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A53751 The reports of that late reverend and learned judge, Thomas Owen Esquire one of the justices of the Common pleas : wherein are many choice cases, most of them throughly argued by the learned serjeants, and after argued and resolved by the grave judges of those times : with many cases wherein the differences in the year-books are reconciled and explained : with two exact alphabeticall tables, the one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters therein contained. England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.; Owen, Thomas, d. 1598.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1656 (1656) Wing O832; ESTC R13317 170,888 175

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Ostensum est nobis returned in the Common Bench against Lee and Lovelace upon a scire Facias awarded against them and two Nihils return'd the Fine was reversed Anderson The scire Facias is not well awarded for it ought to be brought as well against those in possession as the Conufors and this appears by the 21 Ed. 3.56 by which they in possession and those in remainder ought to be made privy Walmesley agreed for the Freehold which is in me shall not be taken from me without making me privie no lesse then if A. bring a Precipe against B. of my land and recover for I shall have an Assise upon this Also another matter is in the Case For the land now in question is alledged to be parcell of the Mannor of Andover and therefore cannot be ancient Demesne But no Iudgment was at this time given because there were but two Iustices Halling against Comand IN an action of Covenant the case was thus Comand the Defendant did covenant with the Plaintiff that at the Costs and charges of the Plaintiff be would assure certaine land for the Ioynture of the Plaintiffs wise before M●ch●e mas And the Plaintiff declared that no assurance was made nor tender before the said Michaelmas And hereupon the Defendant demurred for that the charges should have been offered before the assurance 3 H. 74.23 Eliz. Dyer Anderson in the 35 36 Eliz. F●ste● did covenant with Franke to make an assurance at the costs and charges of Franke and Franke brought a Covenant and Foster Demurred because no charges were tendred to him it was adjudge against Fester for Franke could not have cognizance what manner of assurance should be made and so could not tell what charges to tender and therefore he ought first to shew him what manner of assurance he should make and according to that he ought to tender reasonable Charges Walmesley But the charges ought to precede the assurance but the declaring of what manner of assurance should be made ought first to be done Beaumond of the same opinion Michaelm 38 Eliz. Damport against Sympson IN an action on the Case the Plaintiff declared that he had given to one Spilman certain Iewells to Traffique with them beyond the Seas and that he had not fold them but had delivered them to the Defendant who had spoild them whereupon the Plaintiff brought an action against the said Spilman and upon not guilty pleaded they were at issue and the now Defendant at that evidence did Depose upon his oath that the Iewells were worth but 200 l. whereas they were worth 800 l. by reason whereof the Iury gave indeed but 200 l. damages and for this false oath he brought this action and the Iury upon not guilty pleaded found for the Plaintiff and assessed 300 l. damages And now it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the action would not lie no more than against those informe a Iustice of Peace of Fellony upon his oath against J. S. 20 H. 7.11 Also the party grieved hath his remedy in the Star-Chamber And Walmesley said that for perjury there was no remedy and so is it in the 7th Eliza. Dyer 243. a. for it is not to be thought that a Christian would be perjur'd and in the 2d H. 6.5 a Conspiracy will not lye against Indictors who informe their company of their oath Wherefore It was adjudg'd that this action did not lie Note that Anderson was against this Iudgment but Walmesley Owen and Beumond were against him FINIS The Table of the principall matters contained in this Book Abatement WHere the Resignation of a Bishop Dean or Parson shall abate the writ and where not 30 31 Where the writ shall abate for not naming the party according to his Dignity or Office and where not 61 In trespass against two the writ shall not abate for the death of one 107 Admirall Where he hath Jurisdiction and where not 122 123 Action and what words will beare Action Slanderous words of several kinds 13 17 18. vide Slander where the Lessee for years by intrusion shal have an Ejectment and so in case of the King 18 What Action the Lessee of an Intruder or Copyholder of the King shall have if he be outed 16 Where an Action will lye for slanderous words spoken or for any of them and of a slander in writing 30 Action of Trover good against the Husband onely though the wife made the conversion 48 Action of debt by an Administrator durante minoritate not good 35 VVhere a second Action for the same matter shall be brought and where not 37 For warranting sheep sound 60 VVhere a Trespass or Detinue shall lye for Goods taken and sold 70 VVhat Action for a Dogg Ferret or Hawk 94 VVhere two shall joyn in the action and where not 106 Non-suit of one Non-sult of both in a personall action 107 For a Fine in the Leet brought by the Lord 113 VVhere an action of Trover will lye for money 113 Account For fish in a Pond 19 Account will not lye where is no privity 35 36 Against a Receiver 36 Severall actions of Account 36 Administrator vide Executors Advowson VVhere by the presentment of another the King shall be said to be out of possession 43 Grant of the next avoidance by a Letter 47 Advowson appendant to a Mannor and the Mannor is granted yet the Advowson will not pass 53 VVhere the Patron shall dispose of the Advowson though thre be a deprivation 151 Age. The Heir of the Tenant in tail that is impleaded during life of the Tenant by Curtesie shall not have his age 33 Aide Difference between Tenant at wil and Tenant at sufferance in case of praying aide 29 By him in reversion 43 Where the Tenant praies in aide of a stranger it shall be a forfeiture 81 Alien Debt by an Administrator alien Born 45 Who shall be accounted an alien enemy 45 Amendment Where the Habeas Corpus distringas shall be amended though the Venire be well returned 62 Amends vide payment Annuity Where the husband shall have an action of debt for the arrears of an Annuity granted to the wife before marriage 3 Granted by him that hath no Estate what remedy for the Grantee 3 From a Corporation 75 No Dower to the Bargainees wife before inrolement 70 Where the suing or recovering of Dower shall be accounted the waving of the Assignment of Dower 150 Entry WHere the Entry of the Lessor on the Lessee shall not avoid the Covenant of the Lessee 65 The Lord shall not have a Cessavit after entry in parcell 66 Where the entry of the Discontinuee shall avoid the fine of the Tenant in tail 75 76 VVhere the discent of the Intruder on the King shall not take away the entry of the Kings Feoffee 45 Entry into a house to demand money where good 114 Error Error in Judgment whether amendable 19 VVhere a writ of Error by the husband and wife within age shall
607. Replevin WAkefeild brought a Replevin against Cassand who avowed for Damage-feasant And the Plaintiff prescribed that D. is an ancient Town c. and that all the Inhabitants within the said Town except the Par●ion Infants and some particular houses have used to have Common to their houses c. The Avowant shewed that the house to which Common was claimed was built within thirty years last past And whether he shall have Common to this new erected house was the question on a Demurrer Shuttleworth he shall have this Common by prescription but not of common right Gawdy the Prescription is against common reason that he should have Common time cut of mind c. to that which hath not been thirty years and he hath excepted the Parson Infants and such particular houses and by the same reason may exceptall and therefore it is not good But it was adjudged no good Prescription for if this be a good Prescription then any body may create a new house so that in long space of time there will be no Common for the ancient Inhabitants Periam By such Prescription the Lord shall be barred to improve the Common which is against reason Anderson The Common is intire for if H. hath Common appendant to three Messuages and enfeoff one of one Messuage another of the second and another of the third the Common in this case is gone But all agreed that it is impossible to have a Common time out of mind c. for a house that is builded within the thirty years Mich. 29 and 30 Eliz. Rot. 2299. Bishop of Lincolns Case Quare Impedit THe Queen brought a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Lincoln and Thomas Leigh to present to the Church of Chalsenut Saint Giles in the County of Bucks The case was thus H. being qualified took two Benefices which were above the value of eight pounds and after took a third Benefice above the said value whereby the first Benefice became void and so remained for two years whereby Title of Lapse accrued to the Queen and before presentment made by the Queen the Patron did present one A. who being admitted instituted and inducted did refuse to pay 38 l. 2 s. ob due to the Queen for the Tenths which matter was certified by the Bishop into the Exchequer whereupon and by force of the Statute of the 26 H. 8. the Church is ipso facto void wherefore the Bishop the now Defendant being Patron in right of his Bishoprick did present Thomas Leigh the other Defendant against whom the Queen brought her Quare Impedit And it was adjudged by the Court that the Quare Impedit very well lies for the Recusancy to pay the Tenths was his own act and is a Resignation and by that reason she Church is void and this shall not hinder the Queen of the Lapse But if A. the Incumbent who was presented dies being presented by usurpation upon the Lapse to the Queen yet afterwards the right Patron shall present again But when A. the Incumbent doth resigne and make the Church void by his own Act viz. by Recusancy as in this case is done this may be done by Collusion and by such means the Queen may be deprived of her Litle by Lapse for if this Collusion between the Bishop and the Incumbent be suffered then may a stranger present upon the Title of the Queen and presently such Recusancy and Certificate may be made by which the Church shall become void and so the Queen deprived of the Lapse Fenner this Lapse is given to the Queen by her Prerogative but on condition that she take it in due time for such is the nature of the thing Lapsed as is in this case adjudged viz. That when the Queen hath Title to present by Lapse and doth not present but the Patron presents and after the Church becomes void by the death of the Incumbent In this case adjudged by the Court also the Queen cannot present but in this case the avoidance being by privation and not by death Iudgment was entred for the Queen Trin. 19 Eliz. in Com. B. Hales Case Debt on ● Bond. SAmuel Hales brought an Action of Debt on a Bond against Edward Bell and the Condition of the Bond was that if the said Bell should pay to the said Hales forty pounds within forty daies next after the return of one Russell into England from the City of Venice beyond the Seas that then the Obligation to be void and the Defendant pleaded in Bar that the said Russell was not in Venice upon which the Plaintiff demurred And adjudged by all the Iustices that it was no good plea for in such cases where parcell is to be done within the Realm and parcell out of the Realm the tryall shall be within the Realm 7 H 7.9 Trin. 28 Eliz. in Com. Ban. Haveringtons Case 1974. Debt by an Administrator HAverington and his wife as Administratrix of one Isabell Oram brought an Action of Debt against Rudyand and his wife Executrix to one Laurence Kidnelly the Case appeared to be thus Farmer for thirty years did devise to his wife so long as she shall be sole and a Widow the occupation and profits of his terme And after her Widowhood the Residue of the terme in the Lease and his interest in it to Reynald his Son the Devisor dies and the wife enters according to the Devise And afterwards he in the Reversion by Indenture Dedit concessit vendidit Barganizavit totum illud tenementum suum to the wife and her Heires and did also covenant to make further assurance and to discharge the said Tenement of all former Bargains Sales Rights Joyntures Dowers Mortgages Statute-merchants and of the Staple Intrusions Forfeitures Condemnations Executions Arrearages of Rents and of all other charges except Rents Services which shall be hereafter due to the Lords Paramount And then the Reversioner and his wife levied a Fine to the uses aforesaid and after the Devisee takes husband and thereupon the Son enters in the terme And the Administrator of the wife brought an action of debt upon an Obligation for the performance of the Covenants of the Indenture against the Administrator of the Reversioner And Judgment for the Plaintist And it appeared by the Record that these points following were adjudged to be Law although that the latter matter was onely argued 1. That the wife of the Reversioner who had Title of Dower in the Land is concluded of her right of Dower by the Declaration of the uses of the Fine by the husband onely which Fine is after levied by them joyntly because no contradiction of the woman appears that she doth not agree to the Vses which the husband selely by his Deed of Indenture had declared 2. To Devise that the wife shall have the occupation and profits during her Widowhood is a good Devise of the Land it self during such time See Plow 524. And that no Act which she can do
are in my possession and they are evicted by the right Owner a Covenant will lye contra if I have not possession at the time of the letting them and if I let land and J.S. enter before the Lessee the Lessee cannot have a Covenant Quod nota Et ad journe●ur 35 Eliz. Scarret against Tanner in C. B. Rot 1458. IN a false Imprisonment the Defendant justified that he was High Constable of the Hundred of E. in the County of ●…p and that the Plaintiff made an affray within the said Hundred upon one Walm who came presently to the Defendant and told him of it and took his oath that he was in fear of his life whereupon the Defendant came to the Plaintiff and arrested him and carried him to Prison untill he could finde sufficient Sureties of peace Glanvill A Constable cannot arrest one to finde surety of the peace upon a complaint made to him unless he himself sees the peace broken 7 Ed. 4. Kingsmill contr For he is at Common Law Conservator pacis 12 H. 7.18 And how can he keep the peace if he may not compell them to finde surety 44 Ed. 3. Barr. 2●2 If a man that is threatned complain to the Constable he may compell the party to finde surety for his good behaviour and may justifie the imprisoning him or putting him in the Stocks 22 Ed. 4.35 10 Ed. 4.18 where a Constable in such case may take a Bond. Anderson I grant that Constables are keepers of the peace at the Common Law and are to keep the peace as much as in them lyes and that is to take men that they finde breaking the peace and to carry them to a Iustice of peace to finde surety but the Constable cannot take security nor recognizance nor bail for he is not an Officer upon Record and if he do take a Bond how shall he certifie it and unto what Court Walmesley contr Who said that the Constable might take security by bond although not by recognizance or bail Beaumond A Constable may put him that breaks the peace within the Stocks but it must be where the breach of peace is committed in his view for he hath no authority to take an oath that a man is in fear of his life and then the foundation of his justification doth fail Owen The oath is not material for although he cannot take such oath yet his taking of surety is good and before Iustices of peace were made the peace was preserved by Constables and the Statute that creates Iustices does not take away the power of Constables and therefore he may justifie Sed adjournatur Pasch 38 Eliz. Worsley against Charnock in C. B. IN an audita quaerela the Case was thus The father and son were bound in a Statute-Merchant to Charnock who sued out an Execution against them and their lands were severally extended and they supposing that the Statute was not good because it was not sealed with both their seals according to the Statute they both brought a joynt audita querela and whether they could joyn in this Action or not was the question Warburton They shall not joyn for in all cases a man must make his complaint according to his grief and here their grief is several as it two men be imprisoned they shall not joyn in a false imprisonment The same Law in a Battery 8 Ed. 4. 18 H. 6. 10 Ed. 4. It J.S. hath goods of divers men they shall not joyn in a Replevin and 33 H. 6. two men shall not joyn in an audita quaerela unless the land in execution is in them joyntly and 29 Ed. 3. two Ioynt-tenants Infants alien they shall have several Writs of Cum fuit infra ae●atem But he confessed the Case in 30 Ed. 3. Fitzherbert audita quaerela where two men were in Execution and the Conusor did release to one and then to another by another Release yet both shall joyn in an audita quaerela but this is not Law and besides they cannot recover damages joyntly by reason of their several vexations and this Action being personal damages cannot be severed Vid. 2 Ed. 3. Execution 45. 9 Ed. 4.31 12 Ed. 4.6 Harris contra And as to the last reason the Book in the 20 of Elizabeth is that no damages shall be recovered in an audita quaerela which if it be Law then is the doubt at an end And whereas it hath been said that they shall not joyn because their griefs are several methinks there is no reason but that if he that survives shall be charged with the whole that they shall joyn also in their discharge for if their charge be joynt their discharge shall be joynt also And in the 34 H. 6. and 30 Ed. 3. where an audita quaerela may be brought joyntly and he resembled this to the Case of a Monstraverunt where if a Tenant in antient demesn be distreyned all the Tenants shall joyn because the grievance to one may be a grievance to all the rest Yelverton of the same opinion Tho suing of the Execution was the cause of the audita quaerela but not the ground for the ground was the Statute-merchant and therefore it is here brought according to the Statute Anderson If two men do me several Trespasses yet I may have a joynt Action against them and the death of one of them shall not abate the Writ but if two are Plaintiffs in a personal Action the non-suit of one shall be the non-suit of the other and in our case the Statute was joynt and also the Execution then if all the Writs are so the audita quaerela which is to discharge them shall be joynt also especially in this Writ where they are as it were Defendants and therefore he resembled this Case to a Writ of Errour or an Attaint brought by two joyntly and one is non-sued yet this shall not abate the Writ because they are in a manner Defendants Walmesley contr The Action ought to be brought according to the cause of the wrong and the wrong begun in suing the Execution and that was several and therefore the audita quaerela ought to be several also but if this Statute had been good and had been discharged by release or defeasance then the audita quaerela might be brought joyntly for then the ground of the execution was joynt but here is but a colourable Statute and the cause of the Action is not begun before the Execution sued Owen and Beaumond agreed and after by assent of Anderson Iudgement was given that they ought to have several Writs Note Pasch 36 Eliz. in B. R. Rot. 323. or 521. between Curteise and Overscot If A. did recover against B. by two several Iudgements whereby B. is in Execution it was adjudged that he shall not have one audita quaerela but two several Writs Pasch 37 Eliz. Sawer against Hardy in B. R. Rot. 254. IN an Ejectment the Case was this A woman was Lessee for forty years sub
for the goods themselves are not to be recovered in this action nor damages for them and so they are but collaterall to the action as in 10 Edw. 3.30 In a Rescous the Court was for taking of Cattle without shewing what Cattle and the Iury found them to be two horses and the Plaintiff had judgment where note that a verdict did help an insufficient Court and 22 A●si 21 Ed. 3. a trespass was brought for taking away of Writings concerning land without shewing what they were or the quality of the land But otherwise in a detinue for Charters for there the Writings themselves are to be recovered The second and great doubt was when a man doth promise to another that if he will deliver the pawn he will pay the debt if this be a sufficient consideration to maintain an Assumpsit Foster Justice It is not for he that hath the pawne hath not such an interest in it as he may deliver it over to another or make a legall contract for it and that his delivery being illegall he cannot by his own wrong raise an action to himself and a man shall never maintain any action where the consideration is illegall and not valuable 9 Ed. 4. In an action on the Case the Defendant pleaded an accord and that he delivered the writing to the Plaintiff which concern'd the land and it was held no plea because the Plaintiff having land the writtings belonged to it And cited Reynolds Case where a man promised another 100 l. to solicite his business and it was holden that no action would lie for the money because the soliciting his business was illegall he being no man of Law Dier 355 356. Cook Warburton and Daniell cont Who said that the consideration was good legall and profitable and sufficient to maintain an assumpsit for he who hath goods at pawn hath a speciall property in them so that he may work such pawn if it be a Horse or Oxe or may take the Cowes milk and may use it in such manner as the owner would but if he misuseth the pawn an action lyes also he hath such interest in the pawn as he may assign over and the assignee shall be subiect to a detinue if he detaines it upon payment of the money by the owner as in the 2. assise Land was leased untill he had raised 100 l. he hath such interest as is grantable over And Foster agreed to this because he had power to satisfie himself out of the profits And it was agreed by the Court that if a man takes a distress he cannot work the distress for it is only the act of the Law that gives power to the distress for he hath no propertie in the distress nor possession in jure as in the 21 H. 7. Replevin A man hath returne Irreplevisable he cannot worke them for the Iudgment is to remit them to the pound ibid. remansurum vid. 13 R. 2 Brook 20 H. 7 1 a. 34 H. 8. B● pledges 28.22 Edw. 4 11. goods pawned shall not be put into execution untill the debt be satisfied And it was agreed by Cook and Warburton that when a man hath a speciall interest in a thing by act in Law that he cannot work it or otherwise use it but contrary upon a speciall interest by the act of the partie as in case of a pawn Daniell There is difference between pawns which are chargeable to the parties as Cowes and Horses and things that are not chargeable and also there is a difference between pawnes that will be the worse by usage as Clothes c. For if the pawn be the worse by usage an action of the Case will lie against him that hath them pawned to him But contra of goods that are not the worse for usage Cook If I deliver goods to you untill you are promoted to a benefice you may use them which Foster denied And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff and that they may be granted over and so a good assumpsit will lie 26 Eliz. Earl of Northumberlands Case THis case was privately argued before the Lord Treasurer because the parties agreed to refer themselves to the opinion of Wray and Anderson And the case was this the Earl of Northumberland devised by his will his Iewells to his wife And dyed possessed of a Collar of Esses and of a Garter of gold and of a Buckle annexed to his bonnet and also of many other buttons of gold and pretious stones annexed to his robes and of many other chains bracelets and rings of gold and pretious stones The question was if all these should passe by the devise under the name of Iewells And both Iustices did Resolve that the Garter and Collar of Esses did not pass because they were not properly Iewells but ensignes of Honour and State and that the Buckle in his bonnet and the buttons did not pass because they were annexed to his Robes and were therfore no Iewells But for all the other chaines rings braceletts and Iewells they passed by vertue of the said Will. Michaelm 40 41 Eliz. Sperke against Sperke in C. R. Rot. 2215. IN an ejectment the Case was this M. Sperke made a Lease of the land in question to William Sperke for 89. years if William should so long live the remainder after his death to the Executors or Assignes of the said William for 40. years afterwards William dyes Intestate and administration is committed to Grace Sperke his wife who entred clayming the 40. years and the Defendant clayming by another Lease entred upon him and he brought this action A●d●…on Executor is as good a name of purchase as Heire is And I conceive the points in this case are two First if the Administrator be an assignee Secondly If the lease for 40. years be a Chattell vested in the Intestate in his life for if it be then his Administrator shall have it And as to the first I conceive that she is not assignee to take these 40 years For in the 19 Ed. 3. It is there said that Administrators are not assignees for administration is appointed by the ordinary and assignees must be in by the party himself and not by a stranger and therefore an Administrator cannot be an assignee as an Executor that comes in by the partie or as a husband for his wife Walmesley and Glany●… accorded But Kingsmill cont for he said that although one could not be assignee in Deed without the act of the partie yet one may be assignee in Law by the act of the law And so the opinion of the ● Iustices to the first point was that the Administrator could not have it as assignee and as to the second point Anderson said that it could not vest for if a man have a Lease for life the remainder for 40. years the remainder is voyd because there is no person named to whom it is limited but if a man make a Lease for life and after his death to his lessee for
Administration it is at the election of the Plaintiff to sue him as Executor or Administrator 9 Ed. 4.33 21 H. 6.8 2 Rich. 2.20 18 Ed. 4. Walmesley agreed for the Statute of the 27 Eliz. hath made voyd the Testators gift and sub●ata causa toll ●ur effectus and the gift being taken away the property is also taken away from the Donee and setled in the Donor as to any Creditor To which the other Iustices agreed and Iudgement was given for the Plaintiff Trinit 43 Eliz. George Brooks Case in C. B. Rot. 1822. GIbson recovered in a Debt against Bro●k as Executor to J.S. 60 l. and 6 l. damages and upon a scire facias to the Sheriff he returns no Assets and then upon the estate which was in L●ndon which the Defendant had wasted and so●d a fieri fac●as was awarded to the Sheriff of L●…don with a Commission to the Sheriff of London to enquire if he had Assets at the day of the Writ c and by the inquest it was found that he had Assets at the day of the Writ purchased c. and that he had wasted the estate which was thus return'd by the Sheriff against which the Defendant took issue that he had not Assets and upon this was a a Demurr Walmesley A man may avert against the return of a Sheriff if the return be a matter collateral as if upon a Ca●ias the Sheriff returns a Rescous there may be an averment against this 4 Eliz. 212. a. But if it be in pursuance of the Writ as non est inventus there no averment shall be taken against this but here the return is the saying of the Inquest and not his own saying Warburton I conceive he shall have an averment and traverse or else he shall be without remedy for he cannot have an Action on the Case against the Sheriff because he returns that which was found by the Inquest and so not like where the Sheriff returns falsly without such Inquest and no attachment lyes because it is but an Inquest of office and after it was moved at another day and a president shewn 33 Eliz. in B. R. between Westner and Whitenore and there it was adjudged that such return of the Sheriff was traversable and Anderson and Kingsmill agreed to it wherefore Iudgement was given for the Defendant and that the issue was well taken Day against Fynn IN an Ejectment the Plaintiff declared of a Lease for years of a house and 30 acres of land in D. and that J. S. did let to him the said Messuage and 30 acres by the name of his house in B. and ten acres of land there sive plus sive minus it was moved in arrest of Iudgement because that 30 acres cannot pass by the name of 10 acres sive plus sive minus and so the Plaintiff hath not conveyed to him 30 acres for when 10 acres are leased to him sive plus sive minus these words ought to have a reasonable construction to pass a reasonable quantity either more or less and not twenty or thirty acres more Yelverton agreed for the word 10 acres sive plus sive minus ought to be intended of a reasonable quantity more or less by a quarter of an acre or two or three at the most but if it be 3 acres less than 10. the Lessee must be content with it Quod Fenner Crook concesserunt and Iudgement was staid Smith against Jones IN an Action of the Case upon an Assumpsit the Case was that the wise of Jones was Executrix to J.S. and had Assets to satisfie all Debts and Legacies The woman dyes and the goods remained in the hand of her husband who was the Defendant and Smith the Plaintiff being a Legatee demanded his debt of the husband who said to him Forbear t●ll Michaelmas and I will pay you and if this was sufficient cause of Action was the question on a Demurrer Davies The promise is voyd because it is after the death of the wife Yelverton The Action will lye because he hath the ●oods in his possession and therefore is chargeable and must answer for them and therefore there is a good consideration And he cited Godfreys Case who laid claim to a Copyhold and the Copyholder in possession said to him If the opinion of the Lord Cook be that Godfrey hath a good title to it I will surrender it to him and because he did not surrender to him Godfrey brought an Action on the Case and it was adjudged that the staying of the suit was a sufficient consideration to have an Action on the Case Yelverton If the promise had been to pay this Legacy in consideration he would not sue him then it had been good Williams If there be no cause of suit there is no assumpsit and here is no just cause for he cannot be sued for Legacies Flemming of the same opinion for the husband cannot be sued by the Plaintiff and although perhaps the Legatee may sue him in the spirituall Court yet that is only for the temporall administration And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Defendant Michaelm 9. Jacob. Kempe and James against Laurence in C. B. Rot. 3648. IN a scire facias the case was thus Gant having two daughters made his wife Executrix untill his daughters came to the age of 21. years or should be married and then the Executorship should cease and that then his daughters should be his Executors and the woman did recover a debt upon a bond made to the Testator after which the daughters marryed the Plaintiffs and they brought the scire facias upon the said Judgment against the Defendants as terre-tenants and the Sheriff return'd the Defendants terre-tenants and no others and upon Oyer of the scire facias the Defendants pleaded that H. was se●sed of those lands die Judicii reddit and made a Lease for years to them Iudgment c. Nichols The daughters shall have this judgment as Executors for they are in privity and in by the Testator and are not like an Administrator who comes in by the Ordinary after the death of the Executor 6 H. 8.7 Cook 5. Rep. Brudnells Case and the daughters are Executors and subject to debts of the Testator And as to the plea he said that forasmuch as the Defendants are returned terre-tenants they cannot plead that they are but tenants for years and that their Lessor is not warned for the scire facias is a personall action to have execution but of the goods but in a reall action it is a good plea because the lessor himself cannot plead in discharge of such action 8 H. 6.32 And note that Michaelm 43 44. Eliz. Rot. 834. Iudgment in the very same point was given accordingly Trinit 9 Jacob. Information against West in C. B. Rot. 1246. IN an Information upon the Statute of the 5 of Ed. 6. cap. 14. for buying of wheate-meale and converting it into starch It was resolved by three of the
the wife is at large to have the twelve pound and her Dower also But the Court held that she could not have her joynture for by the recovery of the Dower her joynture is barred for the Rent was given her in recompence of her Dower so that it cannot be intended that she shall have Rent Dower also wherefore it was adjudged that her entry on the Land was not good 30 31 Eliz. The King against the Bishop of Canterbury and Hudson Rot. 1832. IN a Quare impedit Hudson the Incumbent did plead that King Edw. the 4th did grant the Rape of Hastings Et bona catalla Fellonum Fugitivorum ategat of all Residents and non-residents within the said Rape to the Earl of Huntington And pleaded that John Ashborne was seized of the Mannor of Ashborne and of the advowson appending to it and held the same of the Earl of Huntington as of his Rape of Hastings and that the said John Ashborn was outlawed during which the Incumbent of the said Church dyed and the Earl presented the said Hudson Shut I conceive this avoydance does not belong to the Earl by reason of this grant for by the same Patent libertie is given to the said Earl his heirs to put himself into possession and of such things as he cannot put himself into possession they will not passe and here this is a thing in action which by these words will not passe 19 H. 6.42 by the grant de Catalla Fellonum obligations do not passe VValmesley Stanford in his prerogative saith that by the words Bona catalla the King shall have the presentation to the Church of him that is outlawed or Attaint and by the same reason he may grant it by such a name and although the party cannot seise such a thing yet it shall passe 39 H. 3.35 Rent for years shall passe by the grant of bona Catalla Periam It will passe by these words for it is an ancient grant for in that time the Patents of the King were not so specially penned as now they are Anderson I conceive the avoydance will not passe by thse words for within this word bona moveables are contained both dead and living and Avoydance is no Chattell nor right of Chattell Quod Peryam negavit c. Mich. 37 38 Eliz. Townsend against VVhales IN an Ejectment the Iury found that J.S. was seized of land in possession and also in reversion for terme of life and made a Devise by these words That his Executors take the profit of all his Lands and tenements Free and Copy for ten years for the payment of his debts and Legacies and after the end of the said ten years that all the aforesaid lands and tenements with their appurtenances should be sold by his Executors or one of them and the silver to be bestowed in the performance of his Will or by the Executors of his Executors or any of them and then one of the Executors dyed within the ten years and the two surviving Executors did grant all aswell in possession as in reversion to House who made a Lease to the Plaintiff And two points were resolved 1. That the Executors may grant the reversion 34 H. 6. for by these words Free and Copy his intent appears that all should be granted 2. That although one of the Executors died yet the other two Executors may sell Anderson If such bevise had been at the Common Law and one Executor had refused the two others could not sell but if one die the survidors may sell the land for there the authority doth survive Which difference the other Iustices agreed to And at another day Anderson said there was difference where the Devise is that Executors should sell his and the money divided between them there if one die the others shall not sell but otherwise here because the money is the performance of his will Walmesley The sale by the two Executors is good for it is said the Executors or any of them c. And Beaumond agreed Wherefore judgment was given for the Plaintiff Note that there were two verdicts in this case and the first only found that the Executors shoull sell after the ten years and that one dyed and the other two did sell within the ten years and the opinion of the Court was that the sale was voyd but in the 39 and 40 Eliz. all the whole will was found and Iudgment given ut supra The Earle of Rutlands Case Roger Earl of Rudand and John Maners and others Executors to John late Earl of Rudand Executor to Edward Earl of Rutland brought an action on the case against Isabell Countess of Rutland And Declared for divers Iewells and goods c. that came to the hands of John Earl of Rudand as Executor to the said Edward and the said John the 10th of July 29 Eliz. did casually loose them which after came to the hands of the Defendant licet saepius requisita she would not deliver them to the said John in his life time nor to the said Plaintiffs after his death but knowing the goods did belong to the Plaintiffs in D. in the County of Notingham converted them to her proper use And a verdict for the Plaintiff And it was moved often in arrest of Iudgment but all the Iustices agreed that the action of Trover and converversion would lie by the Executors upon the Satute of the 4 Ed. 3. upon a conversion in vita Testatoris and so hath it been adjudged in the Kings Bench and although the Statute mentions onely a Writ of trespass that is only put for example Also they all agreed that the sole cause of action to the Conversion for it there were no conversion they shall be put to their Detinue therefore the great doubt did arise because the day and time of the conversion was not shewed for perhaps it was after the Writ and before the Declaration And also if it was in vita Testatoris they should have this action by the 4th of Ed. 3d. But at length Walmesley said That all Iustices of the Common Pleas and of Serjeants Inne in Fleet-street besides Peryam Chief Baron were of opinion that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiffs for that some of them held that the day of the Conversion is not materiall to be shewn and others that of necessity as this case is it shall be intended that the conversion was in the Plaintiffs time wherefore Iudgment was entredfor the Plaintiffs but a Writ of Errour was brought and the Case much debated Michaelm 38 39 Eliz. Carew against Warren in C. B. Rot. 1945. GUnter Tenant in Tasle of Lands in antient Demesn made a Lease for 60. years to J.S. and for security thereof levied a Fine to Lee and Loveland who rendred to Gunter in Fee who devised the reversion to his wife for life the remainder in Fee and dyed And then the Lord of Andover which is an ancient Mannor by an