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A66651 The body of the common law of England as it stood in force before it was altered by statute, or acts of Parliament, or state. Together with an exact collection of such statutes, as have altered, or do otherwise concern the same. Whereunto is also annexed certain tables containing a summary of the whole law, for the help and delight of such students as affect method. By Edm. Wingate of Grayes-Inne Esq; Wingate, Edmund, 1596-1656. 1655 (1655) Wing W3007; ESTC R220028 104,837 228

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every Accomptant or him that receiveth money for the Queen or her successors to be imployed to the use of the Queen c. shall be extended in the nature of a Statute staple for the payment of the arrerages Or the Queen c. if he do not satisfy within six moneths after the arrerages found may sell his land and the party may have the surplussage to be delivered to him by him that received the money upon the sale without further warrant This sale to be of any land whereof it is found by Inquisition that the Accomptant taketh the profits with Inquisition if it be true after traverse of the office and that found for him he shall have his land againe without any petition livery or Ouster le main Here if any such buy land with the Queens treasure and pay not the arrerages as before the Queen shall seize and retain the land according to the rate that the party had it This Act extendeth not to such officers as have used to disburse money immediatly after their accounts past as the treasurers of War Garisons Navies c. unlesse the Queen c. command present pay Neither doth it extend to Accomptants whose whole Receit exceedeth not 300 l. not to Sheriffes Escheators or Bailiffes of Liberties The Queen c being satisfied by sale of land the sureties shall be discharged for so much and if any remain yet unpaid the sureties shall pay the residue ratably according to their abilites Stat. 2 7. El. 3. the Queen c. may make sale of the accomptants lands c. as wel after his death as in his life time and as well where the accompt was made and the debt known within eight years after his death as in his life time Provided that after the Accomptants death and before the lands be sold a fcire facias shall be awarded to garnish the heir to shew cause why the lands c. should not be sold c. whereupon if the heir upon such Garnishment or two nihils returned do not prove unto the Court that the executors or administrators of the accomptant have sufficient then ten moneths after such two nihils or garnishment returned the lands c. shall be sold and disposed according to the Stat. of 13. El. 4 Nevertheless the heirs sale bona fide and upon good consideration before the scire facias awarded shall be good to him that is not consenting to defraud the Queen c. This Act shall extend to all Officers of Receipts and Accompts to the Queen and to none other The heirs lands c. shall not be sold during his minority but at any time within eight years after his ful age they shall be liable as aforesaid If the Accomptant or debtor had a Quietus est in his life time that shall discharge the heir of debt Stat. 7. Ja. 15 No debt shall be assigned to the King c. by any debtor or accomptant other then such debts as did before grow due originally to the Kings debtor or Accomptant bona fide All Grants and Assignments of debts to the King c. contrary to the true intent of this Act shall be void Rule 15. Marlbr 23. 52. H. 3 Attachment given in an Action of Accompt against Bayliffs that withdraw themselves and have no lands or tenements to be distrained by Westm 2. 11. 13. E. 1. He to whom the accompt is to be made may assign Auditors to take it who may immediately commit to the next Gaole the Accomptant being found in arrerages till he fully satisfie wherupon the Accomptant finding himself grieved may bring the matter by a scire facias before the Barons of the Exchequer CHAP. 32. Rule 22. WEstm 1-20 3. E. 1. Trespassers in parts and Ponds attainted at the suit of the party besides making large amends according to the trespass and fine at the Kings pleasure shall have three years imprisonment and finde good surety not to commit the like trespasse And if he cannot finde surety he shall abjure the Realm Being a fugitive and having no lands or tenements whereby to be justified he shall be proclaimed from county to county and if he appear not outlawed Stat. 5. R. 2. 7. None shall enter into lands or tenements by force in pain of Imprisonment and ransome at the the Kings pleasure Stat. 15 R. 2. 2. When forcible entry is made into lands or Church-livings one or more Justices of peace taking sufficient power and going to the place so kept by force may commit the offender to the next Gaole there to remain convict by the Justices record till he hath made fine and ransome to the King and herein the Sheriff and all others shall be assistant in paine of Imprisonment and great fines making Stat. 8. H. 6. 9. The Statute of 15 R. 2. 2. shall be duely put in execution both against forcible entry and forcible detainer though the entry was peaceable When complaint of any such entry or detainer shall be made to any such Justice or Justices of peace he or they by precept shall command the Sheriffe to summon a sufficient Jury and having by them made inquiry of the force committed shall cause the tenements to be reseised and that as well in the absence as presence of the party offending And here the alienation of tenements so entred into or detained by force for maintenance shall be adjudged void Howbeit this Act shall endamage none where peaceable possession hath been enjoyed three years Stat. 31. El. 11. There shall be no restitution upon an Indictment of forcible entry or detainer where the defendant hath been three years next before in quiet possession and his estate therein ended Stat. 21. Ja. 15. Vpon force or detainer as aforesaid a Justice or Justices of peace have power to give restitution of possession as well unto tenants for years by Elegit Statute-Merchant or staple copiholders or Guardians by Knight service as unto such as claim freehold or Inheritance Merton 6 20. H. 3. A Lay-man ravishing or marrying a Ward within 14 years of age shall be imprisoned besides losse of the value of the marriage Westm 2. 35. 13. E. 1. A strict Law against one that taketh away a Ward CHAP. 33. Rule 2. MAgna Cart. 34. 9. H. 3. A woman shall have no appeal but only of the death of her husband Glocester 9. 6. E. 1. An appeal of the death of a man must be brought within the year Stat. 3. H. 7. 1. One acquitted upon an indictment of Murder or man-slaughter or as accessory shall not go at large without good bayl untill the year and day be past within which time an appeall may be brought if no Clergy be had before and all advantages therein saved as if the acquittall had not been CHAP. 34. Rule 17. 18. WEst 2. 7. A guardian may have writ of admeasurement of dower howbeit the heir at full age shal not be barred by that suit if the guardian did follow it faintly In
matter for the King is found by a Jurie called an Enqest of Office III. This may be before the Officers as Sheriffs Escheators Coroners c. Virtute officii Brevis or Commissionis to them directed IV. Here the number of twelve is not of necessity requisite V. An Enquiry is an office or presentment VI. An Office which findeth matter to intitle the King to some possession VII Upon as high a matter of Record to avoid the Office as the Office it self a man may traverse it VIII If the office be for personal goods the party may alwayes have a traverse or plead any matter unto it unlesse the Escheator have accounted for them and that although the office finde the Kings title to be by matter of Record IX The King upon office finding for him if his entry be lawfull and the possessions to be had at the time is presently in possession X. Also he shall be answered all the mean profits from the time of his title XI Upon an office found virtute Officii whereby the King is intitled to ones wardship the heir shall never have livery viz. the land delivered out of the Kings hands XII But upon a perfect office Virtute Brevis or Commissionis if it be a speciall writ or Commission not a general one to inquire of all wards he may XIII Therefore here the heir is allowed these Commissions following or writs in the nature of such Commissions viz 1. For finding of an office for the King 2. For the having of the land out of the Kings hand XIV Those for the finding of an office are Diem clausic extremum Mandamus and Devenerunc to inquire what lands holden of the King and what of others the ancestors was seized off the day of his death who is his next heir and of what age XV. The Diem clausit extremum is to be sued within the year after his death XVI The Mandamus is after the year and here it must further be inquired who took the profits XVII The Devenerunt is when the ancestor dieth in ward to the King XVIII Upon defect in Offices found by vertue of such writs or commissions these writs following shall issue out to make them perfect viz. XIX A Quae plura upon leaving of any land out i● these offices XX A Melius inquirendum upon any other defect i● the Office XXI A Datum est nobis intelligi upon an Office finding lands to be holden of any other person when there is a Record to prove that they are holden of the King XXII The writs for having the lands out of the Kings hands are an Aetate probanda and a writ i● Livery XXIII An Aetate probanda is to inquire whethe● he b● of full age or not XXIV A writ of Livery is after a perfect Office finding a tenure in cheif to have all the lands delivere● to him at once by the King XXV Two being found heirs by one and the sa●● title The King shall not make Livery until by enter-pleader the truth be discussed at his full age that wa● found heir first XXVI Amongst Co-parceners the King upon Livery shall make partition XXVII He that holdeth of the King by Knight service but not in Chief shall not sue Livery Be when he cometh to his full age shall have an Ouster● main XXVIII A presentment is an enquiry finding some offence against the King which is also called an Indictment XXIX Every strong suspition of such offence appearing of Record hath the force of an Indictment XXX Without an Indictment the King can have no suit upon a wrong done principally to another but done to himsef he may XXXI For the preventing of divers offences viz. trespasses to the body and felonies and committing them that offend to prison untill they may be indicted and so duely punished every Hundred hath his High Constable and every several tithing within the Hundred hath his petty Constables or Headboroughs XXXII Any man suspecting another of a felonie committed or but intended may arrest him XXXIII With indictments of trespasse informations upon penal Statutes such as inflict a pecuniarie mulct or other penalty upon offenders have a neer affinity XXIV Indictments of the death of a man are to be taken before the Coroners CHAP. 37. Proper Original Processe I. HItherto of the first matter of the suit it followeth to speak of original processe II. Original processe is that processe which is untill the defendant do appear III. Original processe is proper or improper IV. Proper which is to bring some matter into Plea or solemn action and it is single or mixt V. Single which is by the possessions onely lands or goods or onely by the person VI. That by the land is of two so●ts first summons and Grand Cape in a real Praecipe quod reddat VII The summons is the warning of the tenant in his land by certain summoners VIII The summons upon an action brought against one as heir must be in the land that did descend IX If it be to recover the freehold of land it self it must be in the same land X. A Grand Cape is to take the Land into the Kings hands by the view of lawfull men with a summons of the tenant to answer as well to his default as to the demandants action XI If the tenant be returned summoned where i● deed he was not the writ shall abate XII Secondly it is summons and re-summons in a Mordancestor Juris utrum and an Assize of Darren presentment and upon default the enquest awarded XIII Original processe by the goods as in Assize of novel disseisin and nusance where the original proces is Pone per vadios c. salvos plegios XIV A Pone pervadios salvos plegios is a proces● to attach the defendant by certain of his proper goods being meer personal chattels which he shall forfeit i● he appear not and upon such default the Inquest summoned by the writ is presently to be awarded to recognize the Assize XV. The original processe by the person is a Capias which is a processe to imprison him then an exigent o● solemn demand at five severall County Courts immediately following one another and for not appearing Outlawry XVI This Judgment of Outlawry is given by the Coroner in the fift County and is onely in mayhem felonie and treason XVII If the Exigent be returned not fully serve without any folly in the Plaintiffe he bringing an Exigent de novo before any other County holden sha●● have the benefit of the former Counties XVIII Outlawry disableth him from suing an● actlon XIX By Outlawry all his chattels are forfeit to the King even such as he hath but a right unto XX. In Mayhem there must be three Capias viz. Capias alias pluries t●o in Felonie viz. Stealth Robbery and Burglary and onely one in the death of a man and high Treason XXI In felonie and Treason they that tarry the Exigent forfeit their chattels XXII A mixt
of the estate either by reason of a particular estate ended or a condition broken XV. Of a particular estate ended is an ad terminum qui praeteriit or Entry ad communem legem XVI Ad terminum qui praeteriit is upon a deforcement by the lessee or a stranger after the Lease for years or life expired XVII Entry ad communem legem is when a tenant for life doth alien and die XVIII Of a condition broken as Causa matrimonii praelocuti XIX Causa matrimonii praelocuti is for a woman that giveth land to a man to marry her and he will not XX· Those grounded upon the disability of the person are a Dum fuit infra aetatem and a Dum non suit compos mentis XXI Dum fuit infra aetatem is by the infant when he cometh to his full age upon an alienation by himself or his ancestor being within age XXII But the clause that he is of full age viz. qui plenae est aetatis shall not be inserted in the Writ if either it be brought in the degrees per cui or post or upon the ancestors alienation XXIII Dum non fuit compos mentis is upon the alienation of himself or his ancestor or being of non san● memoriae CHA Cui in vita sua Cui in vita sine assensu Capituli A writ of Intrusion a writ of Entry in the quibus I. THose upon a wrong at the first are upon a discontinuance or an Ouster II. Upon a discontinuance as a Cui in vita or a sine assensu Capituli III. A Cui in vita for the wife after the husbands death upon his alienation of her fee simple fee tail or free-hold or of such a Joynt estate in them IV. and in this writ claiming a fee-simple she shall say Quod clamat esse jus hereditatem suam V. If it be an estate of fee-simple and she bring not in her life time a cui in vita the heir shall have a sur cui in vita VI. And of this nature is a Cui ante divortium when it is brought by the wife after divorcement upon such an alienation as before VII A sine assensu Capituli is for the successor of a Bishop Abbot Prior Dean Prebendary Master of an Hospital c. after the discontinuance of the Predecessor VIII Upon an Ouster is either an Intrusion or a disseisin IX That upon an Intrusion is called a writ of Intrusion and is for him in the reversion or remainder in fee-simple or for life after the death of tenant for life in Dower or by the curtesie X. Upon a disseisin is when the disseisin is done to him or his ancestor as a Writ of Entry in the Quibus or which is all one in the nature of an Assize CHAP. 27. A Writ of Ayel Besaiell Cosinage Formedon Escheat Dower a Precipe in Capite I. WRits that shew the demandants title are meer possessory or in the right II. Meer possessorie are those which are brought by the next heir upon an abatement after the death of any ancestor other then his Father Mother Brother Sister Uncle Aunt Nephew Neece seized in demesne as of the fee-simple the day of his death Of this sort are III· A writ of Ayell after the death of his Grandfather or Grandmother IV. A writ of Besayell after the death of his great Grandfather or great Grandmother V. A Writ of Cosinage after the death of his great great Grandfather or Grandmother or any other Collateral Cousin save those above-mentioned in the second Rule of this Chapter VI. In the right is that which is to disprove the right of the tenant and is a writ of right in his nature or a praecipe in Capite VII A writ of Right in his nature which sheweth how the demandants right is grown and is a Formedon or a writ of Escheat and Dower unde nihil habet VIII A Formedon is a praecipe quod reddat entitling the partie by the form of the gift and is a Formedon in remainder or a Formedon in reverter IX A Formedon in remaninder is for him in the remainder for life or in fee upon a lease for life expired X. A Formedon in Reverter is for the Donor after the estate in tail determined XI A writ of Escheat is for the Lord upon an Escheat XII Dower unde nihil habet is a writ for ones Dower who hath received no part at all thereof XIII A writ of Dower lieth against Gardein by Knights service XIV A praecipe in capite is a praecipe quod reddat for the meer right of lands holden in chief CHAP. 28. A writ of right of ward and sur disclaimer I. OTher real praecipe quod reddats are those which are in respect of a Seigniorie as a writ of right of ward and a writ of right sur-disclaimer II. A writ of right or ward is to recover the wardship III. If it be for the recoverie of the wardship of the body it lieth as well for Gardein in Socage as for Gardein by Knight-service IV. But if it be for the recovery of the wardship of the land it lieth onely for Gardien by Knight-service V. A writ of right sur-disclaimer is for the Lord to prove the lands to be holden of him when in Action where the services should be recovered the tenant in Court of Record disclaimeth to hold of him VI. If in this writ the Lord can prove the Land to be holden of him he shall recover the Land it self CHAP. 29 A writ de consuetudinibus et se●●ic●js secta ad molendinum Quare impedit Quod permittat Curia Clau●enda Mesne and Warrantia cartae I. A Real Praecipe quod faciat is either to recover hereditaments or some real things that concern them II. Those that are to recover some hereditament demanding of ones own seisin are in the debet and solet III. But demanding of the ancestors seisin they are in the debet onely and then are in all respects as writs for the meer right IV. These are either in respect of a Seigniory or to recover some other hereditament V. In respect of a Seigniorie as a writ de consuetudinibus servitiis and a secta ad molendinum VI. A writ De consuetudinibus serviciis lieth for the Lord that hath an estate for life or a greater estate in the Seigniory and is deforced of his services VII Secta ad molendinum lieth for the Lord when the tenants that hold of him by grinding their corn at his Mill withdraw their suit and grinde elswhere VIII Those that are to recover some other hereditament are a Quare impedit and a Quod permittat IX A Quare impedit lieth upon a disturbance where he or his ancestors or those from whom he claimeth having at any time before presented to a Church himself is now disturbed X. A Quod permittat lieth for one that hath common of pasture for his beasts being disturbed by a stranger so as he
cannot use his Common XI These are to recover some real thing concerning hereditaments are a Curia claudenda or a covenant real and other writs sounding in that nature XII Curia claudenda lieth for a free-holder when one that hath a Close next adjoyning to him which he should keep inclosed will not do it XIII A writ of Covenant real lieth upon a Covenant to do a thing real as to levie a fine of Lands c. XIV Writs in the nature of a Covenant real are a writ of Mesne and a warrantia cartae XV. A writ of mesne lieth for the tenant against the mesne when the Lord Paramont doth destrain the tenant whom the mesne ought to acquit XVI A warrantia cartae lieth for him that hath lands or tenants warranted unto him XVII Here the warrantors hereditaments are liable to the warrantie from the time of the action brought XVIII Upon these writs a fine may be leived XIX A fine is the acknowledging of an hereditament in the Kings Court according to the covenant to be his right that doth complain XX. Here one of them must needs have such an estate at the time of the fine levied XX. That whereof the fine is levied or any thing contained in it may be granted back again to the Conisor by the same fine XXII Fines executed binde all persons if claim be not made within a year XXIII A Feme covert joyning with her husband is a fine it bindeh her for ever XXIV Therefore the Justices must examine her to see that she do it willingly XXV A grant by fine of a Seigniorie rent charge rent seck remainder or reversion is presently good saving for bringing actions that run in privity between the tenant and him CHAP. 30. An Assize of Novel Disseisin Nusance Darrein Presentment Juris utrum Partitione facienda Nuper objit Quo Jure I. THus much of real Praecipes Real Si fecerit te securum are an Assize and a Juris utrum or other II. An Assze is such a real plea meerly in possession III. And this is either an Assize of ones own possession and an Assize of Mordancester or an Assize of Darrein presentment IV. An Assize of ones own possession is an Assize of novel disseisin or an Assize of nusance V. An Assize of novel disseisin is for a free-holder against his disseisor whether it be of land or rent for the Bailiff of the disseisor if himself cannot be found VI This disseisin being of a rent charge or rent seck all the tenants of the land must be named though he were disseised by one tenant only VII If the lord distrain the tenant too often for the rent or services the tenant may have an Assize VIII An Assize of nusance is for him whose free-hold is spoiled by any nusance IX An Assize of his ancestors possession onely called an Assize of Mordancester is for the next heir upon an abatement after the death of his Father Mother Brother Sister uncle Aunt Nephew or Neece who was seized in demesn as of fee-simple the day of his death X. An Assize which may be either of his own or his ancestors possession called an assize of Darrein presentment is upon a disturbance when himself or his ancestor did last present XI A Juris utrum is such a real plea founded upon the right of a Parson or Vicar upon his predecessors alienation XII This is the nature of an Assize and Juris utrum These that follow are a partitione facienda and nuper obiit both which lye between privies in blood or a Quo jure XIII A Partitione facienda lyeth between Coparceners to compel partition to be made XIV Therfore here for equality of partition things that otherwise cannot may be granted without deed XV. A Nuper obiit lyeth against one privy in blood that entreth after the death of the Ancestor that died seised in demesne XVI A Quo jure lyeth for the Tenant of the land when one challengeth Common there to try whether in right he ought to have any or no. CHAP. 31. Debt Detinue Account Covenant I. THus far of reall Actions A personall Actio● is that wherein damages shall be recovered II. This Action being once suspended is gone fo● ever III. Executors bringing such an Action must do i● in all their names as well of those that refuse administration as of rhe rest but an Action may be brough● only against those that do administer IV. In personall Actions growing in respect of ● possession in Common Tenants in Common are i● all respects as Joynt-tenants V. In personall Praecipes damages only shall be recovered where the thing it self cannot be had VI. Personall Praecipes quod Reddat's are debt an● detinue VII Debt when any thing is due upon a contract VIII If the debt be money due one from another i● their own right it is in the debet and detinet otherwi●● in the detinet only IX When any of the Kings Goods come into a Subje●● hands his land at all times after is chargeable for the same into whose hands soever afterwards it comes X. Of this nature is a writ of Annuity which lieth for him that hath an Annuity be it money or other things as cloaths bread c. XI This writ is in the debet for any other thing as well as for money and not in the detinet therein differing from an action of debt XII Detinue is when any thing is with holden XIII Personal Praecipe quod faciats are an action of accompt and an action of covenant XIV An Action of accompt which is for an accompt to be made XV. The King may have it against Executors and so can no other XVI An Action of Covenant which is for a Covenant to be holden CHAP. 32. Personall Si fecerit Securum's I. PErsonal Si te fecerit Securum's are of things done without force or where force is coupled with it II. Of those without force some go not so far as breach of the peace others do break it III. Those that break not the peace are these that follow IV. Rationabili parte bonorum for the wife and children of one deceased to have their part of the goods V. Valore maritagii for Guardian in Knight-service when the heir at full age refuseth to satisfie him for his marriage VI. A writ of forfeiture of marriage which is to recover the double value against such an heir marrying himself within age without the Lords assent and at full age putting out the Lord. VII Intrusion of ward when the heir by Knight-service entreth and puteth out the Lord. VIII Ejectione custodiae for any Guardian by Knight service or soccage against a stranger ejecting him of the land or body of the heir or both IX Quare ejecit infra terminum for lessee for years against the feoffe in fee or for life of his lessor X. Here the term it self shall be recovered if it be not past XI Trespas upon the case of things not against the peace
seller c. shall forfeit the value of the land and likewise the buyer knowing the same provided he that is in lawfull possession by taking the yearly profits may buy c. anothers pretenced right c. Rule 7. Stat. 6. R. 2. 2. Debt accompt and all such actions shall be brought in the County where the contract c. was made Rule 16. Stat. 1. E. 6. 7. The Acceptance of a new name of dignity shall not abate the writ CHAP. 24. Rule 6. MErton 8. 20. H. 3. Seisin of ones Ancestor in a writ of right shall be from the time of H 2. In a Mortdancester writ of Nief and of entry from the last return of King John out of Ireland In an Assize of novel disseisin from Henry 3. his first passage into Gasciogne West 1. 38. 3. E 1. Seisin of ones ancestor in a writ of right shall be from the time of Richard the first In an Assize of novel disseisin and Nuper obiit from H. 3. his first passage into Gascoigne In a Mortdancester Cosinage Aywel entry and writ of Niefe from H. 3. his Coronation Stat. 32. H. 8. 2. Seisin in a writ of right shall be within 60 yeares In a Mortdancester or any other possessory action upon the possession of his ancestor or predecessor shall be within 50 yeares A writ of the possession of the Plaintiff himselfe shall be within 30 years An avowry or cognizance for rent suit or services of the seisin of his Ancestor or of his own shall be within 40 years Formedons in reverter or remainder and Scire facias upon fines shall be sued within 50 years after the title or cause of action accrued Stat. 1 M. 1. Parl. 2. sess 5. The statute of 32 H. 8. 2. shall not extend to a writ of right of advowson Quare impedit Assize of Darrein presentment Jure patronasus writ of right of ward writ of ravishment of ward nor to the seiser of the wards body or Estate but the time of the seisin to be alleadged in such cases shall be as it was in the Common Law before the making of the sayd statute Stat. 21. Jac. 2. The time of prescription for lands concealed from the King is sixty years before the making of that statute Stat. 1. Jac 16. In writs of Formedon in descender remainder and reverter and right of entry the time is 20 years after accruer and imperfections removed Rule 6. Stat. 25 E. 3 stat 5. 16. Non-tenure shall not abate the writ but only for the quantity Stat. 37. E. 3. 17. No writ shall be abated by acknowledgment of villeinage if the demandant or Plaintiffe will averr that he that alleadgeth the exception was freed the day of the Writ purchased CHAP. 26. Rule 4. WEstm 2. 2 13 E. 1. A Gui in vita given to the wife after her husbands death upon his loosing of the land by default and the Tenant that recovered against the husband must maintain his own right CHAP. 27. Rule 4. WEstm 2 20. In a Writ of Cosinage Ayel and Besayel the point shall be inquired whether the demandant be next heir as well as in a Mortdancestor Rule 10. Westm 2. 1. 13. E. 1. A formedon in Descender is also given by this Statute to the heir in tail upon a descent from his Ancestor dying seised of the estate tail Rule 12. Merton 1 20 H. 3. A woman deforced of her dower or Quarentine shall in a writ of Dower recover damages viz. the value of her Dower from her husbands death to the day of the recovery of her Dower and the deforceor shall be amercied Westm 1. 48. 3. E. 1. A writ of Dower unde nihil habet shal not abate though she have received part of her Dower before the writ purchased unlesse it were of the same party against whom the writ was brought and in the same Town Westm 2. 4. 13. E. 1. In place of a writ of right a Quod ei deforceat is given to tenant in Dower for life by the coutresie in Frank-marriage and in tail upon losing by default CHAP. 28. Rule 2. Marlebr 7 52. H. 3. In a writ de communi Custodia if the deforceor come not at the grand distresse the writ shall be renewed as often as may be within half a year and every time read and claimed in the county-court and if he come not in to answer nor the Sheriffe finde him within that halfe yeare he shall lose the Ward saving his action another time if he have right Westm 2. 35. 13. E. 1. In a writ of ward of land or heir or both either of the parties dying before the plea determined a re-summons shall be And in the grand distresse day must be given that three County dayes may be held before the returne in every of which Proclamation shall be made whereupon if the defendant appear not judgement shall be given for the plaintiff saving the right of the defendant if afterwards he will claim it So shall it be done also in a writ of ejectment of ward Rule 6. Westm 2. 2. 13. E. 1. If the tenant disclaim in the County-Court or other Court not of Record the Lord may remove the plea before the Justices to cause it to be of Record so as he may have a writ of right sur dlsclaimer Glocester 4. 6. E. 1. Explanat 4 When land is given in Fee farme rendering or doing so much as amounteth to the fourth part of the value of the land if he whose land is charged let it lye fresh by two years so as no distresse can be found in it nor render or do that which is contained in the writing the other shall recover the land by a Cessavit but the tenant coming before judgment if he render the arrerages and damages and finde sufficient to do from thenceforth that which is contained in the writing shal retain his land Westm 2. 21. 13. E. 1. If a man detain from his Lord his service due by two years the Lord shall recover the land by a Cessavit This lyeth also for the Lords heir against the tenant his heirs and Alience Westm 2 41. If religious houses that have land given c. withdraw the Almes c. by two years the donor shall have the like action CHAP. 29. Rule 7. MArlbr 9. 52. H. 3. The processe in a Sella ad molendinum is attachment venire facias and the grand distresse see also there the order of proceeding in that action Rule 9. Stat. 25. E. 3 Stat. 3. 3 tht Kings Collation to a benefice being found before Judgment to be untrue shall be repealed Marlbr 12. 52. H. the processe in a Quare impedit shall be Summons Attachment and Grand distresse Westm 5. 13. E. 1. A Coparcener being disturbed after Partition shall have a Scire facias and shall not be put to a Quare impedit If tenant in Dower or by the courtesie have presented the reversioner being disturbed shall have a Quare impedit
a man no Essoin shall li● for the Appeallor Westm 1. 41. In Assize and Juries utrum after the tenant hath appeared he shall be no more essoyned so it is also for demandants in an Assize by Westm ● 28. westm 1. 42. Perceners or Jointenants in a Praecipe against them shall have but one Essoin so likewise for a man and his wife by the Stat. of Glocester 10. Stat. 9. E. 3. Stat. 1. 3. In a writ of debt against executors they shall have but one Essoin before and another after appearance Westm 2. 27. No Essoin is allowed after day given by prece partium Marlbr 13. After a man hath put himselfe upon an Inquest he shall have but one Essoin wessm 2. 17. After one hath put himselfe upon an Inquest an Essoin shall be allowed him at the next day but never after Marlbr 19. None shall need to swear to warrant 〈◊〉 Essoin Westm 1. 43. The Demandant may aver against an Essoyn of being beyond Sea Westm 2. 17. He may aver that the tenant is not sick nor in such plight but that he come before the Justices c. Stat. 5. E. 3. 7. Essoyn of the Kings service or protection shall not be allowed in Writs of Attaint Stat. of Essoyns 12. E. 3. 2. See many particular Cases where Essoyns lie not Rule 16. Stats de Anno Bissextili 21. H. 3. The day increasing in the Leap-year and that going before shall be accounted for one day Dies communes in Banco 51. H. 3. Dayes given in Writs shall have 9 returns Dies communes in Banco and 32. H 8. 21. Common dayes shall be given in reall actions 9 returns In Writs of Dower 5 returns Malbr 12. In Dower unde nihil habet 4 or 6 dayes shall be given in the year In Assizes of Darrein presentment or Quare impedit from 15 dayes to 15 dayes or from 3 weeks to 3 weeks as the place shall be neer or far Stat. 5. E. 3. 6. 7. In an Attaint 5 dayes at least Rule 17. Stat. 1. E. 6. 7. By death of the King no Action Suit Bill or plaint shall be discontinued or put without day but shall proceed as if the King had lived Rule 39. Stat. 14. E. 3. 14. The manner of search in suit by petition Rule 43. 27. El. 7. A Iuror shall not be returned without a true addition of the place where he dwels and some other addition wherby he may be known Stat. 35. H. 8. 6. What issues shall be returned upon Jurors Stat 2 3. E. 6 32. If the principall Jury appear not fully at the nisi-prius those that make default shal forfeit their issue though the Jury be made up de Circumstantibus CHAP 43. Rule 20. STat de consultatione 24. E. 1. A Consultation shal be awarded by the Chancellor or cheif Justice upon sight of the Libel at the Instance of the Plaintiffe Stat. 50. E. 3. 4. Upon a consultation the Ecclesiastical Judge may proceed notwithstanding any other prohibition so the matter of the Libel be not enlarged or changed Rule 23. Westm 1. 15. Persons outlawed and such as have abjured the Realm Provers and such as be taken with the manner Ptison breakers Theevers openly defamed and known Appellees by proven during the life of such provers house burners Counterfeiters of the Kings Seal and coin Excommunicate persons manifest offenders and Traitors are not bailable c. other Statutes that concern Bail are 3. H. 7. 3. 1. 2 P. M. 13. and 3 P. M. 10. CHAP. 44. Rule 3. West 2. 5. When the parson of any Church is disturbed to demand his Tithes in the next Parish by an Indicavit the Patron shall have a Wtit to demand the Advowson See Stat. pro Clero 18. E. 3. 7. 47. Rule 6. Stat. 25. E. 3.18 The Lord may seise the body of a Villain notwithstanding that a writ de libertate probanda be hanging Rule 10 Stat. 5 E. 3. 7. No protection shall be allowed in Writs of Attaint Rule 12. See Stat. 13. R. 26. The Statute of Protection 1. R. 2. 8. Rule 14. A Creditor shall have an Action and Judgement against the Kings Debtor notwithstanding such a Protection but not execution unlesse he take upon him to pay the King and then he shall have judgement and execution of both debts as well of that due to the King as to himselfe Rule 16. West 2. 17. He may aver that he is not sick c. vide supra Cap 42. Ru. 10. CHAP 45. Rule 7 STat. 14. El 8. Every fraudulent recovery against Tenant for life wherupon the Tenant for life is vouched shall be void against the Reversioner or him in remainder unlesse it be by his own consent appearing of Record Stat. 21. H. 8. 15. Termers for years or such as are in by Execution of Statute staple Statute Marchant or Elegit may falsifie recoveries for their own term only as Tenants of the Freehold might have done at the Common Law Rule 13. 25. H. 8. 3 revived by 5. 6 E. 6 10. One arraigned upon an Indictment of petty Treason wilfull burning of houses murther robbery or other felony according to the meaning of the same Statute if he stand mute of malice or forward minde or challenge peremptorily above 20 or will not directly answer shal lose his Clergy in such manner as he should if upon the arraignment he had been found guilty Stat. pro Clero 25. E. 3. 4. None convict of petty Treason shall have it Stat. 8. El. 6. Not in Rape Ravishment or Burglary nor in the carnal abusing of a woman within ten years of age Stat. 25. H. 8 6. 5. El. 17. Nor in buggery Stat. 5. E. 6 9. Not for robbing a dwelling house booth or tent c. Stat. 4. 5. P. M. 4. Nor for accessaries before the fact in petty treason murther or robbery in an house or in or neer the high way or for the wilful burning of dwelling house or a barn with Grain Stat. 25. H. 8. 3. 5. E. 6. 10 He that doth a Robbery or Burglary in one County and is taken with the goods so robbed or stoln in another County shal lose his Clergy there as he should do where the Robbery or Burglary was committed Stat. 4. H. 7. 13. 1. E. 6. 11. It is grantable but once to one person unlesse he be within orders Stat. 4. H. 7. 13. He that askeh his Clergy the second time shall at a certain day bring his Letters of order or a Certificate Stat. 4. H 7. 18. He that hath his Clergy shall be marked in the hand viz. with a M if he were convict of Murder with a T if he were convict of other felony Stat. 1. E. 6. 12. A Lord of the Parliament in all Cases where Clergie lieth at the Common Law or is restrained by Statute shall upon his prayer be adjudged as a Clerk convict though he cannot read Stat. 1. El. 4. 18. El 7. After purgation he
Leviable by distresse as A Seigniory which is a Service whereby Land is holden and such Services are Common to all certain Estates Fealty Rent service Hither also may be referred Frankalmoigne and Divine Service Proper to Inheritance Generall Homage Suit of Court Particular whereby Lands are distinguished The Services themselves Soccage Knight-se●vice In the Lords life-time as reasonable Ayde After his death as Wardship and Releif A Rent charge which is a Rent with liberty to distrain upon the Grant or Reservation of a certain Rent to be issuing out of Land Such as cannot be distrained for Tab. 8. The persons Tab. 9. TABLE 8. A bare Hereditament concerning Land for which no distresse can be taken is Rent-seck which is a Rent without liberty to distrain Common which is a profit to be taken in anothers land whither also may be referred Estovers Houseboot c. Also a way over Land liberty to Fish Hunt draw water or the like TABLE 9. A bare Hereditament that concerns the person is Of the person himselfe as a Villaine By reason of the person viz. An Annuity which is a yearly Rent to be had of the person of the Grantor A Corody which is a portion for ones sustenance or cloathing An Office which is a duty of attendance upon a charge TABLE 10. A Prerogative hereditament which is derived from the Kings Prerogative and is termed a Franchise being a Royall priviledge in the hands of a Subject as Markets Fairs Toll and whatsoever liberties else which created at first by the Kings special Grant or of their own nature belonging to him are given to a common person to have an estate in Of this sort also are Execution and return of Writs forfeited Recognizances Fines Post-fines Issues Amerciaments and other Green wax money within such a Precinct or Liberty Also power there to make a Coroner Clerk of the Market and other Officers to have therein Treasure Trove Deodands Wreck of the Sea Waifes Estrayes the goods of Felons and outlawed persons Royall mines Royall Fish to keep a Leet to take Conusance of Fines to hold plea of debts and damages Sans summe and the like TABLE 11. A Chattel wherein their cannot be several Estates whereof consider The common Affection viz. That all ones own Chattels whether in possession or action as debts c. may be devised by Testament which is the appointment of an Executor to administer them for him after his death The severall kinds and so it is Reall as a Term for years or Wardship Personall to which divers things belong In generall Bailment which is the delivery of goods To keep when only the custody is committed to him and that is A simple bailment when he receiveth them to keep for another A Pledge when he receiveth them for another thing had of him at the time To employ as when the Bailee hath the things to use for anothers profit Contract which is a mutuall agreement for the very property of Personal things In particular viz. for the Interest of things uncertain as Accord which is an agrement of the parties themselves upon satisfaction executed Arbitrement which is an Award of satisfaction by others TABLE 12. Punishment of Offences which are Without force as Trespass upon the Case Common as Misuses when by wrong one is endamaged as by slander or the like amongst which serve Disturbance which is the hindring of that which belongeth to one to do Nusanee which is an annoyance done to ones Hereditament Deceit when the damage groweth by an undue sleight or the like Conspiracy to do one wrong or the like Offences in the nature of Trespasses upon the Case which are by the Kings Prerogative punishable like to them viz. by amerciament as Non-suit in an action Fault in the Original Writ he brings Or by the Sheriff in the return thereof making default when he should appear And whatsoever other Offences not being with force which offer no direct injury to a common person Reall wrong Tab. 13. Coupled with force Tab. 14. TABLE 13. A reall wrōg is Discontinuance when one having an Estate Tail or Fee-simple in anothers right maketh a large Estate of the Land then he may Ouster when one is put out of his Free-hold Indeed as by Disseisin of Land when one is put or held out by a forcible Entry Detainer Rent as In every rent by Incloser Forstaller In rent service rent charge by Rescous Replevin In rent-charge rent-seck by denyer Usurpation when the Church becometh full by the presentment of a wrong Patron In Law as by Intrusion which is after the death of the Tenant for life Abatement which is after the death of one that had the Inheritance TABLE 14. Wrongs coupled with force and they are Not punishable by death Trespasses and they touch Possessions as in Goods which is the wrongfull taking of them with pretence of Title Land when it is done upon an actual possession thereof The person and so Trespasses are With pretēce of violence as Menaces which are threatning words of beating one or the like Assault which is an unlawfull setting upon ones person With violence indeed as False Imprisonment which is an unlawfull restraint of liberty Bodily hurts and they are Outward violencies Battery which is the wrongful beating of one Maime which is the wrongful spoyling of a member defensable in fight Rape which is the carnall abusing of a woman against her will Offences against the Publike Tab. 15. Punishable by death Tab. 19. TABLE 15. Offences against the publike termed Contempts may be committed either Against the King as 1. To disobey the Kings Command By his Writ By his Proclamation 2. Disobey any thing ordained by Statute Against the Common-wealth viz. against 1. The peace thereof as Riots Routs unlawfull Assemblies breach of the Peace and Good behaviour false news Barreting Ev●s-dropping c. Also all Trespasses with force for which a man may be both indicted and prosecuted at Law by the Suit of the Party 2. The strengh as to send aide to the Kings Enemies to go beyond Sea without the Kings Licence c. 3. The Justice Tab. 16. 4. The Wealth Tab. 17. 5. The Passages Tab. 18. TABLE 16. 3. Publick Offences against the Justice of the Common-wealth as 1 Perverting of Justice as corrupt Judges who pervert Justice corrupt or negligent Officers Enditors corrupt Jurors Extortion Escapes negligent and voluntary c. 2 All force against the Justice of the Realm as Rescous of a Felon or others Affairs in disturbance of Justice to go armed in the Kings Palace To strike in Westminster Hall for which he shall loose his right hand so shall he that strikes a Juror in the presence of the Justices and be also committed to perpetuall Imprisonment 3. Conventicles which comprehend conspirators and Confederators Maintenance Champerty c. 4 Offences in favour of Malefactors as Misprisions of Treason or Felony which for Treason is perpetuall Imprisonment Theft-boot when a man receives his goods
of him when the Tenant in a Court of Record disclaimeth to hold of him TABLE 29. A reall Praecipe quod faciat which is either to recover an Heredittament and this is either In respect of a Seigniory A Writ de consuetudinibus servitiis Secta ad molendinum To recover some other Herediament A Quare Impedit A Quod permittat A Curia claudenda Some reall thing that concerns an Hereditament as A Writ of Covenant as to levie a Fine of Lands c. Writs in the nature of a Covenant reall A Writ of Mesne A Warrantia Cartae TABLE 30. A reall Si fecerit te securum An Assise Of his own possession as An Assise of Novell D●seisin An Assise of Nusance Of his Ancestors Possession as an Asise of Mortdancestor Either of his own or his Ancestors posession as an Assise of Darrein presentment A Juris utrum for a Parson or Vicar upo● his Predecessors alienation Others Such as be between Privies in blood as A Partitione fa●enda A Nuper obiit A Quo jure to try for Common TABLE 31. A personal Originall Writ is also A Praecipe A Praecipe quod reddat Debt and a Writ of Annuity Detinue A Praecipe quod faciat An Action o● Account An Action of Covenant A Si fecerit te securum Tab 32 TABLE 32. A personal si fecerit te securum which is Without force Where the peace is not broken 1 Rationabili parte bonorum 2. Valore Maritagii 3 VVrit or forfeiture of marriage 4 Intrusion of VVard 5 Ejectione custodiae 6 Quare ejecit infra terminum 7 Trespasses upon the Case not against the Peace Where the Peace is broken yet not Vi as An Action of Deceit An Action of Conspiracy With force An Action of Trespass Speciall Actions of Trespass as De parco fracto Rescous Ejectione firmae TABLE 33. An Appeal which concerneth life and is the parties private Action prosecuting also for the Crown in respect of a Felony and this is given only to the Heir of the party slain TABLE 34. A Commissionall Writ which is either Commissionary as A Writ of right Patent A Justiciis An assise of petty Nusance Admeasurement of Dower Admeasurement of Pasture A Nativo habendo A Rationabilibus divisis A Homine re●legiando A Replevin Also many of the Actions th●● went before as Consue●●● nibus Servitiis Secta 〈◊〉 molendinum Quod permit●● Mesne Dower Unde 〈◊〉 habet Annuity Debt Detinue Covenant Trespas● c to what summ● soev●● be brought and also dete●mined in the County by J●stices Meer Commissions as Oyer and Terminer Association Si non omnes Ad quod damnum Perambulatione faci● de TABLE 35. In Courts that hold plea without original Writ the Suit may be by Plaint in matters that conce●● Common pleas Bill in Pleas of the Crown a● Officers of any Court by p●●viledge may sue or be 〈◊〉 there and not elsewhere by 〈◊〉 TABLE 36. Suits for the King are A Quo warranto for the trying of the right of Franchises As inquiry by a Jury which is an Office to entitle the King to som Possession wherof consider The severall wayes how it may be found viz. Virtute officii brevis Commissionis The severall Writs or Commissions used therein concerning a Wardship viz For finding of it Diem clausit extremum within the year after the ●enants death Mandamus after the year Devenerunt when the Ancestor dyed in Ward to the King For mending it Quae plura Melius Inquirendum Datum est nobis intelligi For discharge of it An Aetate probanda A Writ of Livery for Lands in Capite An Ouster le main for other Knight-service Lands How the party may be releived against it By Traverse or Monstrans de droit when the King is entitled by Office only By Petition when he is intitled by double matter of Record as when the Office finds an Attainder of Treason or the like Presentment or Indictment to find an Offence against the King and for penall Lawes an Information TABLE 37. The Originall Process which is Proper Single By the Possessions By the Land In all reall Praecipes quod reddat Summons i● Land Grand cape i● seise it into the Kings hands A Mortdancester juris utrum da●rein presentment Summons Re-summons upon default the Inquest awarded By the Goods as in Assises of nove● Disseisin Nusance Attachme●● by the defendants goods which h● shall lose if he appear not and up on default the Inquest awarded By the person in Mayhem Felony and Treason Cap. Exig Outlawry Mixt By the goods and lands In all other reall Actions and in all personal Actions except Trespas offences against the publike and also in all Justicies Summons b● the Goods Attachment Distress Inf●nite and ●sues of the Land In all Trespasses upon the Case except Deceit and conspiracy and in all Offences in the nature of Trespasses upon the Case Attachment Distres● infinit● and i●sues By the goods and person as in Trespa●● vi Deceit Conspiracy and Offence against the publike Attachment D●stress infinite and upon nihil returne 3. Capias Exigent Outlawry Improper Tab. 38. TABLE 38. Improper which is not to bring any matter into Plea or solemn Action but only to do or leave undone something and in is Commandatorie as Dote assignanda Homagio capiendo Scutagio habendo De Corrodio habendo De Annua pensione hab De Libertatibus alloc De executione Judicii De restitutione Temporalium De securitate pacis De vi laica removenda Of cleansing Streets De excommunicato capiendo De excommunicato deliberando De leproso amovendo De cautione admittenda De haeretico comburendo De Coronatore exonerando De Coronatore eligendo De exoner vi● forest De Electione vi● forest A Writ for the Royall Assent to elect an Abbot De securitate invenienda All Dedimus potestatems de fine leuando de attornato faciendo c. Prohibitory Tab. 39. TABLE 39. Prohibitory as 1 A Protection cum clausula nolumus to free ones Possessions that nothing be taken against his will for the Kings business 2 To discharge Spirituall Persons of Fi●teens 3 Quod clerici non eligantur in Officium B●livi c 4 To forbid Tenant in Dower by the Curtesie or Guardian by Knight service o● in Soccage to commit VVast to the destruction of the Inheritance 5 A Quo minus for Grantee of Estover to restrain the Grantors from committing VVast so as he cannot have his Estovers 6 De exoneratione sectae for Tenants by Suit of Court or other Services that they be not distrained to do the same for such ti●● as they ought to hold the Land discharged 7 D● deonerando pro rata to discharge the Tenant of parcell of the Land according 〈◊〉 the rate of his Land when he i● lawfull● distrained for all the Rent and Services 8. De essendo quieto de Thelonio 9. De non ponendo in Juratis 10. Ne exeas
after possibility of issue extinct be impleaded judgment passe against him the reversioner or remainder man at the time of the judgment shall have writ of error upon an error in the record of the same judgment as wel in the life of such a tenant as after his death And if at the time of reversing the judgement the tenant for life c. be alive he shall be restored c. his possession with the mean profits the reversioner c. to the arrerages of the rent if any be due But if the tenant for life c. be dead at the time of reversing the judgement then the reversioner c shall be restored to the possession with the issues after the death of the tenant for life c. and also to the arrerages due in his life see the Marqu of Winch. case Co. 3. 4. Stat. 31. E. 3. 12. Error in the Exchequer shall be reversed before the Chancellor and Treasurer taking to them such justices and other sage persons as they shal think fit and afterwards the roll shall be sent back into the Exchequer to make execution Stat. 31. El. 2. If either the Lord Chancellor or Lord Treasurer or both the Chief Justices come at the day of adjournment in the Writ of error in the Exchequer it shall be no discontinuance Stat. 32. H. 8. 30. Made perpetuall 2. E. 6. 32. After a Verdict tryed by 12 men or more in any suit in a Court of record no Judgement shall be stayed or reversed for any mispleading lack of colour insufficient pleading miscontinuance discontinuance misconveying of Processe misjoyning of Issue lack of warrant of Attourney for the party against whom the Issue is tryed or any other default or negligence of the parties their Councellors or Attourneys Stat. 18. El. 14. After a Verdict of 12 men or more in any suit in Court of Record Judgment shall not be stayed or reversed for default of form or lack of form false Latine variance for the register c. in any writ original or judicial Declaration Bill or Plaint or for want of any writ original or judicial or by reason of any imperfect or insufficient return or for want of any warrant of Attourney or by reason of any manner of default in proces upon or after Aid prayer or Voucher Stat. 27. El. 5. After Demurrer joyned or entred in any suit in Court of Record the judges shal proceed give Judgement according to right the matter in law appearing to them without regarding any imperfection defect or want of form in any writ Return Plaint Declaration or other pleading whatsoever except those only which the party specially and particulary shall set down and expresse together with his Demurrer And no Judgment to be given shall be reversed by writ of error or by any such imperfection defect or want of form a● aforesaid except as is before excepted The two last Satutes extend not to suits of Felony or Murder nor to the indictment or presentment of them or of treason nor to the Proces of any of them nor to any suit upon any popular or penal Staute Rule 16 Stat. 27. E. 8. An error in the Kings Bench in an action of debt detinue covenant account action upon the Case Ejectione firmae or trespass first commenced there where the King is no party may at the parties choise be reversed in the Exchequer chamber before the Justices of the Common place and such Barons of the Exchequer as are of the Coife or six of them at least other then for error concerning the jurisdiction of the Kings Bench or want of form in a writ Return Plaint Bill Declaration Pleading Process Verdict or proceeding whatsoever And upon the judgement affirmed or reversed the Record shall be sent back into the Kings Bench to proceed and award Execution therupon the party grieved with such reversall or affirmation may have a writ of error in the Parliament in such sort as is now used upon erroneous judgements in the Kings Bench. Stat. 31. El. 1. Any three of the Justices and Barons if the full number come not may receive Writs of Error award Processe prefix dayes for the continuance of Writs of Error c. Rule 12. West 1 37. 3. E. 1. An Attaint is given in pleas of Land or of Freehold and of things that touch Freehold Stat. 1. E 3. Stat. 1. 6. It is given in Writs of Trespass as well upon the principal as upon the damages Stat. 5. E. 3. 6 7. In attaints no Essoin or Protection shall be allowed and a nisi prius is given in such Writs as well as in others Stat. 28. E. 3. 8. An Attaint is given in trespasse as wel upon a Bill as upon a Writ without having regard to the quantity of the Damages Stat. 34. E. 3. 7 An Attaint is granted in all pleas as well real as personall Stat. 9. R. 2. 3. It is given to the Reversioner during the life of his Tenant for life upon a recovery against him with restitution to the Tenant that left his possession together with the mean profits and of the arrearages to the reversioner but if the tenant that so lost be dead or were of covin with the recoveree restitution shall be made to the reversioner of the possession it selfe with the mean profits arrerages after such death or recovery by covin saving to the tenant his action by scire facias if he wil traverse the Covin Stat. de Attinctis 13. E. 2. If the petty Jury appear not at the first distresse against them or a nihil be returned the grand Jury shal be taken by their default Stat. 23 H. 8. 3. Made perpetuall by 13 El 25. In any suit before Justices of Record not concerning life an Attaint is given against the Petty Jury and every of them and the party himselfe the processe against the Petty Jury and Grand Jury shall be summons and Resummons and distresse infinite Open proclamation shall be made in the Court where the distresse is awarded more then 15 dayes before the return of the distresse and the Grand jury shall be taken in default of the Defendant or petty jurors or any of them If any of the petty jury appear then the Plaintiffe shal assigne the false Oath of the first verdict untruly given wherunto the petty jury shall have no answer if they be the same persons and the Writ Processe Return and Assignment be good and lawfull except the plaintiff in the same attaint hath before been non-suit or discontinued his suit or hath had a former judgment therin but only that they made a true oath which issue shall be tryed by 24. of the Grand jury and the party shal plead that they gave a good Verdict or any other matter which shall be a sufficient bar of the attaint Notwithstanding which plea the grand Jury shall without delay enquire of the truth of the Virdict such a day shal be given in a Processe as in
a writ of Dower and no Essoyn or protection allowable By the death of the party or one of the petty Jury the attaint shall not abate nor be deferred against the rest as long as two of the petty Jury shall live Every attaint shall be in the Kings Bench or Common place and the Nisi-prius granted upon the distresse by the discretion of the Justices Every of the petty Jury may appear and answer by attourney The Non-suit or release of one when their be diverse plaintiffs or defendants in an Attaint shall not prejudice Every one of the grand Jury must have 20 Marks apeice Land of freehold out of ancient demesne but if the value of the thing in suit be under the value of 40 l. then 5 Marks a year or 100 Marks worth of goods sufficeth For default of such sufficient Jurors within the same County a Tales shal be awarded unto the next Stat. 11. E. 6. 4. The plaintiffe shall recover Costs and Damages against the Juror or defendant that pleads a feigned plea in delay FINIS A SUMMARY OF THE COMMON LAW OF ENGLAND As it stood in force before it was altered by Statute or Acts of PARLIAMENT Extracted for the most part out of the French and English Copies of Sir HENRY FINCH Kt. his Learned Treatise of the LAW And digested into certain Tablets for the help and delight o such Students as affect METHOD By E. W. Methodus Memoriae Dux Fulcrum LONDON Printed Anno Salutis 1655. AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER THE Science of the Common Law of England hath not onely been in former times but even at this day is accounted so Abstruse Intricate that it hath alwayes seemed an Impossibility to reduce it to method Howbeit our learned Author in his Treatise of the Law hath not only clothed it with a Logical method but with such an exact one as may be parallel'd with if not extolled above that of Wollebius for Theologie Ramus for Geometry Keekerman Alstedius and other modern Writers for Logick Ethicks Physicks politicks Mathematiques c. So as the Student having treasured up in his memory the Common places of Law held forth in these Tables together with their coherence and dependance one upon another may be thereby furnished in all the general necessary titles of Law whereunto he may aptly refer any Case he meets with especially having also before hand by perusing the Treatise at large acquainted himselfe with the Definitions Distributions affections Rules and Examples respectively belonging to ea h severall Title whereby he may more perfectly understand the nature of them Besides if the Text be not read with these Tablets he will meet with divers things in them which are now abrogated by Statute and so not law at this day as Sanctuaries which are now annulled by 21. Jac. 28. diverse Offences before Petty Treason now by statute made high Treason and the like All which is left to his industry and discretion the Scope and design of this Summary being only to shew him the Harmonicall frame of the Original common law before it was altered by statute Acts of Parliament and other Constitutions of State according to the caution before in the Title Page premised TABLE 1. Of the Common Law of England observe 1. The Circumstances viz. The Place where it is used viz. throughout the Realm of England divided into Counties Hundreds and Towns within which there are divers usage differing from the common Law called Customs The persons who are to use it and they are to be considered As one entire Body The King His Subjects Barons Commons As particular Persons Naturall persons as every man Bodies Politique At the Com. Law The King alone and by himself considered The Rector of a Church or Parson Grown of latter time Temporal as Major and Communalty c. Spirituall Regular as Abbot and Covent c. Secular as Bishop and Chapter c. 2. The parts See Tab 2. 3. The common Affection viz. action Tab. 2● TABLE 2. The parts of the Common Law are two The One concerns Possessions whereof consider The General affections 1. To Possessions this is generall that they may pass by Grant Exchange Prescription 2. Sundry men possessing the same thing by purchase are Joynt Tenants who possesse by the same Title Tenants in common who possesse by severall Titles 3. A possession is either Restrictive upon Limitation which ceaseth upon doing or not doing of something Condition which is only defeasable upon the doing or not doing of something Absolute which is neither upon limitation or condition 4 Tab 3. The Species or severall kinds Tab. 4. The other the punishment of offence Tab. 12. TABLE 3. 4. Possessions are either in Possession viz. such as one doth enjoy Action touching which consider 1. How it ariseth that is in respect of a Right when wrong was done before Title when no wrong was done 2. The Rules which concern it 1. A thing in action cānot be granted but to him in possession that by Release which is the passing of the Grantors Interest Confirmation which is the ratifying of the Grantees possessions 2. The grant of a thing in action and of such things in possession as cannot pass by livery of the hand must be by Deed viz. Deed Pol which is the only deed of the Grantor Indenture which is the mutuall deed of both and makes an Estopel to both parties TABLE 4. The severall kinds of Possessions so a Pos is An Hereditament wherof consider The severall Estates viz. Particular viz. Uncertain At sufferance when after lawfull occupation he continueth possession without Authority At will According to the custom as a Copyholder At pleasure as a bare Tenant at will Certain which is also called a Term wherof consider The dependants Remainder which is the residue of an Estate at the same time appointed over Reversion which is the residue of an estate not at the same time appointed over These pass with Attornment The severall kinds For years For life In Deed after actual Seisin In Law before Entry For his own life For anothers life and these are Freehold Inheritance Tab. 5. The severall kinds Tab. 6. Chattel Tab. 11. TABLE 5. Inheritance whereof consider The estate called fee-simple which is Conditionall when an Hereditament is limitted to the heires of the body hither Frank-marriage may bee referred Absolute which is a Fee-simple to one and his heirs whatsoever The Incidents Dower whereby a woman hath the thirds in severalty Tenancy by the courtesie of England The diverse manners of possessing it viz. in Deed. Law TABLE 6. The severall kinds of an Hereditament and so it is Common as A Tenemēt which is a possession holden it is Land which is a Tenement in manuall occupation and here prescription hath no place An Advowson which is the Interest of presenting to a Church A bare Hereditament Tab. 7. Prerogative Tab. 10. TABLE 7 A bare Hereditament which concerns Land and so it is