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A52567 A treatise of the principal grounds and maximes of the lawes of this nation very usefull and commodious for all students and such others as desire the knowledge and understandings of the laws / written by that most excellent and learned expositor of the law, W.N. Noy, William, 1577-1634.; Doddridge, John, Sir, 1555-1628. Treatise of particular estates.; T. H. Certain observations concerning a deed of feoffament. 1651 (1651) Wing N1453; ESTC R30072 59,730 168

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were granted Joynt-Tenants may have several estates A Joynt-Tenant cannot grant a Rent-charge but for terme of his own life A Joynt-Tenant may make a Lease for life or for years of his part or Release and the Lessee for years may enter although the Lessor die before the Lease begin and his heire shall have the Rent but the Survivor the Reversion A Joynt-Tenant may have a Writ of Partition by the Statute of the 31. of H. 8. cap. 32. A Partition made by Joynt-Tenants or Tenants in Common of Estates of Inheritance must be by Indenture by Word 't is void CHAP. VII TENANTS in COMMON Tenants in Common are those that hold Lands and Tenements by several titles They may joyne in action personal but they must have several actions Real They may have a Writ of Partition by the Stat. of 31. H. 8. cap. 32. IF one Parcener Joynt-Tenant or Tenant in Common take all the other have no Remedie but by Ejectione firme or such like or Waste Gavil-kinde-Lands Tenant by the curtesie of Kent whether he have Issue or no untill he marry and so forth he may not commit Waste CHAP. VIII TENANT in DOWER A Woman shall be indowed of all sorts of inheritance of her husband where the Issue that she had by him may inherit as heire to his father by meetes and bounds of a third part She shall have house-roome and meat and drink in common for forty dayes But she may not kill a Bullock within those 40. days after the death of her husband in which time her Dower ought to be assigned her The Assignement by him that had the Frank-Tenement is good but by him that is Guardian in Soccage or Tenant by Elegit verte Elegit or Statutes or Lessee for years is not She is to demand her Dower on the Land She shall recover dammages when her husband dyed seized from the death of her husband if the heire be not ready at the first day to assigne her Dower She shall have all her Chattels real againe execept her husband sell them he may not charge them or give them by his Will and likewise her bonds if the money were due in the life of her husband and all convenient apparel but if she have more then is fit for her degree it will be assets A woman shall be barred of her Dower so long as she detaineth the bodie of the heire being Ward or the Writing of the sons Land A woman shall not be endowed of any lands that her husband joyntly holdeth with another at the time of his death Dower of Gavil-kind Lands If the woman shall be endowed of one half so long as she is unmarried and chaste and it may be held with the heire in Common It is of Lands and Tenements and not of a Faire or such like where the Heire loseth not his inheritance there she loseth not her Dower Joynture IF a woman have a Joynture be fore marriage she may claim no Dower 27. Hen. 8. If it be made during marriage she may enter into her Joynture presently If she enter or accept of it she shall not be endowed If she shall be expulsed of any part of her Joynture she shall be endowed of the residue of her husbands Lands CHAP IX Tenant for terme of Life TEnant for terme of life is he that hath Lands or Tenements for terme of his life or another mans life and none of lesser estate may have a Free-hold If a Tenant for life sowe the Lands and die before the corn be reaped his Executor shall have it but not the Grasse nor other fruit If a Tenant for life be impannelled upon an Inquest and forfeit Issues and die they shall be levied upon him in the Reversion and so likewise if the Husband on the Lands of the Wife CHAP. X. Tenant for Terme of yeares Tenant for terme of years is where a man letteth lands or tenements to another for certain yeares HE may enter when he will the death of the Lessor is no let and may grant away his terme before it begin but before he enter he cannot Surrender nor have any action of trespasse nor take a release He is bound to repaire the Tenements The Lessor may enter to see what Reparations or Waste there is and he may distraine for his rent or have an action of debt If Tenant for life or years granteth a greater estate then he hath himselfe he doth forfeit his terme CHAP. XI Tenant at Will Tenant at Will is hee that holdeth lands or tenements at the Will of another THe Lessor may reserve a yearely rent and may distraine for it or have an Action of debt the Lessee is not bound to repaire the Tenements The Will is determined by the death of the Lessor or of a woman Lessee by her marriage or when the Lessee will take upon him to doe that which none but the Lessor may doe lawfully it determineth the Will and Possession and the Lessor may have an action of Trespasse for it The Lessee shall have reasonable time to have away his goods and his corne But he shall lose his Fallow and his dung carried forth CHAP. XII REMAINDER A Remainder is the residue of an estate at the same time appointed over and must be grounded upon some particular estate given before granted for years or for like and so forth And ought to begin in possession when the particular estate endeth there may bee no mean time between either by Grant or Will No remainder can be of a Chattel personal a Remainder cannot depend on a matter ex post facto as upon Estate tayle upon condition That if the Tenant in Tayle sell then the Land to remain to another is a void Remainder CHAP. XIII REVERSION A Reversion is the residue of an estate that is left after some particular estate granted out in the Grantor as if a man grant Lands for life without further granting the Reversion of the Fee-simple is in the Lessor CHAP. XIV WASTE WASTE lieth against a Tenant by the curtesie for life for years or in Dower and they shall lose the place wasted and treble dammages Waste lieth not against a Tenant by Elegit Statute-Merchant or Staple but account after the debt or dammage levied Waste or account will lie against a Tenant in Mortgage because he had Fee conditionall Waste is not given to the heire for Waste in the life of his Father Waste is given against the Assigne of the Tenant for life or of anothers life but not against the Assignee of a Tenant in Dower or of the curtesie it is to be brought against themselves It is Waste to pull up the formes benches doors windowes walls Filbert-Trees or Willows planted CHAP. XV. DISCONTINUANCE DIscontinuance is where a man that hath the present possession by makeing a larger estate then he may divesteth the inheritance of the Lands or Tenements out of another and dieth and the other hath right to have them but he may not enter
rather beat him then suffer him to take or carry them away CHAP. XLIV How far other mens Contracts and misdemeanours do binde us A MAN shall be bound by many Trespasses of his wife but not to sustain corporal punishment for it For Murder Fellony Battery Trespass borrowing or receiving of money in his Masters name by a Servant the Master shall not be charged unless it be done by his command or came to his use by his assent If I command one to do a Trespass I shall be a Trespassor or otherwise if I do but consent There is no accessary in Trespass We shall be charged if any of our family lay or cast any thing into the high way to the noisance of his Majesties Liege People Every man is bound to make recompence for such hurt as his beasts shall doe in the corne or grass of his neighbour though he knew not that they were there and for his Dogs Beares c. if they hurt the goods or Chattell of any other for that he is to govern them A man shall not be charged by the contract of his wife or his servant if the thing come to his use having no notice of it But if he command them to buy he shal be charged though they come not to his use or had notice therof If a Wife or Servant use to buy or sell if he sell his Masters Horse and exchange his Oxe for wheat that cometh to his Masters use his Master may not have an action of Trespass for it but he shall be charged for the corn and the other need not to shew that he had warrant to buy for him If a man-servant that keepeth his shop or that useth to sell for him shall give away his goods he shall have Trespass against the Donee But if I deliver my Goods to another to keep to my use and he do give them away I shall not for the Donee had notice whose goods they were as in the case of the servant If a man make another his general receiver which receiveth money and maketh an acquittance and payeth not his Master yet that payment dischargeth the debtor If a servant keep his Masters fire negligently an action lieth against the Master Otherwise if he bear it negligently in the street If I command my servant to distrain and he doth ride on the distress he shall be punished not I. If a man command his servant to sell a thing that is defective generally to whom he can sell it deceit lieth not against him Otherwise if he bid him sell it to such a man it doth A Contract or a promise made to the wife is good when the husband doth agree so it is to a servant and it shall be said to be made to the husband and Master himself If a man taketh a wife that is in debt he shall be charged with her debts during her life if she die he shall be discharged CHAP. XLV Wills and Testaments Having hitherto treated of such contracts as de take effect in the life time of the parties with their differences it is now to deale with Instruments which take effect after their Deaths that those things which they have preserved with care and gotten with paines in their life might be left to their posterity in peace and quietnesse after their Death of which sort are last Wils and Testaments There are two sorts of Wils Written and Nuncupative ANuncupative Testament is when the Testator doth by Word onely without writing declare his Will before a sufficient number of Witnesses of his Chattels onely for Lands passe not but by writing It may for the better continuance after the making be put in writing and proved But it is still a Testament Nuncupative A written Testament is that which at the very time of the making thereof is put in writing by which kind of Testament in writing only Lands and Testaments pass and not by word of mouth only Two things are required to the perfection of a Will by which Lands pass viz. First writing which is the beginning Secondly the death of the Devisor which is the finishing In a Will of Goods there must be an Executor named otherwise of Lands A man may make one Executor or more simply or conditionally for a time or for parcel of his Chattels If no Executor be named then it still retaineth the name of last a Will and shall be annexed to the Letters of Administration in regard of the Gift Gavil kinde Lands may be devised by custome Lands bolden In Socage tenure all is devisable Knights Service 2 parts 3 in writing FEAR fraud and flattery three unfit accidents to be at the making of a Will A woman may make a Will of the goods of her husband by his consent and license by Word is sufficient and of the goods she hath as Executor without his consent but she cannot give them unto him A boy after his age of fourteen and a Maid after her age of twelve may make a Will of their goods and Chattels by the Civil Law The will of the Donor shall be alwayes observed if it be not impossible or greatly contrary to the Law A Devisor is intended Inops consilii and the Law shall be his Counsell and according to his intent appearing in his Will shall supply the defect of his words A Prerogative Will is five pound in another Diocess A man may not traverse the Probate of a Testament or Letters of Administration directly but he may say against the Testament that the Testator never made the party his Executor CHAP. XLVI DEVISES A Devise ought to be good and effectual at the time of the death of the Devisor The Devisee may not enter into the terme or take a Chattell but by the delivery of the Executor But he may sue for it in Court Christian Into Frank-tenement or inheritance he may enter Devisees are Purchasees as if a Lease for years be Willed to a man and his Heires the Heire shall have it for Heire is a name of purchase here A Reversion of Lands or Tenements will pass by the name of Lands and Tenements in a Devise If a man devise all his Lands and Tenements a Lease for years doth not pass where he hath Lands in Fee and also a Lease there otherwise it will If a man devise all his goods a Rent-charge which he had for years will pass and all other his personall Chattells And if a man give all his moveables to one he shall have all his Horses Cattell pans and personall chattells and all his immoveables to another he shall have all his Corn growing and fruit on his Trees and the chattells reall A man may devise Lands or goods to an Infant in the mothers belly or goods to the Church-wardens of D. There is great diversity where the property is devised and when the occupation is devised A man may devise that a man shall have the occupation of his Plate or other chattells during his life or
to him and his heires until B. die without heire of his body for in the one case the Donor hath but an Estate Tayle and in the other a Fee simple determinable hath a possibility of Revertor for if B. die without heire of his body then whether A. be living or dead shall revert to the Donor but such possibility of Reversion for he that hath but such a possibility hath no Estate nor hath he power to give his possibility but in the other case the Donor hath Estate in Fee and therefore he hath power to dispose thereof at his pleasure Remainder A Remainder is a remnant of an estate disposed to another at the time of creation of such particular Estates whereupon it doth depend as if S. seised of lands in Fee demiseth the same to B. for life the remainder to C. and the heirs of his body the remainder to D. and his heirs In this case I. S. hath a particular Estate of the Lessor is then also disposed to C. and D. ut supra whereby B. hath an Estate for life C. a Remainder in Tail and D. a Remainder in Fee depending in order upon the particular Estate in possession and in every Remainder five things are requisite First That it depend upon some particular Estate Secondly That it pass out of the Grantor Donor or Lessor at the time of the creation of the particular Estate whereon it must depend Thirdly That it veste during the particular Estate or at the instant time of the determination thereof Fourthly That when the particular Estate is created there be a Remnant of an Estate left to the Donor to be given by way of Remainder Fifthly That the person or body to whom the Remainder is limitted be either capable at the time of limitation thereof or else in potentia propinqua to be thereof capable during the particular Estate If Lands be given to I. S. and his Heirs the Remainder for default of such Heir to I. D. and his Heirs that Remainder is void because it doth not depend upon any particular Estate But if Lands be given to I. D. the life of I. D. the Remainder to I. B. his Remainder is good for it is not limited to depend upon a Fee-simple but upon a particular Estate which is onely called an Estate for life of I. B. descendable if Lands be given to B. for 11. years if C. do so long live the Remainder after the death of C. to D. in Fee this Remainder is void for in this case it cannot pass out of the Lessor at the time of the creation of the particular Estate for years but if a Lease be made to B. for life the Remainder to the Heires of C. who is then living this Remainder is good upon a contingency that if C. dye in the life of B. for that Remainder may well pass out of the Leassor presently without be yaunce without any inconveniency because onely the inheritance separated from the Free-hold is in abeyance if Lands be given for life with a Remainder to the right Heirs of I. S. and the Tenant for life dyeth in the life of I. S. this Remainder is void because it died not vest or settled either during the particular Estate or at the time of the determination thereof for until I. S. die no person is thereof capable by the name of the Heir But if Lands be given to I. S. for terme of his life the Remainder to his right Heir in the singular number and the Heirs of his body and after I. S. hath issue a Son and dyeth that is a good Remainder and the Son hath thereby an Estate Tail for although it were unpossible that such Remainder should vest during the particular Estate because during his life none could be his Heir yet it might be and did vest at the instant of his death which was at the time of his determination of the particular Estate Concerning the fourth thing if a man seised of Lands in Fee granteth out of the same a Rent or Common to Pasture or such like things which before the grant had no being to I. S. for terme of life the Remainder to I. D. in Fee this Remainder is void because of this thing Granted there was no Remnant in the grant to dispose And because some heretofore have been of opinion that albeit the same cannot take no effect as another Grant of a new Rent or Common Vtres magis valeat quam operat This is a rule in Law that a thing enjoyed in a superior degree shall not pass under the name of a thing in any inferior degree and therefore if Lands be given unto two persons and unto the Heirs of one of them unto the Husband and Wife and Heir of the Husband and he that hath the Estate of Inheritance granteth the Version of the same Land to another in Fee such Grant is void because the Grantor was thereof seised in a superiour degree viz. in Possession and not in Reversion as appeareth 22. Ed. 4. fol. 2 13. Ed. 3. Brook title of Grants 137. And concerning the first and last thing if a Lease be made of Land for term of life the Remainder to the Major and Commonalty of D. whereas there is no such Corporation therein being this Remainder is meerly void albeit the Kings Majesty by his Letters Pattents do create such Corporations during the particular Estate for at the time of such grant the Remainder was void because then there was no such body corporate thereof capable or potentia propinqua to be created and made capable thereof during the particular Estate but the possibility thereof was then forraign and probably intended The like law is if a remainder be limited to I. the Son of T. S. who had then no Son and afterwards during the particular Estate a Son is born who is named John yet this Remainder is void for at the time of such a Grant as was not to be probably in tender that T. S. should have any Son of that name Also before the dissolution of Abbies if a Lease of Land were made to I. S. for life the Remainder to one that then was a Monk such Remainder was void for the cause before alledged albeit we were deraigned during the particular Estate But if such Remainder had been limited to the first begotten Son of I. S. it had been good and should accordingly have vested in such a Son afterwards born during the particular Estate Rights A Right in Land is either cloathed or naked a Right cloathed is when it is wrapped in a possession Reversion or Remainder a naked Right which is also most commonly called a Right is when the same is separated from the possession or Remainder by dissessin discontinuance or the devesting and separating of the possession as for example if a Lease of Land be made for life to I. S. the Remainder to I. D. in Fee in this case I. S. hath a Right cloathed with a Remainder