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A64839 The reports of Sir Peyton Ventris Kt., late one of the justices of the Common-pleas in two parts : the first part containing select cases adjudged in the Kings-Bench, in the reign of K. Charles II, with three learned arguments, one in the Kings-Bench, by Sir Francis North, when Attorney General, and two in the Exchequer by Sir Matthew Hale, when Lord Chief Baron : with two tables, one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters : the second part containing choice cases adjudged in the Common-pleas, in the reigns of K. Charles II and K. James II and in the three first years of the reign of His now Majesty K. William and the late Q. Mary, while he was a judge in the said court, with the pleadings to the same : also several cases and pleadings thereupon in the Exchequer-Chamber upon writs of error from the Kings-Bench : together with many remarkable and curious cases in the Court of Chancery : whereto are added three exact tables, one of the cases, the other of the principal matters, and the third of the pleadings : with the allowance and approbation of the Lord Keeper an all the judges. Ventris, Peyton, Sir, 1645-1691.; Guilford, Francis North, Baron, 1637-1685.; Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676.; England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1696 (1696) Wing V235; ESTC R7440 737,128 910

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was found in the Office The Countess also was alive at that time and so could not be seised into the Kings hands And as to the Statute of 7 Jacobi it is plain that it means a Naturalization by Parliament here for it appoints the Lord Chancellor or Keeper to Administer the Oaths if the Bill begin in the House of Lords and the Speaker to do it if it begin in the House of Commons And of this Opinion was Vaughan in these three last things tho' in the Principal Matter he agreed with the other two Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 22 Car. II. In Communi Banco Thoms Harrison Ux ' versus Dr. Burwell IN an Action for suing in the Spiritual Court after a Prohibition sued out and delivered the Plaintiff sets forth that by an Act of Parliament made in the 32 H. 8. c. 38. it was enacted c. That from the first day c. all and every such Marriages as within this Church of England should be contracted between lawful persons as by this Act they declared all persons to be lawful that be not prohibited by Gods Law to marry such Marriages being Contracted and Solemnized in the face of the Church and consummate with Bodily Knowledge c. should be c. deemed judged and taken to be lawful good just and indissoluble notwithstanding any precontract c. and notwithstanding any Dispensation Prescription Law or other thing granted or confirmed by Act or otherwise and that no Reservation or Prohibition Gods Law except should trouble or impeach any Marriage without the Levitical Degrees and that no person of what Estate Condition or Degree whatsoever he or she be should c. be admitted to any of the Spiritual Courts within this the Kings Realm or any his Graces other Lands and Dominions to any Process Plea or Allegation contrary to this foresaid Act. And sets forth further That one Abbot had Issue Robert and Bartholomew that Robert had Issue Mary who married Robert Harrison and by him had Issue Thomas the Plaintiff that Bartholomew took to Wife Jane Brown who is now the other Plaintiff and that Bartholomew died without Issue and that then the Plaintiffs intermarried they say that he and she were free from any Marriage or Contract with any other person and the Marriage was solemnized according to the Orders and Rules of the Church and that this is a good Marriage by the Laws of God and Man and that A. B. a Notary intending to dissolve this Marriage contrary to the said Act cited the Plaintiffs before Dr. Burwell and articled against them in this manner That within the Jurisdiction c. reciting the Alliance c. and that the said T. H. took the said Jane Abbot to Wife de facto cum de jure non potuit nec debuit and so they committed Incest c. Hereupon Dr. Burwell Demurs and prays a Consultation It had been divers tunes argued at the B●r and now Vaughan Chief Iustice delivered the Opinion of the Court in this manner Vaughan 'T is the pleasure of my Brothers that I deliver their Opinion in this Case and what I do deliver I do not deliver as their Opinion only but as the Opinion of all the Iudges of England for they have met together by the Kings Command several times to debate and consider of this Case and they all agree that no Consultation be granted This is a Case of great expectation and perhaps the only Case which has been solemnly resolved since the Statute of 32 H. 8. was made there are but three Cases concerning it Man's Case 1 Cro. 228. Mo. 907. Parson's Case 1 Inst 235. and Remington's Case Hob. 181. I must in the first place premise that perhaps if we the Iudges had been makers of the Law this Question had not been but we are to proceed upon the Laws as made and cannot alter them This is not a thing of our promotion and this I speak to satisfie such as might object against us This Statute was made in a time when the Popes Power was warmly pursued and Laws were then made which in the circumstances of another time would not have been made I will first give the Reasons the Iudges went upon in their Resolution and then I will also give some Reasons to satisfie People abroad for I know the Case will meet with many censures First Of the former Antiently the Kings Temporal Courts had nothing to do with the lawfulness or unlawfulness of Marriage it was wholly of Ecclesiastical Conisance the Statute de Circumspecte agatis is that the Temporal Iudges should not punish the Spiritual Courts for holding Pleas of those things quae mere sunt spiritualia viz. pro Fornicatione Adulterio hujusmodi and Sir Ed. Coke 2 Inst 488. expounding those words Et hujusmodi he says and he says very right that these are to be taken for Offences of like nature as the two Offences here particularly expressed be viz. as sollicitation of any Womens Chastity which is lesser than these and for Incest which is greater Here is an undoubted evidence that the Temporal Courts used to prohibit c. and the ancientness of that is unquestioned but it seems they did border in their Prohibitions sometimes upon things which were Spiritual which they ought not to have done There was no time but in which some Marriages were lawful and some unlawful but if a man were formerly questioned about such a matter he had no relief from the Temporal Courts By the Ancient Common Law Marriages were unlawful as far as they had names of Kindred viz. to the fourth Degree from Cousin Germans inclusively and therein it irritated the Civil Law but in the Council of Lateran under Pope Innocent the 3d it was ordained thus Sancitum est prohibitionem copulationis conjugalis quartum gradum non excedere and so it stands in all places under the Common Law at this day in Popish Countries with us it has received alteration by this Statute in this matter there is a Reason very much sticks with many viz. That the Temporal Courts are not skilled in the Laws by which this is to be judged and therefore that it is not fit that they should determine concerning it 'T is true the word Cognitio signifies both but yet there is a great difference between Skill and Cognizance But I say further That the Temporal Iudges may well enough have both for though the knowledge of the Canon Law be not adequatum subjectum to a Common Lawyer yet 't is commune subjectum There are four Statutes which have made great alteration in the Cognisance of this matter 25 H. 8. 22. 28 H. 8. c. 7. 28 H. 8. c. 16. and this of 32 H. 8. c. 38. The first indeed is repeased because it was interwoven with matter of Succession of the Crown c. which was set aside But the Second viz. 28 H. 8. cap. 7. is syllabically the same as to this purpose the words are
Court for the proceedings are diverso respectu We proceed against Conventicles as being against the Peace and as being against the Laws of the Church and to prevent the broaching of Heterodor Opinions as in one Court we do agere civiliter by Action criminaliter by Information for the same matter Secondly The proceeding in this Case is according to the constant course of proceeding in their Court for when a Presentment is made they form Articles thereupon tibi articulamur objicimus c. but they never recite or mention the Presentment in the Articles and therefore it does not nor need it appear in them in this Case So that it cannot from hence he concluded to be a prosecution ex Officio mero Moreover 25 H. 8. when it was in force concerned Heresie only As to the Presentment made in this Case by the Curate 1. Those Canons are not to be questioned they have been always allowed having been confirmed by the King 2. The Rectors absence shall be intended 3. The Churchwardens themselves whose ancient and unquestioned Office it is to make Presentments don't take a particular Oath upon all the Presentments they make but they do it by vertue of their general Oath of Churchwardens and Ministers do the same as the Bishop of Sarum present in Court had asserted just before in verbo Sacerdotis or rather by vertue of their general Oath of Canonical Obedience 4. They are not bound to specifie the Presentment in their Articles and this is not so liable to the Objection of Mischief and Vnreasonableness as the Informations daily brought in the Kings-Bench in the Name of the Clerk of the Crown which Informations are approved and preserved by the very Statute of 18 Eliz. c. 5. And if there be no due Presentment 't is an Error which consists in not proceeding according to their Rules i. e. the Canon Law and the proper remedy for that is by Appeal and our Courts will not take notice whether they observe their own Laws Prohibitions are only to be granted when the Common Law is invaded and interfered with Thirdly As to the examining of the Party upon Oath here is no cause to mention it and indeed it is not their course for they only ask him ore tenus whether he will confess or deny the Articles if he deny them then there is litis contestatio and they proceed to examine Witnesses to prove it and if it be not proved the Informer is condemned in Costs Justice Wyld I am of Opinion that there should go no Prohibition We must Iudge only upon the Suggestion Here 't is suggested that the Defendant proceeded against the Plaintiff ex Officio but that may be understood two ways either that he proceeded officiose on his own head or that he proceeded out of Duty according to his Duty and nothing appears to the contrary of this last and then he did as he ought If the Plaintiff had suggested that by the Law of the Land there ought to be a Presentment by such persons in such manner c. he might have brought that into question Archer of the same Opinion We must give faith and credit to their proceedings and presume that they are according to their Law 4 Co. 29 The King with the Convocation may make Orders and Constitutions for the Government of the Church Tyrrell of the same Opinion But if the Suggestion were that no Presentment by a Curate were sufficient nor unless it were upon Oath c. I should have been Opinion for a Prohibition I hold that the King and Convocation without the Parliament can't make any Canons which shall bind the Laity though they may the Clergy Vid. 35 H. 8. c. 19. Vaughan of the same Opinion If the Articles were exhibited meerly ex Officio i.e. out of the mind of the Chancellor himself they were not warrantable But there is no colour for this Suggestion for they appear to be the Information of a Publick Notary As to the Presentment which is thought requisite by the preamble of 25 H. 8. c. 14. declaratory of the Common Law or not it is sufficient Answer to say that the Act is repealed and therein the Preamble And for ought any man knows the Preamble was the Cause of the Repeal this has been the only specious Objection As to the Canons 3 Jacobi certainly they are of force tho' never confirmed by Act of Parliament Indeed no Canons of England stand confirmed by Act of Parliament yet they are the Laws which bind and govern in Ecclesiastick Affairs The Convocation with the License and assent of the King under the Great Seal may make Canons for regulation of the Church and that as well concerning Laicks as Ecclesiasticks and so is Linwood Indeed they cannot alter or infringe the Common Law Statute Law or Kings Prerogative but they may make alterations viz. in Eccleastical Matters or else they could make no new Canons All that is required of them in making of new Canons is that they confine themselves to Church Matters As no Human Law can be made which is contrary to the Divine Law and it is binding only in those things which are permissa by the Divine Law So no Canon Law can be made which is repugnant to the Law of the Land The Subject Matter is in the Case The permissa the things of Ecclesiastical Nature which are left indifferent by the Law of the Land in this Case we must presume there was a Presentment according to their Law if not the Remedy is by Appeal We ought not to assume the Iurisdiction of Iudging upon their Law but give way to their course of Proceedings Serjeant Ellis I only intended that Canons cannot be made to alter the Law without Parliament Curia We all agree as to the First Exception that the Spiritual Court may proceed against Conventicles as a Spiritual Offence tho' not as a Civil As to the Second That they have Conusans of all False Worshippers As to the Third That there is nocolour or occasion to make it Note The Course of the Spiritual Court is not to make a Significavit until forty days after the Excommunication General Citation is a cause of Prohibition for it ought to be expressed for what Cause But this is cured by Appearance or Appeal Termino Paschae Anno 1 Willielmi Mariae In Communi Banco Anonymus UPon a Suggestion of Devastavit of a Feme Executrix it was That the Baron and Feme devastaver ' converter ' ad usum ipsorum And upon the Issue it was found accordingly It was moved in Arrest of Judgment That they could not Convert to their own use And so in Trover and Conversion Quod converter ' ad usum ipsorum is not good Sed non allocatur For here the material part of the Issue was the Wasting which the Baron and Feme might do joyntly and the Conversion is nothing to the purpose Vid. 2. Sand. Issue upon a Devastavit Anonymus
Demurrer to the Replication Joynder in Demurrer 241 7. Debt upon a By-Law made by a Corporation by Prescription 243 The Declaration sets forth That the Town of G. is Antiqua Villa a Corporation time out of mind Power to implead and be impleaded A Custom to make By-Laws for good Government of the Corporation and to impose Penalties Custom to elect a Bayliff annually 243 The By Law sets forth Forfeiture for the Breach The Defendant elected Bayliff for the year then next following who refused to execute the Office per quod Actio accrevit The Defendant pleads the Act of 13 Car. 2. 244 The Act set forth 245 And alledges that he is and at the time aforesaid was a Protestant Dissenter and had not received the Sacrament according to the Rites of the Church of England with a year before his Election and that the said Election by virtue of the said Act was void The Plaintiff demurs The Defendant joyns 246 8. Debt for Rent upon two several Demises by Lease Parol 249 The first Demise Exception Habendum Reddendum Entry Rent arrear Actio accrevit 250 The second Demise Exception Habendum Reddendum Rent arrear Actio accrevit 251 The Defendant pleads That the Plaintiff Nihil habuit in tenementis tempore dimissionis it should have been temporibus demissionis ibid. The Plaintiff replies That before the several Demises one J. S. demised to him for 41 years the said J. S. having then full Power Right and Title to make such Demise by virtue of which he entred and was possest and demised to the Defendant 252 The Defendan demurs The Plaintiff joyns in demurrer 253 Distress and Avowry Vide Replevin E Error 1. ERror in the Exchequer Chamber The Style of the Court 286 The Writ of Error 287 The Return of the Writ The Memorandum and Declaration in a special Action of the Case for not grinding at an Ancient Mill. Seisin of the Mannor and Mill. The Plaintiff Farmer of the Mill habuit habere debuit the Toll 288 The Defendant Occupier of an Ancient Messuage which ought to grind at his Mill. That the Defendant erected a Hand-Mill and ground therewith ratione cujus the Plaintiff lost his Toll The Defendant imparles and pleads Not guilty 289 Postea Tales Verdict for the Plaintiff The Judgment The Placita in the Exchequer Chamber 190 The General Errors assigned A Scire facias ad audiendum Errores prayed and awarded The Defendant in the Writ of Error appears and pleads in nullo est Erratum 291 2. The Placita in the Exchequer Chamber The Writ of Error 296 The Return of the Writ The Placita 297 The Memorandum and Declaration upon an Inland Bill of Exchange The Custom set forth That any Merchant or other person vel Ordini suo super visum acceptavit sic per Indorsamentum appunctuaret pro valore recept ' c. Upon Refusal to pay the Merchant or other person to become chargable 298 Avers That the Defendant being a Merchant at N. drew a Bill upon one J. S. in London payable to one P. or Order for Value received The Bill presented to J. S. and accepted by him P. orders payment to the Plaintiff J. S. had Notice and the Money demanded of him but refused payment of which the Defendant had Notice 299 And became chargable and thereupon promised payment but tho' after requested non solvit 300 The Defendant Protestando that there is no such Custom for Plea says That one C. an Excise-man paid the Defendant the Money in question being the Kings Money to the intent that it should be paid to the King and the Defendant at C's request drew the Bill That C. was then indebted to the King prout per Record ' Scaccarij 301 That an Extent issued out thereupon ad inquirendum The Writ delivered to the Sheriffs of London An Inquisition taken by them 302 The Money and Bill of Exchange seised and returned into the Exchequer The King became Entituled An Extent issued out to the Sheriff of N. for the levying the Money and the Money paid thereupon Averment of una eadem persona 304 Et una eadem Billa Et una eadem Summa The Plaintiff demurs to the Plea especially Causes of demurrer The Defendant joyns in demurrer 304 Eleven Continuances 304 305 306 The Loquela and Proceedings revived by Act of Parliament 1 W. M. Judgment for the Plaintiff upon the demurrer A Writ of Enquiry awarded 306 The Inquisition return'd Damages found Judgment for the Plaintiff 307 Mill and Toll Vid. Error 1. Outlawry pleaded Vid. Action on the Case 8. Prerogative Process Vid. Action on the Case 3. Error 2. Trover 2. Quantum meruit Vid. Action on the Case 8. R Rent Vid. Debt 3. 8. Replevin 1. THe Plaintiff Declares for taking and detaining 8 Cows c. The Defendant acknowledges the taking as Bayliff to the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury 131 Sets forth that they are Lords of the Mannor of M. That J. S. was seized of the Locus in quo parcel of the said Mannor and held it of the Dean and Chapter by Fealty Rent and Suit of Court Sets forth a Custom for the Lord to have a year and an halfs Rent upon every Alienation and power to distrain for it Shews the Alienation and the Purchasers Entry and that there was so much due for a Fine by Custom and because the same was unpaid the Defendant distrained infra feodum c. 132 133 The Plaintiff demurs to the Conizance The Defendant joyns in demurrer 134 2. Against two Defendants One of which avows the other acknowledges the taking as Baily to the former 145 They set forth that long before the taking R.L. and L.L. were seized in Fee of the Locus in quo and by Deed granted an Annuity to the Ancestor of the Avowant and his Heirs issuing out of certain Lands of which the Locus in quo was parcel with power of Distress Conditionally to be void upon payment of 100 l on a certain day then to come which was not paid c. 146 147 And for six years Rent Arrear the Distress was made which the one Defendant bene advocat and the other bene cognoscit as in the Lands charged with the Distress The Plaintiff demurs to the Avowry and Conizance The Defendants joyn 148 3. The Plaintiff declares for taking his Colt c. 210 The Defendant avows for Damage fesant and sets forth that E. M. being seized in Fee demised the Locus in quo to the Avowant to hold at Will That he entred and was possest and took the Cold Damage fesant prays Judgment and a Return and Costs and Damages according to the Statute The Plaintiff pleads in Bar to the Avowry That E. M. demised the Locus in quo to him before the pretended Demise to the Defendant to hold for 6 years That he entred and was possest and that the Defendant took his Colt there absque hoc that E. M. demised to
1 W. M. After which Judgment for the Defendants 166 That the said Defendants shall go sine die and have their Costs 167 Averment that the said Judgment remains in full force That the Goods in the said Action of Trespass and this of Trover are the same That the Conversion in this Action and the Taking in the other is the same That the Cause of Action was the same in both And that the Plaintiffs and Defendants are the same Et hoc parati sunt verificare unde petunt Judicium si praedicti the Plaintiffs Actionem suam versus eos habere debeant c. Not guilty to the residue of the Goods The Plaintiffs demur The Defendants joyn 168 Vsury Pleaded Vid. Debt 7. Way Action for stopping it Vid. Action on the Case 5. WE all knowing the Great Learning and Judgment of the Author do for the Benefit of the Public approve of and allow the Printing and Publishing of this Book Intituled The Reports of Sir Peyton Ventris Kt. Late One of the Justices of the Court of Common-Pleas J. Som̄ers C.S. J. Holt Geo Treby Ed Nevill Joh. Powell W. Gregory N. Lechmere Tho. Rokeby G Eyre Jo Turton John Powell Sam. Eyre April the 20 th 1965. The Second Volume TERMINO SANCTI HILLARII Anno Vicesimo primo secundo Caroli Secundi IN COMMUNI BANCO Craw versus Ramsey IN an Ejectment of Lands and the Rectory of Kingston upon Thames in Surrey Vpon Not Guilty pleaded the Jury found a Special Verdict to this effect viz. That Robert Ramsey Born in Scotland before the Accession thereof to the Crown of England had Issue four Sons Robert Nicholas John and George Antenati Robert died they do not find when leaving Issue three Daughters Margaret Isabel and Jane who were also Aliens and alive 1 Octob. 14 Car. 1. Nicholas had Issue Patrick born in England 1 May 1618. They also find that at the Parliament holden 10 Car. 1. in Ireland it was Enacted That all Persons of the Scottish Nation should be reputed the Kings Natural Subjects to all intents constructions and purposes of that his Realm of Ireland as if Born there And they find the Act of Parliament at large Nicholas Ramsey was alive at the making of that Act. John the third Son afterwards Earl of Holderness was Naturalized by Act of Parliament in England 1 Jacobi and purchased the Lands and Rectory in question and being seised 22 Jac by Indenture Tripartite between him of the First part Sir William Cocke and Martha his Daughter of the Second part and Charles Lord Effingham of the Third part In Consideration of a Marriage to be had between him and Martha did Covenant to levy a Fine to the use of himself for Life and afterwards to Martha for Life the Remainder to the Heirs Males of his Body the Remainder to his own right Heirs And 29 Septemb. 22 Jac. the Marriage was had and the Michaelmas Term after a Fine was Levied accordingly The 24 of Jan. 1 Car. 1. the Earl died without Issue Martha Entred and was seised for her Life and died 17 Car. Et eodem anno it was found by Office that the Earl of Holderness died seised of the Rectory as before and without an Heir and that King Charles anno decimo granted this Rectory to one Murray George the fourth Son of Robert was Naturalized by the Parliament here 7 Jac. He had Issue John the Defendant Nicholas died Patrick his Heir in 1651. bargained and sold to the Earl of Elgin and one Sydenham virtute cujus vigore Statuti c. they were seised prout Lex postulat and in 1662. bargained and sold for years to Amabel Countess of Kent and Jane Hart and afterwards Released to them and their Heirs in 1665. They being seised bargained and sold by Lease and Release also to Pullen and Neale who Entred and bargained and sold to Sir Lionel Talmash and West the Lessors of the Plaintiff upon whom John the Defendant Entred Vpon which the Action is brought and the great Question in the Case was Whether Patrick the Son of Nicholas might claim these Lands as Heir to the Earl of Holderness by virtue of the Act of Parliament in Ireland 10 Car. or that they should descend to the Defendant the Son of George Naturalized the 7 of Jac. in England Wyld and Archer who Argued first were of Opinion That however the Point was adjudged the Plaintiff could not have Judgment upon this Verdict for they do not find that Patrick entred or was seised but that he in 1651. did bargain and sell c. Virtute cujus the Bargainees were seised prout Lex postulat and then bargained and sold in 1662 and do not so much as find their Bargainees seised prout Lex postulat But they find the Defendant Entred and so the primer Possession is in him which is a good Title against the Plaintiff for whom none is found it not being found that Patrick Entred Again If the Naturalization in Ireland will serve in England the Title appears for the Daughters the Heirs of Robert the eldest Son for 't is found that he died but not when so it might be after the Act of 10 Car. But Tyrrell and Vaughan Chief Justice differed in these two Points As to the First They said it would be intended Patrick entred for a Verdict that leaves all the Matter at large to the Iudgment of the Court will be taken sometimes by Intendment as well as where the Jury Conclude upon a Special Point 2 Cro. 64. find an Incumbent Resigned the Resignation shall be intended accepted So in 4 Co. Fullwood's Case it was found that one came before the Recorder of London and Mayor of the Staple recognovit se debere c. and did not say per scriptum suum Obligatorium nec per formam Statuti yet intended so Vid. Hob. 262. And where they find the Bargainees seised prout lex postulat that doth not leave it doubtful whether seised or no but whether by right or wrong for Seisin must be taken as found expresly Neither do they find any other in possession nor that the Defendant made any Claim in Twelve years after which enforces the Intendment as before And it is found expresly that Pullen and Neale Entred in 1665. so that the Defendant had not the primer Possession however or if he had he should not have Judgment if no other Title were found for him as is Resolved in 1 Cro. 42. Hern and Allen's Case As to the Second It shall be intended Robert died before 10 Car. For he is found an Alien and shall be presumed to have continued so during his Life unless found to the contrary then the Discent to the Daughters is obstructed by the Incapacity of their Father And tho' when the Title is found for the King the Court shall adjudge for him because the Kings Courts are intrusted with his Rights 't is not so of any other person but they shall take no
notice of any Title found for a Stranger Wherefore they held notwithstanding these Omissions in the Verdict that Judgment might be given for the Plaintiff And Tyrrell was of Opinion in the Principal Matter for the Plaintiff In his Argument he considered of divers kinds of Allegiance natural and acquired which was either local or legal As when a man is Sworn in the Leet Denizated by the Kings Letters Patents obtained by Conquest or Naturalized which Naturalization must be by Act of Parliament and cannot be limited 2 Cro. 539. 1 Inst 129. who is to all purposes a Natural born Subject An Indictment of Treason against such an one is contra naturalem ligeantiam Neither can it be confined to Place for 't is due to the Natural and not to the Politick person of the King Mo. 790. And the Plea of infra ligeantiam Regni sui Angliae was rejected in Calvin's Case in Co. and said to be never heard of before Idem est nasci idem naturalizari And he Argued That in regard Ireland hath the like Court of Parliament that England hath it hath also the same Power and conceived that the English Laws were introduced by Parliament in King John's time For in the Charter 11 H. 3. it is recited that Johannes quondam Rex Angliae duxit secum in Hiberniam Viros discretos legis peritos quorum Communi Concilio ad instantiam Hibernentium statuit c. ex diuturnitate temporis omnia praesumuntur solenniter esse acta In the 4 Inst 357. it appears that Parliaments were holden there before 17 E. 3. 2 R. 3. 12. Hibernia habet Parliamentum facium Leges And in 4 Inst 452. it is said they may Naturalize an Alien and if they do so he is all one with an Irish man born As one that purchaseth his Freedom in a Corporation hath all Immunities as amply as he that is born a Member of it Neither doth it follow from hence that an Act of Parliament in Ireland could bind England it is the Law of England Cooperating with the Act that gives the Naturalization an effect here The Act is but remotio Impedimenti As if one were Attainted by the Parliament there he should forfeit his Lands here and if that Act were Repealed he should be restored to them again yet neither Act were oligative to England The Act of Ireland is causa remota or sine qua non the Law of England is causa proxima and this of Naturalization was one of the Wonders of the Powers and Priviledges of Parliament As Legitimation of a Bastard and the like The other three Justices were of a contrary Opinion and Argued to this effect that Ireland was a Conquered Kingdom the Conquest compleated if not begun in K. Henry the Second's time in whose time there is no Record of any Establishment and being a Christian Kingdom they remained Governed by their own Laws until King John Anno 12 Regni sui by Charter for so they conceived it to be and not by Parliament for it appears that the Nobles were sworn which is not usual in Acts of Parliament neither is it Teste Rege in Parliamento introduced the English Laws yet it hath ever remained a distinct Kingdom viz. from the bringing in the Laws by King John M. Paris Hist 230. and Calvin's Case in 7 Co. 22 23. the Conquest brought it infra Dominium Regis sed non infra Regnum Angliae Oruke committed Treason in Ireland and it was held tryable by Commission by 33 H. 8. as a Treason out of the Realm 20 H 6. 8. the Judges here are not bound to take notice of the Laws of Ireland Fitzh tit Voucher 239. A man in Ireland cannot be Vouched Anders 262 263. 2 Inst 2. it is said Magna Charta nor the Statute Laws here did not extend to Ireland until Poinings Law 10 H. 7. tho' in truth it appears to be before by 8 E. 4. cap. 10. neither are they obliged by any Statute since unless named Dier 303. It is said of Lands holden in Capite in England and Ireland that there ought to be several Liverties and by several Seals 11 Ed. 4. 7. When the King went into Ireland it was held to be a Voyage Royal. And Wyld said Two Kingdoms could not be united but by Act of Parliament and there ought to be reciprocal Acts and so is my Lord Coke 4 Inst cap. Scotland But this the Chief Iustice said in his Argument was not requisite in case of a Conquered Nation which hereby had lost its Original Right of holding Parliaments but he agreed in case of Kingdoms independent one upon the other He said he had a Charter whereby Gascoigne Guyan and Callice were united to England in Ed. the 3ds time and recited to be by mutual pact upon a Peace concluded that Wales was fully conquered in Ed. 1st time whereupon they all submitted de alto basso to the King and it appears he abrogates some Laws makes some new and continues others and Wales was united and consolidated with England in H. 8 time by Act of Parliament here but there was no Act on their part neither is Ireland only a distinct Kingdom but also subordinate A Law enacted here to extend to all the Kings Dominions shall bind Ireland Writs of Error have been always brought here to reverse Iudgments in Ireland and they naturally lie as the Chief Iustice said into all subordinate Kingdoms Fitz. tit Ass 562. A Writ of Error to reverse a Iudgment given in an Assize in the County of Glamorgan and 21 H. 7. 31. B. it is said many Writs of Error have been brought to reverse Iudgments given in Callice tho' it was alledged the Civil Law there was in use So the Romans allowed Appeals out of every Province subordinate unto them as appears by the Case of St. Paul in the Acts and 't is against Nature that the Inferiour should have any influence upon the Superiour suppose a Bill of Naturalization were brought into Parliament here and rejected and after it should pass in Ireland should it have the same effect as if it had passed here If this might have been what needed the endeavours in the beginning of King James's Reign to obtain an Act for the Naturalization of all Scots and the Union of both Kingdoms when an Act in Ireland would have been as effectual and procured with much greater facility Neither is the Parliament of Ireland equal to that of England for that might be aliened by an Act of Parliament as Gascoigne and Guyan were by mutual Consent tho' the King cannot do it alone therefore King John's Grant to the Pope was held absolutely void but Ireland could not be transferred from the Sovereignty of England by any Act there for they cannot discharge themselves of their Subordination to England H. 3. granted to Ed. 1. Terrem Hibernicam and it was held to be void 40 Ed. 3. 4 Inst 357. And if they should make an Act
there that no Writ of Error should lie into England the Chief Iustice said it would be void for their Power is merely precarious as to the Parliament of England though not to the King in regard of his Charter Wherefore he said it might be questioned whether they could Naturalize at all for the King cannot alone and their Power is wholly derived from this Charter neither hath it been attempted by them until 10 Car. 1. when the Earl of Strafford was Lieutenant there Whereas it was said on the other side that to be Naturalized in Ireland was the same thing as to be born in Ireland he denied it unless they added by the Laws of Ireland i. e. the Law gives him there all the Priviledges a Native hath but this was not ligeantia nata sed data and therefore can extend no further than the Power of them that gave it and tho' it be said an Act of Parliament can do any thing that must be understood as to civil things which are but the Creatures of Men therefore may be altered and disposed at the will of the Supream Authority but natural things are not within its Power For an Act of Parliament cannot make a Man a Woman or a Man to be born in any other place than where he was really born tho' it may give him such priviledges as one hath that is born there viz. such as are within their Power and none else and 7 Co. 18. B. The time of the Birth is of the essence of a Subject born and after in Calvins Case 27. it is said natural Ligeance respecteth the time of the Birth and he cannot be a Natural Subject who was born under the Allegiance of another King for a Natural Subject is the correlative to a Natural Prince and one naturalized there might in all respects be compared to an antenatus who differed from a postnatus in these two things First He was another Princes Subject before a Subject to the King of England Secondly Such an one might have been an Enemy whereas a born Subject may be Traitor but can never be an Enemy Now the Subjects of a Prince that conquers another Kingdom become immediately Denizens of that Kingdom But not è converso as was held in Calvins Case of the antenati in Scotland But the Subjects of a King who is Homager to that King shall not be Aliens in any of his Dominions as in Wales before the Conquest of it in Edw. the 1st Time the like in Scotland as appears Dier 304. Pl. 57. A Scot was indicted of a Rape who pleaded not guilty and prayed a Tryal per medietat ' Linguae and it was denied for that a Scot was never accounted an Alien sed potius Subject ' tho' the Chief Iustice was of Opinion they ought not to have judged so there because the Homage of Scotland had been lost so long before The Statute of 5 Eliz. is that none shall set up a Trade unless he hath been an Apprentice to it by the space of seven years Suppose an Act were made in Ireland that it should be lawful for J. S. to set up a Trade tho' he had never been an Apprentice this would enable him there but no man would say that thereby he should have liberty to set up here No tho' the words of the Act were as if he had served seven years So the Law is that no man can be naturalized here but by Act of Parliament here Naturalization is a great point of State-interest therefore the King cannot do it by his Charter And the inconvenience would be very great if naturalization in Ireland should extend hither for tho' it was objected we might obviate it if found to be so by disallowing their Acts which before they pass there are sent hither and remitted under the Great Seal and so we may repeal their Acts yet it was said the like Power by consequence must be yielded to Scotland and we cannot disannul their Acts so they shall introduce what Aliens they please amongst us without controll And tho' it was said a naturalization there would do us no harm for it could never be made appear because no Certiorari could be awarded from hence thither yet it is manifest there are ways of making it appear In 42 Ed. 3 2. Lord Beaumonts Case Vide 2 Cro. 484. a Certiorari to remove a Record taken at Callis it is said that part of Scotland was within the Kings Ligeance and part without and that the King kept a Roll of such Places as he had under his Subjection and the Party was directed to petition the King to certifie whether Rosse were so or no so the King must be Party to their Acts there and therefore may certifie them or they may be given in Evidence as Foreign Laws or the Sentences in the Ecclesiastical or Civil Law Courts Now we must not always conclude a thing not to be Law because it is inconvenient but that for which there is neither Practical Custom Judicial Precedent or Act of Parliament to warrant may be well judged to be so Wyld and Archer in their Arguments did much insist upon the particular penning of this Act where the Makers did seem to intend that the effect of this Naturalization should be confined to Ireland for the Preamble recites this Your Majesties Realm of Ireland will be much impaired for want of Scottish Planters and that 100000 were planted in the Province of Vlster there it enacts That they and all Scottish shall be deemed Your Majesty's liege Subjects of this Your Realm of Ireland and this your Realm repeated almost in every Clause which would lose its force if the naturalization should be construed to have a larger extent They also took notice of the Proviso of the Act That it should not extend unto any Lands whereof any Office was found for the King and seised into his hands And here was an Office found 17 Jacobi they also mentioned the Statute of 7 Jacobi c. 2. which Enacts That the Bill of Naturalization shall be twiced read unless the Person hath received the Sacrament within a Month before and also taken the Oaths of Allegience and Supremacy To the first Tyril answered First That Naturalization could not be restrained at least not by affirmative words for it doth not say Your Realm of England and not elsewhere the Act hath also these words as born of Irish Parents as natural born Subjects and other words as full as may be also the Act of Naturalization of John and George in England hath the same words mutatis mutandis viz. of this Your Realm and in others they are more restrictive viz. from henceforth shall be deemed c. the Irish Act is that they shall be deemed Natural Subjects that they shall inherit such Lands as have descended after the first day of King Jame's coming to the Crown of England this hath no such restraint As to the Second he answered it was the Rectory only which
cepisset seu cepissent Sacramentum Coenae Dominicae secundum ritus Ecclesiae Anglicanae quod quaelibet talis persona personae sic locata electa vel delecta vel locatae electae sive delectae similit ' caperet seu caperent praedict ' tria sacramenta subscriberent praed ' declaracon ' ad idem tempus quando Sacramentum ꝓ debita Execuc̄one dictorum locor ' officior ' respective administraretur Et in defalt ' inde quaelibet tal ' locatio elecco delecco per eundem Actum inactitat ' declarat ' existit fore vacua Et per eundem Actum ulterius inactitat ' existit authoritate p̄d ' quod potestates concess dictis Commissionariis Virtute ejusdem Actus continuarent essent in vigore usque vicesimum quintum diem Marcij anno Domini Millesimo sexcentesimo sexagesimo tertio non longius prout per eundem Actum plenius apparet Et idem Johannes Clarke ulterius dic ' quod ipse est tempore praed ' elecconis ipsius Johannis fore Balliv ' praed ' Villae de Guldeford ' in Narracone praed ' superius fieri supponit ' fuit ꝓtestan ' Subditus dict' domini Regis dominae Reginae nunc dissentiens ab Ecclesia Anglicana quodque ipse idem Johannes Clarke ad aliquod tempus infr ' The Defendant hath not taken the Sacrament within a year before his Election unum annum ꝓx ' ante tempus Eleccon ' ipsius Johannis fore Ballivum praed ' Villae de Guldeford ' praed ' per Narraconem praed ' superius fieri supponit ' non cepisser Sacramentum Coenae Dominicae secundum ritus Ecclesiae Anglicanae per quod vigore praed ' Statuti idem Johannes Clarke tempore Elecconis praed ' in Narracone praed ' superius fieri supponit ' So that he is become incapable of it fuit inhabil ' incapax fore eligend ' ad praed ' locum sive officium Ballivi Villae de Guldeford ' praed ' praed ' elecco ipsius Johannis fore Ballivum ejusdem Villae per Narraconem praed ' superius supponit ' vigore Actus praed ' fuit vacua Et hoc parat ' est verificare Unde pet ' Judicium si praedict ' Major ' probi homines de Guldeford ' praedict ' acconem suam praedict ' versus eum habere debeant c. The Plaintiff Demurrs Et praedicti Major probi homines Villae de Guldeford ' praed ' dicunt quod praedictum placitum ipsius Johannis superius in barram placitat ' materiaque in eodem content ' minus sufficien ' in lege existunt ad ipsos Major ' probos homines Villae de Guldeford ' p̄d ' ab accone sua praedicta versus praefat ' Johannem habend ' praecludend ' quodque ipsi ad placitum illud modo forma praedict ' placitat ' necesse non habent nec per legem terrae tenentur respondere Et hoc parat ' sunt verificare Unde pro defectu sufficien ' placiti ipsius Johannis iidem Major ' probi homines Villae Guldeford ' praed pet ' Judicium debitum suum praedictum unacum dampnis suis occone detenconis debiti ill ' sibi adjudicari c. The Defendant joyns in Demurrer Et praedict ' Johannes ex quo ipse sufficien ' materiam in lege ad p̄d ' Major ' ꝓbos homines Villae de Guldeford ' praed ' ab accone sua praedict ' versus ipm̄ Johannem habend ' praecludend ' superius placitando allegavit quam ipse parat ' est verificare Quam quidem materiam praedict ' Major probi homines Villae de Guldeford ' praedict ' non dedic ' nec ad eam aliqualit ' respond ' set verificacon ' ill ' admittere omnino recusant pet ' Judicium Et quod praedict ' Major probi homines Villae de Guldeford ' p̄d ' ab accone sua praed ' versus ipsum Johannem habend ' praecludentur c. Et quia Justic ' hic se advisare volunt de super praemissis priusquam Judicium indè reddant dies dat' est partibus praedict ' hic usque à die Sancti Michaelis in tres Septimanas de audiend ' inde Judicio suo eo quod iidem Justic ' hic inde nondum c. Major probi homines de Guldeford ' versus Clarke IN an Action of Debt by the Mayor and probi homines of Gildford against Clarke they declared upon a Prescription to make By-Laws ꝓ bono Regim ' Gubernac̄one Vill ' p̄d ' and that there has been an ancient Officer called a Bayliff of the said Town elected for time whereof c. upon the Monday next after Michaelmass Day and they set forth a By Law made That if any Inhabitant of the said Town should be duly Elected to the said Office of Bayliff and should refuse to take it upon him he should forfeit and pay to the Corporation 20 l And that after the said Law made viz. upon the 30th of September anno primo Willielmi Mariae the Defen-being then an Inhabitant and Freeman of the said Town was Chosen a Bayliff according to ancient Vsage for the year following and had Notice thereof but he refused to take upon him the said Office unde actio accrevit Major ' prob ' homin ' for Twenty pounds c. The Defendant pleaded Actio non for that by the Statute made 13 Cat. 2. for Regulating of Corporations it was amongst other things Enacted That after the determination and expiration of the Commission for Regulating of Corporations in the said Act mentioned no person or persons should for ever after be Chosen into any of the Offices or Places before mentioned in the said Act who within One year next before such Election had not Received the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper according to the Usage of the Church of England and that every person Elected should take the Oaths and subscribe the Declaration in the said Act mentioned at the same time as the Oath for the due Execution of the Office he is Elected to shall be Administred and in default thereof every such Election to be void And the Defendant further said That he is and at the time of the said Election he was a Protestant Subject of the King and Queen and a Dissenter from the Church of England and that he had not Received the Sacrament within a year before the said Election by reason whereof he was not capable to be Elected to the said Office and the Election by reason of the said Act was void hoc parat ' est verificare c. To this Plea the Plaintiffs Demurred In the Argument of this Case Sir John Read's Case was Cited who several years since was made Sheriff of Hertfordshire who was then under an Excommunication and so could not Receive the Sacrament and
whom the King shall have it unless there be a particular person grieved 188 189 267 268 A Forfeiture shall not bind in Equity where a thing may be done afterwards or Composition made for it 352 G Gaming See Assumpsit DIce Play not unlawful in it self tho' prohibited by several Statutes to certain persons and in certain places 175 Grant A Deed having no Execution to make it work as a Grant shall operate as a Covenant to stand seized 261. and by the Statute of Vses 266 Where Land is granted by Deed-Pool in Consideration of Natural Affection without Enrolment or Attornment whether it shall operate as a Covenant to stand seized or be void 318 H Habeas Corpus NO Habeas Corpus to be moved for in the Common Pleas unless it concerns a Civil Cause yet the contrary permitted in the case of an Attorney of that Court 24 Half-Blood The Half-Blood shall have equal Share with the Whole-Blood in Distribution upon the Statute of 22 23 Car. 2. c. 10. 317 Heir See Mortgage Heirs is Nomen collectivum and is sometimes so taken when 't is only Heir in the Singular Number 313 Heir and not Executor shall have the Surplusage of Lands leased for payment of Debts 359 I Infant INfants not foreclosed in Chancery till they come of Age 351 Intent No Exception to Vnum Vasum Vini Hispanici that is not said what the Vessel was made of for it is intended to be made of Wood 67 The Name of a Grantor omitted in an Indenrure supplied by Intendment 142 Racks in a Stable shall be intended to be fixt and need not to be shewn to be so in Pleading 214 Every Agreement must have some reasonable Construction that may may be consistent with the Intent of the Parties and therefore if a man agrees with another that he shall make a Drain through his Ground he shall not make it through the parties Stables or Buildings in case there are other places proper 278 In a Special Verdict nothing shall be intended that is not found 330 Imprisonment See Pleading Impropriation Whether a Rectory Impropriate being made a Lay-Fee can be sequestred by the Court Christian for not Repairing the Chancel 35 Ireland See Naturalization Of its Conquest and the Introducing the Laws of England there 4 The Power of an Act of Parliament in Ireland 5 K King See Forfeiture ALlegiance due to the Natural and not the Politick Person of the King 3 In case of things which are Nullius in Bonis where no visible Right appears the Law gives them to the King as Derelict Lands Treasure Trove Extra-parochial Tythes c. So where the Right is equal between the King and the Subject the Kings Title hath the Preference 268 The King is the Fountain of Justice and that as well Ecclesiastical as Civil and may by the Ancient Law of the Realm visit reform and correct Abuses in the Jurisdiction Spiritual 268 In what Cases Forfeitures are vested in the King before Office found and where not 270 L Law A Thing for which there is neither Practical Custom Judicial Precedent or Act of Parliament to warrant may well be judged to be against Law 7 The clearest way how to understand any Law is to consider what was the Judgment of those People among whom and the Times in which it was practical 17 To excite the People to the disobedience of a Law of a Publick Nature is the highest Offence under High Treason 23 Lease What Lease capable of a Release to work a Bargain and Sale 35 For 99 years if two Persons shall so long live determines upon the death of either 74 Legacy See Executor Legatees are to have their Proportion where the Assets fall short 358 Legatees shall refund against Creditors and if the Ecclesiastical Court give Sentence for a Legacy a Prohibition lies unless they take Security to refund 358 360 Licence See Distress Limitation See Original Mortgage Suit to recover a Depositum in Trust for a Feme Covert not barr'd by the Statute of Limitations 345 London Of the Custom of London relating to Orphans Money 340 341 M Market WHere a Market is granted to the Damage of another the Patent may be repeal'd in a Scire facias notwithstanding a Writ of Ad quod Damnum had been executed for the Return of that Writ was not conclusive 344 Marriage Whether a Man may marry his Great Uncle's Widow 9. He may 18 20 The four Statutes relating to Marriage expounded 11 infr Tho' the Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 38. allows all persons to Marry that are without the Levitical Degrees yet persons Pre-contracted or under a perpetual Impotence are prohibited to Marry 15 To Marry his Brother's Wife prohibited by the Statute tho' not by the Levitical Law 17. So of his Wives Sister ibid. Marriages in the ascending and descending Line prohibited without limit not so between Collaterals and the Reasons 18 The Ecclesiastical Courts have Conizance to punish persons Marrying within the Levitical Degrees but not to determine what is within the Levitical Degrees and what not 22 Agreements to settle in Consideration of Marriage favoured in Chancery 353 354 357 Marriage restrictions how to be observed 365 Mine If a Man opens a Mine in his own Land he may dig and follow the Vein under another Man's Ground 342 But if the Owner did there also he may stop his further progress ibid. Mortgage Where Lands are Mortgaged thrice over the third Mortgagee may buy in the first Incumbrance to protect his own Mortgage and he hath both Law and Equity for him 338 He shall hold the Land against the second Mortgagee until be be satisfied both the Money he paid the first Mortgagee and also his own which he lent upon the last Mortgage ibid. But where only Part of the Lands are mortgaged to the first and the whole to the second and after to the third here if the third buys in the first Title it shall protect only that part that is in the first Mortgage 339 A Purchaser or Mortgagee coming in upon a Valuable Consideration without Notice and purchasing in a precedent Incumbrance it shall protect his Estate tho' he purchased in the Incumbrance after Notice of a second Mortgage ibid. Mortgages not relievable in Chancery after 20 years for the Stat. 21 Jac. 1. c. 16. limits the time of Entry to that number of years and 't is best to square the Rules of Equity as near the Rules of Reason and Law as may be 340 Upon a Mortgage in Fee the Redemption Money shall be paid to the Executor and not to the Heir 348 351 Where by a Devise of all his Lands Lands in Mortgage pass 351 Where a man 's own Covenant shall restrain him from his Equity of Redemption and where it shall not 365 Murder Husband kills a Man in the act of Adultery with his Wife Manslaughter and not Murder the Provocation being exceeding great Vide the First Part of these Reports 158 N Naturalization WHether
remedied either by the words or intention of the Act. Vid. Ante. Nokes and Stokes versus .... THey two brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond. The Defendant pleads the Release of one of the Plaintiffs They pray Oyer of the Release which was of all Actions Suits c. that he had against the Defendant upon his own account and pleads that this Bond was not upon his own account and upon this Issue is taken and found for the Plaintiff Now it was moved in Arrest of Judgment That this Issue was frivolous And upon the whole matter it appears that the Plaintiffs have no cause of Action for the Release of one Obligée dischargeth the Bond and it must be upon his own account But the Court Seriatim delivered their Opinions for the Plaintiffs for he might take this Bond as a security of a Debt with which he was intrusted for another And the truth of the case upon the Evidence was That the Defendant being charged with the payment of divers Legacies to Strangers was requested by one of the Plaintiffs to enter into Bond to him and the other Plaintiff who afterwards made the Release that should be Conditioned for the payment of the Money Bequeathed to the Obligees to the use of the Strangers which not being done the Defendant was Arrested at the Suit of the Plaintiffs this being made known to the Plaintiff who was absent at the taking of the Bond and knowing nothing of the Suit was contented to Release all Actions he had against the Defendant upon his own account King versus Atkins DEbt upon a Bond of 2000 l The Defendant demands Oyer of the Condition which was That whereas the Plaintiff was bound with the Defendant to the King that the Defendant should give a true account of such Moneys as he should receive for the Excise and Chimney Money And that the Defendant should save him harmless from all Payments or Suits upon that Bond and pleads that no Suits Process or Execution was against the Plaintiff upon that Bond issint he saved him harmless The Plaintiff replies a Scire facias issued against him out of the Exchequer upon the Bond and that he was forced to retain an Attorney and that he paid 1 s for his Appearance To this the Defendant Demurrs Because he did not alledge that he gave him notice And this was said not to be like Broughtons Case 5 Co. For there the Defendant knew the Money was to be paid at the day and it was to save him harmless from the single thing but here from a great many so that it was requisite he should have notice Where the Mesne is bound to acquit the Tenant the Tenant shall not recover Damages unless he gives the Mesne notice that he is distrained so that he may Replevy the Beasts But it was said That no notice ought to be given where the thing is an Act of a third person as to pay Money when J. S. comes into England To which it was answered That did not lie in the Conusance of either Party but this was in the notice of the Obligée But that which séemed most against the Demurrer in this case was That the Defendant having pleaded no Process c. he takes upon him the knowledge of it Vid. 1 Cro. 54. And if in the Replication the Plaintiff had alledged notice and the Defendant had Traversed it it would have been a departure and the Court advised until the next Term. Postea Welsh versus Bell. TRespass quare clausum fregit and taking of two Horses out of his Cart The Defendant justifies the taking of them as a Distress for Rent due to him And to this the Plaintiff Demurrs First He could not sever the Horses but ought to have distreined Cart and all according to the Book of 20 Edw. 4. 3. Distress of a Cart loaden with Corn Rolls 270. 3 Cro. 783. and four Horses in it adjudged not excessive because he could not sever the Horses And in 3 Cro. 7. a Difference is taken between Distress for Rent and Damage Feasant to this purpose And the common ground is that a Distress must be taken so as it may be returned in the same plight 1 Inst 47. a. Secondly It appeared also in the Declaration That there was a Servant of the Plaintiffs in the Cart by reason of which it was alledged that the Cart and Horses were priviledged for a Horse cannot be distrained upon which a Man is Riding 3 Cro. 549 596. Ed Adjornatur Twisden cited a Case adjudged before Rolls Chief Justice in Trespass for taking of his Trunk The Case was the Defendant distrained it for Rent and being Informed that there were things of Value in it he caused it to be Corded to prevent damage And for that he was adjudged a Trespasser ab initio Anonymus AN Action on the Case was brought against the Defendant for taking and keeping of the Plaintiffs Wife from him And upon Issue joyned the Court was moved to defer the Trial the Case being that the Wife was Daughter of the Defendant and taken from him by the Plaintiff without his Consent and as the Plaintiff affirmed Married to him Now this Marriage was questioned in the Court Christian And the Court thought it reasonable that the Trial should be delayed until the Marriage was determined there But they were Informed on the other side that the Court were ready to give Sentence That the Marriage was good and the Defendant had Appealed Wherefore they thought fit that the Trial of the Cause should proceed The King versus Nelson AN Order for the keeping of a Bastard Child being removed by Certiorari it was moved to have it quashed because it was ad Sessionem pacis in Com' praed ' and doth not say Tent ' pro ' Com' praedict ' Sed non allocatur For such strictness is not required in an Order But Twisden said it ought to be so in an Indictment It was further alledged that it ought to appear That the Child was likely to be chargeable to the Parish which was agreed But that was sufficiently set forth in the Order for upon Reading of it it appeared that he was ordered to pay such Charges as the Parish had been at Wherefore the Court confirmed the Order and awarded that he should pay such Costs as the Parish had been at for Contesting of it as was done formerly in one Haslefoot's Case And besides the Court Committed Nelson Anonymus DEbt upon a Bond Conditioned to perform Covenants If the Defendant pleads performance without demanding Oyer of the Indenture it is a good cause of Demurrer Anonymus IN Covenant the Plaintiff declares That he let the Defendant a House and that he Covenanted to Repair it The Defendant pleads That it was sufficiently Repaired before the Action brought The Plaintiff Demurs because he doth not plead That he Repaired it for it may be the Plaintiff himself did it Keeling and Raynsford inclined against the Demurrer because
c. adjudged the paying the 10 l was a Condition precedent 5 or 15 H. 7. 10. is our Case in Point if the Plaintiff had alledged that he had offered to work and the Defendant had hindred him it had been good The want of the Averment is not helped by the Verdict for 32 H. 8. extends not to Declarations or Avowry's but only to Pleading if otherwise there had béen no need of 21 Jac. cap. 13. to cure the want of averring the Parties Life Twisden Contra. There is no need of the Averrment there being Reciprocal promises upon which the Parties have mutual remedies and relyed upon the case 1 Roll. 46. Rainsford agreed with Hale Et Ajornatur Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 23 24 Car. II. In Banco Regis Harwoods Case HE was committed to Newgate by the Court of Orphans and upon an Habeas Corpus it was returned That the City of London is an ancient City and that time out of mind the Mayor and Aldermen have had the custody of Orphans within the City until the Age of 21 or Marriage and that there hath been time out of mind a Court of Record called the Court of Orphans holden before them having Conusance of all matters concerning Orphans and that they had power to give Licence to Marry a Woman which was their Orphan or to deny it upon reasonable cause and if any one did Marry such Orphan without Licence first had from the said Court that they might impose a reasonable Fine upon him and if he should refuse to pay it or to give Security to commit him to Prison It was also returned That Harwood did Marry such an Orphan without Licence first obtained whereupon he being present in Court they fined him 40 l and he refusing to pay it or give Security was committed To this return First it was objected That this Custom shall not bind Strangers in 1 Cro. 689. Deanes Case who was imprisoned for refusing to find Sureties for the Good Behaviour which was demanded of him because he called an Alderman Fool. It was returned That if a Freeman commit such an Offence c. So in Andrews Case in Hutton 30. one was Imprisoned for not giving Security for the payment of a Legacy devised by his Testator to an Orphan he is returned to be a Freeman Secondly This Custom as returned is unreasonable for it would oblige Strangers at what distance soever from London who cannot take notice who are Orphans of the City yet they should incur a penalty by Marrying them without leave from the City and they have not returned that Harwood Married the Orphan within the City and therefore it must be intended that he did not and in all other Points most advantagiously for him in regard he cannot shew the truth of his Case by pleading to the Return In an Action upon the Statute of Labourers the Plaintiff declared That he retained a Servant at London and that the Defendant retained him within the Term he had contracted with him for The Defendant pleaded that he found him vagrant in another County and there retained him and held that it was a good plea for he was not bound to take notice of a retenier by the Plaintiff when it was in another County 17 E. 4. 7. b. The difference is taken between Customs general such as Gavelkind and private particular Customs the one everyone shall take notice of but not the other 3 Cro. Launder and Brooks Case The Court of Orphans is a particular Iurisdiction and not to be extended all over England and it appears by the Books that they may have a Ravishment of Ward F.N. B. 142 B. Hob. 95. which therefore seems to be their proper remedy rather than the course they have now taken Thirdly The Custom is unreasonable that they should impose the Fine who are to have it and so to be Iudges and Parties Fourthly It was alledged That the Fine was unreasonable which is not to be proportioned to the Portion the Orphan is to have which was shewn in the Return to be 800 l but to the crime for it doth not appear that the City is to have the value of the Marriage or any benefit by it and in this Case there was no disparagement for his quality deserved such a Portion and he had the consent of her Friends But notwithstanding these Exceptions to the Return it was resolved by all the Court that he should be remanded As to the 1 that it is not returned Harwood is a Freeman the Court resolved that it is not material for in many Cases Strangers are bound by the Customs of London as that of Foreign bought and Foreign sold was resolved to be a good Custom 15 Car. 2. between Hutchins and Players in Communi Banco 2. Tho' it appears the Marriage was in a Foreign County and not shewn that he had Notice it is all one for if that might be an excuse the Government of Orphans by the City of London would be utterly insignificant for it would be only to seduce the Orphan out of the Liberties of the City and whatever practice there were to disparage her in a Marriage it would be dispunishable by them and Notice in this case is impossible to be given but most easie to be taken for what more proper than for a Man to inform himself of the Condition of her whom he intends to make his Wife and if Notice were requisite it must be given to all the Men in England capeable of Marriage and in what manner should that be by fixing it like a Proclamation to some notorious place in the County Yet it would be then hard to maintain that a Man was bound to take notice of such a thing the Statute of this King that takes away the Court of Wards saves and confirms the Iurisdiction of the Court of Orphans in London which being in a general Law is within every mans Notice for the Case of taking away a Mans Servant in a Foreign County to that he was retained in is not like to this for it he be detained after demand made he which first retained him may have an Action and so is at no loss but here there is no remedy by undoing the Marriage and therefore 't is fit the rashness of it should be punished This Custom concerning Orphans is not confined to the Walls of London in many particulars All the Children of a Freeman tho' he dies and they were born out of London shall yet be Orphans If a Legacy be bequeathed to a City Orphan in any Foreign County the Executor c. shall be compelled to give Security to the Court of Orphans for the payment of it Et vid. Luch's Case in Hob. 247. The interest of the City adheres to the person of the Orphan where ever he is as a Citizen of London shall have his personal Priviledges in all places as exemption from Toll Prisage Quaere the last per Hale And as well as they may have a Ravishment
is very clear For tho' in M. Portington's Case in 10 Co. 't is said that the word Condition shall not in a Will be taken as a Limitation yet the Current of the Authorities since are otherwise But here the Court held the Condition void for a man cannot be restrained from an Attempt to Alien For non constat what shall be judged an Attempt and how can it be tryed And when the express words are so there shall not be made another sort of Condition than the Will imports And so the Judgment was affirmed Osborn versus Beversham DEbt for Rent incurred at two Half years As to one of them the Defendant pleaded non debet And as to the other Actio non because he says He was ready to pay it at the Day and Place and has been ever since profert in Cur ' the Rent ideo petit Judicium de damnis To which the Plaintiff Demurred For that he did not say quod obtulit for where the Time and Place of Payment is certain Semper paratus is no Plea without an Obtulit For the Defendant it was said That the Plaintiff ought to reply to a Demand 1 Inst 34. 'T is a good Plea for the Heir in Dower to save his Damages to say That he was always ready Rastal's Entries 159. Semper paratus is pleaded without an Obtulit So 1 Rolls 573. no mention made of a Tender But then another Fault was found that it was pleaded in Bar whereas it ought to have been only in Bar of Damages and not to the Action and this was agreed to be fatal But the Court held the Plea to be naught for the other Cause also Anonymus IN an Ejectment upon a Special Verdict the Case was A man Devised his Land to J. S. after the death of his Wife And after Argument the whole Court were of Opinion that J.S. not being Heir to the Devisor there should go no implied Estate to the Wife for an Heir shall not be defeated but by a necessary Implication Anonymus AN Action for Words for that the Defendant said of the Plaintiff He would have given Dean Money to have Robbed Golding's House and he did Rob the House After Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the first part of the words import only an Inclination and not that he did give any Money And the words He did Rob the House shall be referred to Dean as the last antecedent and not the Plaintiff But the Court were of Opinion for the Plaintiff as was Adjudged where the words were He lay in wait to Rob. Vid. Cockain's Case in the 1 Cro. and in the 4 Co. And the Court said the Words might be construed That the Plaintiff offered Dean Money and he refusing it that the Plaintiff robbed the House himself Smith versus Tracy THe Case being moved again the Opinion of the whole Court was That the Half-Blood should come in for Distribution upon the new Act For as to the granting of Administration the being of Guardian c. the Half-Blood may be taken nearer of Kin than a more remote Kinsman of the Whole Blood Mo. 635 Ro. Rep. 114. Ante. J 's Case J. Brings his Habeas Corpus The Return was that he was Committed by J. S. J. N. T. K. to whom and others a Commission of Bankrupt was awarded for refusing to answer a Question put to him concerning the Bankrupt's Estate c. and so Commissus fuit in custodia by a Warrant to the Officer Virtute Commissionis praedictae haec est causa captionis seu detentionis c. The Counsel for the Prisoner took three Exceptions to the Return First For that there did not appear a sufficient Authority For the Commission is said to be granted to them and others and then they could not act without the rest for the Return does not express any Quorum c. in the Commission Secondly Instead of Commissus in custodia it ought to be Captus for that is the usual Form For this is as if the Commitment were by the Officer that makes the Return Thirdly Haec est causa captionis seu detentionis is uncertain for it ought to be detentionis And upon the first and last Exception the Prisoner was Discharged by the Court but at the same time was told by the Court That he must answer directly to such Questions as were put to him in order to the discovery of the Bankrupts Estate or else he was liable to be Committed Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 29 30 Car. II. In Banco Regis Harrington's Case AN Information was preferred against him for that he maliciously and traiterously intending to stir up Sedition and to create a Disturbance between the King and his People upon Discourse of the late Rebellion and those Persons which were Executed at Charing-Cross for the Murder of the late King in praesentia audita quamplurium utteravit propalavit haec verba pernitiosa sequentia viz. Gubernatio nostra consistebat de tribus statibus si eveniret Rebellio in Regno nisi foret Rebellio contra omnes Status non est Rebellio Vpon Not Guilty pleaded he was found Guilty of speaking the precedent Words and Not guilty as to other Words contained in the Information It was moved in Arrest of Judment that Gubernatio signified the Exercise and Administration of the Government and not the State of it which Regimen doth Again That it was Consistebat and so might relate to the Britons or Saxons Time or to the late mutations of the Form of Government amongst us and that to put the words in Latin without an Anglicè was not to be allowed for the Translation might either aggravate or mitigate the Sense And that such a President might be prejudicial as well to the King as the Defendant But those Exceptions finding little weight with the Court his Counsel proceeded to justifie or at least to extenuate the Words alledging That the Relation was so great between the King and People that to raise a Rebellion against the King must also affect the other States and this whether the King be taken as some would have it as one of the Three Estates or as others that the Lords Spiritual and Temporal make two of the Estates and the Commons the third and the King as Chief and Head of all as is the Statute of 1 Eliz. cap. 3. where the Lords and Commons call themselves the Queens Obedient Subjects Representing the Three Estates of the Realm of England and so is the 4 Inst 1. But the Court supposing that the Words did tend to set on Foot that Position upon which the War Levied in 1641. by the Two Houses against the King was grounded were much displeased that the Counsel would pretend to defend them or put any tolerable Sense upon them It was also insisted upon by the King's Counsel and agreed by the Court that the Ancient Presidents and many latter also were to express the
and therefore Henry the First is accounted the Founder he Endowed it with three Hides of Land Richard the First gave them the Mannor of Cirencester and the Seven Hundreds at the Farm of 30 l per annum The Charter of Exemption mentioned in the Verdit was made by King John who Confirmed the Grant of Richard the First at the same Farm This you shall find in Chartae Antiquae Letter G. for the Book goes by Letters Number 9 and the Letter M. in Number 12. Secondly The next thing to be considered is an Hundred Of old time Hundreds were parcel of the Crown belonging of Common Right to the King 11 H. 6. 89. pl. 44. by the Grant of an Hundred there did not pass only a Liberty which had a Court and also commonly a Leet which is called the Leet of the Hundred But there was also an implied Power of making a Bayliff The Bayliff had a double Office First He had the Collection of Perquisites Amerciaments Fees Ancient Duties as Beupleader Head Silver c. belonging to the Hundreds in some places Secondly He had another Office and that was relating to the Sheriff In Ancient time the Bayliffs of the Hundreds were the immediate Bayliffs of the King for the Execution of Process Vid. the Statute of Sheriffs made at Lincoln 9 Ed. 2. the second Statute there 't is said that the Execution of Writs that come to the Sheriffs shall be done by Hundredors i. e. Lords or rather Bayliffs of the Hundred sworn and known in the full County c. which is Confirmed 2 E. 3. cap. 4. and 14 E. 3. cap. 9. This thing of Farming out Hundreds to persons thus grew to be a great Inconvenience For the Hundreds which were of the County and did belong to the Sheriff there was no Inconvenience the Sheriff did sometimes Account as Custos sometimes per Manus Then those many Provisions were made viz. 2 E. 3. cap. 12. whereas all the Counties in England were in Old time Assessed to a certain Farm and then were all the Hundreds and Wapentakes in the Sheriffs Hand rated to this Farm and after were Approvers sent into divers Counties which did increase the Farms of some Hundreds and Wapentakes And after the Kings at divers times have granted to many men part of the same Hundreds and Wapentakes for the old Farms only And now of late the Sheriffs are wholly charged of the Increase which amounteth to a great Sum to the great hurt of the People and ditherison of the Sheriffs and their Heirs It is Ordained that the Hundreds and Wapentakes set to Farm by the King that now is be it for Term of Life or otherwise which were sometimes annexed to the Farms of the Counties where the Sheriffs be charged shall be adjoyned again to the Counties and that the Sheriffs and their Heirs have Allowance for the Time that is past and that from henceforth such Hundreds and Wapentakes shall not be given nor severed from the Counties Then 14 E. 3. cap. 4. Whereas many Mischiefs be happened throughout the Realm for that Sheriffs have lett the Hundreds and Wapentakes to a higher Farm than they do yield to the King and the Farmers do lett the same to others at higher and greater Sums in such manner that by the letting and enhancing of the Farms and by the greater number of Bayliffs Errants Outriders and others whom the Sheriffs Bayliffs and Hundredors do put in the People be in divers manners charged and grieved It is assented and accorded That from henceforth all the Wapentakes and Hundreds which be severed from the Counties shall be rejoyned to the same Counties as before this time hath been established by another Statute and that the Sheriffs hold the same in their own Hands and put in such Bayliffs and Hundredors having Lands within the same Bayliffs and Hundreds for whom they will Answer And if they will Lett any Hundreds Bayliwicks or Wapentakes to Farm they shall lett the same at the ancient Farm without any thing increasing and that the King and his People be served by such Bayliffs and Hundredors and their Under Bayliffs in avoiding for ever the Outriders and others which in divers Counties before this time have notoriously grieved the People And that no Bayliff Errant be but in the County where Bayliffs Errants have been in times past in the time of the King's Grandfather that now is and that there be no more but one Bayliff Errant in one County And in the same manner it is assented That all other of what Estate or Condition they be which have Bayliwicks or Hundreds in Fee if they the same will hold in their own Hands then they shall put in such Bayliffs for whom they will Answer and if they will lett the same in Farm to other then they shall lett the same at the ancient Farm without any thing increasing as aforesaid is said c. For the Sheriffs did Farm at a certain Rate and did Account for it in the Exchequer and this was called Firma Ballivarum Hundreds were either parcel of the County and there the Sheriff did constitute Bayliffs these Hundreds which were anciently parcel of the Farm of the Sheriffs that the Stat. of the 2 Ed. 3. cap. 12. speaks of or else they were such as were granted out which the Lord of the Hundred held sometimes at Farm and sometimes in Fee called Hundreds of Fee Liberties of Hundreds Franchises of Hundreds It was found that a great Inconvenience grew from the severing of Hundreds from the Counties The Statute intended that the Sheriff should execute Writs c. and it was unreasonable that he should have Bayliffs put upon him and yet be bound to Execute c. therefore the Statute intended to reconcile this as far as it could well and to restore as many of the Hundreds as could well be to the Sheriff Thirdly I come to the Third thing to be Explained and Considered viz. the Liberty of Retorna Brevium This is a superadded Liberty tho' the Hundreds were granted yet the Sheriff might and must still Return the Writs executed there This Liberty was commonly annexed to the Grants of Hundreds tho' sometimes of Mannors it is acquirable by Grant and I think by Prescription tho' that has been a Doubt But 8 H. 4. c. 7. pl. 10. speaks of Retorna Brevium by Prescription Vid. Mo. 670. contr And it was Adjudged it might be so in the Quo Warranto brought by the Queen against the Earl of Shrewsbury for Retorna Brevium and other Liberties claimed by the Earl in Coleharborow in London You wil find the Pleading in the New Entries Quo Warranto pl. 2. Mich. 41 42 Eliz. in Banco Regis 'T is true It was Adjudged against the Earl but it was Agreed that a man might prescribe for Retorna Brevium and that to have it within a House only for that Place was formerly the Bishop of Durham's Mansion House But the Prescription was naught because it
inherit If the Father a Natural Subject hath Issue a Son an Alien who is Naturalized the Father dies the Son shall inherit Co. Lit. 129. Touching the retrospect of a Naturalization and whether the Son being an Alien Naturalized after the death of the Father shall direct the Discent to the youngest depends upon the words of the Naturalization which being by Act of Parliament may by a strange retrospect direct it But as the Naturalization in the Case in question is Penned it would not do it the Naturalization hath only respect to what shall be hereafter The Clause of taking by Discent after the Commencement of the Session of Parliament is sufficient to check that Retrospect And this brings me to the Consideration of the Naturalization in the Case in question and the Effect thereof which I shall not Argue as a Point because I take the Point of the Case to be single But I shall deliver my Opinion of it by way of Conveyance to the Case Read the Naturalization First In this Naturalization I shall set down what Effect it hath And Secondly What Effect it hath not First What Effect it hath It doth doubtless remove that Inability and Incapacity that is in John the Earl and George in respect of themselves being Aliens and so put them in the Condition as if they had been Born in England But if there be a Consequential Impediment or Incapacity derived upon them by Robert their Fathers being an Alien which might hinder their Successions one to another which at the present I suppose or admit I say if there be any such Consequential Impediment this I take is not removed by this Naturalization My Reasons are briefly these First Because this Act of Naturalization hath a proper Subject upon which it may work and with which it is satisfied viz. the Personal defects of the Parties Naturalized because this Defect arising from the Incapacity of the Father is not in any measure taken notice of by the Act nor so much as mentioned that the Father was an Alien By the whole scope of the Act and every Clause of it and those Relative Terms As if Born in England is only to supply the Personal defect of the Parties Naturalized arising from their Birth out of England and therefore shall never be carried to a Collateral purpose Touching the Objection Tho' this Remedy will not Cure a Disease of another nature as Illegitimation Half-Blood c. yet it Cures all the defects of Foreign Births whether in the Parties themselves or resulting from the Ancestors And the Act might have been so Penned as it might have done it but it is not The Plaister is applied only to defects in the arising from their own Birth not defects arising from the Father or that Consequential disability arising thereby Second Objection But we find in Curteen's Case Placita Coronae 241. that where the Father was Attainted the Restitution in Blood granted by the Act to the Son cures that disability that results from the Fathers Attainder and this not only to the Son but also to the Collateral Heirs of the Father And I have before observed the Corruption of the Blood by Attainder is only of the Blood of the Father for the Son's Blood was not at all Corrupted By this Act of Restitution 1. Notice is taken of the Father's Attainder 2. It doth Intentionally provide against it and it was the only business of that Act to remove it 3. Had it not removed that Corruption of Blood it had been useless for there had been nothing else for it to provide against and so the Restitution had been idle had it not had that Effect But in our Case the Naturalization as it takes no notice of the defect in the Father nor provides against it so it hath another business to satisfie it doth remedy the Foreign Birth of the Son And let us examine the several Clauses in this Act of Naturalization we shall find the whole scope of it was no other than to put them in the same and no better Condition than as if they were Born in England This is the Governing Clause both in the first and last Sentence and hath an influence upon all the Clauses that intervene It hath been endeavoured to break the Context and to make the Clause As if Born in England to be cumulative and superabundant But this were by a Nicety to alter the scope and intent of the Act. If it were omitted yet the first Clause making him but a Natural Born Subject to all intents and purposes surely makes him no more and meddles not with the disability of his Father or the Consequence thereof There hath been some stress laid upon the Clause which enables him to make his resort and Pedigree to Ancestors Lineal or Collateral as if that should Entitle George at least to some more advantage by Naturalization than if he had been Born here But to this I say First That is a General Clause and cannot make a Legal Ancestor Secondly Vpon the same Reason it may make John or George inheritable to Patrick and not adjudge the disability of Nicholas his Father which no man pretends It makes him as much inheritable to Ancestors Lineal as well as Collateral and yet it makes no Ancestors Lineal The Words are General and create no new Ancestor that the Law doth not enable It is true that in the Argument of Godfrey and Dixon's Case especially Mountague laid some stress upon these Ancillary Clauses but the rest rather rested upon the very Matter that the party Naturalized was become thereby a Natural born Subject And thus I have done with the Naturalization which doth not Cure any disability of Transmission Hereditary between the Brothers resulting from the disability of the Father if any such be But it doth cure the Personal disability in John and George and makes them to all intents as Natural Subjects as if they had been born in England So that now the Case made is no more than this An Alien hath Issue two Sons born in England and one purchaseth Lands and dies without Issue whether the other shall inherit For as I have before observed the Case of John the Son of George is all one with the Case of George himself whom he represents as to the Point of the Discent from John the Earl Before I come to the Argument of the Question the Verdict had need be delivered from a Question which possibly would make an end of the Dispute It hath been said that if the Wife of Robert were an English Woman there would be no question but the Land might discend between the Brothers John and George tho' Robert the Father were an Alien and that it shall be so intended because nothing appears to the contrary To this I say It is true that if the Mother were an English Woman the Discent from John to George his Son would be unquestionable For notwithstanding the Incapacity of Robert the Father by being an
the Statute are to King James and in administring the Oath King Charles is named 171 172 The Ecclesiastical Court may make Defendants answer upon Oath as the Chancery doth 339 Obligation If two be bound joyntly and one be sued he cannot demur unless he aver the other is living And if there be two Obligees one cannot sue unless he avers the other is dead 34 A Release of one Joint Obligee of all Actions c. upon his own account does not discharge the Obligation 35 I do acknowledge to E. H. by me 20 l upon demand for doing the Work in my Garden Adjudged upon Demurrer to be a good Bond 238 Office and Officer Whether acceptance of a second Grant of an Office be a surrender of the first 297 An Act begun by one Officer and left imperfect what remains for his Successor 319 320. Outlawry Reverst for want of the Words pro Comitatu and why 108 P. Pardon See Witness WHere good without mentioning the Indictment 207 Parliament See Error The Three Estates See King Pasture Custom for Copyholders to have sole Feeding in a Certain Waste it is not needful to alledge that the Beasts were Levant and Couchant Here also a Copyholder may license others without Deed to put on their Beasts 165 Peace See Indictments Ac. Case Formality of Words where necessary in the Proceedings of Justices of Peace 39 Justices of Peace their Proceedings in relation to Bastard Children 48 59 210 310 336 Upon a Forcible Entry 308 Order of Sessions final in relation to a settlement of the Poor 310 King's Bench may judge of Fines imposed at Sessions and mitigate them 336 Perjury See Indictment One gave Evidence at a Trial and afterwards made Affidavit that he was perjured and suborn'd for which Affidavit an Information of Perjury was exhibited against him and he found guilty of Perjury in swearing he was perjured 182 Pleading See Escape Trespass In Debt upon Obligation the Defendant pleads that he delivered it as an Escrow plea nought 9 Where the Defendant pleads in Abatement and the Plaintiff Demurs if it be adjudged against the Defendant it shall be quod respondeat ulterius But if any thing be alledged in Abatement where upon Issue joyned it goes for the Plaintiff there he shall have Judgment to recover his Debt 22 In Actions laid by way of Reciprocal Promise there needs no Averment of Performance 41 178 Double Plea what 48 272 Trespass quare Arbores succidit Declaration insufficient because not exprest what kind of Trees 53 The like of Fishes 272 329 In Battery absque hoc quod moderate castigavit no direct Traverse to the Defendants Justification 70. Yet good after a Verdict ibid. A Plea in Abatement shall not be admitted after Imparlance 76 136 184. Exception 236 A Traverse designed to bring a Colateral matter in question not allowed 77 Executor pleads plene Administravit the Plaintiff confesseth the Plea and prays Judgment de bonis Testatoris quae in futuro ad manus defendentis devenerint 94 Where the Plaintiff denies what the Defendant affirms whether he ought to traverse or conclude to the Country 101 In Trespass where the Defendant claims a Way what Justification is sufficient what not 13 Incertainty in the Declaration or Plea where naught 106 114 120 278. What shall be said a Departure in Pleading what not 121 Where one Declares against one upon a Deed and it appears that another was bound with him it shall not be intended that the other sealed unless averr'd on the Defendants side 136 137 Deed delivered as an Escrow how to be pleaded 210 An apt Issue is not formed without an Affirmative and a Negative 213 To declare that a Bishop was seized in fee and not say in Jure Episcopatus not binds Successor 223 In Debt for Rent semper paratus is no good plea without saying quod obtulit 322 The effect of an Innuendo 337 The Statute for discharge of poor Prisoners how to be pleaded 356 Several Freeholders cannot joyn or be joyned in a Prescription to claim an Intire Interest in another mans Soyl 384. Nor can Freeholders and Copyholders joyn 390 Powers See Rocovery Of Power to Lease where well persued 294 340 Of Power of Revocation See Revocation Whether the Power of Revocation is extinguished by a Fine 368 371 Prescription See Appurtenant Common Grant The Nature and Rules of Prescription 386 Diversity between Prescription and Custom 389 The Owner of the Soyl can by no Prescription or Custom be excluded out of his own Soyl at all times of the year 390. But he may be excluded for a certain time and as to some kind of Profits 391 Prohibition Where it lies to the Admiralty 1 146 To the Ecclesiastical Court where a Parson sues for calling him Knave 2 Whether it lies where a Bishop sues for a Pension in his own Court 3 Whether it lies upon Suggestion that the Proprietors and Occupiers of such a Mannor or any parcel thereof pay a Groat to the Parson for Herbage-Tythes ibid. Lies for citing a man to answer in the Ecclesiastical Court and not delivering a Coppy of the Articles 5. And if the Party be excommunicate a Prohibition with a Mandamus to absolve him ibid. 252 Not lies to the Ecclesiastical Court for calling Impudent Whore 7. Or Whore and Bawd 61 220. Denied to the Ecclesiastical Court for calling Old Theif and Old Whore 10. Secus in London 343 352 In Prohibition on a Suit for Tythes what Suggestion is to be proved within six months 107 To the Ecclesiastical Court to stay a Suit there for Apparators Fees Suggesting there were no such Fees due by Custom 165 To Woodstreet Compter London for refusing to admit a Plea to their Jurisdiction before Imparlance 180 The Defendant in the Ecclesiastical Court pleads that the Tythes belong to another which Plea is refused Prohibition lies 248 335 Granted to the Ecclesiastical Court where Custom and Prescription comes in question tho the Principal Cause belongs properly to that Court as Church-Wardens Rates Tythes Mortuaries 274 Whether it lies to the Ecclesiastical Court for refusing to admit a Proof by one Witness 291 No Precedent for a Prohibition quia timet 313 To the Council of the Marches 330 Proof See Record Where Proof is to be made upon a Writ of Enquiry and where not 347 Q. Queen A Reservation to the Queen of England does not exclude a Queen Dowager 151 One who hath been a Queen not properly called nuper Regina in her Life time 152 Qui tam. See Error Action Judgment arrested because Issue was joyned only on behalf of the Informer and not also for the King 122 Quo Warranto Against certain Persons of the City of Worcester claiming to be Aldermen 366 R. Record If a Record be lost it may be proved to Jury by Testimony 257 Recorder See Mandamus What Causes may be sufficient to remove a Recorder 144 145 Recovery Where a Fine is Levyed to Lessee for years with an Intent
a Scotishman Antenate being Naturalized by Act of Parliament in Ireland can Inherit Lands in England 2 Ne exeat Regnum Granted in Chancery to stop one from going beyond Sea to avoid a Sentence in the Ecclesiastical Court 345 Nonsuit The Plaintiff Nonsuited in Ejectment after Evidence where two Defendants and one appears to confess Lease Entry c. and the other not the Plaintiff shall pay Costs but quaere how to be divided 195 Notice See Chancery Conveyance Mortgage If a Man pleads a Valuable Consideration in Chancery to save his Estate from a Judgment he must also set forth That he had no Notice of the Judgment 361 O Obligation A Penalty may be recovered in an Action of Debt upon a Bill Obligatory tho' it be not drawn properly as a Penal Bill 106 Occupant Occupancy favoured in Chancery 364 Office Where the Archdeacon forfeits his Right to grant the Office of his Register by the Stat. 5 E. 6 c. 16. against the Sale of Offices whether the King or Bishop shall take advantage of the Forfeiture 188 213 267 A Dissenter that hath not received the Sacrament of 12 Months before may plead the Stat. 13 Car. 2. Stat. 2. cap. 1. to excuse him from serving Offices in Corporations 247 248 Original See Writs What Original Filing within time shall be sufficient to prevent the pleading the Statute of Limitations 193 259 Whether in the Common Pleas an Original in a Clausum fregit be sufficient to warrant a Declaration in an Assumpsit 259 Outlawry A Man in Prison ought not to be Outlawed by him who Imprisoned him 46 Action on the Case will not lye for the Party who hath an Outlawry agaist a Sheriff who neglects to extend the Goods of the Outlaw upon the delivery of a Writ of Capias Vtlagatum for that it is the King's loss 90 Whether Outlawry may be pleaded in Bar to an Assumpsit upon a Quantum meruit 282 Oxford See By-Law The Priviledge of the University not allow'd to a Townsman so as to excuse him from Office who keeps a Shop and follows a Trade tho' he be Matriculated and Servant to a Doctor 106 Priviledge not allow'd to a Member of this University in a Suit in Chancery 362 P Pardon SUits by Successor against Executor for Dilapidations not pardon'd by the General Pardon otherwise of Suits ex Officio against the Dilapidator 216 Parliament No Action lies against the Chief Officer of a Corporation for a Double-Return of a Burgess the Common Pleas having no Jurisdiction of this Matter 37 Peace The King cannot discharge a Recognizance taken for Surety of the Peace but after it is broken he may 131 A Gentleman said to be a Member of the House of Commons bound to the Peace for Challenging one of the King's Witnesses to Fight 317 Plantation Tho' a Plantation be an Inheritance yet being in a Foreign Country 't is look'd upon as a Chattel to pay Debts and a Testamentary thing 358 Pleading See Baron and Feme Covenant Intent Scire facias Copyhold What shal be held a Double Plea and what not 68 198 Trespass for carrying away diversa onera equina of Gravel naught for incertainty 73 Want of the Word alio or aliis in a Declaration where several mention is made of things of the same nature yet good enough 78 For the Defendant to traverse Matter not alledged good Cause for the Plaintiff to demur 79 If a Judgment and Execution be pleaded in an Inferiour Court not of Record the Proceedings ought to be set forth at large and not sufficient to say taliter processum fuit also it ought to be set forth That the Cause of Action did arise within the Jurisdiction 100 In a Prescription for Priviledge tempore quo non exstat memoria good enough tho' the Course be to say à tempore cujus contrarium memoria hominum non existit 130 Tho' by Course of the Court if a Defendant lye in Prison two whole Terms without any Declaration put in he may get a Rule to be discharged yet if a Declaration be afterwards delivered and Judgment thereupon 't is a good Judgment and the Bail formerly given will be liable 143 Where Freehold Lands were pleaded to pass by Surrender according to Custom the Special Custom must be set forth 144 Where the Writ contains more than is Declared for this is a Variance not aided by the Verdict and Judgment arrested 153 Debt upon Bond Condition'd That the Husband shall permit the Wife to dispose of her Personal Estate c. it is not sufficient for the Defendant to plead quod Conditio nunquam infracta fuit and put the Plaintiff to assign a Breach but the Defendant must shew forth That he hath perform'd the Condition 156 Where an Action of Trespass brought for the same Matter in another Court may be pleaded in Bar to an Action of Trover 169 170 In Trespass quod duas acras terrae fod subvert asportavit Judgment stayed because the Declaration doth not express the quantity of Earth carried away for the two Acres relate only to the Ground digged 174 The Plaintiff Declares for Assault Battery Wounding and Imprisonment the Defendant in his Plea takes no notice of the Battery naught 193 Plea in Abatement That the Plaintiff was dead before the Action brought where good 196 Where preadict is necessary and where not 197 Where a Traverse that might have been omitted is Cause of Demurrer 212 Doubleness in a Declaration cured by Answering 222 Day of the Week where material ought to be set forth in Pleading for the Court are not obliged to consult the Almanack 248 Tempore dimissionum where it should be temporibus dimissionum naught 253 254 271 Super Acclivitatem de Hampsted which is a description of a Scituation whether it be a Vill or Lieu conus sufficient for a Jury 254 272 Diversas petias Maheremij cepit c. naught for the Incertainty 262 Where the Defendant pleads an Insufficient Plea the Plaintiff shall make no Advantage of that upon Demurrer if his own Declaration be naught but Judgment will be against the Plaintiff 262. As where an Executor sues for Rent and does not sufficiently Intitle his Testator to the Estate demised ibid. Plenam potestatem Jus Titulum ad Praemissa dimittend ' and does not set forth what Estate he had whether in Fee or other Estate not good upon a Demurrer 271 Houses are set forth in Pleading to lye in Parochia praedicta and two Parishes are named before naught for the Incertainty 278 Traverse impertinent where the Matter is confest and avoided 283 No General Rule That a Matter cannot be pleaded specially which may be given in Evidence upon a General Issue and in what Cases it may 295 Vid. infra Statut. 1 W. M. cap. 4. Presumption Presumptions of Law stand as strong till the contrary appears as an express Declaration of the Party 208 Priviledge Whether the Warden of the Fleet shall have a Writ