe that if he be found false then that the Essoigne be turned to a default All those may be Essoigned who are not forbidden by Law uo Defendant in personall Actions not any after default can be Essoigned not any present in Court nor doth Essoigne lye in a Scire facias nor in a Venire facias nor in a Recordari facias toquelam nor in Admeasurement of Pasture nor after the Parties have joyned issue in Judgement though the Jury appeare not nor in case where the Plaintiffe hath not found Surety to pursue his Action nor where one hath Atturney in Court if both be not Essoigned nor where the Summons is not testified nor after an Essoigne not warranted nor to him who was not named in the Writ or in the Plaint except in Warranties nor any one who is re-summoned in Mort-dauncester and Darrein presentment nor when the day is not come nor where the Essoigner commeth too late nor any one whose adversary is dead or any of his Parceners nor he who is adjourned from day to day nor the Kings Officer as Officer nor he to whom it is commanded that he appeare if he please No Essoigne is justifiable if it be not orderly cast nor is it allowed to Infants within age nor to any who is in custody nor to many having one right if the Cause be not divers All may be Essoigners who the Law forbiddeth not it is forbidden to Women to Infants to Villaires and to all who are in Custody to Mad-men to Idiots to Excommunicated Persons to the Judges and uo the Parties in the Cause Essoigners at other times not warranted 〈◊〉 ●●ainted of false delayes to criminall Persons and to those who are not of the Christian Faith or in the Kings Alleagiance it is forbidden that they be Essoigners There are chiefly two kinds of Essoignes the one of the Kings service the other of hinderance The first is dividable either into the service of the King of Heaven or of the King on Earth of the King of Heaven in three manners 1 Either for the generall passage of all to the Land of c. and this Essoigne is not otherwise adjournable but that the Parties goe without day and are to appeare againe by Re-summons of the Plaintiffes at the returne of the Defendant This Essoigne is not allowable to Plaintiffes nor to the Defendant reasonably Summoned before his going from his house in a personall action nor in other but in a Plea which toucheth Inheritance nor but in a Writ of Right Patent but not of Dower nor of Burgage The other Essoigne of the service of the King of Heaven is of a common Pilgrimage beyond Sea towards the Holy Land and this lasts for a yeare this holds not bu● according as the other The third of a Pilgrimage beyond Sea as to Rome or to Saint James De compostella and takes place for halfe a yeare and these Essoignees are to appeare the next Courts following the Termes adjourned After Re-summons holdeth place the common Essoigne De mal venier and also after the terme of Adjournment but this common Essoigne never holds place before the Essoignes before said The Essoigne of the King on Earths service is in two manners 1 The one is of those who serve as Souldiers as Messengers or as Ministers and this Essoigne is not respited but from Court to Court or the common day to the example of a common Essoigne if it be not warranted at the next Court by the Kings Writ it is to be turned to a default 2 The other is of those who serve the King by Tenure of their Land for the defence of the Realme and he hath no day But the Plaintiffe is with out day and the Plea is to be re-continued in the same Estate when his Adversary shall be returned These latter Essoignes are allowable in Pleas summonable to Plaintiffes and Defendants except in Dower Vnde nihil habet Quare impedat Darrein presentment nor to Women nor to Infants nor to Idiots nor to Deaf nor to Dumbe nor Mad-men nor to any in custody nor to any who is not free of himself nor to any Atturney as Atturney nor where the Essoigner acknowledgeth the Cause in Judgement to be false nor after any Cape nor after distresse in the Land After the Essoignes of the Kings service lyeth an Essoigne of Malo veniendi but not è con●●a The Essoigne of disturbance or hinderance is dividable either of sicknesse or of some other hinderance as of those who comming towards the Court are taken by the Kings enemies and so hindered or by Waters Bridges or enemies discovered or by Tempests or other reasonable disturbance so that they have not power to appeare at the day The Essoigne of hinderance and sicknesse is divideable either of languishing which is called De malo lecti and that holdeth place
in all Actions and some not but in Felonies Every one may Answer without a Tutor who is not forbidden by the Law The Law forbiddeth Married women to Answer without their Husbands but then we are to put a difference in the Cases for if she be within the age of one and twenty yeares she is not admitted to Plead in any Case without her Husband but in Case where her dis-inheriting or that which doth amount to as much doth appeare by the malice or negligence of her Husband if she be of full age then she shall so Anawer alone in cases of death and Felony and so it is of men within the order of Religion and of Villaines and of all those who are in Custody and are not delivered CHAP. III. SECT 2. What Exception is and the order of Exception or Plea APlea or Exception is a thing alleadged for Answer either to delay or barre the Action And there are two manner of Exceptions Dillatories and Peremptories The order to Plead is such that the Peremptory Plea is in the highest degree or the Dillatory may have a recourse to the Peremptory but not è contra And of Dillatories some are principall and some are secondary and from the secondaries there is no recourse to the principalls and according to their degrees are they put in partly to helpe out remembrance And some Exceptions are in Counts in Replications and Re-joynders and so forth untill the truth be cleared in the proceedings of the Pleas whereby one may surely come to give cleare Judgements Voucher to warranty lyeth not in personall Actions although that averrements by Record and Minements and Witneffes availeth CHAP. III. SECT 3. Exceptions Dillatories THere are many Dillatory Exceptions whereof the first is to the Judge and that many waies one unto the power of the Judge and that may be in two kinds by reason of the two kinds of Jurisdictions or because the King or his Iudge Deligate hath no Power or Counsance in the Cause as it is of the person of a Clerke by reason of the Priviledges of the Church or because the ordinary Iudge hath not power or Counsans of a thing done out of his Iurisdiction nor any one within a Franchise of a thing done in guildable nor Kings nor those of one Country or of one Land of things done in another Land or Country CHAP. III. SECT 4 Of Exception of Clergy FOr the Priviledge of Clergy as if a Clerke be ordered in Court before a Lay Iudge to Answer to an Action for a personall Trespasse and especially in a Case criminall and mortall Plead that he is a Clerke the Iudge hath no further Counsans of the Cause for the Church is so enfranchised that no Lay Iudge can have Iurisdiction over a Clerke though the Clerke will acknowledge him for his Iudge and in such a case he is without delay to be delivered to his Ordinary Neverthelesse to give Actions to Plaintiffes against the Accessories in Appeales and Indictments it belongeth to the Iudge Ex officio to enquire by the Oathes of honest men in the presence of the Clerke whether he be guilty or not and if he be 〈◊〉 thereof then he is without delay to be delivered to his Ordinary and the Plaintiffe shall Sue against the Accessories in the Kings Court and in the Spirituall Court against the Clerke and the Clerke after his due Purgation made shall without delay have all his lands and moveables delivered to him CHAP. III. SECT 5. Replication of Bigamy THe Exception of Clergy is sometimes Counterpleadable by a Replication of Bigamy in this manner Sit he ought not to enjoy the benefit of this Priviledge for he hath forfeited the same by the sin of Bigamy as he who hath Married a widow or many wives and note that Matrimony is the lawfull Order of joyning together of a Christian man and woman by their assents and as of the Diety and Humanity of Christ there is made an undissolveable Unity so was Matrimony and according to such Unity was such coupling found to be and therefore none can remaine in that Unity who takes to himselfe a Plurality and of a Plurality ariseth this offence of Bigamy which offence draweth Clerkes nearer the Lay Power And note that Bigamy may be two waies one by a Plurality of 〈◊〉 Vives as he who Marrieth two wives or more the one after the death of the other or out-living the other the other is plurality of Husbands as well as wives as it is of a widow who suffereth her selfe to be Married to another man whether her widowhood came by the death of her Husband or by Divorce and because it belongeth to say in what point a Clerke is Bigamus the Bigamy is triable in the Lay Court if neverthelesse the Jury doubt thereof then the Ordinary is to certifie the same at the Command of the King as in the case of Matrimony when it is denyed On the other side a Clerke is incounterable by other Replications as he is for being a murderer or a notorious lyer or of such a condition as the Church is not to protect him against the Kings Peace CHAP. III. SECT 6. Exception to the Power of the Jadge AGainst the power of the Judge the Defendant may help himself by other Dillatory Pleas in this manner Sir I demand the sight and the hearing of the Commission whereby you claime Juri●diction over me and if the Judge doe not deny it or cannot shew it notwithstanding that no Judge Deligate is compelable to shew his power yet may the Party plead thus Sir I appeale from this Commission because it maketh no mention of the Cause for which I was brought to Judgement or not of that point Or because you have no Counsans in such a point or because it is vicious and that may be divers waies as if it be not sealed with the Kings Seale of the Chancery for none is tyed to yeeld obedience according to the Lawes and Customes of the Realme to the Kings Privy Seale or to the Seale of the Exchequer nor unto any other Seale but onely to the Seale which is assigned to be known of the common people and especially in Jurisdictions and Originall Writs if not for the King only Or it may be vicious because the Seale is counterfeited or falsified or because the King is not named in the Writ he not being out of the Kingdome not in Ward or because the Writ containeth Summons in the Action where it is personall or Attachment where the Action is mixt or reall or because the Seale is not fastned to the Parchment but one may remove it and take it from it at his pleasure Or because the Writ was brought too late or too soone Or because it hath rasure or enterlining and diversity of hands and of words or false Latine Or because the Writ is written upon Paper or Parchment which is forbidden Or for default found in the Writ as the omission or transposition of
realls And if any one receive a Felon wittingly into his Franchise the same is now challengable CHAP. IV. SECT 17. Of satisfaction of Debt IF a Plaintiffe recover against many by Iudgement he shall have but once damages as in this case If many Persons owe one Debt and every one be bound in the whole if one of them make agrement for the same although he doe not make a speciall agreement for all the Debtors all of them neverthelesse are discharged because satisfaction hath respect to the Debt and not to the persons CHAP. IV. SECT 18. Cases of Disseisin IF the Iurours in Petit Assizes are agreed that one shall give their common Verdict for all and if they say that they know nothing nor that the Plaintiffe shall receive nothing because he proved not his Action and if they be of divers opinions they are not therefore to be threatned nor imprisoned but they are to be severed and diligently examined And if two Iurours be found to agree amongst all the rest it sufficeth for him for whom they speake and they are not to be examined upon the title of the possession but it is sufficient for the Iudge to know if the Plaintiffe were disseised of his Land whether it were rightfull or wrongfull according to the Plaint for though it were right neverthelesse it was tortious because the Tenant used force where he should have used Iudgement and for that he made himselfe a Iudge therein Iudgement is to be given for the Plaintiffe so as he shall recover seisin such as it is saving every right by another Writ for an Affize lyeth not upon Assize of the same Tenement betwixt the same parties not an Attaint upon an Attaint and if the Iurours for him whether they were sworn upon the Action or upon the Exceptions Iudgement goes for him and they behoove to enquire of the others named in the Writ and if the Disseisors came in with force and Armes although they hurt no persons body all of them neverthelesse are to be adjudged to Corporall punishment according to the quantity of the offence and if they cast him our of his dwelling house or out of his Demesne the felony of this Burglary is punishable at the Kings Suit or at the Suit of the Party for none is to be cast out of his house where he dwelleth and which he hath used as his owne for a yeare without Iudgement although he hath no title thereunto but by Disseisin or intrusion and it sufficeth for fotce and Armes onely the shewing of Armes for to hurt the Adversaries and under the name of Armes are contained B●wes Artowes Sawes Launces Speeres Staves Swords and Targets of Iron The Iury ought to enquire of the damages that is to say of the profits of the Tenements done since the Disseisin and to whose hands such profits after came and of the Charges Costs and reasonable expences which the Plaintiffe hath sustayned in his whole recovery and in all things and how much he is endamaged in distresse of his goods and in his honour and the damages being assessed it is to be awarded that the Plaintiffs recover his seisin such as it is according to the view of the Recognitors and the damages and the Disseisors are punishable according to the points of the offences For the goods found in the Tenements whereof none can know the value as Charter Writings Royall Treasure and such things locked up the Plaintiffe hath an Action by Appeale of Robbery or by a Writ of Trespasse In Iudgement of ●atcine veniable satisfaction is to be made to the 〈◊〉 in●ffes to the double of the value of 〈…〉 which are stolen and in case of 〈…〉 the value 4 double or foure 〈…〉 CHAP. IV. SECT 25. Of Amercements A Pecuniary paine we call an Amercement which follow reall offenders and m●●t and sometimes are certaine and sometimes uncertaine An Amercement is certaine sometimes according to the dignity of the Persons as it is of Earles and Barons for he who holdeth an entire Earldoine is to be amerced one hundred pound when he is least amerced And a Baron for a Barony entire one hundred Markes and he who holdeth lesse lesse and more more according to the quantity of the Tenure And sometime by a certaine Assize in another case as it is of Escapes of people imprisoned in which case yee are to distinguish of the place as where one escapeth out of the Kings Prison or out of the Prison of another out of the Kings Prison yee are to distinguish of the cause whether it be mortall or veniall and if mortall then distinguish if the cause were adjudged or not and if adjudged by norory of fact or of right then the Corporall punishment is uncertaine for if the Keeper or more be assenting to the escape punishment of death followeth thereupon and if the cause was not adjudged and the Keeper was not the Kings Officer nor assented to the escape then the Assize of punishment is so many Shillings sterling or more according to the usage of the Country or of the place or of the person And if the Cause he veniall then the escape is not punishable And if the escape be from the prison of others then yee are to distingu●sh of the cause and of the caption whether the cause be mortall or veniall and if mortall then the pecuniary paine aforesaid holdeth place and if the cause be veniall there is no punishment for the escape CHAP. IV. SECT 26. Of Amercements taxable COmmon Amercements are Taxable by the Oathes and A●●erments of the Peeres of those who sal in misere cordia according to the constitution of the Charter of Franchises which willeth that a Free-man be assessed when he falleth into an Amercement according to the quantity of his offence a Merchant saving to h●● his Merchandize and a Vi●●aine saving his Wainage and these Aff●rrors are to be chosen by the assent of the Parties if they will but the Kings Officers are the more grievonsly to be Amerced for the breach of their faith c. Many cases there are where Corporall punishments are brought in by Fines of money and such are called Ransomes which is as much as to say Redemption from Corporall paines whereof some Fines are common as for Murders other for personall Trespasses of Townes and Commonalties which Fines King Edward Ordained that they should be assessed in the presence of the Justices so as the names of them be put into the Roles of the Iustices so that the Estreates may come to the Sheriffe to leavie the same by parcells and not by totall Summons And in case where one recovereth Debt or Damages King Edward enacted that it should be in the election of them to doe execution by leavying such Debt and damages of the moveable goods of the Debtors at the very value to the value of the thing in demand except the Oxen and Beasts of the Plow together with the moyety of Lands and Tenements of the Debtors if
Action personall from a longer time then the last Eyre 123 It is abuse of the Writ of Accompt for which every one may imprison another wrongfully 124 It is abuse that one is bound to render an accompt of issues of Land whereof he is Guardian by title of Law 125 It is abuse that the Writ of Ne cui juste vexces is so out of use 126 It is abuse that Battailes be not in personall Actions as well as in Felonies 127 It is abuse that proofes and purgations be not by the Miracle of God where other proofe faileth 128 It is abuse to joyne Battaile betwixt persons who are not admitted to wage battailé 129 It is abuse that a Knight is otherwise armed then another man in a Combate 130 It is abuse that Judges have Cognizance by originall Writ or warrant by Vouchers or in others to which his jurisdiction extendeth not 131 It is abuse to suffer a Voucher to warranty in the Kings Writ of Quo warranto 132 It is abuse that those who are sound Usurers by indictments after their deaths are suffered to be buried in Sanctuaries and that the Lands doe not escheat to the Lords of the Fees 133 It is abuse that vicious Obligations drive the Authors to personall Damages in as much as they are voidables 134 It is abuse to compell Iuronts Witnesses to say that which they know not by distresse of Fine and imprisonment after their Verdict when they could not say any thing 135 It is abuse to use the words to their knowledge in their Oath to make the Iurours speake upon thoughts since the chiefe words of their Oathes be that they speake the truth 136 It is abuse that one examine not the Jurours though they finde at least two to agree 137 It is abuse to put more words in the doing of Homage but thus I become your man for the Land which I claime to hold of you 138 It is abuse to Answer or appeare by Atturney 139 It is abuse to make Justices such parties without the Writ in the Kings presence if not with the assent of the parties 140 It is abuse that the Writs of Audita quareta and Conspiracy and others containe not the substance of the plaints 141 It is abuse that the Justices of the Bench meddle with more Pleas then of wrong done against Fines Grand Assizes translation of pleas out of lower Courts and of Darrein presentment and of the rights of the King Queene and their Allies 142 It is abuse to use a Pone when their Causes are discussed if the parties challenge the same for a lying purchasor ought not to have benefit of his leasings 143 It is abuse to sue forth Grand Distresses in Pleas of Attachments whereof the defaults are to the profit of the King and not of the Plaintiffes 144 It is abuse that Trespassours who have nothing are not banished from Townes Counties Manours and Hundreds as they used to be 145 It is abuse to hold that a Petit Cape maketh other title but to save every right in reall Action not in others 146 It is abuse that the issues of Grand Distresses in mixt Actions come not to the profit of the Lords of the Fees and others who have Courts as they doe to the King of Pleas moved in his Court upon the same Actions 147 It is abuse to thinke the same punishment is to be to Maine-prisots as to Principals who make default whereas they are amerceable onely in Courts 148 It is abuse to amerce a man in plesive of Fee or of service going out of the Land by default in a personall Action or reall for Outlawty or losse of Land is sufficient punishment 149 It is abuse that Sheriffes doe not execution of Writs Vice Conntiels in as much as the Plaintiffes have found Pledges De proseqnend where there is no mention to take Sureties 150 It is abuse to distreine for Ar●erages of services issuing out of Lands moveable goods whereas no distresse ought to be but in the Land onely 151 It is abuse that the Tenant may without punishment enfeoffe a third person of the Land of his Lord in prejudice of him or doe other thing or say any thing against the points of his Oath of fealty 152 It is abuse to suffer a man who is a Champion to be a witnesse 153 It is abuse that none have recovery of wrong done by the King or the Queen but at the Kings pleasure 154 It is abuse to judge a man to divers punishments for one Trespasse as to a corporall punishment and to a ransome since ransome is but a Redemption from corporall punishment by payment of a fine of money 155 It is abuse that people defamed of offence are not barred from making oathes and of their dignities and of their other Honors And divers other abuses appeare by those who well understand the Writ before written CHAP. V. SECT 2. The defects of the great Charter SEeing how the Law of this Realm sounded upon forty points of the Great Charter of Liberties is damnably dis-used by the Governours of the Law and by Statutes afterwards made contrary to some of the points to shew the defects or defaults of the points aforesaid and the errours of some Statutes I have put in memory this Chapter of the defect and reprehensions of Statutes and first of the defects of the points of the Great Charter To the point That the Church of England shall have all her Rights and Liberties inviolable for first it were necessary to ordaine a Corporall punishment and namely to the Lay Judges the Kings Ministers and others who Judge Clerkes for mortall Crimes to Corporall punishments infamatories doe detain their goods after their purgation and to those Secular Judges who take upon them Cognizance in causes of Matrimony and Testaments or other speciall things The other point is That every Free-man of the Realme inherite the Liberties of the Charter and whereof every one is disseised as of his Free-hold which is not adjudged according to the points following there lyeth no recovery of damages by the Assize of Novel Disseisin A third point seemeth to be defective for as the releife of an Earldome entire was to decrease in him who held lesse so it seemeth that that certainety was to encrease as much if an Earle held more so as he who held two Earldoms and who held an Earldome and a Barony shall pay as an Eardome and as a Barony and so of other Fees if they be not expressed in the Charter that the Fyne of one hundred pound be not an Eirldome for no point oncreased and so of other certainties The fourth point is defective for although it be that such a point be grounded upon Law to binde the Lord of Fees to warranties by taking of such Homages whether they tooke them of the right Heires or not because it is not expressed whoshould be Guardian of the Fees in time of vacancy and have the issues in the mean
a personall Trespasse and requireth a personall punishment and not a simple Amercement CHAP. V. SECT 4. Articles upon the Statute of Westminster the first MAny Chapters are reproveable of the Statute of Westminster For the points touching religious Persons are matter to gaine monies and a purchase upon a foundation of covetousnesse more then for their advantage The Chapter of Clerkes found guilty of felony is reproveable for for want of addition of punishment these Clerkes are not to be delivered to Ordinaries but at the pleasure of the King and of his Justices The Chapter of Wreck is reproveable in as much as the finder is forjudged by the Statute to have part thereof whereas he ought to have part of the profit and so it is reproveable as to the awarding of the punishment Of the points of Amercements is before spoken in the Great Charter The point of takings of distresse is much reproveable Cap. 9. as before is said The Chapter concerning pursuing of Felons to maintaine the Peace is reproveable in the punishment for he is consenting to a Felon who doth not apprehend him when he may In the same manner is it of the Chapter of Coroners contained in the Articles following The point of Election of Coroners was not needfull to have been ordained Cap. ● for it behoveth more the Electors to have wise and loyall Coroners then to the King and it had better have been enacted that the Coroners doe present the points of their Office under the Seales of the Jurours then Sheriffes should make counter parts of the Rolls The point of Enquest of Odio aria is reproveable Cap. 12. for London and other places in Liberties where there are no Knights The point of putting people found guilty of felony who will not put themselves upon the Country to pennance it is out of use that one kill them without having regard to the conditions of the Persons and therein it is reproveable since one may perhaps helpe and acquit himselfe otherwaies then by his Country and in as much as none is to be put to Pennance before he be attainted of the offence for which he ought to be pained The Ordinances of punishments of long imprisonment are to be reprehended as before is said The point of the order of Outlawry of the principalls before the Accessories is no Statute but a revocation of errour The point of Replevisalls is reproveable according as it is said of Actions the punishment of long imprisonment containe Errour as is said before The punishment of Heites males Married as against the King without the consent of their Lords betwixt 14. yeares and 21. yeares is reproveable for then the King should have amends for that for which he hath not any personall Suit for the amends The point of Heires females containeth Errour as appeareth in the reprehension of the point of Marriages in the Great Charter The point of tortious Distresses ought to contain the punishment for the robbery The punishment of Ministers Disseisors by colour of their Office is reproveable for the smalnesse of it as appeareth amongst the Judgements The point which forbiddeth Sheriffes that they take no rewards is reproveable in as much as the King taketh of them and they take nothing of the King The point of Fines of Clerkes and the officers of Justices in Eyre is reproveable for the common grievance of the people without taking of profit The points of imprisonment are reproveable for the reasons aforesaid and the point of Tolls for the punishment of imprisonment and because Tolls are not established certaine The point which willeth that those who dis-use Marriages should lose them was not needfull to have been made for the Law is that he shall lose his Franchise who useth it not The point of the Receivers of the Kings monies and not rendring the same is reproveable for the smallnesse of the punishment according to that which appeareth before The Errours of taking of Carriages and other goods appeareth sufficiently by the reasons before The point which forbiddeth Judgement to be given by Strangers in Counties is reproveable for no Iudgement given by another then an ordinary Judge assigned is to hold The point which maketh mention of Robbery or Disseisins is reproveable for all those are to be seised upon who the Jurours indict of Robbery according to the example of Theeves and other Felons The point of Attaint is reproveable for it should not extend to one case but it ought to comprchend all Oathes taken by twelve men if one of the Parties complaine thereof The point of limitations of Actions is reproveable for the reasons in the Chapter given upon the same matter The point which forbiddeth falsities and abuses used in Courts before this time to false Judges who used not the Law by sufferance of falsities The point of Champions is reproveable for no Champion is to be receiveable as a witnesse The point of not allowing Essoignes in Assizes after appearance is reproveable by the Assize of Novel disseisin where no Essoigne is allowable for the Tenants no more before appearance then after not in no other personall Action The other points of Essoignes are reproveable for no false cause of Essoigne ought to advantage any man The point of delaies in Pleas of Attachment is reproveable in many points accordingas appearethin the chapter of defaults The point to plead upon the surcharge falleth in prejudice of Sheriffes and of Lords of Fees and of Liberties and although the two points of Disseisins that is to say that every one may avoid the damages in the point of personall trespasse done to his Ancesters in as much as his Action lyeth of what age soever the Parties be yet is the first reproveable for as much as the Plaintiffes have no recovery for the damages done to their Ancestors not any Action but to have restitution of the possession The other point is reproveable for the smallnesse of the punishment but according to common right this punishment should have time that he should never doe Homage betwixt them for the Lords forfeiture when he beginneth to dis-inherite his Tenant contrary to the right of Homage The Prayer of the King is reproveable because he ought to aske nothing contrary to Law but it is the prayer of the Justices who desire alwaies to have much to doe The point that if he who is vouched to warranty ought not to warrant although he be bounden by the deed of his Ancestor whose Heire he is in case he alledge that nothing descended to him from that Ancestor by whose deed he is ●ouched is reproveable for according to the old Law Lands remained liable to the Debt of those who acknowledged it to whose hands soever the Lands afterwards came In the same manner it used to be in all other Contracts where the Contracts were adjudged or granted and although nothing descended to the Heire for that he lost not the Tenements for want of Acquittance and if
he who bound himselfe to warranty would not warrant the Land not vouch over it appeareth thereby that the Ancestor was Tenant by a naughty title and that he was possessor thereof by an ill way and if the Heire had nothing whereby to discharge him the Tenements bound to warranty should be recovered And if the Heire had nothing whereby to discharge not no Land is found bound to the warranty if the Purchasor lost his purchase it was at his owne perill and accounted his owne folly the better at any other time to looke to his assurance CHAP. V. SECT 5. Articles upon the Statute of Westminster 2. THat which is said of the Statute of Westminster 2. which faileth in many cases is now to be understood for against all Trespasses is the Law made although it be dis-used or controuled by those who know not the Law And the three first Chapters are not Statutes but are the revocations of the Errours of negligent Judges for the Law permits not that a man make a better estate to another then himselfe hath but requireth that every lawfull Contract be made according to the wills of the speakers and that which is in the Statute that if a Fine be leavied in deceit of right that the same be null is reproveable but it might have been better said That for that Fine that no man be barred of his right for the Fine leavied cannot be rightly said null but it holds in force and barreth at the least the Donor of his Action The point if Distresses doth not repeale any Errour but affirme them as before appeareth in the second beoke And that which is said in the second Statute that Suitors in Counties have no Record is but abusion since every lawfull restimony is a Record and every false testimony is a lye and as lawfull may other people testifie as the Justices assignned Is not the same Writ abused to grant to Counties Records in Outlawries Pledges Maine-prises Battailes Grand Assizes and other Cases and not other points and to deny that the Sheriffes or Lord of the Fee or other to whom the King sendeth his Writ hath not as well Record of Processe before him as those whom they call Iustices is but Errour And as to the causes of Writs of paines is suffered great Errour that that which is not warranted in the Accessory that he may 〈…〉 in the principall since the Law permits that none be aided by a lye or a vicious Writ Of the other side because there is more realty in the Statute then personalty as more Attachments are awarded in personall Actions then in mixt and realls The point of Measnes is reproveable as to the Proclamation and as to the non-acquittance of those who hold by lesse service then the Measnes for be it that B. hold one hundred pound Land of D. by the service of twenty pound per annum and the same B. give the moyety thereof in Frankalmoigne or Frank marriage or to hold by the service of a Rose to C. if it happen that the same B. forfeited what he hath by this Statute no remedy is ordained for C. who was purchasor from B. and therefore the old course is to be holden which is said before in Iudgements The remediall Statute of the right of the Wife lost by the default of the Husband is reproveable for the old Law was that a woman after the death of her Husband should repleeve her Inheritance or purchase so lost summoning the Tenants for a Cape is not but a distresse and ejection of seasin saving every right and it is lawfull for one of the Tenants in common to defend his right where he is damnified by the negligence or the non ability of his Partner In the same manner may a Woman according to Law in the right of her Husband neither doth the Law give to Widowes Action to demand Dower in the cases named in the Statute but in all cases the Law enables her to be received by Lawfull reversing of the Iudgement And that which is contained that Tenants may vouch to warranty is but abuse how holdeth voucher place where a Writ lyeth not yet is it understood with a saving that no jurisdiction of a Iudge assigned extend to other Persons then those who are named in the Writ and that none shall vouch more then in the same Writ are named by Writ of Replegiare and therefore are warranties attainable and determinable by Writs The Statute following which Ordaineth new Writs remedialls after defaults is prejudiciall to Lords of Fees who lose the advantages of their Courts because that Writs of Right are forbidden in such cases where they wont to be used Presentments to Churches ought not to be but in the names of those to whom the meere right of the Advowson doth belong according as is said before in Contracts and it is errour and abusion of Law to endow women of Advowsons or to Lease them to Farme or for the terme of anothers life or in Frank-marriage or in Mortgage or in Fee-tayle or otherwise then in Fee-simple And those who receive Clerkes presented to Churches in prejudice of those to whom the meere right in Fee doth appertaine are bound to make restitution of the damages and those who have recovered to Jurours by whom they were certified of the right of the personage and so it appeareth that the punishment lyeth more against the Bishops then the presentors And that which enacteth long Imprisonment for a punishment is but abuse since none is imprisonable if not for a wrongfull imprisonment The Statute of Warranties is but a revocation of Errour used against Law The Statute of Admeasurement is reproveable in many points as to the Proclamations since admeasurement and surcharge are to be by Jurours The Statute of Measnes is reproveable in many points as it appeareth in the Chapter of Distresses Contracts and defaults and the same appeareth in the end of the Statute where the Plaintiffes know not a set fine The Statute of suspension of Writs in Eyres is reproveable as repugnant to the great Charter which saith we will sell no Right nor detaine it and wherefore are Writs rebuttable from heating but for the multitude of Writs which are and for the small number of Justices the right of many perish The Statute of obligees in Accompt is reproveable in many points one as to the exception to the Persons for the Masters is ordained recovery and to Serjeants not when Auditors are assigned without the consent of the servants The other that the Auditors are not tyed to allow any thing but at their pleasure without punishment Another that the recovery is ordained by detinue of the servants and not against the Surety not the goods Another that the Lords are not to be Attested according as of the servants Another that the wickednesse of Auditors remaineth unpunished Another of Outlawry for none is to be imprisoned if not for a tortious imprisonment The Statute of Appeales is reproveable in
is reproveable and distinguishable according as hath been said before The Statute to have view of Lands is but a wrongfull delay of the right of the Plaintiffes for the View appeareth sufficient by the Certificate of the Summons upon what Tenements the Tenants are summoned The Statute which forbiddeth that no Officer of the Court take any presentment of any Church not other thing which is depending in Plea or in debate is not kept Reprehensions upon the Statute of Gloucesier 16. E. 1. THe Statutes to recover Damages in Pleas of possession enacted at Gloucester or else where and of the horrible damages in waste are reproveable for that the Law giveth one no more then is his demand and therefore it behooveth that the damages be mentioned in the Writs if damages shall be awarded for a Judge cannot exceed the points of his Commission and so it would be needfull to use it according to the first Ordinance of Writs And the Statute of Tenements alliened of Lands in prejudice of others is reproveable for the remedy ought to be such as of Guardians allienors to the dis-inherison of the right Heires The Statute of Trespasse pleaded in Counties is reproveable for want of distinction for small Trespasses Debts Covenants broken and such other kinds not exceeding forty shillings Suitors have power to heare and determine without Writs by warrant of jurisdiction Ordinary and by Writs granted afterwards for Sheriffes have more jurisdiction in their Writs vicontiell then Justices of the Bench by the Pone And as to the recovery of twenty shillings or more in right of Essoigne of the Kings service not warranted the Statute is reproveable for that Essoigne might be cast where the Defendant would make default by the adverse Party and so he should have advantage of his malice The Statute which forbiddeth the abatement of Appeales is not observed The Statute which awardeth an innocent man to remaine in Prison or to have no manner of punishment for necessary Man-slaughter or by mischance where no offence is found is but an abusion The Statutes making mention of London ought to extend commonly throughout the whole Realme CHAP. V. SECT 6. The reprehensions of Circumspectè agates An. 13. E. 1. THe first point which saith That the Kings prohibition holds not in correction of mortall offences where a pecuniary paine is enjoyneable by Ordinaries is founded upon open errour and usage to enjoyne a pecuniary paine for a mortall offence notwithstanding to destroy the King jurisdiction The other points to compell the Parishioners by corrections to enclose Church-yards to offer to give Mortuaries Monies for Consessions Chalices Lights Holy Vestments and other adornement of Churche are more grounded upon interest then amendment of soules and note that after that they are offered to God that they are so spirituall that they are to be expended but in Almes and spiritually for they are never to be converted to Lay uses And then if any Parishioner for the hurt of the Parson of the Church keopeth back his Tithes or stealeth them away or doth not pay them duly or fully the same is not punishable by a pecuniary paine but by a corporall punishment For the Excommunicate no pecuniall paine was to be for restitution or satisfaction no more then of a Pagan or a Jew and if they doe demand a pecuniary paine there the Kings Prohibition lyeth and much more in the demand of Pensions or of damages of Trespasse or of defamation but of Pleas of correction where one Pleades onely Pro salute anima the Kings prohibition lyeth not CHAP. V. SECT 7. THe new Statute of Debts is contrary to Law as it appeareth in the Chapter of Contracts for every imprisonment of the body of a man is an offence if not for tortious Judgement and the Law will not suffer any Obligation or vicious Contract by intermixture of offence and therefore it was to be avoided as grounded upon an offence for no honest man ought to agree to such a Contract which causeth him to offend or to be punished Againe it is contrary to the Great Charter which enacteth that no man be taken nor imprisored if not by the lawfull judgement of his Peeres or by the Law of the Land Here endeth the Mirrour of Justices of the right Lawes of Persons according to the ancient usages of England The end of the fifth Chapter and of the whole Booke FINIS THE BOOKE Called The Diversity of Courts And Their Jurisdictions Written by an unknown Author in the time of King Henry the Eighth in the French Tongue Wherein many necessary and profitable things ate contained Translated out of the French Tongue into English for the use of many By W. H. of Grays Inne Esquire Imprinted at London for Matthew Walbancke and are to be sold at his Shop at Graies Inne gate 1646. The Booke called The diversity of Courts and their Jurisdictions IT is to be understood that the King is the fountaine of Justice and to that purpose ordayneth Judges that Justice be administred to all his Subjects The King himselfe for the excellency of his Person may fit and give Judgement in all Causes personall or reall betwixt Party and Party but he cannot fit in Person in Judgement in any Cause where he himselfe is Party or where the things of his Crowne or Dignity are concerned as upon an Indictment of Treason or upon as appeale of Murder or Felony or upon an Action brought by himselfe as Formdon of Land of which the right is descended to him from a colaterall Ancester or in an Action of Debt by reason of the affection moving him to be favourable to himselfe and therefore he maketh his Iudges to sit and heare such matters in difference and to doe justice to the parties And the place where the Judges sit to minister Justice are called Courts which are of divers kinds and the Judges thereof have severall Authority Of the Court of Marshalsey ANd first the Court of Marshalsey is an ancient Court and made for the well government and ordering of the Kings house for the preservation of the King and his Servants and this Court hath its bounds within which it hath jurisdiction and not without The Iudges of this Court are the Steward and Marshall of the Kings house for in them under the King is the ordering of the houshold c. The title of the Court is Placita Corone aula Hospitii Domini Regis leat coram seneschalle mareschallo hosp●●●i Domini Regis c. And this Court hath power to enquire of Treason Murder and Felony and to take Appeales of them and of Mayhem if they be done within the Virge betwixt persons who are of the Kings house And if one of the houshold Sueth another who is not of the houshold he may plead to the jurisdiction of the Court and if they will not allow of the Plea he shall have a Writ of Errour and the Iudgement shall be reversed in the Kings Bench. And if