Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n abatement_n abbot_n call_v 18 3 6.5445 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Book of Entries fo 63 c. 205. d. 519. c. where this word Abatement is called in Latin Intrusio And I think it better to call it in Latin Interpositio ot Intratio per interpos ● ionem make a difference between this word and Intrusio after the death of the Tenant for life Abbot ABbot was the sovereign head or Chief of those Houses which when they stood were called Abbies and this Abbot with the Monks of the same House who were called the Covent made a Corporation Such a Sovereign of any such House shall not be charged by the Act of his Predecessor if it be not by common Seal nor for such things which come to the use of his House Also an Abbot shall not be charged for the debt of his Monk before his entry in Religion though the Creditor have an especialty thereof except it have come to the use of his House but the Executors of the Monk shall be charged therewith Look for this in the Abridgements the same Title under which you shall see that some of them were elective some presentative and how they were made Governours and their Authority And in this Title are also comprehended all other Corporations Spiritual as Prior and his Covent Friers and Canons Dean and Chapter Abettors ABettors are in divers Cases diversly taken One Kind of Abettors are they that maliciously without just cause or desert do procure others to sue false Appeals of Murther or Felony against men to the intent to trouble and grieve them and to bring them to infamy and slander Abettors in Murthers are those that command or procure counsel or comfort others to Murther And in some case Abettors shall be taken as Principals and in some case but as Accessories So in other Felonies And their presence at the deed doing and their absence makes a difference in the case There are Abettors also in Treason but they are as Principals for in Treason there are no Accessories See more in the Book called Pleas of the Crown made by the Reverend Judge Sir W. Stamford in the Titles of Accessories and Dammages in Appeal Abeyance ABeyance is when a Lease is made for term of life the Remainder to the right Heirs of J. S. who is living at the time of the Grant now by this Grant the Remainder passes from the Grantor presently yet it vests not presently nor takes hold in the Grantee that is the right Heir of J. S. but is said to be in Abeyance or as the Logicians term it in posle or in understanding and as we say in the Clouds that is in the Consideration of the Law That if J. S. die having a right Heir and living the Lessee for life then this is a good Remainder and now vests and comes to the right Heir in such sort as that he may grant forfeit or otherwise dispose the same and ceases to be any more in Abeyance for that there is one now of ability to take it because J. S. is dead and hath left a right Heir in life which could not be living J. S. for that during his life none could properly be said to be his Heir Also if a man be Patron of a Church and presents one to the same now the Fee of the Lands and Tenements pertaining to the Rectory is in the Parson But if the Parson die and the Church become void then is the Fee in Abeyance until there be a new Parson presented admitted and inducted for the Patron hath not the Fee but only the right to present and the Fee is in the Incumbent that is presented and after his death it is in no body but in Abeyance till there be a new Incumbent as is aforesaid See Litt. Lib. 3 cap. 11. fo 145. and Perkins fol. 12. Abishersing ABishersing and in some Copies Mishersing is to be quit of Amerciaments before whomsoever of Transgression proved Abjuration ABjuration is an Oath that a Man or Woman shall take when they have committed Felony and fly to the Church or Church-yard or to any other place priviledged for safeguard or their lives chusing rather perpetual Banishment out of the Realm than to stand to the Law and be tryed for the Felony In which Case before the Coroner he shall make such Confession which may make a sufficient Indictment of Felony Then the Coroner at the Common Law shall make him forswear the Realm and assign to him what Port he shall go and shall swear him that he go not out of the High way and that he abide not at the Port if he may have good passage above one flood and one ebb and if he cannot have Passage then he shall go every day during xl days in the Sea to the knees But if such a Felon as abjures goes out of the High way and flies to another place if he be taken he shall be brought before the Iudge and there shall have Iudgment to be hanged And if he who so prays the privilege will not abjure then he shall have the priviledge for xl days and every man may give him meat and drink And if any give him sustenance after xl days although it be his Wife such giving is Felony Also he that doth abjure shall be delivered from one Constable to another and from one Franchise to another till he come to his Port and if the Constable will not receive him he shall be grievously amerced See the Oath in the Treatise De abjuratione Latronum This Law was instituted by S. Edward the Confessor a King of this Realm before the Conquest and was grounded upon the Law of mercy and for the Love and Reverence he and others his Successors did bear unto the House of God or place of Prayer and Administration of his Word and Sacraments which we call the Church Note this Law is now changed by the Statutes 21 H 8. cap. 2. 22 H. 8. cap. 14. and 32 H. 8. cap. 12. by which it appears that he at this day shall not abjure the Realm but all his Liberty of this Realm and all his liberal and free habitations resorts and passages from all places of this Realm to one certain place in this Realm thereto limited by 32 H. 8. cap. 13. and 33 H. 8. c. 15. See more in Stamf. li. 2. c. 10. and see the Statutes 1 Jac. c. 25. and 21 Jac. c. 28. for the repeal of all Statutes concerning Abjured persons and the taking away of all Sanctuaries See the Statutes of 35 El. chap. 12. for the Abjuration of Recusants and Stat. 1 Jac. c. 25. Abridgement of a Plaint or Demand ABridgement of a Plaint or Demand is where one brings an Assise Writ of Dower Writ of ward or such like in which cases for that the Writ of Assise is de libero tenemento as in a Writ of Dower the Writ is Rationabilem dotem quae contingit de libero tenemento W. her husband and in a Writ of ward the Writ is Custo ● terrarum
LES TERMES DE LA LEY OR Certain difficult and obscure Words and Terms of the Common Laws and Statutes of this Realm now in use expounded and explained Now Corrected and Enlarged With very great Additions throughout the whole Book never Printed in any other Impression Hor. Multa renascentur quae jam cecidere cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula si volet usus LONDON Printed by W. Rawlins S. Roycroft and M. Flesher Assigns of Richard and Edward Atkins Esquires For G. Walbanke S. Heyrick J. Place J. Poole and R. Sare 1685. To the READER I Need not strive much to prove the necessity of this Book if you consider that the most accomplished Pleader that ever charm'd his Author with Eloquence and Reason began with it much less shall I have difficulty to shew its profitableness to any who looks about and sees how many fair Estates are every day gained by the Professors of this Noble Science to which this little Book must open the door and let them in But least of all need I suspect that whoever is convinced of these two Points its Necessity and Profitableness will fail to peruse and esteem it Though no name of any Authour appears to it yet my Lord Cook in his preface to his Tenth Report ascribes it to William Rastal that reverend Judge who was eminently knowing both in the Common and Statute Law of this Land as appears by the many Leraned Expositions and Excellent Cases which every where occur in it And we may probably guess it to be written by him originally in French only having some cause to suspect the Translation to be done by a less skilful Hand For though by the many Impressions of it and carelesness of Printers it has suffered much as other Books of like nature daily do yet some Objection lay against the Translator himself as to omit others Chapter is defined to be Locum in quo fiunt communes tractatus Collegiatorum which was Englished thus odly A Place wherein common Tracts of men Collegiate are made And for Errors of the Press they were very numerous and strangely unhappy as disseised for die seized Common Law for Canon Law deep for deer necessary for accessary tiel for viel rather for either owner for power c. In devastaverunt sans compulsion was Englished by compulsion In the word Gild two whole Lines were omitted in the English and the French imperfect so likewise in Garranty and other words There was also a mistake in Geography in the word Pape where Rome was said to be 1500 miles from hence full 500 too much And still as Impressions were iterated Errat's increased Besides the very many Faults which were thus crept into this Book it was so extreamly misalphabeted that some words could not be found without much difficulty I had almost said not at all for if the Reader finds not the word he seeks in its true place he commonly lays by the Book with despair To remedy these encreasing Evils I was willing to bestow my endeavour First by adding above an hundred Words with Explications in their proper places and making references to others where needful Secondly by Correcting the whole Work in what I found amiss and retrenching some antiquated and tautological Expressions as they occurred Thirdly by adding to some old words such late Statutes as alter or concern the Law established by them And lastly by digesting the whole into an exact Alphabet and taking care to prevent Errors of the Press That I intended well I can give you but my word how I have performed I make my Reader Judge Inner Temple T. B. TERMS OF THE LAW EXPOUNDED Abate ABate seems to come from the French Abbatre is to destroy or defeat utterly and has several significations As to Abate a Castle or Fortlet Old Natura brev fo 45. which in Westem 1. cap. 17. is interpreted to beat down And to abate a Writ is to defeat or overthrow it by some Error or Exception Britton cap. 48. And he that steps in between the former possessor and his Heir is said to abate in the Lands See Abatement Abatement of a Writ or Plaint ABatement of a Writ or Plaint is when an Action is brought by Writ or Plaint wherein is want of sufficient and good matter or else the matter alledged is not certainly set down or if the Plaintiff or Defendant or Place are misnamed or if there appear variance between the Writ and the Specialty or Record or that the Writ or the Declaration be uncertain or for Death of the Plaintiff or Defendant and for divers other like causes then upon those defaults the Defendant may pray that the Writ or Plaint may abate that is to say that the Plaintiffs Suit against him may cease for that time and that he shall begin again his Suit and bring a new Writ or Plaint if he be so disposed But if the Defendant in any Action plead a matter in Bar to annul the Action for ever he shall not come afterwards to plead in Abatement of the writ but if after it appear in the Record that there is some matter apparent for which the Writ ought to be abated then the Defendant or any person as a friend to the Court may well plead and shew it in Arrest of Iudgement See the titles of Writ Misnosmer and Variance in the Abridgements and the Book called The Digests of Writs in which this matter especially is very well handled There are also other matters Which abate and stay Actions and Writs that is to say Variance between the Writ and the Count. If the Plaintiff be an alien Enemy For want of naming the Defendant of what Town Trade or degree he is where the Suit is by Writ That a Woman Plaintiff is married before or hanging the Suit That the Plaintiff hath another Action depending for the same cause That the Writ is dated before the Action accrued For that the Defendant ought to be sued in another Court of which he is an Attorney or Officer For that the Land is ancient demesne For that the matter in Suit was done upon the high Sea in which case the Admiral hath Iurisdiction These csuses underneath do not abate the Writ or Action but suspend the prosecution for a time If the Plaintiff in Action personal be out-law'd or convicted of Recusancy or Excommunicated Vpon a Scire facias against ter ' tenants for Debt plea that there are other Lands liable to the same Debt which are not returned doth stay the Proceedings until they be also returned Abatement in Lands ABatement in Lands or Tenements is when a man dies seised of Lands or Tenements and one that hath no right enters into the same before the Heir this Entry is called an Abatement and he an Abator But if the Heir enter first after the death of his Ancestor and the other enter upon the possession of the Heir this last entry is a Disseisin to the Heir Look in
bloud that is Brothers by the Fathers side because they had both one Father and are both of his bloud and not Brothers at all by the Mothers side nor of bloud nor kin that way and therefore the one of them cannot be Heir to the other for he that will claim as Heir to one by discent must be of whole ● bloud to him from whom he claims In the same manner it is if a woman have divers issues by divers husbands who are called Brothers by one Mother Denariata terrae DEnariata Terrae See Fardingdeal Denelage DEnelage is the Law that the Danes made here in England cut of which and Merchenlage and Westsaxonlage William the Conquerour composed certain Ordinances to be observed by his subjects Denizen DEnizen or Donaison is where au Alien born becomes the Kings Subject and obtains the Kings Letters Patents to enjoy all Priviledges as an English-man but if one be made Denizen he shall pay Customes and divers other things as Alien as it appears by divers Statutes thereof made It seems that Donaison is the true name so called because that his Legitimation is given to him and not Denizen as derived from Deins nee And the Law is so precise in the making of Denizens that the King cannot grant power to any other to make Aliens born Denizens it is by the Law so inseparably and individually annexed to his Royal person for the Law esteems it an high Prerogative to make Aliens Subjects of the Realm and capable of Lands and Inheritances as natural born Subjects are And therefore the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 24. which reunites many of the most ancient Prerogatives and Regal Flowers of the Crown makes no mention of any authority to make Letters of Denization to be resumed for that never any claimed it be any pretext whatsoever it being so high a point of Prerogative See Cok. l. 7. Calvins Case Deodand DEodand is when any man by misfortune is slain by a Horse Cart or any other thing that moves to further his death such thing which at the time of his misfortune did move or cause his death shall be sorfeit to the King and that is called Deodand and that pertains to the Kings Almoner for to dispose in Alms and Deeds of Charity But it is not forfeited untill the matter be found of Record and therefore they cannot be claimed by Prescription and the Iury that finds or presents the death by such misadventure ought also to find and appraise the Deodand Co. l. 5. f. 110. If a Horse strikes one and afterwards the Owner sells the Horse and then the party that was stricken dies of the stroke in this case the Horse shall be forfeited as a Deodand notwithstanding the sale for relation shall be had to the stroke which was before the sale Plow Com. 260. b. What move to death or kill the dead Are Deodand and forfeited Departure from a Plea or matter DEparture from a Plea or matter is where a man pleads a Plea in bar and the Plaintiff replies thereto and he after in his Rejoynder pleads or shews another matter contrary or not pursuing to his first Plea that is called a Departure from his Bar. As if a man pleads a general Agreement in bar and in the Rejoynder he alledges an especial Agreement this shall be adjudged a Departure in Pleading So in Trespass if the Defendant will plead a discent to him and the Plaintiff saith that after this the Defendant enfeoffed him and the Defendant saith that this Feoffment was upon Condition for the breach whereof he entred this is a Departure from the Bar for it is a new matter See Plow Com. f. 7. 8. Departure in despight of the Court. DEparture in despight of the Court is when the Tenant or Defendant appears to an Action and hath a day over in the same Term or is called after though he had no day given him so that it be in the same Term if he do not appear but make Default it is a Departure in despight of the Court and therefore he shall be condemned And it is to be observed that Departure in despight of the Court is always of the part of the Tenant or Defendant and the Entry thereof is Quod praedictus A licet solenniter exactus non revenit sed in contemptum Curiae recessit Defaltam fecit and this is when in judgement of the Law he is present in Court and being demanded departs in despight of the Court this amounts to a Bar in respect of the Despight and Contempt of the Court. See Cok. lib. 8. f. 62. Deprivation DEprivation is when an Abbot Bishop Parson Vicar Prebend c. is deprived or deposed from his Preferment for any matter in Fact or in Law As if a Miscreant or Schismatick be presented admitted and inducted there is good cause of Deprivation So if a meer Lay-man be presented admitted instituted and inducted yet he shall be deprived or if the Incumbent hath Plurality of Benefices or subscribe not to the Articles of Religion according to the Stat. of 13 Eliz. cap. 12. By the Statute of 21 H. 8. cap. 13. it is enacted That if any person having a Benefice with Cure of souls of the yearly value of eight pounds or more accepts or takes any other with Cure of souls and be instituted and inducted into the possession thereof the first Benefice shall be void and the Incumbent in this case is outed or deprived by Cession In which case the Bishop needs not give notice to the Patron because the Deprivation is by Act of Parliament to which every one is party and ought to take notice at his peril But otherwise it is if the first Church be not of the yearly value of eight pounds for then it is void meerly by the Ecclesiastical Law See Co. l. 4. f. 76. and l. 7. 43 b Deputie DEputie is he that exercises in another mans right either Office or any other thing and his forfeiture or misdemeanor shall cause the Officer or him whose Deputy he is to lose his Office But a man cannot make his Deputy in all cases except the Grant so be as if it be with these or such like words To exercise or use by himself or his sufficient Deputy or if the words go farther To himself or his Deputy or the Deputy of his Deputy then he may make a Deputy and his Deputy also may make a Deputy or else not As if the Office of a Parkership be granted to one he cannot grant this over to another because it is an Office of trust and confidence and shall not be forfeited And there is great diversity between Deputy and Assignee of an Office for an Assignee is a person that hath an Estate or interest in the Office it self and doth all things in his own name for whom his Grantor shall not answer unless it be in especial cases and a Deputy hath not any Estate or interest in the Office but is only
the Province against any inferiour Ordinary for Delaying Iustice in any Cause Ecclesiastical as to give sentence or to institute a Clerk presented or such like the effect of which is That the Archbishop taking knowledge of such Delay directs his Letters under his authentical Seal to all and singular Clerks of his Province thereby commanding and giving authority to them and every of them to admonish the said Ordinary within nine days to do the Iustice required or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in the said Letters prefixed and there to alledge the cause of his Delay and lastly to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he performs not the thing injoyned nor appears at the day assigned he himself without other Delay will proceed to perform the Iustice required And it seems to be called a Double Quarel because it is most commonly made against the Iudge and him at whose request Iustice is delayed Dower DOwer by the Law of the Realm is a Portion which a Widow hath of the Lands of her husband which by the Common Law is the third part but by her husbands assignment by his fathers assent at the Church-door she may have so much of his fathers Land as is so assigned and so of the husbands assignment of part of his own Land And Dower by the Custome of some places is to have half the husbands Land Dower is also a Writ that lies where a man is sole seised during the Coverture between him and his wife of Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple or Fee-tail where by possibility the issue between them may inherit if such a man die his wife shall recover the third part of all the Lands whereof the husband was sole seised any time during the Coverture by a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet though he died not seised and though he made Alienation thereof in his life But if a man before the Statute of Vses 27 H. 8. had Lands in which another man or other men were seised to his use always during the Coverture and he to whose use they were seised died before the said Statute his wife should not be endowed And if before the said Statute two men were seised of Lands to the use of one of them and he to whose use c. died before the said Statute his wife should not be endowed Also if a woman bring a Writ of Dower she should recover Dammages for the profit run after the death of her husband if he died seised thereof but if any Alienation or Estate were made during the Coverture so that the husband died not seised then though she should recover the Land yet no Dammages Also there is another Writ of Dower called a Writ of Right of Dower which lies where a woman hath recovered part of her Dower in one Town and the other part she is to recover But in divers cases a woman shall not have Dower as if the husband commit Treason for which he is attainted then his wife shall have no Dower And if she elope from her husband with another man in Adultery and be not reconciled to him of her own will without coercion of the Church she shall not be endowed See Lit. l. 1. cap. 4. And note where in the Civil Law Dower is that which the husband hath with his wife in Marriage to maintain the married estate by the Laws of this Realm the word Dower signifies such Portion as the wife after her husbands death shall have to live on Dozeine DOzeine See Deciners Drie Exchange DRie Exchange Anno 3 H. 7. cap. 5. Seems to be a subtile term invented to disguise Vsury in which something is pretended to pass on both sides whereas in truth nothing passes on the one side Drift of the Forest DRift of the Forrest is nothing else but an exact view or Examination taken once twice or oftner in a year as occasion shall require what Beasts there are in the Forrest to the end that the Common in the Forrest be not over-charged that the Beasts of Foreiners that have no Common there be not permitted and that Beasts not commonable may be put out See for this the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 35. and Manwoods Forrest Laws cap. 15. Right RIght is where one hath a thing that was taken from another wrongfully as by Disseisin Discontinuance or such like the Challenge or Claim of him that ought to have it is called Right If a woman release all her Right to him in Reversion her Dower is extinct for when the Right which is the foundation and principal is released by Consequence the Action which is but the means to recover is also released By Release of all Title to the Land all his Right is extinct So when a man hath Title either by Condition or by Alienation in Mortmain the Release of all his Right shall extinguish this Title Cok. lib. 8. fol. 151 153. Right of Entry RIght of Entrie is when one seised of Land in fee is thereof disseised now the Disseisee hath Right to enter into the Land and may so do when he will or else may have a Writ of Right against the Disseisor Duces tecum DUces tecum is a Writ out of the Chancery commanding a man to appear there and to bring with him some piece of Evidence or other thing that the Court would have a sight of Dum fuit infra Aetatem DUM fuit infra aetatem is a Writ that lies where an Infant aliens his Land in Fee-simple or for term of life when he comes to his full age he shall have this Writ or he may enter if he will but he must be of full age the day of his Writ brought Also if an Infant alien his Land and die his issue at his full age shall have this Writ or he may enter but the issue shall not have this Writ within his age Dum non fuit compos mentis DUM non fuit compos mentis is a Writ that lies when a man that is out of his wit viz. Mad or Lunatick aliens his Land in Fee-simple and dies then his Heir after his decease shall have this Writ but he himself shall not have it for that a man shall not be received to disable himself Also this Writ may be made in the Per Cui and Post Duplicat DUplicat is a Second Letters Patents granted by the Lord Chancellour in case where he hath granted the same before and therefore they are held void by Crompton in his Jur. of Courts fol. 215. Duresse DUresse is where one is kept in Prison or restrained from his Liberty contrary to the order of Law or threatned to be killed maimed or greatly beaten and if such person so in Prison or in fear of such Threatnings make any Specialty or Obligation by reason of such Imprisonment such a Deed is void in Law and in an Action brought upon such a Specialty he may say it was made by Duresse
time their Reservations were as well in Victuals as Money until at the last and that chiefly in the time of King Henry the First by agreement the reservation of Victuals was turned into ready Money and so hitherto hath continued amongst most men Fate or Fatt FAte or Fatt is a Measure mentioned in the Statutes of 1 H. 5. cap. 10. and 11 H. 6. cap. 8. to contain eight Bushels but the Citzens and Merchants of London as it appears by those Statutes and the Kings Purveyors would have that measure and a Bushel over for one Quarter and so they had nine Bushels for one Quarter of Corn. Faux Imprisonment FAux Imprisonment is a Writ that lies where a man is arrested and restrained from his Liberty by another against the order of the Law then he shall have against him this Writ whereby he shall recover Dammages See more thereof before tit Arrest Faux Judgment FAux Judgment See thereof before tit Error Fealty FEalty is a Service called in Latine Fidelitas and shall be done in this manner viz. The Tenant shall hold his right hand upon a Book and shall say to his Lord I shall be to you faithful and true and shall bear to you Faith for the Lands and Tenements which I claim to hold of you and truly shall do you the Customs and Services that I ought to do to you at the terms assigned So help me God and shall kiss the Book but he shall not kneel as in doing Homage And thereof see after in the Title Homage Also Fealty is incident to all manner of Tenures Fee FEE Feodum is in our Law an equivocal word of divers significations for it is most usually taken for an Estate of Inheritance in Lands and Tenements to one and his Heirs or to one and the Heirs of his Body But it is used also for the Compass Circuit or Extent of a Lordship or Mannor And from thence comes the ordinary Plea in Bar to an Avowry That the Land upon which he avows is out of his Fee And thirdly it is taken for a Reward or Wages given to one for the execu ● 〈◊〉 of his Office as the Fee of a Forrester or the Keeper of a Park or a Sheriffs Fee sor ● erving an Execution lim ●● s by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap 4. And it is also taken for that Consideration which is given a Sergeant at Law or a Councellor or a Physitian for their Counsel or Advice in their profession which as it is well observed by Sir Jo. Davies in his Preface to his Reports is not properly Merces but Honorarium Yet in our Law-language it is called his Fee Fee expectant FEE expectant Where Lands are given to a man and his wife in Frank-marriage to have and to hold to them and their heirs in this case they have Fee-simple but if they are given to them and the heirs of their body c. They have Tail and Fee-expectant Kitch fol. 153. Fee Farm FEE Farm is when a Tenant holds of his Lord in Fee-simple paying to him the value of half or of the third fourth or other part of the Land by the year And he that holds by Fee-Farm ought not to pay Relief or do any other thing that is not contained in the Feoffment but Fealty for that belongs to all kind of Tanures Fee-simple FEe-simple is when any person holds Lands or Rent or other thing inheritable to him and his Heirs for evermore and these words His Heirs make the Estate of Inheritance for if the Land be given to a man for ever yet he hath but an Estate for life Also if Tenant in Fee-simple die his first son shall be his Heir but if he have no Son then all his Daughters shall be his Heirs and every one shall have her part by partition but if he have no Son nor Daughter then his next Coufin collateral of the whole Blood shall be his Heir Fel de se FElo de se is he that commits Felony by murthering himself See Crompt Justice of Peace fol. 28. Felony FElony is a general term which comprehends divers hainous Offences for which the Offenders ought to suffer death and lose their Lands And it seems that they are called Felonies of the Latine word Fel which is in English Gall in French Fiel or of the ancient English word Fell or Fierce because they are intended to be done with a fell fierce or mischievous mind When a man without any colour of Law steals the Goods of another amounting to the value of Twelve pence or more that is Larceny but if he approaches the Person of another in the High-way and robs him of his Goods although it be but to the value of one peny it is Felony and that is called Robbery and therefore he shall be hanged Fence-moneth FEnce-moneth is a Forrest word and signifies the time of 31 days in the year that is to say 15 days before Midsummer and 15 days after in which time it is forbidden for any man to hunt in the Forrest or to go into it to disturb the wild Beasts The reason of which is because the Female Deer do then Fawn And therefore this Moneth is called the Fence-moneth or Defence-moneth for that the Deer are then to be defended from scare or fear See Manwood Forrest Laws cap. 13. fol. 90. b. Feodarie FEodarie was an Officer in the Court of Wards appointed by the Master of that Court by virtue of the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 46. to be present with the Escheator in every County at the finding of Offices and to give in evidence for the King as well for the Value as the Tenure And his Office was also to survey the Lands of the Ward after the Office found to return the true value thereof into the Court to assign Dower unto the Kings Widows to receive all the Rents of the Wards Lands within his Circuit and to answer them to the Receiver of the Court But see the Stat. 12 C ● r. 2. c. 24. for Abolishing the said Court Feoffment FEoffment is where a man gives Lands Houses or other Corporal things which are Heritable to another in Fee-simple and thereof delivers Seisin and Possession Also if one make a gift in tail or a lease for life Livery and Seisin must be given or else nothing shall pass by the Grant Feoffor and Feoffee FEoffor is he that infeoffs or makes a Feoffment to another of Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple And Feoffee is he who is infeoffed or to whom the Feoffment is so made Ferdfare FErdfare is to be quit from going to War Flet. lib. 1. c. 47. Ferdwit FErdwit is to be quit of Murther committed in the Army Flet. l. 1. c. 47. Ferry IS a liberty by prescription or the Kings Grant to have a Boat for passage upon a great Stream for Cariage of horses and men for reasonable toll Feude FEude or Deadly Feude is a German word and signifies implacable Hatred not to be
who is therefore called the Incumbent of that Church because he doth bend all his study to the discharge of the Cure there Indicavit INdicavit is a Writ or Prohibition that lies for the Patron of a Church whose Clerk is Defendant in Court-Christian in an Action for Tithes commenced by another Clerk and extending to the fourth part of the Church or of its Tithes in which case the Suit belongs to the Kings Court by Westm 1. c. 5. Wherefore the Defendants Patron being like to be prejudiced in his Church and Advowson if the Plaintiff obtain in the Court-Christian has this means to remove it to the Kings Court Reg. orig fol. 35. and Britton c. 109. This Writ is not returnable but if they cease not their Suit he shall have an Attachment Inditement INditement See Enditement Indorsement INdorsement is that which is written upon the Back of a Deed as the Condition of an Obligation is said to be indorsed because it is commonly written on the Back of the Obligation Induction INduction is a lay act made by prescept of the Ordinary by which actual possession of the Church is given to the Rector or Vicar after his Presentation and Institution to it Infangtheef INfangtheef is a Priviledge or Liberty granted to Lords of certain Mannors to judge any Thief taken within their Fee Information INformation for the King is that which for a common person is called a Declaration and is not always done directly by the King or his Attorney but rather by some other man who sues as well for the King as for himself upon the breach of some penal Law or Statute wherein a Penalty is given to the party that will sue for the same but no Action of Debt to recover it therefore it must be had by Information Ingrosser INgrosser comes of the French word Grosier that is one that sells by Whole-sale But in our Law an Ingrosser is one that buys Corn Grain Butter Cheese Fish or other dead Victuals with an intent to sell the same again And so he is defined in the Stat. of 5 E. 6. c. 14. made against such Ingrossing Inheritance INheritance See Enheritance Inhibition INhibition is a Writ to inhibit a Iudge to proceed farther in the Cause depending before him And there is another Writ where after the Kings Presentment to a Benefice he presents another and inhibiteth the Bishop to give Induction to the first Presentee Plo. Com. 528. See F. N. B. f. 39. where he puts Prohibition and Inhibition together Inhibition is most commonly a Writ issuing forth of an higher Court-Cheistian to a lower and inferiour upon an Appeal Anno 24 H. 8. c. 12. and Prohibition out of the Kings Court of Record at Westminster to a Court-Christian or to an inferiour Temporal Court Injunction INjunction is an interlocutory Decree out of the Chancery sometimes to give Possession to the Plaintiff for defect of Apparance in the Defendant sometimes to the ordinary Courts of the King and sometimes to the Court-Christian to stay Proceeding in a Cause upon suggestiou made that if the rigor of the Law take place it is against Equity and Conscience in that Case See West part 2. tit Proceedings in Chancery sect 25. Inlagary INlagary or Inlagation is a Restitution of one outlawed to the Kings Protection or to the benefit condition of a Subject Inlaugh INlaugh signifies him that is sub Lege in some Frank-pledge not out-lawed of whom see Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 11. Inmates INmates are those persons of one Family that are suffered to come and dwell in one Cottage together with another Family by which the poor of the Parish will be increased And therefore by the Statute of 31 Eliz. c. 7. there is a Penalty of ten shillings a Month set upon every one that shall receive or continue such an Iumate Inquisition INquisition See Enquest Inrolment INrolment is the Registring Recording or Entring of any Act or Deed in the Chancery or elsewhere as of a Recognizance Fine Statute or Deed indented by the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 16. by which a Freehold shall pass Instant INstant in Latine Instans is defined by the Logicians A thing not dividable in Time which is not any Time nor part of Time to which yet the parts of time are conjoyned and much considered in the Law and though it cannot be actually divided yet in consideration and conceit it may be divided and applied to several purposes as if they were several times whereof see in Plowdens Commentaries in the Case between Fulmerston and Stuard where the Statute of 31 H. 8. which Enacted That if an Abbot within a year before the Statute had letten Lands to one who at the time of making that Lease had the same Land to farm for a term of years then not expired that the Lessee should have that Land only for twenty one years is expounded And there it is debated That when the Termor takes the second Lease he surrenders his former term and so at the same instant of taking the second Lease the former term is expired And in the Case between Petit and Hales he who kills himself commits not Felony till he be dead and when dead he is not in being so as to be termed a Felon but at the instant is in the Law so adjudged And there are many other Cases in Law where the instant time that is not dividable in nature in the consideration of the mind and understanding of the Sages of the Law is divided upon which arise many arguments of great use and profound learning Institution INstitution is a Faculty made by the Ordinary by which a Vicar or Rector is approved to be Inducted to a Rectory or Vicarage Interdiction INterdiction has the same signification in the Common as in the Canon Law where it is thus defined Interdictio est Censura Ecclesiastica prohibens administrationem Divinorum And so it is used 22 H. 8. cap. 12. Intrusion INtrusion is a Writ that lies against him that enters after the death of Tenant in Dower or other Tenant for Life and holds out him in the Reversion or Remainder for which see Fitz. N. B. fol. 203. E. And every entry upon the possession of the King is called an Intrusion as where the Heir of the Kings Tenant enters after Office and before Livery this is called an Intrusion upon the King as appears in Stanf. Prerog fol. 40. and many other Books Intrusion INtrusion See Entrusion Inventary AN Inventary is a Catalogue or Recital in Writing of all the Goods and Chattels of one that is dead with the Valuation of them by four several persons which every Executor and Administrator ought to exhibit to the Ordinary at the time appointed Jointenans JOintenants are where two men come to any Lands and Tenements by one joynt Title as if a man give Lands to two men and to their Heirs Tenants in common are where two have Lands by several Titles or by Feoffment to two
but he may enter and his Entry is lawful by R. Thorpe chief Justice 28 E. 3. 96. 45 E. 3. 25. Tales TAles is a Supply of men impannelled upon a Iury or Inquest and not appearing or at their appearance challenged for the Plaintiff or Defendant as not indifferent and in this case the Iudge upon Petition grants a Supply to be made by the Sheriff of some nien there present equal in Reputation to those that are impanneled and hereupon the very act of supplying is called a Tales de circumstantibus This Supply may be one or more and of as many as shall either make Default or else be challenged by each party Stamf. Plac. Cor. l. 3. c. 5. Howbeit he that hath had one Tales either upon default or challenge though he may have another yet he may not have the latter to contain so many as the former for the first Tales ought to be under the number of the principal Pannel except in a cause of Appeal and so every Tales less then other until the number be made up of men present in Court and such as are without exception to the party or parties See Stamford in the place before where you may find some exceptions to this general Rule See Brook f. 105. and Coke l. 10. f. 99. Bewfages Case Talwood TAlwood is a term used in the Statutes of 34 35 H. 8 c. 3. and 7 E. 6. c. 7. and 43 Eliz. cap. 14. and signifies such Wood as is cut into shore Billets for the sizing whereof those Statutes were made Tax and Tallage TAx and Tallage are Payments as Tenths Fifteens Subsidies or such like granted to the King by Parliament The Tenants in Ancient demesne are quit of these Taxes and Tallages granted by Parliament except the King to tax Ancient demesne as he may when he thinks good for some great cause See Ancient demesne Tenant Paravail TEnant Paravail See Paravail Tender TEnder is an act done to save a penalty of a Bond and of Mony for Rent or Contract before Distress or Action brought and where it may be pleaded and where refusal is peremptory Vide Coke 1 Institut 207 208 211. uncore prist Tenure in Capite TEnure in Capite is where any hold of the King as of his Person being King and of his Crown as of a Lordship by it self in gross and in chief above all other Lordships And not where they hold of him as of any Mannor Honor or Castle except certain ancient Honors which appears in the Exchequer See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Term of years TO hold for term of years is but a Chattel in effect 〈◊〉 no Action is maintainable against the Termour for recovery of the Free-hold no Free-hold being in him A Lease for Term of years is a Chattel real and all Goods which are removeable are Chattels personal Testament TEstament is thus defined in Plowdens Commentaries A Testament is a Witness of the mind and is compounded of these two words Testatio and Mentis which so signifie Truth it is that a Testament is witness of the mind but that it is a compound word Aulus Gelius lib. 6. cap. 12. doth deny to an excellent Lawyer Servius Sulpitius and saith it is a simple word as are these Calceamentum Paludamentum Paviamentum and divers such like And much less is Agreeamentum a compound Word of Aggregatio and Mentium as is said before in the Title of Agreement for there is no such Latine word simple or compound but it may nevertheless serve well for a Law-Latine word And therefore thus it may better be defined A Testament is the true Declaration of our last Will in that we would to be done after our death c. Of Testaments there are two sorts namely a Testament in Writing and a Testament in Words which is called a Nuncupative Testament which is when a Man being sick and for fear lest death want of memory or speech should come so suddenly upon him that he should be prevented if he staid the writing of his Testament desires his Neighbors and Friends to bear witness of his last Will and then declares the same presently by words before them which after his decease is proved by Witnesses and put in writing by the Ordinary and then stands in as good force as if it had at the first in the life of the Testator been put in Writing except onely for Lands which are not devisable but by a Testament put in Writing in the Life of the Testator Thanus THanus is a word which sometimes signifies a Noble-man sometimes a Free-man a Magistrate an Officer or Minister Lambert in the word Thanus Skene saith it is a name of dignity and appears to be equal with the son of an Earl And Thanus was a Free-holder holding his Lands of the King and a man taken with the manner accused of Larceny no sufficient proof being brought against him must purge himself by the Oath of 27 men or 3 Thanes The Kings Thanage signifies a certain part of the Kings Lands or property whereof the rule and government appertains unto him who therefore is called Thanus for the Kings Demains and the Kings Thanage signifies one and the same thing Theftbote THeftbote is when a man takes any Goods of a Thief to favor and maintain him and not when a man takes his own Goods that were stoln from him c. The punishment in ancient time of Theftbote was of Life and member But now at this day Stamford saith it is punished by Ransom and Imprisonment But enquire farther for I think it is Felony Them THem that is That you shall have all the generations of your Villains with their Suits and Cattel wheresoever they shall be found in England except that if any Bond-man shall remain quiet one year and a day in any Priviledged Town so that he shall be received into their Communalty or Guild as one of them by that means he is delivered from Villenage Tithes TIthes See Dismes Title TItle is where a lawful cause is come upon a Man to have a thing which another hath and he hath no Action for the same as Title of Mortmain or to enter for breach of Condition Title of Entry TItle of Entry is when one seised of Land in Fee makes a Feoffment thereof upon Condition and the Condition is broken after which the Feoffor hath Title to enter into the Land and may so do at his pleasure and by his Entry the Free-hold shall be said to be in him presently And it is called Title of Entry because he cannot have a Writ of Right against his Feoffee upon Condition for his right was out of him by the Feoffment which cannot be reduced without Entry and the Entry must be for the breach of the Condition Toft TOft is a place wherein a House once stood but is now all fallen or pulled down Tol or Tolne TOl or Tolne is most properly a payment used in Cities Towns Markets and