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A19476 The interpreter: or Booke containing the signification of vvords wherein is set foorth the true meaning of all, or the most part of such words and termes, as are mentioned in the lawe vvriters, or statutes of this victorious and renowned kingdome, requiring any exposition or interpretation. ... Collected by Iohn Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1607 (1607) STC 5900; ESTC S108959 487,900 584

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his assistants in causes of iustice betweene the king and his subiects touching causes appertaining to the Exchequer The Lord chiefe Baron at this day is the chiefe Iudge of the court and in matter of lawe information and plea answereth the barre and giueth order for iudgment thereuppon He alone in the terme time doth sit vpon Nisi prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers office or out of the office of the clerke of of the please which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He taketh recognisances for the Kings debts for appearances and obseruing of orders He taketh the presentation of all the officers in court vnder himselfe and of the Mayor of London and seeth the Kings Remembrancer to giue them their oathes He taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts of the lands of the late augmentation made before him by the Auditors of the shires He giueth the two parcel makers places by vertue of his office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord chiefe baron answereth the barre in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances for the kings debts apparences and obseruing of orders He giueth yearely the oath to the late Maior and escheatour of London for the true accompt of the profits of his office He taketh a declaration of certaine receyuers accompts He also examineth the letters and summes of such Shyreeues foraine accompts as also the accompts of Escheatours and Collectours of Subsidies and Fifteens as are brought vnto him by the auditors of the Court. The third Baron in the absēce of the other two answereth the barre in matters aforesaide he also taketh recognisances as aforesaide He giueth yerely the oath of the late Mayor and gawger of London for his true accōpting He also taketh a declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and sūmes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him The fourth barons is alwaies a coursetour of the court and hath bene chosen of some one of the clerks in the remembrancers offices or of the clerke of the pipes office He at the daies of prefixion taketh oth of al high shyreeus and their vndershyreeues and of all escheatours baylifs and other accountāts for their true accounting He taketh the oath of al collectours controllers surueyours and serchers of the custome houses that they haue made true entrances in their bookes He apposeth all shyreeues vyon their sūmons of the pipe in open court He informeth the rest of the Barons of the course of the court in any mater that concerneth the kings prerogatiue He likewise as the other Barons taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and summes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him These barons of the exchequer areauncient officers for I finde them named westm 2. ca. 11. anno 13. Ed. 1. and they be called barons because barons of the realme were wont to be employed in that office Fleta li. 2. ca. 24. S. Thomas Smith saith of them that their office is to looke to the accompts of the Prince and to that end they haue auditors vnder them as also to descide all causes appertaining to the Kings profits comming into the exchequer by any meanes This is in part also proued by the statut anno 20. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 27. eiusdem stat 2. ca. 18. anno 5. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 9. 12. anno 14. eiusd ca. 1● And hereupon they be of late men learned in the common lawe of the realme wheras in auncient times they were others viz. maiores discretiores in regno siue de clero essent siue de curea Ockam in his lucubrations de fisci regij ratione Horn in his mirrour of Iustices saieth that barons were wont to be two and they Knights ca. De la place del Eschequer Then be there in this signification Barons of the Cinque portes anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 2. et anno 33. H 8. ca. 10. which are two of euery of the seuen towns Hastings Winchelsey Ry Rumney Hithe Douer Sandwiche that haue places in the lower house of Parlament Cromptons iurisd fo 28. Baron in the the third signification is vsed for the husband in relation to his wife which is so ordinary in all our lawe writers that wright in french as it were superfluous to confirme it by any one Baronet I reade this word anno 13. R. 2. stat 2. ca. 1. but I hould it falsely printed for Baneret or els to signifie all one with it Baronye baronia baronagium is the fee of a baron In which accompt are not only the fees of temporall Barons but of Bishops also who haue two respects one as they are spirituall men without possessions as was the tribe of Levy among the Israelites being susteined by the only first frutes and tenthes of the other tribes Iosue ca. 13. versue 14. The other respect they haue groweth from the bountie of our english Kings whereby they haue baronies at the least are thereby Barons or Lords of the Parlament This baronie as Bracton saith li. 2. ca. 34. is a right indiuisible and therefore if an inheritance be to be divided among coparceners though some capitall messuages may be divided yet si capitale messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae he saith they may not be parcelled The reason is ne sic caput per plures particul as diuidatur plura iura comitatuum baroniarum deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baronys dicitur esse constitutum Barre barra commeth of the French barre or barriere i. repagalum obex vectis It is vsed in our common law for a peremptory exception against a demaūd or plaint and is by the author of the Termes of law defined to be a plee brought by the defendant in an action that destroieth the action of the plaintiffe for euer It is divided into a barre to common intent and a barre speciall Abarte to a common intendment is an ordinarie or generall barre that ordinarily disableth the declaration or plee of the plaintiffe a barre speciall is that which is more then ordinarie falleth out in the case in hand or question vpon some speciall circumstance of the fact Plowden casu Colthirst fo 26. a. b. For exāple an executor being sued for his testators debt pleadeth that he had no goods left in his hands at the day when the writ was purchased or taken out against him This is a good barre to common intendment or prima sacie But yet the case may so fall out that more goods might come to his hands sithence that time which if the plaintiffe can shew by way of replication then excep the haue a more especiall plee or barre to alleadge he is to be condemned in the action See also Plowden in the case aofre named fo 28. a. b. and Brooke titulo Barre nu
or reall Personall may be so called in two respects one because they belong immediatly to the person of a man as a bowe horse c. the other for that being any way withheld iniuriously from vs we haue no meanes to recouer them but by personall action Chatels reall be such as either appertain not immediatly to the person but to some other thing by way of dependencie as a boxe with charters of land the body of a ward apples vpon a tree or a tree it selfe growing on the ground Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 33. B or els such as are necessary issuing out of some immoveable thing to a person as a lease or rent for tearme of yeares Also to hould at will is a chatell reall New tearmes verbo Chatell The ciuilians comprehend these things as also lands of what kin de or hould so euer vnder bona bona autē diuiduntur in mobilia immobilia mobilia verò in ea quae se movent vel ab aliis moventur v. legem 49. l. 208 〈◊〉 de verb. significa interpretes ibidem Bract. also ca. 3. li. 3. nu 3. 4. seemeth to be of the same iudgement Catallis captis nomine districtionis is a writ which lyeth within a borowe or within a house for rent going out of the same and warranteth a man to take the doores windowes or gates by way of distresse for the rent Old nat br fo 66. Catallis reddendis is a writ which lyeth where goods being deliuered to any man to keepe vntill a certaine day and be not vpon demande deliuered at the day And it may be otherwise called a writ of detinew See more of it in the Register orig fo 139. and in the ould nat br fo 63. This is answerable to actio depositi in the ciuile lawe Catchepolle though it now be vsed as a word of contempt yet in auncient times it seemeth to haue bene vsed without reproch for such as we now call sergeants of the mace or any other that vse to arrest men vpon any cause anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 4. ca. 2. Cathedrall See church Casu matrimonii praelocuti is a writ which lyeth in case where a woman giueth lands to a man in fee simple to the intent he shall mary her and refuseth so to doe in reasonable time being required thereunto by the woman The forme and farder vse hereof learne in the Register orig fol. 233. and in Fitzh nat br fo 205. Causam nobis significes is a writ which lyeth to a Mayer of a towne or city c. that formerly by the kings writ being commaunded to giue seisin vnto the kings grantee of any land or tenements doth delay so to do willing him to shew cause why he so delayeth the performance of his charge Coke li. 4. casu communalty des Sadlers fo 55 b. Cautione admittenda is a writ that lyeth against the Bishop houlding an excommunicate person in prison for his contempt notwithstanding that he offereth sufficient caution or assurance to obey the commandments and orders of holy church from thence forth The forme and farder effect whereof take out of the Regist orig pa. 66. and Fitzh nat br fol. 63. Century centuria See Hundred Cepi corpus is a returne made by the Shyreue that vpō an exigēd he hath taken the bodie of the partie Fitzh nat br fo 26. Certiorari is a writ issuing out the chauncerie to an inferiour courte to call vp the records of a cause therein depending that conscionable iustice therein may be ministred vpon complaint made by bill that the partie which seeketh the said writ hath receiued hard dealing in the said court Termes of the lawe See the diuers formes and vses of this in Fitzh nat br fo 242. as also the Register both originall and iudiciall in the tables verbo Certiorari Cromptō in his Iustice of peace fo 117. saith that this writ is either returnable in the Kings bench and then hath these wordes nobis mittatis or in the chauncerie and then hath in cancellaria nostra or in the common bench and then hath Iusticiariis nostris de banco The word certiorare is vsed diuers times in the digest of the ciuile lawe but our later Kritiques think it soe barbarouse that they suspect it rather to be foisted in by Tribonian thē to be originally vsed by those men of whose workes the saide digest is compiled Prataeus in suo lexico Certificat certificatoriū is vsed for a wirting made in any courte to giue notice to another courte of any thing done therein As for example a certificate of the cause of attainte is a transcript made briefely and in few words by the clerke of the Crowne clerke of the peace or clerke of assise to the courte of the Kings benche conteying the tenure and effect of everie endictment outlawrie or conviction and clerke attained made or pronounced in any other court an 34. H. 8. c. 14. Of this see more in Certificat d'evesque Broke f. 119. Certification of assise of novel dissessin c. Certificatio assisae novae disseisinae c. is a writ graunted for there examining or reuew of a mater passed by assise before any Iustices and is called certificatione novae disseisine Old nat br fo 181. Of this see also the Register Original fo 200. and the newe booke of entrise verbo Certificat of assise This word hath vse where a man appearing by his bayliffe to an assise brought by another hath lost the day and hauing something more to pleade for himselfe as a deede of release c. which the bayliffe did not or might not pleade for him desireth a farder examination of the cause either before the same Iustices or others and obteineth leters patents vnto them to that effect The forme of these leters patents you may see in Fitzh nat br fo 181. and that done bringeth a writ to the Shyreeue to call both the party for whome the assise passed and the Iurie that was empaneled vpon the same before the said Iustices at a certaine day and place And it is called a certificate because in it there is mention made to the Shyreeue that vpon the parties complainte of the defectiue examination or doubts yet remaining vpon the assise passed the King hath directed his leters patēts to the Iustices for the beter certifiing of themselues whether all points of the said assise were duly examined yea or not See farder old nat br and Fitzh vbi supra Of this also you may reade Bracton li. 4. ca. 19. nu 4. in fine 5. 6. where he discusseth the reason of this pointe very learnedly and lastly Horn in his Myrrour of Iustices li. 3. ea finali § en eyde des memoyres c. Certificando de recognitions Stapulae is a writte directed to the Mayor of the staple c. cōmaunding him to certifie the chaunceler of a statute of the staple taken before him betweene such and such in case where
petitioners as in conscionable cases deale by supplication with his Maiestie This court as M. Gwin saith in the preface to his readings had beginning from commission first graunted by Henry the 8. to the masters of Requests whereas before that time by his opinion they had no warrant of ordinary iurisdiction but trauelled betweene the king and the petitioner by direction from the kings mouth But Sir Iulius Caesar in a Tractate of his painefully and very iudiciously gathered from the records of the same court plainely sheweth that this court was 9. Henrici septimi though then following the king and not setled in any certaine place neither swayed particularly by the Masters of requests as now it is but more at large by others of the kings most Honourable Councell whom he pleased to employ in this seruice For pag. 148. of the said Tractate you haue the forme of the oath then ministred to those that were Iudges in this court and à pag. prim vsque ad pag. 46. causes of diuers natures which in the said kings dayes were there handled and adiudged This court as that right Honorable and learned Knight in a briefe of his vpon the same court plainely proueth was and is parcell of the kings most Honorable Councell and so alwaies called and esteemed The Iudges thereof were alwaies of the kings most Honourable Councell appointed by the king to keepe his Councell board The keeping of this court was neuer tyed to any place certaine but onely where the Councell sate the suyters were to attend But now of late for the ease of suiters it hath bene kept in the White hall at Westminster and onely in the Tearme time It is a court of Record wherein recognizances are also taken by the kings Councell The forme of proceeding in this court was altogether according to the processe of summarie causes in the ciuile lawe The persons plaintiffes and defendants were alwaies either priviledged as officers of the court or their servants or as the kings seruants or as necessarie attendants of them or else where the plaintiffes pouertie or meane estate was not matchable with the wealth or greatnesse of the defendant or where the cause meerely contained mater of equitie and had no proper remedie at the common law or where it was specially recommended from the king to the examination of his Councell or concerned Vniuersities Colledges Hospitals and the like The causes wherwith they deale and wherof they iudge are of all sortes as maritime vltra marine ecclesiasticall temporall but properly temporall causes and onely of the other sort as they are mixt with temporal The maner of proceeding in the said court is first by privie seale leters missiue or Iniunction or messenger or bond Secondly by attachement Thirdly by proclamation of rebellion Fourthly by commission of rebellion fiftly by Sergeant at armes The effect of the defendants apparence is that he attend de die in diem on the councell till he haue made his answer to the plaintiffes bill and be licenced to depart vpon caution de iudicio sisti indicato solvendo and constitution of his Atturney and councell by name The authoritie of this court is such as vppon cause to graunt iniunctions for barring the defendant from syewing the plaintiffe at the common lawe and to stay the suyte at the common lawe before commencement and not to arrest the bodie of the plaintiffe till furder order be taken by the Kings councell and the execution of a decree in this court may be done either by imprisonment of the person disobeying being partie or claiming vnder the partie or by levie of the summe adiudged vppon his lands Courtesie of England lex Angliae commeth of the french Courtesie i. benignitas humanitas but with vs hath a proper signification being vsed for a tenure For if a man marie an inheretrice that is a woman seised of land in fee simple or fee taile generall or seised as heire of the taile speciall and getteth a childe of her that commeth aliue into the world though both it and his wife die forthwith yet if she were in possession shall he keepe the land during his life and is called tenent per legem Angliae or by the courtesie of England Glanvil li. 7. ca. 18. Bracton li. 5. tracta 5. ca. 30. nu 7. 8. 9. Britton ca. 51. fo 132. Fleta li. 6. ca. 56. § lex quaedam Fitzh nat br fo 149. D. Litleton li. 1. ca. 4. It is called the law of England Westm 2. ca. 3. This is in Scotland called curialitas Scotiae Skene de verbo sign verbo Curialitas who there saith that this is vsed in these two realmes onely and maketh a large discourse of the custome Coutheutlaughe is he that wittingly receiueth a man outlawed and cheriseth or hideth him In which case he was in auncient times subiect to the same punishment that the outlawe himselfe was Bracton li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 13. nu 2. It is compounded of couthe i. knowne acquainted familiar and vtlaughe an outlaw as we now call him Courtilage aliâs curtilage curtilagium aliâs curtilegium signifieth a garden a yard or a feeld or peece of voide ground lying ne ere and belonging to a mesuage West parte 2. Symbolaeo titulo fines sect 26. And so is it vsed anno 4. Ed. i. ca. vnico anno 35. H. 8. ca. 4. anno 39. Eliza ca. 2. and Coke vol. 6. fo 64. a. Of this also Lindwood thus writeth Curtilegium vulgare nomen est non omnium patriarum sed certarum Est enim curtis mansio vel manerium ad habitandum cum terris possessionibus aliis emolumentis ad tale manerium pertimentibus prove satis colligitur in libro feudorum titulo de controuersia investiturae § si quis de manso Coll. 10. Vnde curtilegium dicitur locus adiunctus tali curti vbi leguntur herbae vel olera sic dictus a curtis lego legis pro collig ere Thus farre Linwood titulo de decimis ca. Sancta § omnibus verbo Curtelegiorum So that in effect it is a yard or a garden adioyning to a house Creansour creditor commeth of the french croyance i. persuasio and signifieth him that trusteth another with any debt be it in mony or wares Old nat br fo 67. Cranage cranagium is a liberty to vsea crane for the drawing vp of wares from the vessels at any creek of the sea or wharfe vnto the land and to make profit of it It signifieth also the mony paide and taken for the same New booke of Entries 〈◊〉 3. col 3. Creeke creca crecca vel crecum seemeth to be a part of a hauen where any thing is landed or disburdened out of the sea So that when you are out of the mayne sea within the hauen looke how many landing places you haue so many creeks may be said to belong to that hauen See Cromptons iurisdictions fo 110. a. This word is mencioned in the statute as anno
is a breach of peace For Grith is a word of the old Angles signifiing peace Roger Hovedin parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. See Greachbreach Grills anno 22. Ed. 4. ca. 2. Grocers be merchants that ingrosse all merchandize vendible anno 37. Ed. 3. ca. 5. Groome anno 33. H. 8. ca. 10. Valletus is the name of a seruant that serueth in some inferiour place M. Verslegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence saith that he findeth it to haue beene in times past a name for youths who albeit they serued yet were they inferiour to men seruants and were sometimes vsed to be sent on foote of errands seruing in such manner as lackies doe nowe Growme anno 43. E. ca. 10. seemeth to be an engine to stretch wollen cloth withall after it is wouen Guydage Guydāgium is that which is giuen for safe conduct through a strange territorie Cassan de consuet Bourg pag. 119. whose words be these Est Guidagiū quod datur alicui vt tutò conducatur per loca alterius Guylde See Gyld Guylhalda Teutonicorum See Gild. Gule of August Gula Augusti anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. vnico Fitzh nat br fol. 62. I. aliâs Goule de August Plowd casu Mines fo 316. b. is the very day of Saint Peterad vincula which was wont and is still within the limits of the Roman church celebrated vpon the very Kalends of August Why it should be called the gule of August I cannot otherwise coniecture but that it commeth of the latine gula or the French gueule the throate The reason of my coniecture is in Durands rationali diuinorum li. 7. ca. de festo Sancti Petri ad vincula who saith that one Quirinus a tribune hauing a daughter that had a disease in her throat went to Alexander then Pope of Rome the sixt from Saint Peter and desired of him to borow or see the cheines that Saint Peter was cheined with vnder Nero which request obteined his said daughter kissing the said cheine was cured of her disease and Quirinus with his family was baptised Tunc dictus Alexander papa saith Durand hoc festum in Kalendis Augusti celebrandum instituit in honorem beali Petri ecclesiam in vrbe fabricavit vbi vincula ipsa reposuit ad vincula nominavit Kalendis Augusti dedicauit In qua festivitate populus illic ipsa vincula hodie osculatur So that this day being before called onely the Kalends of August was vpon this occasion afterward termed indifferently either of the instrument that wrought this miracle Saint Peters day ad vincula or of that part of the maiden wheron the miracle was wrought the Gule of August Gultwit seemeth to be compounded of Gult i. noxa and wit which is said by some skilfull men to be an auncient termination of the words in the Saxon tongue signifiing nothing in it selfe but as dom or hood and such like be in these english words Christendom and Manhood or such others others say and it is true that wit signifieth blame or reprehension Gultwit as Saxon in his description of England ca. 11. doth interpret it is an amends for trespas Gust Hospes is vsed by Bracton for a straunger or guest that lodgeth with vs the second night lib. 3. tracta 2. ca. 10. In the lawes of Saint Edward set forth by M. Lamberd num 27. it is written Gest of this see more in Vncothe Gumme gummi is a certaine clammie or tough liquor that in maner of a swetie excrement issueth out of trees and is hardened by the sunne Of these ther be diuers sorts brought ouer seas that be drugs to be garbled as appeareth by the statute anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Gutter tyle alias corner tyle is a tile made three cornerwise especially to be laid in gutters or at the corners of tyled houses which you shall often see vpon douehouses at the foure corners of their rofes anno 17. Eduardi 4. ca. 4. H A HAbeas corpus is a writ the which a man indited of some trespas before Iustices of peace or in a court of any franchise and vpon his apprehension being laid in prison for the same may haue out of the kings bench thereby to remooue himselfe thither at his owne costs and to answer the cause there c. Fitzh nat br fol. 250. H. And the order is in this case first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chaūcerie directed to the said Iustices for the remoouing of the Inditemēt into the kings bench and vpon that to procure this writ to the Shyreeue for the causing of his body to be brought at a day Register iudiciall fol. 81. where you shall finde diuers cases wherein this writ is vsed Habeas corpora is a writ that lieth for the bringing in of a Iurie or so many of them as refuse to come vpon the venire facias for the tryall of a cause brought to issue old nat br fol. 157. See great diuersitie of this writ in the table of the Register Iudiciall verbo habeas corpora the new booke of Entries verbo eodem Habendum is a word of forme in a deede of conueyance to the true vnderstanding whereof you must knowe that in euery deede of conueyance there be 2. principall parts the premisses and the habendum The office of the premisses is to expresse the name of the grauntour the grauntee and the thing graunted or to be graunted The office of the habendum is to limite the estate so that the generall implication of the estate which by construction of lawe passeth in the premisses is by the habendum controlled and qualified As in a lease to two persons the habendum to one for life the remainder to the other for life altereth the generall implication of the ioynt tenancie in the freehould which should passe by the premisses if the Habendum weare not Cooke vol. 2. Bucklers case fo 55. See Vse Habere facias seisinam is a writ Iudicial which lyeth where a man hath recouered lands in the kings court directed to the Shyreeue and commaunding him to giue him seisin of the land recouered old nat br fol. 154. Termes of the lawe whereof see great diuersity also in the table of the Register Iudiciall verb. Habere facias seisinā This writ is issuing sometime out of the Records of a fine executorie directed to the Shyreeue of the countie where the land lyeth commanding him to giue to the Cognizee or his heires seisin of the land whereof the fine is levied which writ lyeth within the yeare after the fine or Iudgemēt vpon a scire facias and may be made in diuers formes West parte 2. symb titulo Fines sect 136. There is also a writ called Habere facias seisinam vbi Rex habuit annum diem vastum which is for the redeliuery of lands to the Lord of the fee after the king hath taken his due of his lands that was conuicted of felonie Register orig fol. 165.
mesler i. miscere turbare Meere Merus though an Adiectiue yet is it vsed for a substantine signifiing meere tight Owld nat br fol. 2. in these words And knowe yee that this writte hath but two issues that is to say ioyning the mise vpon the meere And that is to put himselfe in the great assise of our Souerainge Lord the King or to ioyne battell See Mise Mesurement See Admesurement Medietas linguae signifieth an enquest empaneled vpon any cause wereof the one halfe consisteth of Denizens the other of straungers It is called in English the halfe tongue and is vsed in plees wherein the one party is a straunger the other a denizen See the statute anno 28. Ed. 3. ca. 13. anno 27. eiusdem statu 2. ca. 8. commonly called the statute of the Staple anno 8. H. 6. ca. 29. anno 2. He. 5. ca. 3. anno 11. He. 7. ca. 21. anno 1. 2. Phi. Mar. ca. 8. And before the first of these statutes was made this was wonte to be obteined of the King by graunt made to any company of straungers as Lombards Almaines c. Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. ca. 7. Medio acquietando is a writ iudiciall to distraine a lord for the acquiting of a meane Lord from a rent which he formerly acknowledgeth in court not to belong vnto him Register iudiciall fol. 29. b. Melius inquirendo is a writ that lyeth for a second inquiry as what lands and tenements a man dyed seised of where partiall dealing is suspected vpon the writ Diem clausit extremum Fitzh nat br fol. 255. Merchenlage was one of the three sorts of lawes out of which the Conquerour framed lawes vnto vs mingled with those of Normandy Camd. Britan. pag. 94. who also pag. 103. sheweth that in the yeare of our lord 1016. this land was diuided into three parts whereof the west Saxons had one gouerning it by the lawes called West Saxon lawes and that conteined these nine shyres Kent Southsex South rey Barkeshire Hamshire Wilshire Somerset Dorset and Deuonshire the second by the Danes which was gouerned by the lawes called Denelage and that conteined these fifteene shires Yorke Darby Notingham Leycester Lincolne Northampton Bedford Buckingham Hertford Essex Midlesex Northf Southf Cambridge Huntington The third was possessed and gouerned by the Mercians whose lawe was called Merchenlage which were these eight Glocester Worcester Hereford Warwicke Oxenford Chester Salop and Stafford See Lawe Mercy Misericordia signifieth the arbitrement or discretion of the King or Lord in punishing any offence not directly censured by the law As to be in the grieuous mercie of the king anno 11. H. 6. cap. 6. is to be in hazard of a great penaltie See Misericordia Measondue domus Dei commeth of the French maison de dien by which names diuers Hospitals are named You find the word anno 2. 3. Philip. Mar. cap. 23. in fine Mese See Mease Mesn medius seemeth to come from the French mainsnè i. minor natu it signifieth in our common lawe him that is lord of a maner and thereby hath tenents holding of him yet holding himselfe of a superiour Lord. And therefore it seemeth not absurdly to be drawne from the French mainsnè because the Lordship is created after the higher whereof he holdeth Mesn also signifieth a writ which lyeth where there is Lord mesn and tenent the tenent holding of the mesn by the same seruices whereby the mesn holdeth of the Lord and the tenent of the mesn is distrained by the superiour lord for that his seruice or rent which is due to the mesn Fitz. nat br fol. 135. See Mesnaltie Mesnaltie medietas commeth of Mesn and signifieth nothing but the right of the mesn as the mesnaltie is extinct old net br fol. 44. if the mesnalty descend of the tenent Kitchin fol. 147. For farder vnderstanding wherof take these words out of the Custumarie of Norm Medietate tenentur feuda quando aliqua persona intervenit inter Dominum tenentes Et hoc modo tenent omnes post nati mediante ante nato Messenger of the Exchequer is an Officer there of which sorte there be foure in that court that be Pursuyvants attending the lord Treasurer to cary his leters and precepts See Pursuyvant Mesuage mesuagium is a dwelling house West part 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 26. But by the name of a mesuage may passe also a Curtilage a garden an orchard a doue house a shoppe a mill as parcell of an house as he himselfe confirmeth out of Bracton lib. 5. cap. 28. sect prim and Plowden fol. 199. 170. 171. and of himselfe he auoucheth the like of a cotage a tost a chamber a celler c. yet may they be demaunded by their single names Mesuagium in Scotland signifieth the principall dwelling place or house within a Barony which in our land is called a maner-house Skene de verb. significat verbo Mesuagium where he citeth Vaientine Leigh that in his booke of Suruey he affirmeth Mesuagium to be the tenement or land earable and the dwelling house or place or court hall thereof to be called the site in Latine called Situs Mile milliare is a quantitie of a thousand paces otherwise described to containe eight furlongs and euery furlong to conteine forty lugs or poles and euery lugger or pole to containe 16. foote and a halfe anno 35. El. cap. 6. Mildernix anno 1. Iacob cap. 24. Mindbruch is hurting of honour and worship Saxon in his description of Engl. cap. 71. Miniuer See Furre Minouery anno 7. R. 2. cap. 4. seemeth to be compounded of two French words main i. manus and ouvrer i. operari and to signifie some trespasse or offence committed by a mans handie worke in the Forest as an engyn to catch Deere Britton vseth the verbe Meinoverer for to occupie and manure land cap. 40. and cap. 62. main-ovre for handy-worke It is not vnlike that our English manure is abbreuiated of the French Mint commeth of the Germane word meunk i. pecunia moneta and it signifieth with vs the place where the kings coyne is formed be it gold or siluer which is at this present and long hath bene the Tower of London though it appeare by diuers stories and other anticuities that in auncient times the mint hath bene also at C●leis an 21. R. 2 cap. 16. anno 9 Hen. 5. stat 5. cap. 5. The Officers belonging to the mint haue not bene alwaies alike At this present they seeme to be these The Warden who is the chiefe of the rest and is by his office to receiue the siluer of the Goldsmiths and to pay them for it and to ouersee all the rest belonging to this functiō His fee is an hundred pounds per annum The master-worker who receiueth the siluer from the Warden causeth it to be melted and deliuereth it to the moniers and taketh it from them againe when it is made His allowance is not any set fee but according
Cathedrall and collegiate churches as also the Clergie make choice of their Proctors which done and certified to the Bishop he returneth all answerably to his charge at the day These proctors of the Clergie howsoeuer the case of late dayes is altered had place and suffrage in the lower house of Parlament as well as the knights citizens Barons of the Cinque ports and Burgesses For so it plainely appeareth by the Statute anno 21. R. 2. cap. 2. cap. 12. And sithence they were remooued the Church hath daily growne weaker and weaker I pray God that in short time she famish not but that her liberties be better maintained Procurator is vsed for him that gathereth the fruites of a benefice for another man anno 3. R. 2. stat 1. cap. 2. And procuracy is vsed for the specialtie whereby he is authorized Ibid. They are at this day in the West parts called Proctors Profer profrum vel proferum is the time appointed for the accompts of Shyreeues and other officers in the Exchequer which is twice in the yeare anno 51. H. 3. statut quint. And it may be gathered also out of the Register fol. 139. in the writ De Atturnato Vicecomitis pro profro faciendo I reade also of profers anno 32. H. 8. cap. 21. in these words Trinitie terme shall beginne the Monday next after Trinity Sunday whensoeuer it shall happen to fall for the keeping of the essoins profers returnes and other ceremonies heretofore vsed and kept In which place profer seemeth to signifie the offer or indeauour to proceede in action by any man whom it concerneth so to doe See Briton cap. 27. fol. 50. b. 55. a. fol. 80. b. and Eleta lib. 1. cap. 38. § Vtlagati seqq Profer the halfe merke See Halfe merke Profession professio is in the common lawe vsed particularly fot the entring into any religious Order of Friars c. New booke of Entries verbo Profession Profits apprender See Prender Prohibition prohibitio is a writ framed for the forbidding of any court either spirituall or secular to proceed in any cause there depending vpon suggestion that the cognition thereof belongeth not to the said court Fitz. nat br fol. 39. G. but is most vsually taken especially in these dayes for that writ which lyeth for one that is impleeded in the Court Christian for a cause belonging to the temporall iurisdiction or the cognisance of the Kings court whereby as well the partie and his Councell as the Iudge himselfe and the Register are forbidden to proceed any farder in that cause for that it appertaineth to the disinheriting of the Crowne of such right as belongeth vnto it In how many cases this lyeth see Broke hoc titulo and Fitz. na br fol. 39. seqq This writ and the praemunire might in these daies well be spared For they were helpes to the kings inheritance and Crowne when the two swords were in two diuers hands Whereas now both the Iurisdictions being setled in the King there is small reason of either except it be to weatie the subiect by many quircks and delayes from obtaining his right of this prohibition you may reade Bracton also lib. 5. tract 5. cap. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. who saith that it lyeth not after sentence giuen in any cause howsoeuer the case is altered and againe the statute made anno 50. Ed. 3. which ordaineth that aboue one prohibition should not lye in one cause See the diuersitie of prohibitions in the table of the original Regist See the new booke of Entries verbo Prohibition and Fitz. nat br fol. 39. Prohibitio de vastodirecta parti is a writ Iudiciall directed to the tenent and prohibiting him from making waste vpon the land in controuersie during the suite Register Iudiciall fol. 21. It is sometime made to the Shyreeue the example whereof you haue there next following Pro Indiuiso is a possession and occupation of lands or tenements belonging vnto two or more persons whereof none knoweth his seuerall portion as Coparceners before partition Bracton lib. 5. tracta 2. cap. pri nu 7. Prolocutour of the conuocation house prolocutor domus conuocationis is an officer chosen by persons ecclesiasticall publiquely assembled by the kings writ at euery parlament And as there be two houses of conuocation so be there two prolocutours one of the higher house the other of the lower house who presently vpon the first assembly is by the motion of the Bishops chosen by the lower house and presented to the Bishops for their prolocutour that is the man by whom they meane to deliuer their resolutions to the higher house and to haue their owne house especially ordered and gouerned His office is to cause the clerk to call the names of such as are of that house when he seeth cause to cause all things propounded to be read by him to gather the suffrages and such like Promoters promotores be those which in popular and penall actions doe deferre the names or complaine of offenders hauing part of the profit for their reward These were called among the Romaines Quadruplatores or Delatores They belong especially to the Exchequer and the kings bench Smith de Repub Anglo li. 2. cap. 14. Pro partibus liberandis is a writ for the partition of lands betweene coheires Register originall fol. 316. Prophecies prophetia be in our common law taken for wiserdly foretellings of maters to come in certaine hidden and enigmaticall speeches Whereby it falleth out many times that great troubles are stirred in our common wealth and great attempts made by those to whom the speach framed either by the description of his cognisance armes or some other quality promiseth good successe anno 3. Ed. 6. cap. 15. anno 7. eiusdem cap. 11. anno 5. Eliza. ca. 15. But these for distinctions fake are called false or phantasticall prophecies Property proprietas signifieth the highest right that a man hath or can haue to any thing which is no way depending vpon any other m●ns courtesie And this none in our kingdome can be said to haue in any lands or tenements but onely the King in the right of his Crowne Because all the lands through the realme are in the nature of fee and doe hould either mediately or immediately of the Crowne See Fee This word neuerthelesse is in our common law vsed for that right in lands and tenements that common persons haue because it importeth as much as vtile dominium though not directum Proprietate probanda is a writ See the originall Regist fol. 83. a. 85. b. It lyeth for him that will proue a propertie before the Shyreeue Brookes Propertie 1. For where a propertie is alledged a replegiare lyeth not Idem ibidem Proprietarie proprietarius is he that hath a propertie in any thing but it is most notoriously vsed for him that hath the fruites of a benefice to himselfe and his heires or successours as in time past Abbots and Priors had
say what he can for the iustifiing of his right to this land before he so conveied it The third man commeth not wherevpon the land is recouered by him that brought the writ and the tenent of the land is left for his remedie to the third man that was called and came not in to defend the tenent And by this meanes the entayle which was made by the tenent or his auncester is cut of by iudgement herevpon giuen for that he is pretended to haue no power to entaile that land wherevnto he had no iust title as now it appeareth because it is evicted or recouered from him This kinde of recouery is by good opinion but a snare to deceiue the people Doctor Stud. ca. 32. dial pri fol. 56. a. This feigned Recouery is also called a common Recouery And the reason of that Epitheton is because it is a beaten and common path to that end for which it is ordeined viz. to cut of the estates aboue specified See the new booke of Entries verbo Recouery I saide before that a true recouery is as well of the value as of the thing for the beter vnderstanding whereof know that In valew signifieth as much as Illud quod interest with the Ciuilians For example if a man buy land of an other with warranty which land a third person afterward by suite of lawe recouereth against me I haue my remedie against him that sould it me to recouer in value that is to recouer so much in mony as the land is worth or so much other land by way of exchaunge Fitzh nat br fol. 134. K. To recouer a warranty old nat br fol. 146. is to proue by iudgement that a man was his warrant against all men for such a thing Recto is a writ called in English a writ of Right which is of so high a nature that whereas other writs in reall actions be onely to recouer the possession of the land or tenements in question which haue beene lost by our auncester or our selues this aimeth to recouer both the seisin which some of our Auncesters or wee had and also the propertie of the thing whereof our Auncester died not seised as of fee and whereby are pleaded and tried both the rights togither viz. as well of possession as property Insomuch as if a man once loose his cause vpon this writ either by Iudgement by Assise or batell he is without all remedie and shall be excluded per exceptionem Rei iudicatae Bracton lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 1. seqq where you may reade your fille of this writ It is diuided into two species Rectumpatens a writ of right patent and Rectum clausum a writ of right close This the Ciuilians call Iudicium petitorium The writ of right patent is so called because it is sent open and is in nature the highest writ of all other lying alwaies for him that hath fee simple in the lands or tenements siewed for and not for any other And when it lieth for him that chalengeth fee simple or in what cases See Fitzh nat br fol. pri C. whome see also fol. 6. of a speciall writ of right in London otherwise called a writ of right according to the Custome of London This writ is also called Breue magnum de Recto Register originall fol. 9 A. B. and Fleta li. 5. cap. 32. § 1. A writ of right close is a writ directed to a Lord of auncient Demesn and lieth for those which hould their lands and tenements by charter in fee simple or in fee taile or for terme of life or in dower if they be eiected out of such lands c. or disseised In this case a man or his heire may siew out this writ of Right close directed to the L. of the Auncient Demesn commanding him to doe him right c. in his court This is also called a small writ of right Breve parvum Register originall fol. 9. a. b. and Britton cap. 120. in fine Of this see Fitzh likewise at large nat br fol. 11. seqq Yet note that the writ of right patent seemeth farder to be extended in vse then the originall inuention serued for a writ of Right of Dower which lieth for the tenent in Dower and onely for terme of life is patent as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fol. 7. E. The like may be said of diuers others that doe hereafter followe Of these see also the table of the originall Register verbo Recto This writ is properly tried in the Lords court betweene kindsmen that claime by one title from their Auncester But how it may be thence remoued and brought either to the Countie or to the kings court see Fleta lib. 6. cap. 3. 4. 5. Glanvile seemeth to make euery writ whereby a man sieweth for any thing due vnto him a writ of right lib. 10. ca. 1 lib. 11. cap. 1. lib. 12. cap. 1. Recto de dote is a writ of Right of Dower which lieth for a woman that hath receiued part of her Dower and purposeth to demaund the Remanent in the same towne against the heire or his Gardian if he be ward Of this see more in the old nat br fol. 5. and Fitzh fol. 7. E. and the Register originall fol. 3. and the newe booke of Entries verbo Droyt Recto de dote vnde nihil habet is a writ of right which lieth in case where the husband hauing diuers lands or tenements hath assured no dower to his wife and she thereby is driuen to siew for her thirds against the heire or his Gardian old nat by folio 6. Register originall fol. 170. Recto de rationabili parte is a writ that lieth alway beweene priuies of bloud as brothers in Gauel-kind or sisters or other Coparceners as Nephewes or Neeces and for land in Fee simple For example if a man lease his land for tearme of life and afterward dyeth leauing issue two daughters and after that the tenent for terme of life likewise dyeth the one sister entring vpon all the land and so deforcing the other the sister so deforced shall haue this writ to recouer her part Fitz. nat br fo 9. Register origin fol. 3. Recto quando Dominus remisit is a writ of right which lyeth in case where lands or tenements that be in the Seigneurie of any Lord are in demaund by a writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the prayer of the Demandant or Tenent shall send to the Court of the King his writ to put the cause thither for that time sauing to him another time the right of his Seigneurie then this writ issueth out for the other partie and hath this name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This writ is close and must be returned before the Iustices of the common Bancke old nat br fol. 16. Regist orig fol. 4. Recto de Advocatia Ecclesiae is a writ of right lying where a man hath right of Advouzen and
bequeath any thing to the redeeming of captives c. and appoint one to execute his will in that point the partie soe appointed shall see it performed and if he appointe none to doe it then the Bishop of the citie shall haue power to demaund the legacie and without all delay performe the will of the deceased Admirall Admiralius cometh of the frenche amerall and signifieth both in France and with vs an high officer or magistrate that hath the gouernement of the Kings navie and the hearing and determining of all causes as well civile as criminall belōging to the sea Cromptons diuers iurisd fo 88. and the statutes anno 13. R. 2. ca. 5. anno 15. eiusdem ca. 3. an 2. H. 4. ca. 11. anno 2. H. 5. ca. 6. an 28. H. 8. ca. 15. with such like This officer is in all kingdomes of Europe that border vpon the sea and his authoritie in the kingdome of Naples is called magna Curia Admirariae quae habet iurisdictionem in eos qui vivunt ex arte maris Vincent de Franch descis 142. nu 1. This Magistrate among the Romanes was called praefectus classis as appeareth by Tully in Verrem 7. but his authoritie was not continuall as the Admirals is in these daies but onely in time of warre Neither doe I finde any such officer belonging to the Emperours in our Code And M. Guyn in the preface to his reading is of opinion that this office in England was not created vntill the daies of Edward the third His reason is probable Britton that wrote in Edw. the firsts time and in the beginning of his booke taking vpon him to name all the courts of Iustice maketh no mention of this courte or magistrate And againe Richard the second finding the Admirall to extend his iurisdiction over farre ordeined by statute made the 10. yeare of his reigne that the limits of the admirals iurisdiction should be restrained to the power he had in his grandfather Edward the thirds daies whereby the saide Master Gwin coniectureth that he did nought els but reduce him to his originall But contrarily to this it appeareth by auncient records the copies whereof I have seene that not onely in the daies of Ed. the first but also of King Iohn all causes of Merchants and mariuers and things happening within the fludde marke were ever tried before the Lord admirall Adiura Regis is a writ for the Kings Clerke against him that seeketh to eiect him to the preiudice of the Kings title in the right of his crowne Of this you may see diuers formes vpon divers cases Register orig fo 61. a. Admittendo clerico is a writte graunted to him that hath recouered his right of presentation a-against the Bishop in the common bank the forme whereof read in Fitzh nat br fo 38. the Register orig fo 33. a. Admittendo in socium is a writ for the association of certaine persons to Iustices of assises formerly appointed Register orig fol. 206. a. Ad quod damnum is a writ that lyeth to the escheater to inquire what hurt it will be to the King or other person to graunt a Faire or market or a mortmaine for any lands intended to be giuen in fee simple to any house of religion or other body politicke For in that case the land so giuē is said to fal into a dead hād that is such an estate and condition that the chiefe Lords do leese all hope of heriots seruice of court and escheates vpon any traiterous or felonious offence committed by the tenant For a bodie politicke dieth not neither can performe personall seruice or commit treason or felonie as a singular person may And therefore it is reasonable that before any such grant be made it should be knowne what preiudice it is like to worke to the graunter Of this reade more in Fitzh nat breu fol. 221. and look Mortmaine Ad terminum qui praeteriit is a writ of entrie that lyeth in case where a man hauing leased lands or tenements for terme of life or yeers and after the terme expired is held from them by the tenant or other stranger that occupieth the same and deforceth the leassour Which writ belongeth to the leassour and his heire also Fitzh nat br fol. 201. Aduent aduentus is a certaine space of time comprising a moneth or thereabout next before the feast of Christs natiuitie Wherein it seemeth that our ancestors reposed a kind of reuerence for the neerenesse of that solemne feast so that all contentions in lawe were then remitted for a season Whereupon there was a statute ordained Westm 1. cap. 48. anno 3. Ed. 1. that notwithstanding the said vsuall solemnitie and time of rest it might be lawfull in respect of iustice and charitie which ought at all times to be regarded to take assises of nouell disseisin mort d'auncester and darrein presentment in the time of Aduent Septuagesima and Lent This is also one of the times from the beginning whereof vnto the end of the Octaues of the Epiphany the solemnizing of mariage is forbidden by reason of a certain spiritualioy that the church so consequently euery member thereof for that time doth or ought to conceiue in the remembrance of her spouse Christ Iesus and so abandon all affections of the flesh See Rogation weeke and Septuagesima Advocatione decimarum is a writ that lyeth for the claime of the fourth part or vpward of the tythes that belong to any Church Register orig fol. 29. b. Advow aliâs avowe advocare commeth of the French advoüer aliâs avoüer and signifieth as much as to iustifie or maintaine an act formerly done For example one taketh a distresse for rent or other thing and he that is destreyned sueth a Replevin Now he that tooke the distresse or to whose vse the distresse was taken by another iustifying or maintaining the act is said to avowe Tearmes of the lawe Hereof commeth advowant Old nat br fol. 43. and advowrie eodem folio Bracton vseth the Latine word in the same signification as advocatio disseisiuae li. 4. cap. 26. And I find in Cassauaeus de consuet Burg. pa. 1210. advohare in the same signification and pag. 1213. the Substantine desavohamentum for a disavowing or refusall to avowe Advowzen advocatio signifieth in our common law a right to present to a benefice as much as ius patronatus in the canon lawe The reason why it is so tearmed proceedeth from this because they that originally obtained the right of presenting to any Church were maintainers and vpholders or great benefactors to that Church either by building or increasing it and are thereupon tearmed sometime patroni sometime Advocati cap. 4. cap. 23. de iure patronatus in Decretal And advowzen being a bastardly French word is vsed for the right of presenting as appeareth by the Statute of Westm the second anno 13. Ed. 1. ca. 5. Advowsen is of two sorts advowsen in grosse that is sole or
scribit Suetonius cap. 42. Hodiè hic vsus in subalpina regione est frequens vt scribit Iacobinus de Sancto Georgio in tractu de homagiis col 8. Etiam pro filia quae religionem ingreditur non modò pro vna filia sed pluribus filiabus non tamen pro secundis nuptijs exigitur In which place the said author maketh mention of diuers other Civilians and feudists that record this custome to be in other places Of this aide our Fleta writeth thus sicutetiam quaedam consuerudines quaeservitia non dicuntur nec concomitantia seruitiorū ficut rationobilia auxilia ad filium primogenitum militem faciendum vel ad filiam primogenitā maritandam quae quidem auxilia sunt de gratia non de iure pro necessitate indigentia dominicapitalis Et non sunt praedialia sed personalia secundùm quod perpendi poterit in breui ad hoc prouiso c. This word ayde is also particularly vsed in matter of pleading for a petition made in court for the calling in of helpe from another that hath an interest in the cause in question and is likely both to giue strength to the party that prayeth in aide of him and also to auoide a preiudice growing toward his owne right except it be preuented For example when a tenent for terme of life by courtesie tenent in taile after possibility of issue extinct for tearme of yeares at will by elegit or tenent by statute merchant being impleaded touching his estate may petere auxilium that is pray in ayde of him in the reuersion that is desire or intreate the court that he may be called in by writ to alledge what he thinketh good for the maintenance both of his right and his owne Termes of the lawe Fitzh mentioneth both prier en ayde and prier ayde de patron c. auxilium petere à patrono nat br fol. 50. d. and the new booke of entries verbo Ayde de parcener auxilium de parcionario fol. 411. columna 4. This the later practitioners in the ciuill lawe call authoris laudationem vel nominationem Emericus in pract titulo 48. This ayde prier is also vsed sometime in the kings behoofe that there be no proceeding against him vntill the kings Councell be called and heard to say what they thinke good for the auoyding of the kings preiudice or losse touching the cause in hand For example if the kings tenent holding in chiefe be demaunded a rent of a common person he may pray in ayde of the king Also a citie or borough that hath a fee ferme of the king any thing being demaunded against them which belongeth the reunto may pray in ayde of the King c. Tearms of the law of this thing you may read the statute de big amis a. 4. Ed. 1. ca. 1. 2. 3. anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 14. The civile law in suites begunne betweene two alloweth a third to come in pro interesse and he that commeth in for his interrest commeth either assistendo or opponendo c. The former is like to this ayde prier the other to that which our common lawyers call Receyte Looke Receyte Aile avo commeth of the French aieul i. avus signifieth a writ that lieth where the grādfather or great grandfather called of our common lawyers besayle but in true French bisaieul was seised in his demaines as of fee of any land or tenement in fee simple the day that he died and a stranger abateth or entreth the same day and dispossesseth the heire Fitzh nat br fo 221. Alderman aldermannus is borrowed from the saxon Ealderman signifying as much as Senator in latine Lamb. in his explica of Saxon words verbo senator See Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. Aler sans iour is verbatim to goe without day the meaning whereof is to be finally dismissed the courte because there is no day of farder appearāce assigned Kitchin fo 140. Ale-tastor is an officer appointed in every court leete and sworne to looke to the assise and the goodnes of bread and ale or beere within the precincts of that Lordship Kitchin fo 46. where you may see the forme of his oath Alias v. Capias alias Alien alienare commeth of the French aliener and signifieth as much as to transferre the propertie of any thing vnto another man To alien in mortmaine is to make over lands or tenements to a religious companie or other body politike Stawnf praero fo 48. looke Mortmayn To alien in fee isto sel the fee simple of any land or tenement or of any incorporeall right West 2. ca. 25. anno 13. Ed. 1. Alien alias alion alienigena commeth of the latine alienus and signifieth one borne in a straunge country It is ordinarily taken for the contrarie to Denizen or a naturall subiect that is one borne in a straunge country and neuer heere infranchised Broke Denizen 4. c. And in this case a man born out of the land so it be within the limits of the Kings obedience beyond the sease or of English parents out of the Kings obedience so the parents at the time of the birth be of the Kings allegiance is no alien in account but a subiect to the King Statute 2. a. 25. Ed. 3. ca. vnico commonly called the Statute De natis vltra mare Also if one borne out of the kings allegiance come and dwell in England his children if he beget any heere be not aliens but denizens Termes of the lawe See Denizen Allaye Allaia is vsed for the temper and mixture of siluer and gold anno 9. H. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 4. Stat. 1. eiusdem anni cap. 11. The reason of which allay is with a baser mettall to augment the waight of the siluer or gold so much as may counteruaile the Princes charge in the coining Antonius Faber de nummariorum debitorum solutionibus cap. 1. Allocatione facienda is a writ directed to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer vpō complaint of some accountant commaunding them to allow the accountant such sums as he hath by vertue of his office lawfully and reasonably expended Register orig fol. 206. b. Alluminor seemeth to be made of the French allumer i. accendere incendere inflammare it is vsed for one that by his trade coloureth or painteth vpon paper or parchment And the reason is because he giueth grace light and ornament by his colours to the leters or other figures coloured You shall find the word an 1. R. 3. ca. 9. Almaine riuets be a certaine light kind of armor for the body of a man with sleeues of maile or plates of iron for the defence of his armes The former of which words seemeth to shewe the countrie where it was first invented the other whether it may come from the French verb revestir 〈◊〉 superinduere to put on vpon another garment I leaue to farther consideration Almner elecmosinarius is an officer of the
Which maketh me to thinke that it rather cōmeth from attaindre as we would say in english catched ouertaken or playnly deprehended And Britton ca. 75. vseth the participle attaint in the sence that we say attained vnto A man is attainted by two meanes by appearance or by proces Stawnf pl. cor fo 44. Attaynder by by apparence is by confession by battelll or by verdict idem fo 122. Confession whereof attaynt groweth is double one at the barre before the iudges when the prisoner vpon his endictment read being asked guilty or not guilty answeareth guilty neuer putting himselfe vpon the verdict of the Iurie the other is before the coroner in sanctuarie where he vpon his confession was in former times constreyned to abiure the Realme which kinde also of the effect is called attaynder by abiuration Idem fo 182. Attaynder by battel is when the party appealed by another and chusing to trie the the truth by combat rather then by Iurie is vanquished Idem fo 44. Attaynder by verdict is when the prisoner at the barre answering to the endictment not guilty hath an enquest 〈◊〉 life and death passing vpon him and is by their verdict or doom● pronounced guiltie Idem fo 108. 192. Attainder by processe otherwise called attainder by default or attainder by outlagarie is where a partie flieth and is not found vntill he haue bene fiue times called publikely in the countie and at the last out-lawed vpon his default Idem fol. 44. I find by the same author fol. 108. that he maketh a difference between attainder and conuiction in these words And note the diuersitie betweene attainder and conuiction c. And with this agreeth the Statute anno 34. 35. H. 8. cap. 14. in ipso principio and anno 1. Ed. 6. cap. 12. in these words that then euery such offender being duly thereof convicted or attainted by the lawes of this realme c. And againe in these words Euery woman that is or shall fortune to be wife of the person so attainted convicted or outlawed c. To this you may likewise adde the flat anno 2. 3. Edw. 6. cap. 33. And I find by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 66. that a man by our ancient lawes was said to be conuicted presently vpon the verdict guiltie but not to be attainted vntill it appeared that he was no clerke or being a clerke and demanded of his ordinarie could not purge himselfe So that a man was not attainted vpon conuiction except he were no Clerke and in one word it appeareth that attainder is larger then conuiction conuiction being onely by the Iurie And attainder is not before iudgement Perkins Graunti num 27. 29. Yet it appeareth by Stawnf fol. 9. that conuiction is called attainder sometime For there he saith that the verdict of the Iurie doth either acquit or attaint a man and so it is Westm pr. cap. 14. anno 3. Ed. 1. This auncient lawe touching the conuiction and purgation of Clerkes is altered by anno 23. Eliz. cap. 2. as you may farder reade in Clergie Attainder Attinctus though it be most vsed in matters of felonie and treason yet is it likewise applied to inferior transgressions as to disseisin Westm 1. cap. 36. anno 3. Ed. 1. and Britton cap. 26. See Attaint and Attainted Attendant attendens cōmeth of the French attendre i. demorari opperiri expectare praestolari it signifieth in our common law one that oweth a dutie or seruice to another or after a sort dependeth of another For example there is Lord mesn and tenent the tenent holdeth of the mesn by a peny the mesn holdeth ouer by two pence The meane releaseth to the tenent all the right he hath in the land and the tenent dyeth His wife shall be endowed of the land and she shall be attendent to the heire of the third part of the peny and not of the third part of the two pence For she shall be endowed of the best possession of her husband Another hath Kitchin fol. 209. in these words where the wife is endowed by the gardian she shal be attendant to the gardian and to the heire at his full age with whome agreeth Perkins also in Dower 424. Atturney atturnatus cōmeth of the French tourner i. vertere as tourner son esprit à faire quelque chose i. animum ad rem aliquam inclinare Thence commeth the participle tournè i. versus conversus and the Substantiue tour i. vices vicissitudo as chacun à son tour i. quilibet sua vice It signifieth in our common lawe one appointed by another man to do any thing in his steade as much as procurator or fyndicus in the ciuill lawe West parte 1. Symbolayogr lib. 2. sect 559. defineth it thus Atturneys be such persons as by the consent commandement or request do take heed fee to and take vpon them the charge of other mens busines in their absence by whome they are commaunded or requested And where it seemeth that in auncient time those of authoritie in Courts had it in their arbitriment whether they would suffer men to appeare or sue by any other then themselues as is euident by Fitz. nat br fol. 25. in the writ Dedimus potest atem de atturnato facundo where it is shewed that men were driuen to procure the kings writs or letters parents to appoint Atturneys for them it is sithence prouided by Statutes that it should be lawfull so to do without any such circuit as by the Statute anno 20. H. 3. cap. 10. anno 6. Ed. 1. cap. 8. anno 27. eiusdem stat 2. an 12. Ed. 2. 1. anno 15. eiusdem cap. vnico anno 7. Ric. 2. cap. 14. anno 7. H. 4. cap. 13. anno 3. H. 5. cap. 2. anno 15. H. 6. cap. 7. anno 17. H. 7. cap. 2. is to be proued And you may see great diuersitie of writs in the table of the Regi origin wherein the king by his writ commaundeth the Iudges to admit of Atturneys Wherby there grew at the last so many vnskilfull Atturneys and so many mischiefes by them that prouision for restraining them was requisite Wherefore anno 4. H. 4. cap. 18. it was ordained that the Iustices should examine them and displace the vnskilfull And againe anno 33. H. 6. cap. 7. that there should be but a certaine number of them in Northfo 〈…〉 and Southfolke In what cases a man at this day may haue an Atturney and in what not see F●● vbisupra Atturney is either generall or speciall Atturney generall is he that by generall authoritie is appointed to all our affaires or suites as the Atturney generall of the king pl. cor fol. 152. which is as much as Procurater Caesaris was in the Romane Empire Atturney general of the Duke Cromptons Iurisd fol. 105. Atturney speciall or particular is he that is employed in one or more causes particularly specified Atturneys generall be made after two sorts either by the kings leters patents before him or
the Lord Chancelour or by our appointment before Iustices in eyre in open court Glanvile li. 11. cap. pri Britton cap. 126. whome of this thing you may reade more at large There be also in respect of the diuers courts Atturneys at large and Atturneys special belonging to this or that court onely The name is borrowed of the Normanes as appeareth by the custumarie cap. 65. And I find the word attornati or as some reade tornati in the same signification in the title de statu regularium ca. vnico § Perrò i. n sexto where the glosse saith that Atturnati dicuntur Procuratores apud acta constituti Our old Latine word for this seemeth to be responsalis Bract. lib. 4. cap. 31. lib. 5. parte 2. cap. 8. and so it is in Scotland at this day but especially for the Atturney of the defendant as prolocutor is for the persewer M. Skene de verb. significatione Responsalis as Sig●nius witnesseth in his first booke de regno Italie was in auncient time the title of the Popes ambassadour pag. 11. Atturney of the court of wards and Liueries Atturnatus regis in curia Wardorum Liberaturarū is the third officer in that Court who must be a person learned in the lawes of the land being named and assigned by the king At his admission into the office he taketh an oath before the Master of the said court well and truly to serue the king as his Atturney in all courts for and concerning any mater or cause that toucheth the possessions and hereditaments limited to the suruey and gouernement of this court and to procure the kings profite thereof truly to councell the king and the Master of the Court in all things concerning the same to the best of his cunning witte and power and with all speed and diligence from time to time at the calling of the Master to endeuour himself for the hearing and determination indifferently of such matters causes as depend before the Master not to take any gift or reward in any mater or cause depending in the court or else where wherein the king shall be partie whereby the king shall be hurt hindred or disinherited to do to his power wit and cunning all and euery thing that appertaineth to his office Atturney of the Court of the Duchie of Lancaster Atturnatus curia Ducatus Lancastriae is the second officer in that Court and seemeth for his skill in law to be there placed as assessor to the Chanceler of that court being for the most part some honorable man and chosen rather for some especiall trust reposed in him to deale betweene the king and his tenents then for any great learning as was vsuall with the Emperors of Rome in the choice of their Magistrates Attournment attornamentum commeth of the French tourner i. vertero and in our common lawe is an yeelding of the tenent to a new Lord or acknowledgement of him to be his Lord. For otherwise he that buyeth or obtaineth any lands or tenements of another which are in the occupation of a third cannot get possession yet see the statute an 27. H. 8. cap. 16. The words vsed in atturnment are set downe in Litleton I agree me to the graunt made to you c. But the more common atturnment is to say Sir I attourn to you by force of the same graunt or I become your tenent c. or else deliuer vnto the grauntee a peny halfepeny or farding by way of attournment Litleton lib. 3. cap. Attournment 10. whome you may reade more at large and find that his definition proceedeth from more lawe then Logicke● because he setteth downe diuers other cases in the same chapter whereto attournment appertaineth as properly as vnto this But you may perceiue there that attournment is the transposing of those duties that the tenent ought to his former Lord vnto another as to his Lord and also that attournment is either by word or by act c. Also attournment is voluntarie or else compulsorie by the writ tearmed Per quaeseruitia Owld nat br fol. 155. or sometime by distresse Fitzh nat br fol. 147. Lastly attournment may be made to the Lord himselfe or to his Steward in Court Kitchin fol. 70. And there is attournment in deede and attournment in lawe Coke vol. 6. fo 113. a. Attournment in lawe is an act which though it be no expresse attournment yet in intendment of law is all one Atturnato faciendo vel vecipiendo is a writ which a man oweing suite to a countie hundred weapon take or other court and desiring to make an attourney to appeare for him at the same court whome he doubteth whether the Shyreeue or bailiffe will admit or not for his Attourney there purchaseth to commaund him to receiue such a man for his attourney and admit his appearance by him The forme and other circumstances whereof see in Fitzh nat br fo 156. Audiendo terminando is a writ but more properly tearmed a commission directed to certaine persons when as any great assembly insurrectiō or heinous demeanure or trespasse is committed in any place for the appeasing and punishment thereof which you may read at large in Fitzh nat br fo 110. See also oyer terminer Andience courte Curia audientiae Cantuariensis is a court belonging to the Archbishop of Canterburie of equall authoritie with the Arches court though inferior both in dignity and antiquitie The originall of this court was because the Archeb of Canterbury heard many causes extra iudicially at home in his owne palace in which before he would finally determine any thing he did vsually commit them to be discussed by certaine learned men in the ciuile canon lawes whome thereupon be termed his auditors And so in time it grew to one especiall man who at this day is called Causarum negotiorumque audientiae Cantuariensis auditor seu officialis And with this office hath heretofore commonly bene ioyned the Chancelership of the Archbishop who medleth not in any point of cōtentious iurisdiction that is desciding of causes betweene party and party except such as are ventilated pro forma onely as the confirmation of bishops elections or such like but onely of office and especially such as are voluntariae iurisdictionis as the granting of the custody of the spiritualties during the vacation of Bishoprickes Institutions to benefices dispensing with banes of matrimonie and such like But this is now distinguished in person from the Audience Of this Audience court you may reade more in the booke intituled De antiquitate ecclasiae Brittannicae historia Audita querela is a writ that lieth against him who hauing taken the bond called statute Merchant of another and craving or hauing obteined execution of the same at the Maior Bayliffes hands before whome it was entred at the complaint of the partie who entred the same vpon suggestion of some iust cause why execution should not be graunted as a release or other exception This writ is
who at any time sithence the first day of this present parlament or at any time hereafter shall depart the Realme or begin to keepe his or her house or houses or otherwise to absent him or her selfe or take sanctuarie or suffer him or her selfe willingly to be arrested for any debt or other thing not growne or due for mony deliuered wares sould or any other iust or lawful cause or good consideration or purposes or hath or will suffer him or her selfe to be outlawed or yeld him or her selfe to prison or willingly or fraudulently hath or shall procure him or her selfe to be arrested or his or her goods money or chatels to be attached or sequestred or depart from his or her dwelling house or make or cause to be made any fraudulent graūt or conueyance of his her or their lands tenements goods or chatels to the intent or whereby his her or their creditours being subiects borne as aforesaide shall or may be defeated or delayed forthe recouery of their iust and true dept or being arrested for debt shall after his other arrest lye in prison fixe monethes or more vpon that arrest or any other arrest or detention in prison for debt and lye in prison sixe monethes vpon such arrest or detention shall be accompted and adiudged a bankrupt to all intents and purposes Banishment exilium abiuratio commeth of the French bannissement and hath a signification knowne to euery man But there be two kinds of banishments in England one voluntarie and vpō oath whereof you may reade Abiuration the other vpon cōpulsion for some offence of crime as if a lay-man succor him that hauing taken sanctuarie for an offence obstinately refuseth to abiure the realme he shall loose his life and member if a Clerke do so he shall be banished Stawnf pl. cor fol. 117. This punishment is also of our moderne Civilians called bannimētum which was aunciently tearmed deportatio if it were perpetuall or relegatio in insulam if for a time Vincentius de Franchis Petrus de Belluga in suo speculo fol. 125. num 4. Barbaries Oxyeantha is a thornie shrub knowne to most men to beare a bery or fruite of a sharpe taste These beries as also the leaues of the said tree be medicinable as Gerara in his herball sheweth lib. 3. cap. 21. You find them mentioned among drugs to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Bard aliâs Beard See Clack Bargaine and sale as it seemeth by West part 1. symb lib. 2. sect 436. is properly a contract made of maners lands tenements hereditaments and other things transferring the propertie thereof from the bargainer to the barganee But the author of the new termes of lawe addeth that it ought to be for money saying farder that this is a good contract for land c. and that fee-simple passeth thereby though it be not said in the deed To haue and to hold the land to him and to his heyres and though there be no liuerie and seisin made by the seller so it be by deed indented sealed and enrolled either in the Countie where the land lyeth or within one of the kings courts of Records at Westminster within sixe moneths after the date of the deed indented anno 27. H. 8. cap. 16. Barkarie Barkaria is a heath house New booke of Entries titulo Assise corp polit 2. Some call it a Tanne house Baron Baro is a French word and hath diuers significations here in England First it is taken for a degree of Nobilitie next vnto a Vicount Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. num 4. where he saith they be called Barones quasi robur belli And in this signification it is borowed from other nations with whom Baroniae be as much as Prouinciae Petrus Belluga in speculo princip fol. 119. So Barones be such as haue the gouernment of Prouinces as their fee holden of the king some hauing greater some lesser authoritie within their territories as appeareth by Vincentius de Franchis in diuers of his desceisions and others Yet it may probably be thought that of old times here in England all they were called Barons that had such Seigniories as we now call court-barons as they be at this day called Seigneurs in France that haue any such manor or lordship Yea I haue heard by men very learned in our Antiquities that neere after the conquest all such came to the Parlament and sate as Nobles in the vpper house But when by experience it appeared that the Parlament was too much pestered with such multitudes it grew to a custome that none shold come but such as the king for their extraordinarie wisedome or qualitie thought good to call by writ which writ ranne hac vice tantùm After that againe men seeing this estate of Nobilitie to be but casuall and to depend meerly vpon the Princes pleasure they sought a more certain hold and obtained of the King leters patents of this dignitie to them and their heyres male And these were called Barons by leters patents or by creation whose posterity be now by inheritance and true descent of Nobilitie those Barons that be called Lords of the Parlament of which kind the king may create more at his pleasure It is thought neuerthelesse that there are yet Barons by writ as wel as Barons by leters patents and that they may be discerned by their titles because the Barons by writ are those that to the title of Lord haue their owne surnames annexed as Compton North Norice c. whereas the Barons by leters patents are named by their Baronies These Barons which were first by writ may now iustly also be called Barons by prescription for that they haue continued Barons in themselues and their auncestors time beyond the memorie of man The originall of Barons by writ Master Camden in his Britannia pag. 109. in meo referreth to Henry the third Barons by leters patents or creation as I haue heard among our Antiquaries were first created about the dayes of Henry the sixth the maner of whose creation reade in Master Stowes Annales pag. 1121. Of all these you may also reade Master Ferui glorie of Generositie pa. 125 126. And see M. Skene de ver signif verb. Baro. with Sir Thomas Smith lib. 1. de rep Anglor cap. 17. who saith that none in England is created Baron except he can dispend a thousand pound by yeare or a thousand markes at the least To these former Master Seager by office Norrey lib. 4. cap. 13. of Honour ciuill and militarie addeth athird kind of Baron calling them barons by tenure and those be the Bishops of the land all which by vertue of baronries annexed to their bishoprickes haue alwaies had place in the vpper house of Parlament and are tearmed by the name of Lords spirituall Baron in the next significatiō is an Officer as barons of the Exchequer be to the king of which the principall is called Lord chiefe Baron capitalis Baro and the three other for so many there be are
is vsed in the common law for that which commeth in or is adhering of the side as collaterall assurance is that which is made ouer and beside the deede it selfe For example if a man couenant with another and enter bond for the performance of his couenant the bond is termed collaterall assurance because it is externall and without the nature and essence of the couenant And Crompton in his Iurisd fol. 185. saith that to be subiect to the feeding of the kings Deere is collateral to the soyle within the Forest In like maner may we say that the libertie to pitche boothes or standings for a Faire in another mans ground is collaterall to the ground The priuate woods of a common person within a Forest may not be cut without the kings licence For it is a prerogatiue collaterall to the soyle Manwood parte 1. of his Forest lawes pag. 66. Collaterall warrantie See Warrantie Collation of a benefice collatio beneficii signifieth properly the bestowing of a benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his owne gift or patronage and differeth from Institution in this for that Institution into a benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is patron of the same or hath the patrons right for the time Extra de Institutionibus De concessione praebendarum c. And yet is collation vsed for presentation anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 6. Collatione facta vni post mortem alterius c. is a writ directed to the Iustices of the cōmon plees commanding them to direct their writ to a Bishop for the admitting of a clerk in the place of another presented by the king that during the suit betweene the king and the Bishops clerk is departed For iudgment once passed for the kings clerk and he dying before he be admitted the king may bestow his presentation vpon another Register orig fo 31. b. Collatione heremitagii is a writ whereby the king conferreth the keeping of an ermitage vpon a clerk Register orig fo 303 308. Colour color signifieth in the common law a probable plee but in truth false and hath this end to draw the triall of the cause from the Iury to the Iudges Of this see two apt examples in the author of the new tearms Verbo Colour who also referreth you to the Doctor and student fo 158. c. See Broke tit Colour in assise trespas c. fo 140. Collusion collusio is in our common law a deceitfull agreemēt or compact between two or more for the one party to bring an action against the other to some euill purpose as to defraude a third of his right c. See the new tearms and Broke titulo Collusion See also one case of collusion in the Register orig fo 179. a. Combat duellum is a french word signifiing as much as certamen decertatio dimicatio discrimen praelium pugna but in our common law it is taken for a formall triall of a doubtfull cause or quarrell by the sword or bastons of two champions Of this you may reade at large both in diuers ciuilians as Paris de Puteo de remilitari duello Alciat de duello Hotomam disputatio feudalium ca. 42. and others as also in our common lawyers of England namely Glanuile li. 14. ca. 1. Bracton li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 3. Britton ca. 22. Horns mirrour of Iustices li. 3. ca. des exceptions in fine proxime ante c. Iuramentū duelli Dier fo 301. nu 41. 42. That this also was aunciently the law of the Lombards before they inuaded Italy which was about the yeare of our Lord 571 appeareth by Sigonius in his historie De regno Italiae lib. 2. de Ari●aldo rege who there reporteth that the said king hauing put away his wife Gundeberga vpon a surmise of adulterie with Tato Duke of Etruria at the priuate suggestion of Adalulphus a great man among the Lombards and being charged by Clotharius the king of France his Ambassadors of whose bloud she was that he had done her wrong he answered that he had done her no wrong Whereupon Ansoaldus one of the ambassadors replyed that they would easily beleeue him if he would suffer the truth to be tried by combat betweene some one of the Queens friends and her accuser according to the custome of the Lombards And the king yeelding vnto this Adalulphus was vanquished by one Pitto otherwise called Charles set foorth for the Queenes chāpion and she restored to her former place and honour Cominseede aliâs Cumin seed Semen cumini is a seede brought foorth by an hearbe so called which you may see described in Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 416. This is placed among the garbleable drugges anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Comitatu commisso is a writ or a commission whereby the Shyreeue is authorized to take vpon him the swaye of the countie Regist orig fol. 295. a. b. and Co 〈…〉 Reports li. 3. fol. 72. a. Comitatu castro commisso is a writ whereby the charge of a countie together with the keeping of a castell is committed to the Shyreeue Reg orig fol. 295. a. Commaundrie praeceptoria was by some mens opinion a maner or chiefe mefuage with which lands or tenements were occupied belonging to the Priorie of S. Iohns in Hierusalem in England and he which had the gouernement of any such maner or house was called the commaunder who had nothing to dispose of it but to the vse of the Priorie taking onely his sustenance thence according to his degree and was vsually a brother of the same Priorie Author of the new tearmes of lawe verbo Commaundrie By some other bookes it appeareth that the chiefe Prior of S. Iohns was a cōmaunder of a Nunnerie and cōstituted the Priores of the said Nunnerie who was vnder his obedience and remoueable at his will notwithstanding that shee had covent and common seale and had her possessions seuerall and was wont to lease the land for terme of yeares Fulbecks Paralels fol. 2. a. Of these commādries also Petrus Gregorius lib. de beneficiis cap. 11. num 11. hath these words Praeceptoriae dictae commendae sacrorum militum 〈…〉 eluti ordinis hospitalii Sancti Ioannis Hierosolymitani beneficia quidem secundum quid Ecclesiastica dic untur à Barbatia ad Clement causam col 51. de Electione Tamen non propriè dicuntur ex genere communium beneficiorum eo quòd personae conferentes quibus conferuntur non sunt laicae vel ecclesiasticae sed tertu ordinis De hiis beneficiis ●fit mentio cap. exhibita de priuilegiis in extravag com in cap. Dudum de decimis These in many places of our realme are termed by the name of temples because they sometime belonged to the Templers Of these you reade ann 26 H. 8. cap. 2. anno 32. eiusd ca 24. And of these the said Gregorius Tolosanus li. 15. sui syntagmatis cap. 34. hath these words Monuimus superiori capite
other thing that may be tried by the lawe of the land And reade Fortescue ca. 32. This office was belonging heeretofore to the lords of certaine maners iure feudi and why it is discontinued see Dyer fo 258. nu 39. Out of this high magistracie saith M. Lamberd were drawen these lower constables which we call constables of hundreds franchises and first ordeined by the statute of Winchester anno 13. Ed. 1. which appointeth for the conseruation of the peace and view of armour two constables in euerie hundred and franchise which in latine are called constabularii capitales And these be nowe a daies called high constables because continuance of time and increase both of people and offenfes hath againe vnder these made others in euery towne called petit constables in latine subconstabularios which are of like nature but of inferiour authoritie to the other as you may read at large in that learned mans treatise before named Of these also read S. Thomas Smith li. 2. ca. 22. Beside these there be officers of particular places called by this name as constable of the tower Ssawnf pl. cor fol. 152. anno 1. H. 4. ca. 13. Stowes annals pa. 812. iurisdict fo 132. constable of the exchequer anno 51. H. 3. statute 5. Constable of Douer castel Camdeni Britan. pa. 239. Fitzh nat br fo 240. otherwise called castellane Westm i. ca. 7. anno 3. Ed. i. But these be castellani properly as M. Lamberd noteth though conioined in name with the others See the statute anno 32. H. 8. ca. 38. M. Manwood parte prima ca. 13. of his forest lawes maketh mention of a constable of the forest Consuetudinibus seruities is a writ of right close which lyeth against the tenent that deforceth his lord of the rent or seruice dew vnto him Of this see more at large the Old nat br fo 77. Fitzh eodem fo 151. and the Register orig fo 159. Consultation consultatio is a writ whereby a cause being formerly remoued by prohibition from the ecclesiasticall court or court christian to the kings court is returned thither againe For the Iudges of the kings court if vpon comparing the libell with the suggestion of the party they do find the suggestion false or not proued and therefore the cause to be wrongfully called from the court christian then vpon this consultation or deliberation they decree it to be returned againe wherevpon the writ in this case obtained is called a consultation Of this you may reade the Register orig fo 44. 45. c. vsque fol. 58. Old nat br fo 32. Fitzh eodem fo 50. Contenement contenementum seemeth to be the free hould land which lyeth to a mans tenement or dwelling house that is in his owne occupation For in magna charta ca. 14. you haue these words A free man shall not be amerced for a small fault but after the quantity of the fault and for a great fault after the maner thereof sauing to him his contenement or free hould And a merchant likewise shal be amerced sauing to him his merchandies and any other villaine then owers shal be amerced sauing his wainage if he take him to our mercy And Bracton li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 1 nu 3. hath these words sciendum quòd miles liber homo non amerciabitur nisi secundùm modum delicti seoundùm quod delictum fuit magnum vel parvum saluo contenemento suo mercator verò non nisi salua merchandiza sua villanus nisi saluo Waniagio suo which mercy seemeth to haue bene learned from the ciuile lawe whereby executio non potest fieri in boues aratra aliaue instrumenta rusticorum l. executores Authen Agricultores Co quae res pign obliga nec in stipendia arma equos militum l. stipendia Co. de executio rei indica ibi doctores nec in libros scholarium glos in l. Nepos Proculo verbo dignitate Π. de verbo significa Quae tamen rusticorum militum scholarium priuilegia circa executionem vera esse eatenus obtinere intelligenda sunt quatenus alia bona habent Iohan. Eimericus in processu indiciario cap. de Executione senten 79. num 11. Continuance seemeth to bee vsed in the common law as prorogatio is in the ciuile lawe For example Continuance vntil the next assise Eitz nat br fol. 154. F. and 244. D. in both which places it is sayde that if a record in the treasurie be alledged by the one partie and denyed by the other a certiorari shall be siewed to the Treasurer and the chamberlaine of the Exchequer who if they certifie not in the Chauncerie that such a record is there or that it is likely to be in the Tower the king shall send to the Iustices repeating the certificate and will them to continue the assise In this signification it is likewise vsed by Kitchin fol. 202. 199. and also anno 11. H. 6. cap. 4. Continuall claime continuum clameum is a claime made from time to time Within euery yere and day to land or other thing which in some respect we cannot attaine without daunger For example if I be disseised of land into which though I haue right vnto it I dare not enter for feare of beating it behooueth me to hold on my right of entry to the best oportunitie of me mine heyre by approching as neare it as I can once euery yere as long as I liue and so I saue the right of entry to mine heire Termes of law Againe if I haue a slave or villein broken from me and remaining any where within the auncient demesn of the king being in the handes of the king I cannot maintaine the writ de nativo habendo as long as he continueth there but if I claime him within the yeare and the day and so continue my claime vntill I can find him within that compasse I may lawfully lay hold of him as mine owne Fitz. nat br fol. 79. See more in Litleton verbo Continuall claime And the new booke of Entries Ibid. and Fleta lib. 6. cap. 53. Contract contractus is a covenant or agreement with a lawfull consideration or cause West parte prim symbol lib. 1. Sect. 10. and lib. 19. Π. de verbo Significa with other places it is thus defined Contractus est negotium inter duos pluresve data opera gestum vt vel vterque invicem vel alteruter obligetur Who so will throughly examine the difference betweene this and pactū and such other words something like in signification let him search the civilians and he shall find worke both pleasant and profitable and well fitting the common lawe also Contra formam collationis is a writ that lyeth against an abbot or his successor for him or his heire that hath giuen land to an Abbey to certaine good vses and findeth that the Abbot or his successour hath made a feofment thereof with the assent of the tenents to
originall writ of deceite lieth where any deceit is done to a man by another so that he hath not sufficiently performed his bargaine or promise In the writ iudicial he concurreth with the former booke See the Reg. orig fo 112. and the Reg. iudiciall in the table verbo Deceptione Decimis solvendis pro possessionibus alienigenarum is a writ or leters patents yet extant in the Register which laye against those that had fermed the Priors aliens lands of the king for the Rector of the Parish to recouer his tythe of them Regi orig fol. 179. Deciners aliâs desiners aliâs doziners decennarii commeth of the French dizeine i. decas tenne in number or else of disenier i. decearchus It signifieth in the auncient monuments of our lawe such as were wont to haue the ouersight and checke of ten friburgs for the maintenance of the kings peace And the limits or compasse of their iurisdiction was called decenna Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 15. of whom you may also reade Fleta lib. 1. cap. 27 and a touch in the Regist orig fol. 68. b. These seemed to haue la 〈…〉 authoritie in the Saxons time 〈◊〉 king knowledge of causes within their circuite and redressing wrongs by way of iudgement as you may reade in the lawes of king Edward set out by M. Lambard num 32. In later times I find mention of these as in Britton cap. 12. who saith in the kings person as he writeth his whole booke in this maner We will that all those which be 14. yeares old shall make oath that they shall be sufficient and loyall vnto vs and that they will be neither felons nor assenting to felons and we will that all be en dozeine plevis per dozeniers that is professe themselues to be of this or that dozein and make or offer suretie of their behauiour by these or those doziniers except religious persons clerks knights and their eldest sonnes and women Yet the same author in his 29. chapter some thing toward the end doth say that all of 12. yeares old and vpward are punishable for not comming to the Turne of the Shyreeue except Earles Prelats Barons religious persons and women Stawnf pl. cor fol. 37. out of Fitzh hath these wordes The like lawe is where the dozeniers make presentment that a felon is taken for felonie and deliuered to the Shyreeue c. And Kitchin out of the Register and Britton saith thus Religious persons clerkes knights or women shall not be deceniers fol. 33. So that hereby I gather that of later times this word signifieth nothing but such an one as by his oath of loyaltie to his Prince for suretie none ordinarily findeth at these dayes is setled in the combination or societie of a dozein And a dozein seemeth now to extend so farre as euery leete extendeth because in leetes onely this oathe is ministred by the steward and taken by such as are twelue yeares old and vpwards dwelling within the compasse of the leete where they are sworne Fitz. nat br fol. 161. A. The particulars of this oath you may reade in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. in these words Quibus propositis that is the commission of the Iustices being read and the cause of their comming being shewed debent Iusticiarii se transferre in aliquem locum secretum vocatis ad se quatuor vel sex vel pluribus de maioribus de comitatu qui dicuntur Busones Comitatus ad quorum nutum dependent vota aliorum et sic inter se tractatum habeant Iusticiarii ad muicem ostendant qualiter a Domino Rege eius concilio prouisum sit quod omnes tam milites qùam alii qui sunt quindecim annorum ampliùs iurare debent qùod vtlagatos murditores robbatores burglatores non receptabunt neceis consentient nec eorum receptatoribus si quos tales nouerint illos attachiari facient hoc Vicecomiti baliuis suis monstrabunt si hutesium vel clameum de talibus audiverint statim audsto clamore sequantur cum familia hominibus de terra sua Here Bracton setteth downe 15. yeares for the age of those that are sworne to the kings peace but lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. num 5. he nameth 12. yeares See Inlaughe A man may note out of the premisses diuersities betweene the auncient and these our times in this point of law and gouernement as well for the age of those that are to be sworne as also that Decennier is not now vsed for the chief man of a Dozen but for him him that is sworne to the kings peace and lastly that now there are no other Dozens but leetes and that no man ordinarily giueth other security for the keeping of the kings peace but his owne oathe and that therefore none aunswereth for anothers transgression but euery man for himselfe And for the general ground this may suffice See Frankepledge Declaration declaratio is properly the shewing foorth or laying out of an action personall in any suite howbeit it is vsed sometime and indifferently for both personall and reall actions For example anno 36. Ed. 3. c. 15. in these words By the auncient termes and formes of declarations no man shall be preiudiced so that the mater of the action be fully shewed in the demonstration in the writ See the new Termes of lawe See Cownte Dedimus potestatem is a writ whereby commission is giuen to a priuate man for the speeding of some act appertaining to a Iudge The Civilians call it Delegationem And it is graunted most commonly vpon suggestiō that the partie which is to doe something before a Iudge or in court is so feeble that he cannot trauell It is vsed in diuers cases as to make a personall aunswer to a bill of complaint in the Chaunceric to make an Atturney for the following of a suite in the Countie Hundred Wapentake c. Oldnat br fol. 20. To levie a fine West part 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 112. and diuers other effects as you may see by Fitzh nat br in diuers places noted in the Index of the booke In what diuersitie of cases this writ or commission is vsed see the table of the Regist orig verbo Dedimus potestatem Deedes Facta signifie in our commō law wrighungs that containe the effect of a contract made betweene man and man which the ciuilians call literarum obligationem And of deeds there be two sorts deeds indented and deeds poll Which diuision as M. West saith parte i. Simbol lib. 1. sect 46. groweth from the forme or fashion of them the one being cut to the fashion of teeth in the toppe or side the other being plaine And the definition of a deede indented he expresseth thus Sect. 47. A deed iudented is a deede consisting of two partes or more in which it is expressed that the parties to the same deede haue to euery parte thereof interchangeabely or seuerally
nat br fol. 147. Register fol. 170. Dotis admensuratione See Admēsurement See the Register fol. 171. Dotkins a kinde of coine pl cor fol 37. It seemeth to come of the Dutch word Duythen that is the eight part of a Stufer or French Shilling which in lat ne is called Solidus Gallicus Doubles anno 14. H. 6. cap. 6. signifie as much as leters patents being as it seemeth a French word made of the Latine diploma Double plee duplex placitum is that wherein the defendant alledgeth for himselfe two seuerall maters in barre of the action whereof either is sufficient to effect his desire in debarring the plaintiffe And this is not to be admitted in the common lawe wherefore it is well to be obserued when a plee is double and when it is not For if a man alledge seuerall maters the one nothing depending of the other the plee is accounted double If they be mutually depending one of the other then is it accompted but single Kitchin fo 223. See Broke hoc titulo But why this doublenes for so Kitchin calleth it fol. 234. should bee debarred I see no reason vnder correction all things being spoken For a man may haue two good defences and happily in the issue he shall contrarily to his hope faile in prouing the one and yet be able to carie the cause by the other And therefore not onely the Civilians but Bracton also saith Pluribus exceptionibus uti nemo prohibetur lib. 5. tract 5. cap. 5. num 4. whom also reade libro 4. cap. 17. And Sir Thomas Smiths reason of this scantly satisfieth me alledging this to be the course of our proceeding because the triall is by twelue rude men whose heades are not to be troubled with ouer many things at once lib. 2. de Repub Anglor cap. 13. Double quarell duplex querela is a complaint made by any Clerke or other vnto the Archbishop of the Prouince against an inferiour ordinarie for delaying of iustice in some cause ecclefiasticall as to giue sentence or to institute a clerke presented or such like The effect whereof is that the said Archbishop taking knowledge of such delay directeth his leters vnder his authenticall seale to all and singular clerkes of his Prouince therby commaunding and authorizing them and euery of them to admonish the said Ordinarie within a certaine number of dayes namely 9. dayes to doe the iustice required or otherwise to cite him to appeare before him or his officiall at a day in the said leters prefixed and there to alledge the cause of his delay And lastly to intimate to the said Ordinarie that if he neither performe the thing enioyned nor appeare at the day assigned he himselfe will without farder delay proceed to perform the iustice required And this seemeth to be tearmed a double quarell because it is most commonly made against both the Iudge and him at whose petition iustice is delayed Dower dos commeth of the French douaire and signifieth in our common lawe two things first that which the wife bringeth to her husband in mariage otherwise called maritagiū mariage good next and more commonly that which she hath of her husband after the mariage determined if she out-liue him Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 38. Britton cap. 101. in princ And in Scotland dos signifieth iust as much Skene de verb. signif verbo Dos The former is in French called dot the other doüayre and by them latined doarium I likewise once thought it not vnreasonable to call the former a Dowrie the other a Dower but I find them confounded For exāple Smith de rep Anglo p. 105. calleth the later a dowrie and dower is sometime vsed for the former as in Britton vbi supra yet were it not inconuenient to distinguish them being so diuers The Civilians call the former dotem and the later donationem propter nuptias Of the former the common law bookes speake very litle This onely is to be noted that whereas by the ciuile lawe instruments are made before mariage which containe the quantitie of the wiues dowrie or substance brought to her husband that he hauing the vse of it during mariage may after certaine deductions restore it againe to his wiues heires or friends after the mariage dissolued the common lawe of England whatsoeuer chatels moueable or immoueable or readie money she bringeth doth make them foorthwith her husbands owne to be disposed of as he will leauing her at his courtesie to bestow any thing or nothing of her at his death The reason whereof is said to be the holding of the wife in obedience to her husband Onely if she be an inheretrice her husband holdeth the land but during her life except he haue issue by her but then he holdeth it by the courtesie of England during his owne life See Courtesie And againe if he haue any land in fee wherof he was possessed during the mariage she is to haue a third therof during her life though she bring nothing to him except she doe by fine release her right during the mariage So that here is no great mater to bee spoken of but touching dower in the later signification You must know therfore that vpon speech of mariage betweene two the parents of both sides are commonly more carefull in prouiding each for his childe then the parties themselues and that by their meanes there bee diuers bargaines made sometime for the conueiance of lands c. to them and their issue and this is said to be giuen in franke mariage sometime to her during her life and that before or at the mariage if before mariage then it is called a Ioynture For a Ioynture is a couenant whereby the husband or some for him is tyed ratione iuncturae in consideration of the mariage that the wife surviuing him shall haue during her life this or that tenement or lands or thus much rent yearely paylible out of such land c. with clause of distresse and this may be more or lesse as they doe accord Britton cap. 101. whome read also ca. 102. 103. 104. for conventio vincit legem Bracton lib. 5. tract 4. cap. 9. The diuersitie of these Ioyntures you may see in West parte prima symbol lib. 2. sect 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. But if none of these former bargaines passe before mariage then must the wife stick to her Dower and that is sometime giuen at the Church doore or the Chappell doore if the mariage bee by licence but not the chamber doore and may bee what the husband will so it exceede not a third part of his lands G lanvile libro 6. cap. pri Or the halfe as some say Fitzh nat br fol. 150. N. P. And this Dower is either certainly set downe and named or not named but onely in generalitie as the law requireth if it be not named then is it by lawe the third part and called dos ligitima Bracton lib. 4. tracta 6. cap. 6. nu 6.
Habere facias visum is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases where view is to be taken of the lands or tenements in question See Fitzh nat br in Iudice verbo View See Bracton li. 5. tract 3. ca. 8. lib. 5. parte 2. ca. 11. See vi 〈…〉 See the Register Iudiciall fol. 1. 26 28. 45. 49. 52. Haberiects Hauberietus pannus magn chart ca. 25. pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Hables is the plurall of the French hable signifiing as much as a porte or hauen of the sea whence ships doe set forth into other countries and whether they doe arriue when they returne from their voyage This word is vsed anno 27. Hen. 6. cap. 3. Haerede deliberando alii qui habet custodiam terrae is a writ directed to the Shyreeue willing him to commande one hauing the body of him that is ward to another to deliuer him to him whose ward he is by reason of his land Register originall fol. 161. b. Haerede abducto is a writ that lyeth for the lord who hauing the wardship of his tenent vnder age by right cannot come by his body for that he is conueyed away by another old nat br fol. 93. See Ravishment de Gard and Haerede rapto in Regist orig fol. 163. Haeretico comburendo is a writ that lyeth against him that is an heretike viz. that hauing beene once conuinced of herisy by his Bishop and hauing abiured it afterward falleth into it againe or into some other and is therevpon committed to the secular power Fitzh nat br fol. 269. Haga is vsed as a kinde of latine word for a house I finde in an auncient booke sometime belonging to the abbey of Saint Augustines in Canterbury that king Stephen sent his writ to the Shyreeue and Iustices of Kent in this maner Stephanus Rex Anglorum vicecomiti Iusticiariis de Kent salutem praecipio quòd faciatis habere ecclesiae sancti Augustini monachis hagam suam quam Gosceoldus eis dedit it a bene in pace iustè quietè liberè sicut eam eis dedit in morte sua coram legalibus testibus c. Hagbut See Haque and Haquebut Haye boote seemeth to be compounded Haye i. Sepes and Bote. i. compensatio The former is french and the second is Saxon. And although it doe fall out sometime that our words be so compounded yet is it rare wherefore it may be thought peraduenture to come as well from Hag and boote which be bothe saxon words It is vsed in our common lawe for a permission to take thorns and freeth to make or repaire hedges Halfe haque See Haque Half merk dimidia merka seemeth to signifie a noble Fitzh nat br fol 5. where he saith that in case a writ of right be brought and the seisin of the Demaundant or his auncester alleaged the seisin is not traversable by the Defendant but he may tender or proferre the halfe merke for the inquirie of this seisin which is as much to say in plainer termes that the Defendant shall not be admitted to deny that the Demandant or his auncester was seised of the land in question and to proue his deniall but that hee shal be admitted to tender halfe a merke in money to haue an inquirie made whether the Demandant c. were so seised or not And in this signification I reade the same words in the old English natura breuium fol. 26. b. viz. Know ye that in a writ of right of Advouzen brought by the king the defendant shall not proferre the halfe merke ne iudgement finall shall be giuen against the king c. Wherof Fitz. vbi supra M. giueth the reason because in the kings case the defendant shall bee permitted to trauerse the seisin by licence obtained of the Kings Sergeant To this effect see Fitz. nat br fol. 31. C. D. E. Halfe seale is vsed in the Chauncerie for the sealing of Commissions vnto Delegates appointed vpon any appeale in ecclesiasticall or marine causes an 8. Elizab. cap. 5. Halfe tongue See Medietas linguae Halymote aliâs Healgemot is a Court Baron Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 111. and the etymologie is the meeting of the tenents of one hall or maner M. Gwins preface to his reading which for the esteeme thereof is by copies spred into many mens hands Hallage is a see due for cloths brought for sale to Blackwell hal in London Coke vol. 6. fol. 62. b. Hamlet Hameletum is a diminutiue of Ham which signifieth habitationem Camden Brit. pag. 149. 354. The French hameau i. viculus is also nere vnto it Kitchin hath Hamel in the same sence fol. 215. who also vseth hampsel for an ould house or cotage decayed fol. 103. Hamlet as Stowe vseth it in Ed. 3. seemeth to be the seate of a Free holder For there he saith that the said king bestowed two maners and nine hamlets of land vpon the monasterie of Westminster for the keeping of yearely obits for his wife Queene Eleanor deceased Hameling of dogges or hambling of dogges is all one with the expeditating of dogges Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 212. parte 2. cap. 16. num 5. where he saith that this is the auncient terme that Foristers vsed for that mater whence this word might be drawne I dare not resolue but it is not improbable that hameling is quasi hamhalding that is keeping at home which is done by paring their feete so as they cannot take any great delight in running abroade See Expeditate Hampsell See Hamlet Hamscken see Homesoken M. Skene de verb significa writeth it Haimsuken and deriueth it from Haim a German word signifiing a house or dwelling and Suchen that is to seeke search or persiew It is vsed in Scotland for the crime of him that violently and contrary to the kings peace assaulteth a man in his owne house which as he saith is punishable equally with rauishing of a woman significat quietantiam miser●●rdiae intrationis in alienam domum vi iniustè Fleta lib. pri cap. 47. See Homesoken Hand in and Hand out anno 17. Ed. 4. cap. 2. is the name of an vnlawful game Hand full is foure inches by the standard anno 33. H. 8. cap. Hankwit alias Hangwit or Hengwit commeth of the Saxon words Hangen i. pendêre and wit whereof reade in Gultwit Rastall in the title Exposition of words faith it is a liberty graunted vnto a man wherby he is quit of a felon or theese hanged without iudgement or escaped out of custodie I reade it interpreted mulcta pro homine iniustè suspenso Or whether it may be a libertie whereby a Lord chalengeth the forfeiture due for him that fordoeth himselfe within his fee or not let the Reader consider See Bloodwit Hanper haneperium haueper of the Chauncerie anno 10. R. 2. cap. prim seemeth to signifie as fiseus originally doth in Latine See Clerke of the Hanaper Hanse as Ortelius in the Index of
register fol. 234. which lyeth where the tenent for terme of life or of anothers life tenent by curtesie or tenent in Dower maketh a feofment in fee dyeth he in the reuersion shall haue the foresaid writagainst whomsoeuer that is in the land after such feofment made Ingrossing of a fine is making the indentures by the chirographer and the deliuery of them to the party vnto whom the cognisance is made Fitzh nat br fol. 147. A. Ingrosser ingrossator commeth of the frence Grosseur i. crassiiudo or Grosier i. Solidarius venditor it signifieth in the common law one that buieth corne growing or dead victuall to sell againe except barly for mault oats for oatemeale or victuals to retaile badging by licence and buying of oiles spices and victualls other then fish or salte anno 5. Edward 6. cap 14. anno 5. Elizab cap 14. anno 13. Elizab. cap 25. these be M. Wests words parte 2. simbol titulo Inditements sect 64. howbeit this definition rather doth belong to vnlawfull ingrossing then to the word in generall see Forstaller Inheritance hareditas is a perpetuity in lands or tenements to a man and his heirs For Litleton cap i. lib i hath these words and it is to be vnderstand that this word inheritance is not onely vnderstand where a man hath inheritance of lands and tenements by discent of heritage but also euery fee simple or fee taile that a man hath by his purchase may be said inheritance for that that his heires may inherit him Seuerall inheritance is that which two or moe hould seuerally as if two men haue land giuen them to them and the heires of their two bodies these haue ioynt estate during their liues but their heires haue seuerall inheritance Kitchin fol 155. See the new terms of law verbo Enheritance Inhibition Inhibitio is a writt to inhibit or forbid a Iudge from farder proceding in the cause depēding before him See Fitzh nat br fol 39. where he putteth prohibition and inhibition together inhibition is most commonly a writ issuing out of a higher courte Christian to a lower and inferiour vpon an Appeale anno 24. H. 8. cap 12. and prohibition out of the kings courte to a court Christian or to an inferiour temporall court Iniunction iniunctio is an interlocutory decree out of the Chācerie sometimes to giue possession vnto the plaintife for want of apparence in the defendant sometime to the Kings ordinary court and somtime to the court Christian to stay proceeding in a cause vpon suggestion made that the regour of the law if it take place is against equitie and conscience in that Case see West parte 2. simb titulo Proceeding in Chauncery sect 25. Inlawgh Inlagatus vel homo sub lege signifieth him that is in some frank pledge of whome take Bractons words l. 3. tracta 2. cap. H. nu 5. Minor verò qui infra aetatem duodecim annorū fuerit vtlagari non potest nec extra legem poni quia ante talem aetatem non est sub lege aliqua nec in decenna non magis quam foemina quae vtlagari non potest quia ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlowghe anglicè sc in franco plegio siue decenna sicut masculus duodecim annorum vlteriūs c. Inlaughe significat hominem subiectum leg i Fleta li. i. cap. 47. Inlagary Inlagatio is a restitution of one outlawed to the kings protection and to the benifite or estate of a subiect Bracton lib. 3 tracta 2 cap. 14. nu 6. 7. 8. Britton cap 13. Inmates are those that be admitted to dwell for their mony iointly with another mā though in seuerall roomes of his mantiō house passing in and out by one doore and not being able to maintaine themselues which are inquiralle in a leete Kitchin fol 45 where you may reade him at large who be properly Inmates in intendment of law and whoe not Imprision anno 18 Ed 3 statu 4 cap. vnico seemeth to signifie so much as an attempt comming of the french empris which is all one with enterpris an enterprise Inquirendo is an authoritie giuen to a person or persons to inquire into some thing for the kings aduantage which in what cases it lieth see the Register originall fol. 72. 85. 124. 265. 266. 179. 267. Inquisition Inquisitio is a maner of proceeding in maters criminall by the office of the Iudge which Hostiensis defineth thus Inquisitio nihil aliud est quàm alicuius criminis manifesti ex bono aquo Iudicis compeientis canonicè facta investigatio ca. qualiter de accusatio In the Decretales this course we take here in England by the great Enquest before Iustices in Eyre See Eyre and the places in Bracton and Britton there noted Inquisition is also with vs vsed for the King in temporall causes and profits in which kinde it is confounded with Office Stawnf praerog fo 51. See Office Inrolement Irrotulatio is the registring recording or entring of any lawful act in the rowles of the chauncerie as recognisance acknowledged or a statute or a fine leuied See West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 133. Insimul tenuit is one species of the writ called a Formdon See Formdon Intakers be a kinde of theeues in Ridesdall anno 9. H. 5. ca. 8. so called as it seemeth because they dwelling within that libertie did receiue in such booties of catell or other things as the out parters brought in vnto them See Out parters Interdiction Interdictio is vsed in the common lawe in the same signification that it hath in the canon lawe where it is thus defined interdictio est censura ecclesiastica prohibens administrationem diuinorum c. quod in te de paenitent remiss in the Decretals and thus is it vsed anno 24. H. 8. cap. 12. Interpleder See Enterpleder Intrusion Intrusio by Bracton lib. 4. cap. 2. is thus defined Intrusio est vbi quis cui nullum ius competit in re nec scintilla Iuris possessionem vacuam ingreditur quae nec corpore nec animo possidetur sicut haereditatem iacentem antequam adita fuerit ab harede vel saltem a domino capitals ratione custodiae vel ratione eschaeta si forte heredes non existant vel si post mortem alicuius per finem factum vel per modum donationis vbi successio sibi locum vendicare non possit vel si post mortem alicuius qui tenuit ad vitam debeat tenementum reverti ad proprietariū ponat quis se in seisinā antequā tenemētū illud veniat ad illū ad quem pertinere deberet ex praedictis causis with whome agreeth Fleta lib. 4. cap. 30. § 1. 2. See Britton cap. 65. to the same effect See the newe booke of Entries verbo Entrusion See Entrusion See disseisin the author of new Terms of lawe would haue intrusion especially after the tenent for life is deceased verbo Abatement and abatement in all other cases But I finde
deliberandas quandoque ad vnicam vel duas non plures And by this meanes the Iustices of both benches being iustly to be accounted the fittest of all others and others their assistants as also the Sergeants at law may be imployed in these affaires who as grauest in yeares so are they ripest in iudgement and therefore likest to be voide of prociality for being called to this dignity they giue ouer practise anno 8. R. 2. cap. 3. but this alway to be remembred that neither Iustice of either bench nor any other may be Iustice of Assise in his owne country anno 8. Rich. 2. cap. 2. anno 33. H. 8. cap. 24. lastly note that in these daies though the selfe same men dispatch busines of so diuers natures and all at one time which were wont to be performed by diuers and at seuerall times yet they doe it by seuerall commissions Cromptons Iurisdictions fo 210. For those who be in one word called Iustices of circuit and twice euery yeare passe by two and two through all Englād haue one cōmission to take Assises another to deliuer Goales another of oyer and terminer That Iustices of Assise and Iustices in Eyre did aunciently differ it appeareth an 27. Ed. 3. cap. 5. and that Iustices of Assise Iustices of goale deliuery were diuerse it is euident by anno 4. Fd. 3. cap. 3. The oath taken by Iustices of assise is all one with the oath taken by the Iustices of the kings bench Ould abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Oath Iustices of oyer and terminer Iusticiarii ad audiendum terminandum were Iustices deputed vpon some especiall or extraordinary occasion to heare and determine some or more causes Fitzherberd in his natura beruium saith that the commission d' oyer and terminer is directed to certaine persons vpon any great assembly insurrection hainous demeanure or trespasse committed And because the occasion of granting this commission should be maturely wayed it is prouided by the statute anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 2. that no such commission ought to be graunted but that they shal be dispatcheo before the Iustices of the one bench or other or Iustices errāts except for horrible trespasses that by the especial fauour of the King The forme of this cōmission see in Fitzh natura breu fol. 110. Iustices in Eyre Iusticiarii itinerantes are so termed of the French Erre i. iter which is an old word as a grand erre i. magnis iteneribus prouerbially spoken the vse of these in auncient time was to send them with commission into divers counties to heate such causes especially as were termed the plees of the crowne and therefore I must imagine they were so sent abroad for the ease of the subiects who must els haue beene hurried to the kings bench if the cause were too high for the countie court They differed from the Iustices of oyer and terminer because they as is aboue said were sent vpon some one or fewe speciall cases and to one place whereas the Iustices in Eyre were sent through the prouinces and counties of the land with more Indefinite and generall commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11. 12. 13. and Britton cap. 2. And againe they seeme to differ in this because the Iustices of oyer and terminer as it is before said were sent vncertainly vpon any vproare or other occasion in the country but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth downe in the preface to his reading were sent but euery seuen yeare once with whome Horn in his myrrour of Iustices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux poient estre actours c. and lib. 2. c. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and lib. 3. c. de Iustices in Eyre where he also declareth what belonged to their office These were instituted by Henry the 2. as M. Camden in his Britannia witnesseth pag. 104. And Roger Hoveden parte posteri annalium fo 313. b. hath of them these wordes Iusticiarij itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui diuisit regnum suumin sex partes per quarum singulas tres Iusticiarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Iustices of Gaol deliuery Iusticiarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with commission to heare and determine all causes apperteining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authoritie is to punish such as let to mainprise those prisoners that by lawe be not bayleable by the statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitzh nat br f. 251. I. These by likelyhoode in auncient time were sent to countries vpon this seuerall occasion But afterward Iustices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4. Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the kings Iustices of either bench Ould Abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Othe Iustices of labourers were Iustices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or haue vnreasonable wages See anno 21. Eduardi 3. cap. primo anno 25. eiusd cap. 8. anno 31. eiusdem cap. 6. Iustices of Nisi prius are all one now a daies with Iustices of Assises for it is a common Adiournment of a cause in the common plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Iusticiarii venerint ad eas partes ad capiendas Assisas and vpon this clause of Adiournment they are called Iustices of Nisi prius as well as Iustices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they haue to deale in their commission you may see in Cromptons Iurisdsctious fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference betweene them because Iustices of Assise haue power to giue iudgement in a cause but Iustices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both there functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Iustices of Nisi prius haue to deale in causes personall as well as reall wheras Iustices of Assise in strict acception deale only with the possessory writs called Assises Iustices of trial bastō alias of trayl baston were a kind of Iustices appointed by King Edward the first vpon occasion of great disorder growne in the Realme during his absence in the Scottishe and French warres they are called in the ould nat bre f. 52. Iustices of triall Baston but by Holynshed and Stow in Edw. pri of Traile baston of trailing or drawing the staffe as Holinshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realme by the verdict of substantiall Iuries vpon all officers as Mayors Shyreeues Bailifes escheatours others touching extortion briberies and other such greeuances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that vsed to take mony for beating of men and also of them whom they did beate by meanes of which inquisitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the
anno 1. Iac. cap. 33. conteineth 12. dozen of hides or skins Latitat is the name of a writ whereby all men in personall actions are called originally to the Kings bench Fitz. nat br fo 78. M. And it hath the name from this because in respect of their beter expedition a man is supposed to lurke and therefore being serued with this writ he must put in securitie for his appearance at the day for latitare est se malitiosè occultare animo fraudandi creditores suos agere volentes l. Fulcinius § Quid sit latitare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quibus ex causis in possessionem eatur But to vnderstand the true original of this writ it is to be knowne that in auncient time whilest the kings bench was moueable and followed the court of the King the custome was when any man was to be siewed to send forth a writ to the Shyreeue of the county where the Court lay for the calling him in and if the Shyreeue returned non est inventus in baliva nostra c. then was there a second writ procured foorth that had these words testatum est eum latitare c. and thereby the Shyreeue willed to attach him in any other place where he might be found Now when the tribunall of the Kings bench came to be setled at Westminster the former course of writ was kept for a long time first sending to the Shyreeue of Midlesex to summon the party and if he could not be found there then next to apprehend him wheresoeuer But this seeming too troublesome for the subiect it was at last deuised to put both these writs into one and so originally to attache the party complained of vpon a supposall or fiction that he was not within the county of Middlesex but lurking else where and that therefore he was to be apprehended in any place else where he was presumed to lye hidden by a writ directed to the Shyreeue of the county where he is suspected to be and by this writ a man being brought in is committed to the Marshall of that court in whose custodie when he is then by reason he is in the same countie where the Kings bench is he may be siewed vpon an action in that court whereas the original cause of apprehending him must be a pretence of some deceit or contempt committed which most properly of old belonged to the cognizance of that court I haue bene enformed that the bringing of these actions of trespas so ordinarily to the kings bench was an inuention of Councelers that because onely Sergeants may come to the common plees barre found a meanes to set themselues on worke in that court The forme of this writ is such Iacobus Dei gratia Angliae Francis Scotiae Hiberniae Rex fidei defensor c. Vicecomiti Cantabrigiae salutem Cum Vicecomitinostro Midlesexiae nuper praeceperimus quod caperet Thomam T. Wilielmum W. si inuenti fuissent in balliua sua eos saluo custodiret ita quòd haberet corpora eorum coram nobis apud Westminster die veneris proximo post octavas Sanctae Trinitatis ad respondendum Roberto R. de placito trangressionis cumque vicecomes noster Midlesexiae ad diem illum nobis returnauerit quod praedicti Thomas T. Wilielmus W. non sunt inuenti in balliua sua super quo ex part praedicti Roberti in curia nostra coram nobis sufficienter testatum est quòd praedicti Thomas Wilielmus latitant discurrunt in comitatu tuo Idcirco tibipraecipimus quòd capias eos si invētifuerint in balliua tua eos salvo custodias it a quod habeas corpora eorum coram nobis apud Westminster die Martis proximo post tres septimanas eodem Trinitatis ad respondendum praefato Roberto deplacito praedicto habeas ibi tunc hoc breve Teste Iohanne P●pham apud Westminster Roper Launcegay anno 7. Rich. secundi cap. 13. Law lex cometh of the Saxon lah the generall significatiō is plaine only this I thought to note that the law of this land hath beene variable For first Dunwallo Mulmutius otherwise Molincius a Brittaine that being Duke of Cornwall reduced the whole land formerly seuered by ciuile wars into the state of a Monarchy made certaine wholsome lawes which long after were called Mulmutius lawes and by Gyldas translated out of the Bryttish tongue into latine Stow in his Annals pag. 16. Of these there remaine yet certaine heads recorded by our historiographers as followeth 1. vt Deorum templa ciuitates hominum consequantur tantam dignitatem ne quis illò confugiens extrahipossit antequàm ab eo quem laeserat veniam impetraverit 2. vt huiusmods privilegium immunitatis habeant etiam ipsae viae quae ducunt ad templa ad vrbes 3. Imo iumenta quoque illa quae res rusticae subueniunt 4. Denique colonorum aratra ipsa tali praerogativa libertatis perfruantur 5. Hoc amplius vt ne quaterra vacaret culturâ neve populus inopia reifrumentariae premeretur aut ea minueretur si pecora sola occuparent agros qui ab hominibus coli dobent 6. Constituit quot aratra quaelibet dioece sis haberet ac poenam statuit iis per quos ille numerus aratrorum foret diminutus 7. Item vetuit bovem arator●m pro debito pecuniae assignari debitoribus si alia bonae debitoris essent Ita fore ne compendii causa homines pecuarii agros incultos redderent sic etiam fore ne quid carum rerum quas natura praebet hominibus vsquam deesse posset Rich. Vitus historiarum Britanniae li. 3. nu 1. And of these lawes we finde no obscure remanets in our lawes now in vse See Magna charta ca. 1 c● 14. See Sanctuary See Peace Then was there a lawe called Merchenlage whereby the Mercians were gouerned being a kingdome in the heart of the land conteining those countries that be nowe called Northampton shire Leycester shire Rutland shire Lincolne shire Nottingham shire and Derby shire Camd. Britan. pag. 94. whose power was great in the Heptarchy of the Saxons vntill at the last they were conquered by the west Saxons and made subiect to them Polydor. in Angl. Hist lib. 5. But whereas the name of these lawes sauoureth of the Saxons time it is reported by others that Martia a very learned Queene and wife to Quintelinus a Britton king was the author of them long before the Saxons set foote in England Rich. Vitus histo Britan. li. 3. nu 14. who also saith that Alphred the Saxon King translated both these and also those of Mulmutius into the English or Saxon tongue Thirdly there was the lawe of the west Saxons called west Saxenlage and the lawe of the Danes when they set foote into the Realme called Denelage And of these lawes Edward made one lawe as some write whereby he ruled his kingdome But M. Camd. vbi supra speaking nothing of
tract 2. cap. 7. 10. 12. and Fleta li. 6. cap. 10. Horne in his second booke of his mirrour ca. des Essoines saith that the aduerse party may graunt licentiam surgendi to his aduersary thus essoyned And if he will not the king vpon iust cause may Licentia surgendi is the writ whereby the tenent essoyned de malo lecti obteineth liberty to rise See Licence to arise See the Register fol. 8. Licentia transfretandi is a writ or warrant directed to the keepers of the Port at Douer c. willing them to let some passe quietly ouer sea that hath formerly obteined the kings licence thereunto Reg. Orig. fol. 193. b. Lieftenent locum tenens is a French word signifiing as much as Legatus it is compounded of Lieu. i. Locus and tenir i. tenere It signifieth with vs him that occupieth the kings place or representeth his person as the Liefetenent of the Kings of Ireland anno 4. H. 5. cap. 6. so is it vsed anno 2. 3. Ed. 6. cap. 2. whence that officer seemeth to take his beginning But I read also in M. Manwoods first part of forest lawes pag. 113. that the lord cheife Iustice in Eyre of the Forest and the cheife warden also haue their Liefetenents in the forest So that though a Leiftenent be most ordinary and most properly vsed for the Depute of the king yet is it sometime extēded to ther deputes that be but Liefetenents to the King Liefetenent of the Ordinance anno 39. El. ca. 7. Liege ligius is a word borowed from the Feudists and hath two seuerall significations in our common lawe sometime being vsed for Liege Lord. anno 34. 35. H. 8. cap. 1. anno 35. eiusdem cap. 3. and somtimes for Liege man anno 10. R. 2. cap. vnico anno 11. eiusdem cap. prim Liege Lord is he that acknowledgeth no superiour Duarenus in Comment de Consuetud Feudorum cap. 4. num 3. Liege man is he that oweth legeancie to his liege Lord. M. Skene de verb. sign verbo Ligeantia saith that it is deriued from the Italian word liga i. a band league or obligation in whom read more of this mater Ligeancie is such a duty or fealtie as no man may owe or beare to more then one Lord. Idem eodem num 4. I find also this definition of ligeancie in the grand Custumarie of Normandy cap. 13. Ligeantia est ex qua Domino tenentur vasalli sui contra omnes homines qui mori possunt viuere proprii corporis praebere consilii auxilii iuvamentum ei se in omnibus innocuos exhibere nec ei adversantium partem in aliquo confouere Dominus etiam eosdem tenetur regere protegere defensare eosque secundum iura consuetudines leges patriae pertractare this is otherwise called l●gietas Cassan de Consuetud Burgund pag. 420. 421. This word is vsed in the statutes of our realm as the kings liege people anno 14. H. 8. c. 2. Of the oath of leageancy Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludio feudorum cap. 2. nu 138. hath these words Praestatur hoc Ligeum Homagium in manibus Regis vel imperatoris genibus flexis positis manibus iunctis in manibus Domini dicendo Ego iuro homagiū tibi Dom. vt a modo sim homo ligeus vester contra omnem hominem qui potest viuere verba sunt pulchra Andr. de Isern in cap. 1. in verbo omnem Colum prima de noua forma fidelita hoc ligeum Homagium videmus praestari domino Regi tantum quia cum per id efficiatur homo solius illius cui iuratur vt dixit Hostiensis in cap. ex diligenti de Symon alii non potest praestari i. quia illius solius esse similiter non potest Non 〈…〉 esse potest duorum in solidum l. si vt certo § si duobus vehiculum 〈◊〉 commodati secundùm And in dicto cap 1. § omnem Bald hic in 7. diuis Aluar. in 13. diuisione Non ligeum verò dicitur quando quis ●●rat fidelitatem Domino excepta aliqua persona viz. domino superiori vel antiquiore Hactenus Iacobutius where you may reade more touching this point as also in Hotomans disputations de feudis pag. 816. fol. 820. c. Ligeance Ligeantia See Liege It sometime signifieth the dominions or territoritie of the Liege Lord as anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 2. Children borne out of the Ligeance of the King Lierwit est mulcta adulteriorum Fleta li. 1. ca. 47. It is vsed for a libertie whereby a Lord chalengeth the penalty of one that lyeth vnlawfully with his bond woman See Lotherwit Limitation of Assise Limitatio assisae is a certaine time set downe by statute within the which a man must alledge himselfe or his auncester to haue bin seised of lands siewed for by a writ of Assise See the statute of Merton cap. 8. anno 20. H. 3. and West 1. cap. 38. and an 32. H. 8. c. 2. an 1. M. 1. p. c. 5. See also Theloals digest of writs lib. 10. cap. 2. So it is vsed in the old nat br fol. 77. in these words the writ de consuetudinibus seruitiis lyeth where I or mine Auncesters after the limitation of Assise were not seised of the Customes c. But before the Limitation of Assise wee were seised c. Lindwood was a Doctor of both Ciuill and Canon lawes and Deane of the Arches he was Embassadour for Henry the fiueth into Portingall anno 1422. as appeareth by the preface to his commentarie vpon the Provincialls Litleton was a lawyer of great accompt liuing in the daies of Edward the fourth as appeareth by Stawnf praerogat cap. 21. fol. 72. he wrot a booke of great accompt called Litletons tenoures which Hotoman in his commentary de verbis feudalibus verb. Foedum thus commendeth Stephanus Pasquerius excellenti vir ingenio inter Parisienses causidicos dicendi facultate praestans libellum mihi Anglicanum Litletonum dedit quo Feudorum Anglicorum lura exponuntur ità inconditè absurde inconcinnè scriptum vt facilè appareat verum esse quod Polidorus Virgilius in Anglica historia scribit stultitiam in eo libro cum malitia calumniandi studio certare Literae ad faciendum attornatum pro secta facienda see in the Regist originall fol. 172. Literae de annua pensione eodem 266. 307. Litera patens ad faciendum generalē atturnatum quia infirmus eodem fol. 21. Litera per quam dominus remittit curiam suam Regi eodem fol. 4. Literae de requestu eodem fol. 129. Literae canonici ad exercendam iurisdictionem loco suo fo 305. Literae patentes ad conferendum beneficta domino in remotis agente fol. 305. Literae ad innote scēdum recuperationem Regis de ecclesia omnibus quorum interest fol. 305. Literae patentes regis quod Abbas ad totam vitam suam possit
praecepturum pro viribus opem impensurum vt ecclesiae dei omni populo Christiano vera pax omni suo tempore observetur Secundò vt rapacitates omnes iniquitates omnibus gradibus interdicat 3. vt in omnibus iudieiis aequitatem praecipiat misericordiam vt indulgeat et suā misericordiā clemens misericors Deus vt per Iustitiā suam firma gaudeant pace vniuersi And in the old abridgement of statutes set out in H. 8. daies I finde it thus described This is the oath that the King shall sweare at his coronation That he shall keepe and maintaine the right and the liberties of the holy church of old time graunted by the righteous Christian Kings of England and that he shall keepe all the lands honours and dignities righteous and free of the Crowne of England in all maner whole without any maner of minishment and the rights of the Crowne hurt decayed or lost to his power shall call againe into the auncient estate and that he shall keepe the peace of the holy church and of the clergy and of the people with good accord and that he shall doe in all his iudgements equitie and right iustice with discretion and mercie and that he shall graunt to hold the lawes customes of the realme and to his power keepe them and affirme them which the folke and people haue made and chosen and the euill lawes and customes wholly to put out and stedfast and stable peace to the people of this realme keepe and cause to be kept to his power and that he shall graunt no charter but where he may doe it by his oath All this I finde in the foresaide Booke titulo Sacramentum Regis and Charter of pardon quinto Oth of the Kings Iustices is that they well and truly shall serue the king and that they shall not assent to things that may turne to his dammage or disinheritance Nor that they shall take no fee nor liuerie of none but the king Nor that they shall take gift nor reward of none that hath adoe before them except it be meate and drinke of smal value as long as the plee is hanging before them nor after for the cause Nor that they shall giue councell to none in mater that may touch the King vpon paine to be at the kings will body and goods And that they shall doe right to euery person notwithstanding the Kings leters c. anno 18. Ed. 3. statut 4. which the old abridgement maketh to be anno 20. eiusdem statuto per se Otho was a Deacon Cardinall of S. Nichens in carcere Tulliam and Legate for the Pope heere in England anno 22. H. 3. whose constitutions we haue at this day Stowes An. pa. 303. see the first constitution of the said Legat. Othobonus was a Deacon Cardinall of S. Adrian and the Popes legate heere in England anno 15. H. 3. as appeareth by the award made betweene the said King and his commons at Kenelworth his constitutions we haue at this day in vse Ouch anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. Ouster le main Amouere manum word for word signifieth to take off the hand though in true French it should be Oster la main It signifieth in the common law a Iudgement giuen for him that tendeth a trauers or sieweth a Monstrance de droit or petition For when it appeareth vpon the mater discussed that the King hath noe right nor title to the thing he seised then Iudgement shal be giuen in the Chauncery that the kings hands be amoued and thereupon Amoueas manum shal be awarded to the Escheatour which is as much as if the iudgement were giuen that he should haue againe his land v. Stawn praerog ca. 24. See anno 28. Ed. 1. stat 3. ca. 19. It is also taken for the writ graunted vpon this petition Fitzh nat br fol. 256. C. It is written oter le maine anno 25. Hen. 8. ca. 22. Ouster le mer vltra mare commeth of the French oultre i. vltra and le mer. i. mare and it is a cause of excuse or Essoine if a man appeare not in Court vpon Summons See Essoin Outfangthef aliâs vtfangthef is thus defined by Bracton li. 3. tra 2. ca. 34. vtfangthef dicitur latro extraneus veniens aliunde de terra aliena qui captus fuit in terra ipsius quitales habet libertates but see Britton otherwise fol. 91 b It is compounded of three Saxon words out i. extra fang i. capio vel captus and Thef i. fur It is vsed in the common law for a liberty or priuiledge whereby a Lord is inhabled to call any man dwelling within his owne fee and taken for felony in any other place and to iudge him in his owne court Rastals expos of words Owelty of seruices is an equality when the tenent parauaile oweth as much to the mesn as the mesn doth to the Lord paramont Fitzh nat br fol. 136 A. B. Outlawry vtlagaria is the losse or depriuation of the benefit belonging to a subiect that is of the Kings protection and the Realme Bracton li. 3. tract 2. ca. 11. num pri nu 3. Forisfacit vtlagatus omnia quae pacis sunt Quia a tempore quo vtlagatus est caput gerit lupinum ita quòd ab omnibus interfici possit impunè maxime si se defenderit vel fugerit ita quòd difficilis sit eius captio nu 4. Si autem non fugerit nec se defenderit cùm captus fuerit extunc erit in manu domini Regis mors vita qui taliter captum interfecerit respondebit pro co sicut pro alio v. c. Outeparters anno 9. H. 5. ca. 8. seemeth to be a kind of theeues in Ridesdall that ride abroad at their best advantage to fetch in such catell or other things as they could light on without that liberty some are of opinion that those which in the forenamed statute are termed out-patters are at this day called out-putters and are such as set matches for the robbing of any man or house as by discouering which way he rideth or goeth or where the house is weakest fittest to be entred See Intakers Owtryders seeme to be none other but bayliffe errants employed by the Shyreeues or their fermers to ride to the fardest places of their counties or hundreds with the more speede to summon to their county or hundred courts such as they thought good to worke vpon anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 9. Oxgang of Land Bouata terrae Sixe oxgangs of land seeme to be so much as sixe oxen will plough Crompton iurisd fol. 220. but an oxegang seemeth properly to be spoken of such land as lyeth in gainour old nat br fol. 117. M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Bovata terrae saith that an oxen-gate of land should alway conteine 13. acres and that 4. oxen-gates extendeth to a pound land of old extent See
time exhorting them ne merces tam viles tanti emerent Parke parcus commeth of the French parquer i. vallo vel fossa circundare It signifieth with vs a peece of grounde inclosed and stored with wild beastes of chase Which a man may haue by prescription or the kings graunt Cromptons Iurisd fol. 148. M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 148. defineth it thus A parke is a place of priuiledge for wilde beastes of venerie and also for other wild beasts that are beasts of the Forest and of the chase tam syluestres quam campestres And all those wild beastes are to haue a firme peace and protectiō there So that no man may hurt or chase them within the park without licence of the owner of the same Who also fol. 149. saith thus A parke is of another nature then either a chase or a warren is For a parke must bee inclosed and may not lye ope for if it doe that is a good cause of seisure of the same into the hands of the king as a thing forfeited as a free chase is if it be enclosed And moreouer the owner cannot haue action against such as hunt in his park if it lye open See Forest See Chase See Warren This word Parke Baldwinus deriueth a paradiso eumque locum esse dicit in quo varia animalia ad vsum voluptatis aut venationis includuntur possidentur adempta naturali libertate Ad tit de rerum divis in Institutionib Parco fracto is a writ which lyeth against him that violently breaketh a pound and taketh out beasts thence which for some trespas done vpon another mans ground are lawfully impounded Register originall fol. 166. Fitzh nat br fol. 100. Parish parochia commeth of the greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Accolarum conuentus accolatus sacra vicinia it is vsed in the Cannon law some time for a Bishoprick But in our common law it signifieth the particular charge of a secular priest For euery church is either Cathedrall Couentuall or Parochiall Cathedrall is that where there is a Bishop seated so called a Cathedra Conuentuall consisteth of Regular clerks professing some order of religion or of Deane and chapter or other colledge of spirituall men Parochiall is that which is instituted for the saying of diuine seruice and ministring the holy Sacraments to the people dwelling within a certaine compas of ground neare vnto it Our Realme was first diuided into parishes by Honorius Archb of Canterbury in the yeare of our Lord. 636. Camden Britan. pag. 104. Of these parish churches I finde there were in England in the daies of H. 8. the number of 45000. Hotoman in his disputations de feudis ca. 2. maketh mention of this word parochia out of Pomponius Laetus in these words Nam sic quoque Pomponius Laetus veterem consuetudinem fuisse scribit eamque ab Imperat 〈…〉 Constantino repetitam vt Duc 〈…〉 praefectis Tribunis qui pro augend● Imperio consenuerant darentur agri villaeque vt necessaria suppet 〈…〉 quoad viuerent quas paroehias cabant And a litle after ver 〈…〉 inter feuda parochias hoc 〈…〉 est quod hae plerumque senibus 〈…〉 veteranis plerisque emeritae 〈…〉 dabantur qui cum de Rep. bene meriti essent publico beneficio reliquum vitae sustentabant aut si quod bellum nasceretur euocati non tam milites quàm magistri militū viderentur Feuda vero plurimum I●●enibus robustis primo flore aetatis qui militiae munus sustinere poterāt imo verò vt possēt vt vellēt c. Parlament parlamentum is a French word signifiing originally as much as Collocutio or colloquium but by vse it is also taken for those high courts of Iustice throughout the kingdome of Fraunce where mens causes and differences are publikely determined without farder appeale Whereof there be seuen in number as Paris Tolouse Gresnoble in Daulphene Aix in Prouence Bordeaux Diion in Bourgogine and Roan in Normandy Vincentius Lupanus de Magistrat Franc. lib. 2. cap. Parlamentum num 28. whereunto Gerard de Haillon addeth the eighth viz. Rhenes in Brettagne In England we vse it for the assembly of the king and the three estates of the Realme videlicet the Lords Spirituall the Lords Temporall and commons for the debating of maters touching the common wealth and especially the making and correcting of lawes which assembly or court is of all other the highest and of greatest authoritie as you may reade in Sir Thomas Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 1. 2. Camd. Britan. pag. 112. and Cromptons Iurisd fol. pri seqq The institution of this court Polydor Virgil lib. 11. of his Chronicles referreth after a sort to Henry the first yet confessing that it was vsed before though verie seldome I find in the former prologue of the Grande Custumarie of Normandie that the Normans vsed the same meanes in making their lawes And I haue seene a monument of Antiquite shewing the maner of houlding this parlament in the time of King Edward the sonne of King Etheldred which as my note saith was deliuered by the discreeter sorte of the Realme vnto William the Conquerour at his commaundement allowed by him This writing beginneth thus Rex est caput principium finis parlamenti ita non habet parem in suo gradu Et sic ex Rege solo primus gradus est Secundus gradus est ex Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus per Baroniā tenentibus Tertius gradus est de procuratoribus cleri Quartus gradus est de Comitibus Baronibus aliis Magnatibus Quintus gradus est de militibus Comitatuum Sextus gradus est de civibus Burgensibus ita est parlamentum ex sex gradibus sed sciendum licet aliquis dictorum quinque graduum post Regem absens fuerit dum tamen omnes praemoniti fuerint per rationabiles summonitiones parlamentum nibilo minus censetur esse plenum Touching the great authoritie of this court I finde in Stowes Annalls pag. 660. that Henry the sixth directing his priuie seale to Richard Earle of Warwicke thereby to discharge him of the Captainship of Cales the Earle refused to obey the priuie seale and continued forth the said office because he receiued it by Parlament But one example cannot make good a doctrine And of these two one must needes be true that either the king is aboue the Parlament that is the positiue lawes of his kingdome or els that he is not an absolute king Aristotle lib. 3. Politico cap. 16. And therefore though it be a mercifull policie and also a politique mercie not alterable without great perill to make lawes by the consent of the whole Realme because so no one part shall haue cause to complaine of a partialitie yet simply to binde the prince to or by these lawes weare repugnant to the nature and constitution of an absolute monarchy See Bracton lib. 5.
his auncienter Lord by prioritie and of his later Lord by posterioritie Stawn praerog fol. 10. 11. when one tenent holdeth of two Lords of the one by prioritie of the other by posterioritie c. old nat br fol. 94. Pourchas perquisitum commeth of the French pourchasser i. sollicitare ambire it signifieth the buying of lands or tenements with money or other agreement and not the obtaining of it by title or discent Coniunctum perquisitum Ioynt pourchase Regist originall fol. 143. b. Pour faire proclaimer que nul eniect fimes ou ordures en fosses euriuers pres cities c. is a writ directed to the Maior Shyreeue or Bayliffe of a citie or towne cōmanding them to proolaime that none cast filth into the ditches or places neare adioyning and if any be cast alreadie to remoue it This is founded vpon the statut anno 12. Rich. 2. cap. 13. Fitzherb nat br fol. 176. Pourparty propars propartis vel propartia is contrarie to pro indiuiso For to make pourparty is to diuide and seuer the landes that fall to Parceners which before partition they hold ioyntly and pro indiuiso old nat br fol. 11. Pourpresture pourprestura vel perprestura vel paraprestura seemeth to come from the French pourpris i. conseptum It is thus defined by Glanuile lib. 9. cap. 11. Pourprestura est propriè quando aliquid super Dominum Regem iniustè occupatur Vt in Dominicis Regis vel in viis publicis abstructis vel in aquis publicis transuersis à recto cursu vel quando aliquis in ciuitate super Regiam plateam aliquid adificando occupauerit generaliter quoties aliquid fit ad nocumentum Regii tenementi vel Regiae viae vel ciuitatis Crompton in his Iurisd fol. 152. defineth it thus Pourpresture is properly when a man taketh vnto himself or incrocheth any thing that he ought not whether it be in any Iurisdiction land or fraunchis and generally when any thing is done to the Nusance of the kings tenents Et idem eodem fol. 203. saith to the same effect but more at large See Kitchin fol. 10. and Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 169. parte 2. cap. 10. per totum See Skene de verbor signif verb. Purpresture Where he maketh three sorts of this offence one against the King the second against the Lord of the fee the third against a neighbour by a neighbour lying neare him Pour seisir terres la femme que tient en Dower c. is a writ whereby the King seiseth vpon the land which the wife of his Tenent that held in capite disceased hath for her Dowrie if shee marry without his leaue and is grounded vpon the statute of the Kings prerogatiue cap. 3. see Fitzh fol. 174. Poursuyuant commeth of the French poursuiure i. agere agitare persequi It signifieth the Messenger of the king attending vpon him in warres or at the counsell table the Starre Chamber Exchequer or commission court to be sent vpon any occasion or message as for the apprehension of a party accused or suspected of any offence committed Those that be vsed in marshall causes be called Poursw 〈…〉 t s at armes anno 24. Hen. 8. cap. 13. whereof there be foure in number of especial names which see in Herald And M. Stowe speaking of Richard the third his end pag. 784. hath these words For his bodie was naked to the skinne notso much as one cloute about him and was trussed behinde a Pursuyuant at armes like a hogge or a calfe c. The rest are vsed vpon other messages in time of peace and especially in maters touching iurisdiction See Herald Pourueyour prouison commeth of the French pour 〈…〉 i. prouidere prospicere It signifieth an Officer of the King Queene or other great personage that prouideth corne and other victuall for the house of him whose Officer he is See magna charta cap. 22. 3. Ed. prim cap. 7. cap. 31. anno 28. eiusdem Articuli super chartas 2. and many other statutes gathered by Rastal vnder this title Powldauis anno 1. Iacob ca. ●4 Power of the countie posse c 〈…〉 tatus by M. Lamberds opinion in his Eirenar lib. 3. cap. 1. fol. 309. containeth the ayde and attendance of all Knights gentlemen yeomen labourers seruants apprentises and villaines and likewise of Wardes and of other young men aboue the age of fifteene yeeres within the countie because all of that age are bound to haue harnesse by the statute of Winchester But women ecclesiasticall persons and such as be decrepit or do labour of any continuall infirmitie shall not be compelled to attend For the statute 2. H. 5. cap. 8. which also worketh vpon the same ground saith that persons sufficient to trauell shall be assistant in this seruice Pounde parcus seemeth to signifie generally any inclosure of strength to keepe in beasts but especially with vs is signifieth a place of strength to restraine catell being distrained or put in for any trespas done by them vntill they be repleuied or redeemed And in this signification it is called a pound ouert or open pound being builded vpon the wast of some Lord within his fee and is called the Lords pownd For he provideth it to his vse and the vse of his tenents See Kitchin fol. 144. It is diuided into pound open and pound close pound open or ouert is not onely the Lordes pownd but a backside court yarde pasture or else what soeuer whether the owner of any beasts impounded may come to giue them meate and drinke without offence for their being there or his comming thither pound close is then the contrary viz. such a one as the owner cannot come vnto to the purpose aforesaide without offence as some close house or such like place Powndage is a Subsidie granted to the King of all maner of merchandies of euery merchant denizen and alien caried out of this realme or brought into the same by way of Merchandize to the valew of twelue pence in eeuery pound anno 12. Ed. 6. cap. 13. anno 31. Eliz. cap. 5. anno 1. Iacobi cap. 33. Pray age See Age prier Pray in ayd See Ayd Prebend praebenda is the portion which euery member or Canon of a Cathedrall church receiueth in the right of his place for his maintenance And though vse haue wrought the latine word into the nature of a Substantiue yet I thinke it originally to be an Adiectiue or participle and to haue bene ioyned with pars or portio as Canonica portio which is in a maner all one in signification How be it Canonica portio is properly vsed for that share which euery Canon or Prebendary receiueth yearely out of the common stocke of the Church and praebenda is a seuerall benefice rising from some temporall land or church appropriated toward the maintenance of a Clerke or member of a Collegiat Church and is commonly surnamed of the place whence the profit groweth And Prebends
either of two French words Prime or Primier i. primus and Notaire i. Notarius tabellio or of two Latine words prae notarius quasi primus aut principalis notarius The office is likewise borowed from the later Romanes who made his name of halfe Greeke and halfe Latine viz 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. primus principalis and Notarius It is vsed in our common lawe for the cheife clerks of the Kings courts whereof 3. be of the common pleas and one of the Kings bench For the pregnotarie of the commmon plees anno 5. H. 4. cap. 14. is termed the cheife clerke of that court He of the Kings Bench recordeth all actions civile siewed in that court as the Clerke of the Crowne office doth all criminall causes Those of the common plees doe enter and inrolle all maner of declarations pleadings Assises and Iudgements and all actions the same terme that the apparence is made Also they make out all iudiciall writs as the venire facias after issues ioyned and Habeas corpus for the bringing in of the Iurie after it is returned vpon the venire facias They also make forthe writs of executions and ofseisin writs of supersedeas for appearance to exigents as well as the exigents and writs of priuiledges for remouing of causes from other inferiour courts of Record in case where the partie hath cause of priuiledge Also writs of procedendo of scire facias in all cases and writs to inquire of dammages and all proces vpon prohibitions and vpon writs of audita querela and false Iudgement Finally they inrolle all recognisances acknowledged in that court and all common Recoueries and may make exemplifications of any Record the same terme before the rols be deliuered from them Prender commeth of the French prendre i. accipere acceptare capere prehēdere it signifieth in our common lawe sometime a power or right to take a thing before it be offered as such things as lie in Prender or such as lie in render West parte 2. titula Fines sect 126. where you haue these words If the lord graunt the seruices of his tenent by fine or otherwise the Lord before atturnment shall haue such things as lie in prender as the ward of the body of the heire and of the land escheats c. but not such things as lie in prender as rents and releifes heriots and other seruices For he canot avowe for them before the atturnment Prender de Baron signifieth literally in barbarous French to take a husband but it is vsed in our common lawe as an exception to disable a woman from persiewing an appeale of murder against the killer of her former husband Stawnf pl. cor li. 3. cap. 59. The reason whereof whether it be because by her secōd mariage she may iustly be thought to haue giuen vp the interest shee had in her former husband or for that shee is now couert againe or for both I leaue to consideration Prender del profits signifieth verbatim to take the profits It signifieth substantiuely the taking of the profits See Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 185. See Pernour of profits Prest is vsed for some dutie in money to be paide by the Shyreeue vpon his accoumpt in the exchequer anno 2. 3. Ed. 6. cap. 4. Prest mony is so called of the French word Prest i. explicatus promptus expeditus for that it bindeth those that haue receiued it to be ready at all times appointed Primage is a dutie due to the mariners and saylers for the loading of any shippe at the setting forth from any hauen anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Primier seisin Prima seisina ad verbum signifieth the first possession It is vsed in the common lawe for a braunch of the kings prerogatiue whereby he hath the first possession of all lands and tenements through the Realme holding of him in cheife whereof his tenent died seised in his demesn as of fee and so consequently the rents and profits of them vntill the heire if he be of age doe his homage if he be vnder yeares vntill he come to yeares See Stawnf prarog cap. 3. and Bracton lib. 4. tract 3. cap. pri Primo beneficio See Beneficio Prince Princeps is a french word and taken with vs diuersly sometime for the king himselfe but more properly for the kings eldest sonne who is prince of Wales as the eldest sonne to the French king is called Dolphine both being princes by their natiuitie M. Fearn in the glory of generositie pag. 138. For Edward the first to appease the tumultuous spirits of the Welch men who being the auncient Indigenae of this land could not in long time beare the yoke of vs whome they call strangers sent his wife being with childe into Wales where at Carnaruan shee was deliuered of a sonne therevpon called Edward of Carnarvan and afterward asked the Welch men seing they thought much to be gouerned by straungers if they would be quietly ruled by one of their owne nation who answering him yea then quoth he I will appoint you one of your owne country men that cannot speake one word of English and against whose life you can take no iust exception and so named vnto them his sonne borne in Carnarvan not long before from which time it hath continued that the kings eldest sonne who was before called Lord Prince Stawnf praerog cap. 22. fol. 75. hath beene called prince of Wales Stowes Annals pag. 303. See anno 27. H. 8. cap. 26. anno 28. eiusdem cap. 3. Principality of Chester anno 21. Rich. 2. cap. 9. See Cownty palatine and Cromptons diuers iurisdictions fol 137. Prior perpetuall or datife and removeable anno 9. R. 2. cap. 4. and anno 1. Ed. 4. cap. 1. paulo ante finem Lord prior of Saint Iohns of Ierusalem anno 26. H. 8. cap. 2. Priors aliens Priores alieni were certaine religious men borne in Fraunce and gouerners of religious houses erected for out-landish men here in England which were by Henry the fifth thought no good members for this land after such conquest obtained by him in Fraunce and therfore suppressed Whose liuings afterwards by Henry the 6. were giuen to other Monasteries and houses of learning Stowes Annals pag. 582. See anno 1. H. 5. cap. 7. but especially to the erecting of those two most famous Colledges called the Kings Colledges of Cambridge and Eton. Prioritie prioritas signifieth in our common lawe an antiquitie of tenure in comparison of another not so auncient As to hold by Prioritie is to hold of a Lord more aunciently then of another old nat br fol. 94. So to hold in posterioritie is vsed by Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fo 11. And Crompton in his Iurisdiction fol. 117. vseth this word in the same signification The Lord of the prioritie shal haue the custodie of the bodie c. fol. 120. If the tenent hold by prioritie of one and by posterioritie of another c. To which effect see also Fitz. nat br fol. 142. F.
if they thinke good And the later course is taken most commonly where there is feare of strife and contention betweene the kindred and freinds of the party deceased about his goods For a will proued only in common forme may be called into question any time within 30. yeares after by common opinion before it worke prescription Procedendo is a writ whereby a plee or cause formerly called from a base court to the Chaūcerie Kings bench or commō plees by a writ of priuiledge or certiorare is released and sent downe againe to the same court to be proceded in there after it appeareth that the defendant hath no cause of priniledge or that the mater comprised in the bille be not well proned Brooke hoctitulo and Termes of lawe Cooke vol. 6. fol. 63. a. See anno 21. R. 2. cap. 11. in fine leters of procedendo graunted by the keeper of the priuie scale See in what diuersitie it is vsed in the table of the originall Register and also of the Iudiciall Proces Processus is the maner of proceeding in euery cause be it personall or reall ciuile or criminall even from the originall writ to the end Britton fol. 138. a. where in there is great diuersitie as you may see in the table of Fitzh br verbo Proces and Brookes Abridgement hoc titulo And whereas the wtitings of our common lawyers sometime call that the proces by which a man is called into the court and no more the reason thereof may be giuen because it is the beginning or the principall part thereof by which the rest of the busines is directed according to that saying of Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diucrs kinds of proces vpon Inditements before Iustices of peace See in Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 133. b. 134. 135. But for orders sake I referre you rather to M. Lamberd in his tractat of ptocesses adioyned to his Eirenarcha who acording to his subiect in hand diuideth criminall proces either into proces touching causes of treason or selonie and proces touching inferiour offēces the former is vsually a capias capias aliâs exigi facias The second is either vpon enditement or presentment or information that vpon enditement or presentment is all one and is either generall and that is a venire facias ' vpon which if the partie be returned sufficient then is sent out a Distringas infinite vntill he come if he be returned with a Nibil habet then ifsueth out a Capias Capias aliâs Capias pluries and lastly an Exigifacias The speciall proces is that which is especially appointed for the offēce by statute for the which he referreth his reader to the 8. Chapter of his 4. booke being very different Processium continuando is a writ for the continuance of a proces after the death of the cheife Iustice in the writ of oyer and terminer Register originall fol. 128. a. Prochein Amy Proximus amicus vel propinquior is word for word a neere freind It is vsed in our common lawe for him that is next of kinde to a childe in his nonage and is in that respect allowed by lawe to deale for him in the managing of his affaires as to be his Gardian if he hold of any in socage and in the redresse of any wrong done vnto him be it by his Gardian if he be ward and hold in Chiualrie or any others Statut. West pri cap. 48. 3. Ed. pri and Westm 2. cap. 15. anno 13. Ed. pri Profe aliâs Prove is vsed for an Enquest anno 28. Ed. 3. cap. 13. Proclamation Proclamatio signifieth a notice publikely giuen of any thing whereof the King thinketh good to advertise his subiects So it is vsed anno 7. Rich. 2. ca. 6. Proclamation of rebellion is a publike notice giuen by the officer that a man not appearing vpon a Sub poena nor an attachment in the Starre Chamber or Chauncerie shal be reputed a rebell except he render himselfe by a day assigned Cromptons Iurisd fol. 92. See Commission of rebellion Proclamation of a fine is a notice openly and solemnly giuen at all the Assises that shall be holden in the Countie within one yeare after the ingrossing of the fine and not at the foure generall quarter sessions And these proclamations be made vpon transcripts of the fine sent by the Iustices of the Common plees to the Iustices of Assise and the Iustices of peace West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 132. where also you may see the forme of the proclamarion Proclamare est palā valde clamare vsed by Tullie Liuie and the Civilians Π. Quibus ad liberta proclamare non licet And Proclamator signifieth him qui litem intendit vel causam agit Cicero de oratore lib. pri Non enim causidicum nescio quem neque proclamatorem aut rabulam hoc sermone conquirimus c. I reade in Fitzh nat br fol. 85. C. that the kings proclamation is sufficient to stay a subiect from going out of the Realme See the force of proclamations anno 31. H. 8. cap. 8. see also Proclamations in diuers cases Newe booke of Enteries verbo Proclamation Procters of the clergie procuratores cleri are those which are chosen and appointed to appeare for cathedrall or other Collegiat churches as also for the common clergie of euery Dioces at the Parlament whose choice is in this sort First the king directeth his writ to the Archebishop of each province for the summoning of all Bishops Deanes Archdeacons cathedrall and collegiat churches and generally of all the clergie of his prouince after their best discretion and iudgement assigning them the time and place in the said writ Then the Archebishops proceede in their accustomed course One example may serue to shew both The Archebishop of Canterbury vpō his writ receiued directerh his leters to the Bishop of London as his Deane provincial 1. § statuimui de poenis verb. tanquam in glos first citing himselfe petemptorily and then willing him to cite in like maner all the Bishops Deanes Archedeacons cathedrall and collegiate churches and generally all the Clergie of his Prouince to the place and against the day prefixed in the writ But directeth withal that one Proctor sent for euery Cathedrall or Collegiat Church and two for the bodie of the inferiour Clergie of each Diocesse may suffice And by vertue of these leters authentically sealed the said Bishop of London directeth his like leters seuerally to the Bishop of euery Diocesse of the Prouince citing them in like sort and commaunding them not onely to appeare but also to admonish the said Deanes and Archdeacons personally to appeare and the Cathedral 〈…〉 and collegiat Churches as also the common Clergie of the Diocesse to send their Proctors to the place and at the day appointed and also willeth them to certifie the Archbishop the names of all and euery so monished by them in a shedule annexed to their leters certificatorie The Bishops proceed accordingly and the
to them and their successours See Appropriation Prorata portionis See Onerando pro rata portionis Protection protectio hath a generall and a speciall signification In the generall it is vsed for that benefite and safetie that euery subiect or Denizen or alien specially secured hath by the Kings lawes And thus it is vsed anno 25. Ed. tertii capite 32. Protection in the speciall signification is vsed for an exemption or an immunitie giuen by the King to a person against suites in lawe or other vexations vpon reasonable causes him thereunto moouing which I take to be a braunch of his prerogatiue And of this protection Fitzh maketh two sortes in his nat br fol. 28. The first forme or sort he calleth a protectiō cum clausula volumus wherof he mentioneth foure particulars A protection quia profecturus for him that is to passe ouer sea in the kings seruice A protection quia moratur for him that is abroad in the Kings seruice vpon the sea or in the marches anno 7. H. 7. cap. 2. A protection for the Kings debter that he be not siewed or attached vntill the King be payed his debt See anno 15. Ed. 3. This some Ciuilians call moratoriam which see In singularibus Marantae verb. Princeps pag. 79. col 2. And a protection in the kings seruice beyond the seas or on the marches of Scotland whereof you may reade something anno 1. R. 2. cap. 8. See the Regist orig fol. 23. and Britton cap. 123. The second forme of protection is tearmed cum clausula Nolu 〈…〉 which is graunted most commonly to a spirituall company for their immunitic from taking of their catell by the Kings ministers But it may be graunted also to one man spirituall or temporall Of these things reade the same authour and the formes of these writs See also in the Register originall fol. 22. 23. And see the new Expositour of lawe termes to what action the kings protection doth not extend See also the new booke of Entries verbo Protection Protonotarie protonotarius See Preignetarie Protestation protestatio is as Iustice Walsh defineth it a defence or safegard to the partie which maketh it from being cōcluded by the act he is about to doe that issue cannot be ioyned vpon it Plowden fol. 276. b. whereof see the Register original fol. 306. b. And see Protest Protest protestari hath two diuers applications one is by way of cautell to call witnesse as it were or openly to affirm that he doth either not at all or but after a sort yeeld his consent to any act as vnto a proceeding of a Iudge in a court wherein his iurisdiction is doubtfull or to answer vpon his oath farder then he by lawe is bounde See Plowden casu Gresbroke fol. 276. b. and the Register orig fol. 306. b. Another is by way of complaint to protest a mans bill For example if I giue mony to a Merchant in Fraunce taking his bill of exchange to be repayed in England by one to whome he assigneth me if at my comming I find not my selfe satisfied to my contentment but either delayed or denyed then I goe into the Burse or some open concurse of Merchants and protest that I am deceiued by him And thereupon if he haue any goods remaining in any mans hands within the Realme the lawe of Merchants is that I be paid out of them Prouuer Probator See Approuuer anno 5. H. 4. ca. 2. See Approuours Prouince Prouincia was vsed among the Romans for a Country without the compasse of Italie gained to their subiection by the sword wherevpon the part of Fraunce next the Alpes was soe called of them when it was in their dominion and of that carieth the same name at this present But with vs a province is most vsually taken for the circuit of an Archebishops Iurisdiction as the Province of Canterbury and the province of Yorke anno 32. H. 8. cap. 23. anno 33. eiusdem cap. 31. yet it is vsed diuers times in our statutes for seuerall parts of the Realme Provinciall Prouincialis is a cheife gouernour of an order of Friers anno quar Henr. quar cap. 17. Protoforestarius was he whom the auncient kings of this Realme made chiefe of Winsour forest to heare all causes of death or mayhem or of slaughter or of the Kings deare within the Forest Camd. Britan. pag. 213. See Iustice of the Forest Prove See Profe Prouision Provisio is vsed with vs as it is vsed in the Canon lawe for the providing of a Bishop or any other person of an ecclesiasticall liuing by the Pope before the Incumbent be dead It is also called gratia expectatiua or Mandatum de providendo The great abuse whereof in the Pope through all Christendome heretofore you may read not only in Duarenus de sacris ecclesiae ministoriis beneficiis lib. 3. cap. 2. but also for England particularly in diuers statuts of the Realme viz. anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 22 sttat 4. statu 5. commonly called the statute de prouiscribus anno 27. eiusdem cap. i. anno 38. eiusdem stat 2. cap. 1. 2. 3. 4. anno 38. eiusdem anno 2. Rich. 2. cap. 7. anno 3. eiusdem cap. 3. anno 7. eiusdem cap. 12. anno 12. eiusdem cap. 15. anno 13. eiusdem stat 2. cap. 2. 3. anno 16. eiusdem cap. 5. anno 2. H. 4. cap. 3. 4. anno 5. eiusdem cap. pri anno 7. eiusdem cap. 6. 8. anno 9. eiusdem cap. 8. anno 3. H. 5. cap. 4. See Praemunire Provisour Provisor is he that sieweth to the court of Rome for a prouision old nat br fol. 143. See Provision Proviso is a condition inserted into any deede vpon the obseruance wherof the validitie of the deede consisteth which forme of condition seemeth to be borrowed from Fraunce for Pourve u Gallicum semper conditionem inducit Tiraquel tomo 3. pag. 216. Our common lawyers say that it sometime signifieth but a couenant whereof you haue a large disdispute in the 2. booke of Sir Ed. Cokes reports in the Lord Cromwels case It hath also another signification in maters Iudiciall as if the plaintife or demaundant desist in prosecuting an action by bringing it to a triall the defendant or tenent may take out the venire facias to the Shyreeue which hath in it these words Prouiso quòd c. to this ende that if the plaintife take out any writ to that purpose the shyreeue shall summon but one Iurie vpon them both See old natura breuium in the writ Nisi prius fol. 159. Purchas See pourchas Purfles of a womans growne anno 33. H. 8. cap. 5. Purgation Purgatio is a cleering of a mans selfe from a crime whereof he is probably and publiquely suspected and thereof denounced to a Iudge Of this there was great vse in England touching maters of felonie imputed to Clerks in former time as appeareth by Stawnf pl.
either Bench Barons of the Exchequer Iustices of peace c. And those that be meere recognisances are not sealed but inrolled And execution by force thereof is of all the recognisours goods and chatels except his draught beasts and implements of husbandrie and of the moitie of his lands West parte prim symb lib. 2. titulo Recognisances sect 149. And of these you may see there great diuersitie of presidents Note farder that a Recognizance though in the speciall signification it do but acknowledge a certaine debt and is executed vpon all the goods and halfe the lands of the recognisour yet by extention it is drawne also to the Bonds commonly called Statute Merchant and Statute of the Staple as appeareth by the Register original fol. 146. 151. 252. and by West vbi supra and others See Statute Merchant and Statute Staple Recognisance hath yet another signification as appeareth by these wordes in the statute West 1. c. 36. anno 3. Ed. 1. It is prouided also and agreed that if any man be attainted of disseisin done in the time of our King that now is with roberie of any maner of goods or moueables by recognisance of Assise of nouel disseisin the iudgement shall c. In which place it is vsed for the verdict of the twelue men empaneled vpon an Assise which twelue are also called recognitours of the Assise Litleton fol. 72. So also Bracton calleth them lib. 5. tractat 2. cap. 9. num 2. in these words In essonio verò reddendo exigentur omnes illi quos causa tetigerit sicut particeps Warantus alii vt supra Recognitores in Assisis Iuratores in Iuratis Inquisitores in Inquisitionibus c. And againe lib. 3. tract prim cap. 11. num 16. See the Statute anno 20. Ed. prim stat 4. See the newe book of Entries ver Recognisance Recognitione adnullanda per vim duritiem facta is a writ to the Iustices of the common Bench for the sending of a record touching a recognisance which the recognisour suggesteth to be acknowledged by force and hard dealing that if it so appeare it may be disanulled Register original fol. 183. a. b. Recognitours recognitores is a word vsed for the Iurie empaneled vpon an assise The reason why they be so called may be because they acknowledge a disseisin by their verdict See Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 9. nu 2. lib. 3. tract prim cap. 11. num 16. Record recordum commeth of the Latine recordari The word is both French and English and in both tongs signifieth an authenticall or vncontroulable testimonie in writing Britton cap. 27. and Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 13. In the Grand Custumarie of Normandie there are seuerall Chapters of diuers records expressing whose presence in each of the Courts is sufficient to make that which is enacted to be a record viz. the 102. chapter where you haue wordes to this effect The record of the Kings Court is a record of things done before the King All things done before the King so he haue one other witnesse This record may he and other make if he himselfe will not make it it may be made by three others And his person may not bee impeached or excepted against either in this or any other thing The next chapter viz. the 103. sheweth how many persons suffise to make a record in the Exchequer The next how many in an assise c. I find not that wee in our Courts especially the Kings Courts stand much vpon the number of recorders or witnesses for the strength of the testimonie which the record worketh but that we take it sufficient which is registred in each Court Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. num 4. Britton in the Proeme of his booke saith that the Iustices of the Kings Bench haue a record the Coroner Vicount Iustices of the Exchequer Iustices of Goale deliuerie the Steward of England Iustices of Ireland Iustices of Chester Iustices assigned by the Kings leters patents in those causes they haue commission to take knowledge of All which as I take it must be vnderstood with that caueat of Brooke titulo Record num 20 22. that an act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the terme wherein it is written is alterable and no record but that terme once ended and the said act duly enrolled it is a record and of that credit that admitteth no alteration or proofe to the contrarie Yet see Sir Edward Cookes Reports lib. 4. Rawlins case fol. 52. b. ann 12. Ed. 2. cap. 4. It is said that two Iustices of either Bench haue power to record Non suites Defaults in the countrey It appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. c. 1. 11. that quatuor milites babent recordum being sent to view a partie essoined de malo lecti and lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 4. nu 2. that Seruiens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum honinum And in the Statute of Carleil made anno 15. Ed. 2. it is said that one Iustice of either Bench with an Abbot or a Prior or a Knight or a man of good same and credence hath a record in the view of one that is said by reason of sicknesse to be vnable to appeare personally for the passing of a fine And anno 13. H. 4. cap. 7. anno 2. H. 5. cap. 3. that two Iustices of peace with the Shyreeue or Vndershyreeue haue power to record what they find done by any in a ryot or route c. That which is before mentioned out of Britton touching the Shyreeue seemeth to be limited by Fitzh nat br fol 81. D. Who alloweth him a Record in such maters onely as he is commaunded to execute by the Kings writ in respect of his office And thence it commeth that Kitchin fol. 177. saith that the Escheatour and Shyreeue be not Iustices of record but officers of record In which words he signifieth that their testimony is authenticall onely in some certaine things that are expresly inioyned them by vertue of their Commission as ministers to the King in his higher Courts whereas Iustices of record haue in generality a record for all things within their cognisance done before them as Iudges though not expresly or particularly commaunded Fitzherbert in his Nat br fo 82. in principio something explaneth this point writing to this effect Euery act that the Shyreeue doth by vertue of his commission ought to be taken as mater of record no lesse then the Iustices of peace His reasons be two the former he cause his patent is of record the other because he is a conseruatour of the peace And then he addeth that the plees held before him in his County be not of record Yet is the county called a Court of record Westm 2. ca. 3. anno 13. Ed. 1. But it seemeth by Britton cap. 27. that it is onely in these causes whereof the Shyreeue houldeth plee by especiall
See the new booke of Entries verbo Remitter Render commeth of the French Rendre i. reddere retribuere restituere and signifieth in our common lawe the selfe same thing For example this word is vsed in leuying of a fine For a fine is either single by which nothing is graunted or rendred backe againe by the Cognizee to the Cognizoumor double which conteineth a graunt or render backe againe of some rent common or other thing out of the land it selfe to the Cognizor c. West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 21. 30. F. Also there be certaine things in a maner that lie in prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his officer when they chaunce without any offer made by the tenent as the ward of the body of the heire and of the land escheats c. and certaine that lie in Render that is must be deliuered or answered by the Tenent as rents reliefes heriots and other seruices Idem eodem sect 126. C. Also some service confisteth in seisāce some in Render Perkins Reseruations 696. Rent Reditus commeth of the French Rent i. vectigal pensitatio annua and signifieth with vs a summe of mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of land or tenements Plouden casu Browning fol. 132. b. fol. 138. a. 141. b. There be three sorts of rents obserued by our common Lawyers that is Rent seruice Rent charge and Rent seck Rent seruice is where a man houldeth his land of his Lord by fealty and certaine rent or by fealty seruice and certaine rent Litleton lib. 2. ca. 12. fol. 44. or that which a man making a lease to another for terme of yeares reserueth yearely to be paid him for the same Termes of lawe verbo Rents who giueth this reason thereof because it is in his libertie whether he will distraine or bring an action of debt A Rent charge is that which a man making ouer an estate of his land or tenements to another by deede indented either in in fee or fee tayle or lease for terme of life reserueth to himselfe by the said indenture a summe of money yearely to be paide vnto him with clause of distresse or to him and his heires See Litleton vbi supra A Rent seck otherwise a drie rent is that which a man making ouer an estate of his land or tenement by deede indented reserueth yeerely to be paid him without clause of distresse mentioned in the Indenture Litleton vbi supra and termes of the lawe verbo Rents see the newe expositour of lawe Termes See Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. See the differences betweene a rent and an annuitie Doctor and Student cap. 3. O●dialo primo Reparatione facienda is a writ which lieth in diuers cases whereof one is where three be tenents in common or ioynt tenents or pro Indiviso of a mille or house which is fallen into decay and the one being willing to repaire it the other two will not In this case the party willing shall haue this writ against the other two Fitzh nat br f. 127. where read at large the form many vses of this writ as also in the Regi orig fol. 153. b. Repeale commeth of the French Rappel i. Revocatio and signifieth in our common lawe euen the same as the Repeale of a statute Rastall titulo Repeale Brooke vseth Repellance in this signification titulo Repellance Repleader Replacitare is to plead againe that which was once pleaded before Rastall titulo Repleader See the newe booke of Entries verbo Repleder Replegiare See Replevie See Second deliuerance Replevie Pleuina is the bringing of the writ called Replegiarifacias by him that hath his catel or other goods distreined by another for any cause and putting in suerty to the Shyreue that upon the deliuery of the thing distreined he will persiew the action against him that distreined Termes of lawe See Replegiare It is vsed also for the bayling of a man pl. cor fol. 72. 73. 74. West pri cap. 11. cap. 15. anno 3. Ed. 1. Replegiare de averus is a writ brought by one whose catell be distreined or put in pound vpon any cause by another vpon surety giuen to the Shyreeue to persiew the action in lawe anno 7. H. 8. cap. 4. Fitzh nat br fol. 68. See the Register originall of diuers sorts of this writ called Replegiare in the table verbo eodem See also the Register Iudiciall fol. 58. 70. see also the newe boke of Entries verbo Replevin See Dyer fol. 173. nu 14. Replevish Replegiaro is to let one to mainprise vpon suretie anno 3. Ed. 1. cap. 11. Replication replicatio is an exception of the second degree made by the plantife vpon the first answer of the Defendant West parte 〈◊〉 symbol titulo Chauncerie sect 55. Westm 2. anno 13. Ed. pri cap. 36. This is borowed from the Ciuilians De replicationibus lib. 4. Institutio titulo 14. Report Reportus is in our common lawe a relation or repetition of a case debated or argued which is sometime made to the court vpon reference from the court to the Reporter somtime to the world voluntarily as Ploydens reports such like Reposition of the Forest was an act whereby certaine forest grounds being made purlieu vpon view were by a second view laide to the Forest againe Manwood parte pri pag. 178. Reprisels Reprisalia are all one in the common and Ciuill law Represalia est potestas pignorandi contra quemlibet de terya debitoris data creditori pro iniuriis damnis acceptis Vocabularius vtriusque iuris This among the auncient Romans was called Clarigatio of the verb Clarigo i. res clarè repeto It is called in the statute anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. lawe of Marque of the German word March i. terminus limes And the reason may be because one destitute of Iustice in another territory redresseth himselfe by the goods belonging to men of that territorie taken within his owne bounds Requests Supplicum libelli Curia Requisitionum is a Court of of the same nature with the Chauncerie redressing by equitie the wrongs that poore men doe suffer at their hand whose might they are not able to withstand either in lawe or otherwise It tooke beginning as some men thinke by commission from King Henry the 8. before which time the Masters of Requests had no warrant of ordinary Iurisdiction but travailed betweene the Prince and petioners by direction from the mouth of the King Guins preface to his readings But see Court of Requests Resceyt Receptio seemeth to be an admission of a third person to pleade his right in a cause formerly commenced betweene other two See the newe booke of Entries verbo Resceit v. Aide prier The Ciuilians call this admissionem tertii pro suo interesse Of this you haue one example in the Termes of lawe viz. if Tenent for terme of life or tenent for terme of yeares bring an action he
of common-plees where the common lawe of England is most strictly obserued These are made by the Kings mandat or writ directed vnto them commaunding them vpon a great penaltie to take vpon them that degree by a day certaine therein assigned Dyer fol. 72. num 1. see Counte And of these one is the Kings Sergeant being commonly chosen by the King out of the rest in respect of his great learning to pleade for him in all his causes as namely in causes of treason pl. cor lib. 3. cap. prim And of these there may be more if it so please the King This is called in other Kingdomes Aduocatus Regius Cassan de consuet Burgund pag. 850. With what solemnitie these Sergeants be created reade Fortescue cap. 50. This word Sergeant seemeth to be vsed in Brition for an Officer belonging to the Countie who in his first chapter speaking of Appeales made before the Corones hath these words in effect And then let the Coroner cause his appeale to be entred and the names of his sureties And afterward let commaundement be giuen to the Sergeant of the countrie where the felonie was committed that he haue the bodie of the persons appealed at the next Countie And it is probable that this officer was all one with him whom Bracton in his fifth booke cap. 4. num 2. calleth Seruientem Hundredi of whome he hath these words Post probationem defaltae faciet seruiens Hundreds incontinenti summonitionem vel affidet partibus diem si praesentes sint ad proximum Comitatum c. This is like to be the same Officer which in auncient time was called the Bayliffe of the Hundred who as is declared in Baylife had the like authoritie in his Hundred that the shyreeue had in the Countie though inferiour to him and to be controlled by him as appeareth by diuers auncient presidents set downe by Kitchin in his tractat of Returns in Court Hundred Court Baron c. I read also in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. ca. 28. Of the Kings Sergeant who is like to be also an officer in the County in these words speaking of a woman ranished and what shee ought to doe for the persuite of the Rauisher sic ire debet ad praepositum Hundredi ad seruientem Domini Regis ad coronatores ad vice-comitē ad primū comitatū faciat appellū suum And againe eod li c 32. in these words si sine secta cognouerit se inde esse latronem coram vicecomite vel coronatore vel seruiente Domini Regis c. And againe lib. 5. tractat 3. cap. 4. nu 8. in these words Quid si seruiens Domini Rogis dederit partibus diem ad Comitatum c. And by Fleta it seemeth that this terme was generall to the Shyreeue Coroner and Bayliffes of Counties who in his sixth booke cap 3. § 1. hath these worde Cum quis igitur senserit dominum suum vel curiam suam sibi de recto defecisse tunc ostenso hoc vicecomiti statim praecipiat balliuo Hundredi vel itineranti vel alteri seruienti Regis quòd assumptis sibi liberis legalibus hominibus de vicineto illo ad curiam illius domini si quem habuerit accedat c. And to helpe this probability I finde that the steward of a maner is termed seruiens manerii Coke Vol 4. Copyhould cases fo 21. a. Then is there a Sergeant at armes seruiens ad arma whose office is to attend the person of the King anno 7. H. 7. ca. 3. to arrest traitours or men of worth or reckoning that doe or are like to contemne messengers of ordinary condition for other causes and to attend the Lord high Steward of England sitting in Iudgement vpon any Traytour and such like pl cor lib. 3. cap. pri Of these by the statute anno 13. R. 2. cap. 6. there may not be aboue thirtie in the Realme This sort is called del espee In the custumary of Nor. ca. 5. which read There be also some two of these Sergeants of the Parlament one for the vpper another for the lower house whose office seemeth to serue for the keeping of the doores and the execution of such commaundements especially touching the apprehension of any offender as either house shall thinke good to inioyne them See Cromptons Iurisdictions fol. nono See also Vowels aliâs Hookers booke of the order of the Parl. There is one of these that belongeth to the Chauncery who is also called a Sergeant of the Mace as the rest may be because they cary Maces by there office He of the Chauncery attendeth the Lord Chaunceler or Keeper in that court for the meanes to call all men into that court is either by this officer or by sub poena West pa. 2. sym tit Chauncery Sect. 17. Then be there sergeants that be the chiefe officers in their seuerall functions within the kings houshould which be chiefe in their places of which sort you may read many named in the statute anno 33. H. 8. ca. 12. There is also a more base kinde of sergeant of the Mace whereof there is a troupe in the City of London and other townes corporate that serue the Maior or other head officer both for mesniall attendance and mater of Iustice Kitchin fol. 143. And these are called Seruientes ad clauā New book of Entries ver scire facias in Mainperners f. 538. c. 3. Sergeantie Seriantia commeth of the French Sergeant i. satelles fignifieth in our cōmō law a seruice due to the King frō his tenēt holding by such seruice For this seruice cannot be due to any L. from his Tenēt but to the King onely And this is either grand or petit as you shall find at large set downe in Chivalrie Of this also you may read Bra l. 2. c. 16. c. 37. n. 5. 4. Brit. c. 66. n. 1. 2. See Seruice M. Skene de ver signifi calleth this Sergeanterie defining and diuiding it as we doe in England Servientibus are certaine writs touching seruants and their Masters violating the statutes made against their abuses which see in the Regist orig fol. 189. 190. 191. Service seruitium though it haue a generall signification of dutie toward them vnto whome we owe the performance of any corporall labour or function yet more especially in our common lawe it is vsed for that seruice which the tenent by reason of his see oweth vnto his Lord. And so doth it signifie among the Feudists also For Hotoman thus defineth it Seruitium est munus obsequii clientelaris verbo Servitium De verbis feudal or rather declareth it so to be defined lib. feud 2. titulo 51. § 8. It is sometime called seruage as anno i. R. 2. cap. 6. This seruice is either militarie and noble commonly called Knights seruice or clownishe base commonly called socage of both which reade Chiualry as also socage and Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16.
Tollendo but I rather thinke it commeth from the greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. vectigalium redemptio vel etiam vectigalium exactio Fleta hath these words of it Tol significat acquietantiam Theolonii vbique in Regno lib. pri cap. 47. M. Skene de verb. signifi verbo Toll saith it is a custome and that it commeth from the Greeke word of the same signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that he who is infeoffed with Toll is custome free and payeth no custome which is manifest by sundry ould bookes wherein it is writen Toll hoc est quod vos homines vestri de toto homagio vestro sint quieti de omnibus mercantus de Tolneto de omnibus rebus emptis venditis Thus farre he Kitchin fol. 104. maketh mention of Tolle through and Toll Trauers his words be to this effect Custom or prescription to haue Toll through in the high way is not good for it is against the common right But to haue prescription of Tolle Trauers is good In which place the difference betweene the one and the other the newe expositour of lawe terms faith to be that tolletrauers is that mony which is taken for passing ouer a priuate mans ground But this author seemeth to differ from Kitchin touching the lawfulnes of tolle through saying that by reason of a bridge prouided at the cost and charge of the towne for the ease of trauellers he thinketh it resonable that tolle through be exacted toward the maintenance thereof which writer also maketh mention of tolle turn and that he defineth to be tolle paide for beastes driuen to be sold though they be not sold indeede Where I think he must meane a tolle paide in the returne homeward from the faire or market whether they were driuen to be sold Plowden casu Willion fo 236. agreeth in this definition of tolle trauers And this the Feudists call parangariam defining it to be sumptus labores ferendi referendiue alicui●s causa a principe impositi cùm non per viam sed aliò versùm iter suscipitur l. 2. Co. de Episc cleri a graeco 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. transitus per viam transversam Gothofred ad l. 4. § 1. Π. de vetera I finde in Andrew Horns mirrour of Iustices lib. 1. cap. des articles c. that by the auncient lawe of this land the buyers of corne or catell in faires or markets ought to pay tolle to the Lord of the market in testimony of their contract there lawfully made in open market for that priuie contracts were held vnlawfull Toloneum or Breve de essends quietum de Toloneo is a writ that lyeth in case where the Citizens of any Citie or Burgesses of any towne be quit from tolle by the graunt of the kings predecessours or prescription which you haue at large in Fitzh nat br fol. 226. See Telonium Tolt Tolta is a writ whereby a cause depending in a court Baron is remoued into the county court Old nat br fol. 2. The reason of the appellation seemeth ●o come from the verb Tollo v Cooke lib. 3. in praefatione ad lectorem Tonne See Tunne Tonnage is a custome or impost due for merchādise brought or caried in tonns and such like vessels from or to other nations after a certain rate in euery tonne anno 12. Ed. 4. ca. 3. anno 6. H. 8. ca. 14. anno pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. anno pri Iacobi cap. 33. I haue heard it also called a duty due to the Mariners for vnloading their ship arriued in any hauen after the rate of euery tonne Torny See Turney Totted anno 42. Ed. 3. cap. 9. anno 1. Ed. 6. ca. 15. is a word vsed of a dept which the forein Apposer or other officer in the Exchequer noteth for a good dept to the King by writing this word Tot vnto it Tourn See Turn Tout temps prist vncore est that is to say in English Alway ready and is at this present this is a kinde of plee in way of excuse or defence vnto him that is siewed for withhoulding any dept or duty belonging to the plaintiffe See of this Brooke his Abridgement fol. 258. Traile baston See Iustices of triall baston Traitor traditor proditor See Treason Transgressione is ●writ called commonly a writ or action of trespas Of this Fitzherbert in his Naturabre hath two sorts one Vicountiel so called because it is directed to the Shyreeue and is not returnable but to be determined in the countie The forme whereof differeth from the other because it hath not these words Quare vi amis c. and this see in Fitzh nat br fol. 85. G. The other is termed a writ of trespasse vpon the case which is to be siewed in the common Bank or the Kings Bench in which are alwaies vsed these words vi armis c. And of this you haue Fitzh nat br fol. 92. E. See Trespas See the diuers use of this writ in the Register originall in the table Transcript anno 34. 35. H. 8. cap. 14. is the copy of any originall writen againe or exemplified Transcripto Recognitionis factae coram Iusticiariis itiner antibus c. is a writ for the certifiing of a Recognisance taken before Iustices in Eire into the Chauncery Register orig fol. 152. b. Transcripto pedis finis levati mittendo in Cancellariam is a writ for the certifiing of the foote of a fine leuied before Iustices in Eyre c. into the Chauncerie eodem fol. 169. Register Iudiciall fol. 14. Travers cōmeth of the French Traverser i. transfigere It signifieth in our common lawe sometime to denie sometime to ouerthrow or vndoe a thing done Touching the former signification take these words in Wests symbol parte 2. titulo Chauncery sect 54. An answer saith he speaking of an answer 〈◊〉 a bille in Chauncerie is that which the Defendant pleadeth or saith in barre to avoide the plantiffes bille or action either by confession and avoiding or by denying and traversing the materiall parts thereof And againe sectio 55. A replication is the plaintifles speech or answer to the Defendants answer which must affirme and persiew his bille and confesse and auoide deny or traverse the Defendants answer And the formall words of this trauers are in Lawyers French sans ceo in Latine absque hoc in English without that See Kitchin fol. 227. titulo Affirmatiue Negatiue In the second signification I find it in Stawnfords praerog cap. 20. through the whole chapter speaking of trauersing an office which is nothing else but to proue that an inquisition made of goods or lands by the Eschetour is defectiue and vntruly made So trauersing of an Inditement is to take issue vpon the chiefe mater thereof which is none other to say then to make contradiction or to deny the point of the Enditement As in presentment against A. for a
columna 1. whereupon because the foreyner neede not be tryed in that Court the record and cause is remooued to the common plees c. See of this Fitz. nat br fol. 6. E. Vser de action is the persiewing or bringing of an action which in what place and countie it ought to be See Brooke titulo Lieu Countie fol. 64. Vse vsus is in the originall signification plaine enough but it hath a proper application in our common lawe and that is the profit or benefit of lands or tenements And out of M. Wests first parte of his simbol lib. pri sect 48. 49. 50. 51. and 52. I gather shortly thus much for this purpose Euery deede in writing hath to be considered the substance and the adiuncts Touching the substance a deede doth consist of two principall parts namely the premisses and the consequents The premisses is the former parte thereof and is commonly saide to be all that which preceedeth the Habendum or limitation of the estate which be the persons contracting and the things contracted The consequent is that which foloweth the premisses that is the Habendum In which are two limitations the one of the estate or propertie that the party passiue shall receiue by the deede the other of the vse which is to expresse in the said Habendum to or for what vse and benefite he shall haue the same estate And of the limitation of those vses you may read many presidents set downe by the same author in his second booke of his saide first part sectio 308. and so forth to 327. These vses were inuented vpon the statute called West 3. or Quia emptores terrarum before the which statute no vses were knowne Perkins Devises 528. And because mens wits had in time devised many deceits by the setling of the possession in one man and the vse in another there was a statute made anno 27. H. 8. ca. 1. wherby it was inacted that the vse and possesssion of lands and possessions should alway stand vnited New expositour of lawe termes verbo Vse v. Coke lib. 1. Chudleise case fol. 121. seqq Vsher Ostiarius commeth of the French Huissier i. Accensus apparitor Ianitor It signifieth with vs first an officer in the Eschequer of which sort there be foure ordinarie vshers that attend the cheife officers and Barons of the court at Westminster and Iuries Shyreeues and all other accoumptants at the pleasure of the court Therbe also Vshers in the Kings house as of the priuy chāber c. Vtas Octavae is the eight day following any terme or feast as the vtas of Sainct Michaell the vtas of Sainct Hilary the vtas of Sainct Martine of Sainct Iohn Baptist of the Trinitie c. as you may reade anno 51. H. 3. stat concerning generall daies in the Benche And any day betweene the feast and the eighth day is saide to be within the vtas The vse of this is in the returne of writs as appeareth by the same statute Vtfangthef is an auncient Royaltie graunted to a Lord of a maner by the King which giueth him the punishment of a theefe dwelling out of his liberty and hauing committed theft without the same if he be taken within his fee. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. who in his third booke tract 2 ca. 35. seemeth rather to interpret the word then to expresse the effect and saith thus Vtfangthef dicitur extraneus latro veniens aliunde de terra aliena qui captus fuit in terra insius qui tales habet libertates It seemeth to be compounded of these three words Vt fang thef which in our moderne English be oute take or taken Theefe Of this Fleta hath these words vtfangenthef dicitur latro extraneus veniens a liunde de terra aliena qui captus fuerie in terra ipsius qui tales habet libertates Sed non sequitur quod possit ille hominem suum proprium extra libertatem suam captum reducere vsque in libertatem ibi eum iudicare reducere tamen poterit indicatum iudicium in proprio patibulo exequiratione libertatis commodum tamen non video Debet enim quilibet iuri subiacere vbi deliquit proprios tamen latrones alienos iudicare possunt dum tamen infra libertatem fuerint capti c. Vtlaghe significat bannitum extra legem Fleta li. 1. cap. 47. See Vtlawrie Vtlagato capiendo quando vtlagatur in vno comitatu postea fugit in alium is a writ the nature whereof is sufficiently expressed in the words set downe for the name thereof See the Register originall fo 133. Vtlawrie vtlagaria aliâs vtlagatio is a punishment for such as being called into lawe and lawfully sought doe comtēptuously refuse to appeare And as Bracton saith li. 3. tract 2. ca. 11. He that is siewed must be sought and called at 5. counties a moneth being betweene euery countie to answer to the lawe And if he come not within that time pro exlege tenebitur cum principi non obediat nec legi ex tunc vtlagabitur that is as the author of the termes of lawe saith he shal be pronounced by the coroner to be out of the Kings protection and depriued of the benefit of the lawe The effect of this is diuers as the same Author saith for if he be outlawed in an action personall he meaneth at the suite of another in a ciuile cause he shall forfeit all his goods and cattells to the King if vpon felonie then he shall forfeit all his lands and tenements that he hath in fee simple or for terme of his life and his goods and cattles Bracton vbi supra nu 5. saith that such as be out-lawed vpon felonie ex tunc gerunt caput lupinum ita quod sine iudiciali inquisitiene ritè pereant secum suum iudicium portent meritò sine lege pereunt qui secundum legem viuere recusarunt Et haec ita si cum capiendi fuerint fugiant vel se defendant si autem vivi capti fuerint vel se reddiderint vita illorum mors erit in manu Domini Regis See Horns mirrour of Iustices lib. 3. cap. des fautes punishables Bracton saith in the place aboue specified with whome also Fleta agreeth lib. 1. cap. 27. that a Minor or a woman cannot be outlawed But take his owne words Minor verò qui infra aetatem 12. annorum fuerit vtlagarinon potest nec extra legem poni quia ante talem aetatem non est sub lege aliqua nec in Decenna non magis quàm foemina quae vtlagari non potest quia ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlaugh Anglicè sc in frāco plegio sive decenna sicut masculus 12. annorum vlteriùs Et ideo non potest vtlagari Waiviari tamen bene potest pro derelicta haberi cum pro felonia aliqua fugam fecerit siue ceperit Est enim waiuium quod nullus aduocat nec
lib. 2. cap. 41. § Item inquiratur 12. and Cromptons Iurisd fol. 194. in these words without warrant no subiect may haue within the Forest a vacarie But in the statute anno 37. H. 8. cap. 16. I finde vacharie to be as it were a speciall proper name of a certaine quantitie and compasse of ground within the forest of Ashedowne Valewe valentia valor The word is in it selfe plaine enough But I cannot omitte one place in M. West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 70. V. W. touching the difference betweene value and price These be his words And the value of those things in which offences are committed is vsually comprised in Inditements which seemeth necessary in thest to make a difference from perit larceny and in trespas to aggrauate the faulte and increase the fine But no price of rhings ferae naturae may be expressed as of deere of hares c. if they be not in Parks and warrens which is a liberty anno 8. Ed. 4. fol. 5. nor of charters of land And where the number of the things taken are to be expressed in the Inditement as of yong Doucs in a Doue house yong haukes in a wood there must be saide pretii or ad valentiam but of diuers deade things ad valentiam and not pretii of coine not current it shal be pretii but of co●ne current it shall neither be saide pret● nor ad valentiam for the price and value thereof is certaine But of counterfeit coine shall bee said ad valentiam and in couterfeiting of coine shall not be said decem libras in denariis Dominae Reginae nor in pecunia Dominae Reginae but ad instar pecuniae Dominae Reginae Valour of mariage Valore maritagii is a writ that lyeth for the Lord hauing profered covenable mariage to the Infant without disparidgement against the Infant comming to his yeares if he refuse to take the Lords offer And it is to recouer the value of the mariage Regist orig fol. 164. old nat br fol. 90. Variance commeth of the French varier i. alter are it signifieth in the common lawe an alteration or change of condition after a thing done For example the communality of a towne make a composition with an Abbot Afterward this towne by a graunt from the king obteineth Bayliffes This is a variance and in this case if the Abbotcōmence any suite for breach of the composition he must varie from the words of the communalty set downe in the Composition and begin against the Bayliffes and the Communalties Brooke tit Variance fol. 292. It is also vsed for an alteration of some thing formerly laide in a plee which is easilier knowne what it is then when it may be vsed as it appeareth by Brooke through the whole title aforesaide See variance in the newe booke of Entries Vassall vassallus signifieth him that holdeth land in see of his Lord Hot. verbo Feudal we call him more vsually a tenent in fee whereof some owe fidelitie and seruice and are called vassalli iurati some that owe neither and are called vassalli iniurati But of this later sort I thinke that in England we haue not any Of these thus writeth Hotoman in his disputations vpon the Feuds cap. 3. Propriè is vassa dicitur qui ab Imperatore regale feudum accepit vassallus autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diminutivo nomine qui ab illo feudale beneficium adeptus est quasi qui in vassi fide clientela est c. M. Skene de verbor signif verb. Ligentia saith that vassallus is diuided into homologum non homologum Homologus is he that sweareth seruice with exception of a higher Lord and non homologus is he that sweareth with out exception all one with Ligeus And the same author verb. Vassallus saith that it is vassallus quasibassallus id est inferior soctus From the French bas i. humilis dimissus and the Dutch word gesel i. socius his reason is because the vassall is inferior to his master and must serue and reuerence him and yet he is in maner his companion because each of them is obliged one to the other He saith farder out of Cuiacius lib. prim de Feud that leades leodes fideles homines nostri feudatarii ministeriales beneficiarii beneficiati vassalli signifie almost all one thing And a litle after he saith thus In the lawes of the Feuds vassallus is called fidelis quia fidelitatem iurat Amongst vassals the first place of dignitie is giuen to them that are Duces Marchion●s Comites and are called Cap●tanti Regni The second is granted to Barons and others of like estate and are called Valvasores Maiores The third to them who are called Gentlemen or Nobles holding of Barons which also may haue vnder them vassals that be Gentlemen And such vassals holding in chiefe of Barons are called Valv aso●ts minores And they which hold of Gentlemen are called vassalli valvassini seu minimi valvasores But in this Realm he speaketh of Scotland they that hold of Barons are called Milites and they that hold of them are called subvassores Thus fa●e M. Skene Vasto is a writ that lyeth for the heire against the tenent for terme of life or of yeares for making waste or for him in the Reuersion or Remainder Fitzh 〈◊〉 br fol. 55. Regist orig fol. 72. 76. and Regist Iudic. fol. 17. 21. 23. 69. v. anno 6. Ed. pricap 5. Vavasour vavasor aliâs valvasor is one that in dignitie is next vnto Baron Camden Britan. pag. 109. Bracton lib. prim cap. 8 saith thus of this kind of men Sunt alii potentes sub Rege qui dicuntur Barones hoc est robur belli sunt alii qui dicuntur Vavasores viri magnae dignitatis Vavasor enim nihil meliùs dici poterit quàm vas sortitum ad valetudinem Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludio Feudorum tit prim num 4. c. calleth them valvasores and giueth this reason of it Quia assident valva i. portae Domini in festis in quibus consueueruat homines curtizare eis reuerentiam exhibere propter Beneficium eis collatum sicut libertus patrono M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 108. hath these words of them Primus etiam Normannorum temporibus Thani proximi à Comitibus in dignitate censebantur Et valvasores maiores si illis qui de feudis scribunt credimus iidem fuerunt Barones Venditioni exponas is a writ Iudiciall directed to the Vndershyreeue commaunding him to sell goods that he hath formerly by commaundement taken into his hands for the satisfying of a iudgement giuen in the kings Court Register Iudicial fol. 33. b. Venire facias is a writ Iudicall and goeth out of the Record lying where two parties plead and come to issue sc vpon the saying of the country For then the party plaintiffe or Defendant shall haue this writ directed to the Shyreeue that he cause to come twelue lawfull men
of the same country to say the truth vpon the sayd issue taken And if the Enquest come not at the day of this writ returned then shall goe a habeas corpora and after a distresse vntill they come old nat br fol. 157. See how diuersly this writ is vsed in the table of the Register Iudiciall There is also a writ of this name that is originall as appeareth in the Register orig fol. 200. b. which M. Lamberd in his processes annexed to his Eirenarcha saith to be the common proces vpon any presentment not being felony nor especially appointed for the fault presented by statute Whereof he setteth downe an example in the same place See also the new booke of Entries verbo Enquest fol. 253. columna 1. 2. 3. Venire facias tot matronas See Ventre inspiciendo See Lamb. Eirenarcha li. 4. ca. 14. pa. 532. Venew vicinetum is taken for a neighbour or neare place As for example twelue of the Assise ought to be of the same Venew where the Demaund is made old nat br fol. 115. and in the statute anno 4. H. 4. ca. 26. anno 25. H. 8. ca. 6. I finde these words And also shall returne in euery such panell vpon the venire facias sixe sufficient Hundreders at the least if there be so many within the Hundred where the Venew lyeth Ventre inspiciendo is a writ for the search of a woman that faith shee is with childe and thereby withhouldeth land from him that is the next heire at the common law Register originall fol. 227. a. Verdour viridarius commeth of the French verdior i. Saltuarius vel custos nemoris he is as M. Manwood parte pri of his forest lawes pag. 332. defineth him a Iudiciall officer of the Kings forest chosen by the King in the full county of the same shire within the forest where he doth dwell and is sworne to maintaine and keepe the Assises of the forest and also to view receiue and inrolle the Attachments and presentments of all maner of trespasses of the forest of vert and venison And the same authour vpon the first artitle of Canutus charter in the beginning of the same part saith that these in the Saxons times were called Pagened being foure in number and they chiefe men of the forest as then they were Their fee was in Canutus time each of them euery yeare of the Kings allowance two horses one of them with a saddle another of them without a saddle one sword fiue Iauelins one speare one shield and ten pounds in money These foure as appeareth by the said charter nu 11. had regalem potestatem and might proceede to a threefold iudgement And if any man offered them or any of them violence if he were a free man he should loose his freedome and all that he had if a villein he should loose his right hand All the officers of the forest were to be corrected and punished by them ibidem nu 10. The verdour is made by the Kings writ Cromptons Iurisd fol 165. the forme of which writ you haue in Fitzh nat br fol. 164. which is directed to the Shyreeue for the choice of him in a full County by the assent of the said County Yet if a verdour bee sodainely sicke or dead at the time of the Iustice seate a new may be chosen without a writ Manwood parie prim pag. 72. the office is as Crompton saith loco allegato properly to looke to the vert and to see that it be wel maintained Also when any forfeiture is taken in the Forest before the Foristers or other ministers the price thereof shall be deliuered to the verdour who is to answer for it before the Iustices in Eyre And if he die his heire is chargeable therewith Crompton ibidem The forme of his oath at his admittance you may see in Manwoods first part of his Forest lawes pag. 51. who there calleth him verderour aliâs verdictor You shall truly serue our Soueraigne Lord the King in the office of a verderor of the Forest W. you shall to the vttermost of your power and knowledge do for the profit of the King so farre as it doth apperteine vnto you to do You shall preserue and maintaine the auncient rights and franchises of his Crowne you shall not conceale from his Maiestie any rights or priuiledges nor any offence either in vert or venison or any other thing You shall not withdraw nor abridge any defaults but shal endeuour your selfe to manifest and redresse the same and if you cannot doe that of your selfe you shall giue knowledge thereof vnto the King or vnto his Iustice of the Forest You shall deale indifferently with all the Kings liege people you shall execute the lawes of the Forest and do equall right and iustice as well vnto the poore as vnto the rich in that appertaineth vnto your office you shall not oppresse any person by colour thereof for any reward fauour or malice All these things you shall to the vttermost of your power obserue and keepe Their office is farder expressed eodem pag. 93. which is to sit in the court of attachment to see the attachments of the Forest to receiue the same of the Foresters and Woodwards that do present them and then to enter these Attachments into their rolles Verdict veredictum is the answer of a Iurie or Enquest made vpon any cause ciuill or criminall committed by the court to their consideration or triall And this verdict is two-fold either generall or especiall Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 9. A general verdict is that which is giuen or brought into the Court in like generall termes to the generall issue as in an action of disseisin the Desendant pleadeth No wrong no disseisin Then the issue is this in generall whether the fact in question be a wrong or not And this committed to the Iurie they vpon consideration of their euidence come in and say either for the plaintiffe that it is a wrong and disseisin or for the Defendant that it is no wrong no disseisin And againe the prisoner at the barre pleading Not guiltie the Enquest in like generall termes bring in their verdict either for the King Cuilty or for the prisoner Not guilty A speciall verdict is that whereby they say at large that such a thing and such they find to be done by the Defendant or Tenent so declaring the course of the fact as in their opinions it is proued and for the qualitie of the fact they pray the discretion of the Court. And this speciall verdict if it containe any ample declaration of the cause from the beginning to the end is also called a verdict at large Whereof reade diuers examples in Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 9. and one or two in Litleton fol. 78. 79. See the new booke of Entries verb. Verdict Verge virgata may seeme to come from the French verger i. viridarium hortus It is vsed here in England for the compasse