Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n day_n die_v end_n 4,289 5 5.3574 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
A90208 The practice of the Exchequer court, with its severall offices and officers being a short narration of the power and duty of each single person in his severall place. Written at the request of the Lord Buckhurst, sometime Lord Treasurer of England. By Sr. T.F. Whereunto are added the rules and orders of proceedings by English bill. Osborne, Peter, 1521-1592.; Fanshawe, Thomas Fanshawe, Viscount, 1596-1665, attributed name. 1658 (1658) Wing O527; Thomason E1928_1; ESTC R8740 61,106 176

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Terme while hee come in and plead as aforesayd He admitteth any such person that hath any such Land whereof the Tenant is returned Mortuns est or Nihil habet before the Dic. Tenement goeth forth thereof with a Nec non ad ostendend upon the sayd return to come into his Office and inroll there his licence or pardon of Alienation of the same Land and to shew his conveyance thereof and likewise to enroll his Livery speciall generall the Ousterlemain or after the course of the Chancery and upon the same enrollment and shew he doth admit such person to do his fealty and to pay his Fine upon a Writ made from the sayd enrollment and shew of his evidences to agree therewith without any manner of pleading because all such Writs be like the first writts inrolled from the originall and written out as aforesaid against the first tennant onely of the land by good matter of Record He upon all pleas put into his Office where the Kings Attorney may make an Averrment contrary to the plea of the partie and where the partie pleadeth anie forraigne matter then is of record in that Court and allowed of or would discharge any Claim title or Interest of the King by the same plea save in the said ordinarie Writts for fealtie and Homage sealtie and such like doth by himselfe or some Clerk of his make the Kings Attorney ever privy to all such pleas their replications and rejoynders who doth respect them and consider them and at length either doth confesse them or referreth them or giveth his Warrant out under his hand to have them tryed in the Countrie at the Assizes of Nisi prius He according to the Ancient order of the Court upon all other ordinarie Pleas examined by him with one of the Clerks of his office concerning Writts of service and such like doth enter Judgment alone without making the kings Attorney or the Court privie thereto which ever in this wise were dispatched as agreeable to the President of the Court. He either upon the first writ from the originall or upon the writts written from the said Pleas or upon distresses from the Streat of the fines of the Commission pleas or from writts upon such like records in his office doth set over persons fines for respit of Homage payable every fifth Terme according to a rate given him by the Court at his first comeing into his office whereof a record was then made and is as followeth the Fines for respit of Homage every fift Terme of lands and Tenements s Three pounds per Annum downwards 0 4 Five pounds per Annum downwards 0 8 Sixe pounds thirteene shillings four pence per annum downwards 1 0 Ten pounds per annum downwards 1 8 Eighteene pounds per annum downwards 2 0 Twenty pounds per annum downwards 3 4 Thirty pounds per annum downwards 5 0 Forty pounds per annum downwards 6 8 Sixty pounds per annum downwards 10 0 And noe such fines are set higher but upon Noblemen which according to the greatness or meanesse of their lands are set some at thirteen shillings fourpence some at twentie shillings some twentiesix shillings eight pence some at thirtie shillings and some at forte shillings to be payed every fifth Terme and none above nor so high but for Dukes He hath set downe in his Book called nomina Vic. by the Clerk of the Pipe every yeare the debts of all Sheriffs Bayliffs of liberties and men of certain Towns that are found and cast upon their accounts entred in the Pipe and in another of his Bookes called Nomina Ecaetor he hath every yeare the like debts of Escheators set downe by the same Clerk of the Pipe for all the which he maketh Attachment and other ordinarie processe of the Court for the levying of the same as the case doth require He hath in a third Book in his Office called Schedula Pipe All debts set downe by the Clark of the Pipe of such persons as upon the opposalls of the Sherift of their summons be said by them to be dead to the end he should make a Diem clausit Extremum after the death of such debtors to the Sherift which is the award of the Court and of purpose to enquire what day and yeare they died and what goods and Chattells and of what value they had at the day of their death and to whose hands the same came and now be and to seize the same in whose hands soever they be and to leavy the same debt and have them before the Barons such a day And if their goods and Chattells be not sufficient to pay the said debt then to enquire what lands and Tenements and to what yearely value they had at the day of their deaths or when they became debtors or ever since and to whose hands and possession the same came after their decease and in whose hands they now be and the same to seize in whose hands soever they be and keepe safe and to Answere the issues and profits thereof untill the said debt be fully satisfied and payed or that he otherwise is Commanded and to distraine all the Executors of the Testament of the said debtors as Administrators of the goods and Chattells that were his and also the heires and Ter Tenants of the same debtors if they have not Executors to Answere the same debt and all to the intent the same might this way be payed that could not by the summons of the Pipe be so levied And likewise he hath put in his said Booke of Schedula Pipe by the Clerk of the Pipe other great and speciall debts that the Court will have spedeier and sharper process made for them by the said summons to the intent the Debtors should be either quickly Attached and brought into the Court or the money payed and Answered to the Sheriffs or into the Reccit as should best fall out for the ease and dispatch of the debtors He taketh into his Office all Streats of Fines issues and Amerciaments sent into the Court from the Kings Bench the common pleas the Justices of Assize and all Justices of the Peace through England which are by him delivered over by the Rolls of streats into his Office to the Clark of the Streats to write out who sets his hand thereto for the Receipt of the same He taketh on his side also as the Kings Remembrancer doth afore all Sheriffs for raigne accounts Bayliffs accounts Escheators accounts Customers accounts Collectors accounts of Subsidies and fifteens and the Cofferers accounts as before is declared in the point amongst the matters of the Kings Remembrancers side He ruleth the ordinary petitions that any of the sayd Accountants do make or pray upon their sayd accounts to be allowed them without the privity of the Court being matter of Record and President in Court for the discharge of the same and other their new and first petitions are allowed from time to time by the Judgement of the Court