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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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one Tales either upon default or challenge though he may have another yet he may not have the later to contain so many as the former for the first Tales must be under the principal pannel except in a cause of Appeal and so every Tales lesse than other untill the number be made up of men present in Court and such as are without exception to the partie or parties Of this see Stawnford more at large ubi supra where you may find some exceptions to this general rule These commonly called Tales may in some sort and ineded are called Meliores viz. when the whole Iury is challenged as appearcth by Brook titulo Octo tales et auter tales fol. 105. In whom you may likewise read many cases touching this matter Tales is a proper name of a book in the Kings bench office Cook lib. 4. fol. 93. b. Tallage See Taylage Talshide See Talwood Talwood vide anno 34 et 35 Henrici octavi capit 3. et anno 7 Edw. 6. cap. 7. et 43 El. cap. 14. Talshide ibidem It is a long kind of shide riven out of the tree which shortned is made into billets Tartaron anno 12 Edward 4. cap. 3. et anno 4 Henry 8. cap. 6. Tasels anno 4 Edward 4. cap. 1. is a kind of hard burre used by Clothiers and Cloath Workers in the dressing of Cloath Taske aliâs Taxe by M. Camden following the authority of Doctor Powell whom he greatly commendeth for his diligence in the search of Antiquities is a British word signifying tribute Camden Britan pag. 304. And it seemeth it is such a kind of tribute as being certainly rated upon every Town was wont to be yearly paid See Gild and the places there cited out of Master Cambden Now it is not paid but by consent given in Parliament as the Subsidie is And it differeth from Subsidy in this that it is alway certain accordingly as it is set down in the Chequer book and levyed in general of every Town and not particularly of every man Lastly it is a fifteenth of that substance that every Town was first rated at by the number of Hides of Land in the same Whereupon it is also called a fisteenth vide anno 14 Edw. 3. statut 1. cap. 20. For whereas Master Crompton in his jurisdiction fol. saith that it is levied sometime by goods as well as by Lands as also appeareth by the Statute anno 9 Hen. 4. cap. 7. I take his meaning there to bee that though the task in the whole were at the first by the Prince proportioned by the land Yet the Townes men among themsel ves to make upthat sum are at these dayes sometimes valued by goods See Fifteenth It seemeth that in antient times this task was imposed by the King at his pleasure but Edward the first anno 25. of his reign bound himself and his succesiors from that time forward not to levy it but by the consent of the Realm anno 25 Ed. pri cap. 5. The word Task may be thought to proceed from the French Taux aliâs Taxe i. aestimatio pretium for we call it also Taxe but over curiously to contend in these derivations may seem frivolous considering that many words are common to divers peoples TE Telonium or Breve essendi quietum de Telonio is a writ lying for the Citizens of any City or Bourgesses of any Town that have a Charter or prescription to free them from Toll against the Officers of any Town or Market constraining them to pay Toll of their Merchandise contrary to their said grant or prescription Fitzb. nat br fol. 226. Hotoman lib. 2. commentariorum in feuda cap. 56. vers Vectigalia hath these words Telonia autem dicuntur publicano rum stationes in quibus vectag alia recipiunt sed apud istius generis scriptores Telonium dicitur vectigal quod proponitum aut riparum munitione penditur et plenumque à principibus solius exactionis causa imperatur Team aliàs Theam is an old Saxon word signifying a Royalty granted by the Kings Charter to a Lord of a Manor Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 8. of this Saint Edwards laws nu 25. say thus Quod si quisquam aliquid interciet idest penes alium defend it super aliquem et intercitatus non poterit warantum suum habere erit forisfactura sua et Justicia similiter de calumnintore si defecerit M. Skene de verborum significatione verbo Theme saith that it is a power to have servants and slaves which are called nativi bondi villani and all Baronies infeoffed with Theme have the same power For unto them all their bondmen their children goods and cattels properly appertain so to that they may dispose of them at their pleasure And in some old authentike books it is written Theme est potestas habendi nativos ita quod generationes villanorum vestrorum cum eorum catallis ubicumque inveniantur ad vos pertineant Theme commeth from Than 1. servus and therefore sometime signifieth the bondmen and slaves according to an old statute and law De Curia de Theme Quod si quis teneat curiam de Theme et illa querela in illa curia movetur ad quam Theme vocatur non debet illa curia clongari sed ibidem determinari et omnes Theme the compareant Which is understood of the question of liberty when it is in doubt whether any person be a bondman or free man Which kind of proces should not be delayed but summarily decided And the new Expositor of law terms speaketh to the like effect verbo Them I read it also in an old paper written by an Exchequer man thus translated Theam i. propago villanorum Teller is an officer in the Eschequer of which sort there be four in number And their office is to receive all monies due to the King and to give to the Clerk of the Pell a bill to charge him therewith They also pay to all persons any money payable unto them by the King by warrant from the Auditor of the receipt They also make weekly and yearly books both of their receipts and Payments which they deliver to the Lord Treasurer Templers Templarii See Knights of the Temple These whilest they flourished here in England which seemeth to be all that time between Henry the seconds dayes untill they were suppressed had in every nation a particular Governour whom Bract. calleth Magistrum militiae Templi lib. 1. c. 10. Of these read M. Camden in his Br. p 320. See Hospitalers Temporalt es of Bishops Temporalia Episcoporum be such revenues lands and tenements as Bishops have had laid to their Sees by the Kings and other great personages of this land from time to time as they are Barons and Lords of the Parliament See Spiritualties of Bishops Tend seemeth to signifie as much as to endeavour or offer or shew forth to tend the Estate of the party of the Demandant Old nat br fol. 123. b. to tend to
life anno 1. Ed. 2. stat 1. and also enableth him to contract and to deal by himself in all lawful causes appertaining unto his estate Which until that time he cannot with the security of those that deal with him This the Lomberds lettle at 18. years as appeareth by Hotemans disputations in libros feudorum l. 2. c. 53. ver decimo octavo anno Which power the Romans permitted not usque ad plenam maturitatem and that they limitted at 25. years lib. 1 in fine π. de major 25. ann l. fin Co. de Legit. tit in principio titulo de curat in Institut The age of twelve yeares bindeth to appearance before the Sheriff Coroner for enquirie after Robberies ann 52. H. 3. cap. 24. The age of 14. yeers enableth to enter an order of religion without consent of parents c. anno 4. H. 4. cap. 17. Age prier aetatem precari or aetatis precatio is a petition made in count by one in his minority having an action brought against him for lands comming to him by descent that the action may rest untill he come to his full age which the Court in most cases ought to yeeld unto This is otherwise in the Civill law which inforceth children in their minority to answer by their tutors or curatours π. de minor 25. an Agenhine See Haghenhine Agist agistare seemeth to come of the French gist i. jacet having gisir in the Infinitive moode whence commeth the nown gisme a lying in childbed or rather of gister i. stabulari a word proper to a Deer cum sub mensem Maium è lodis abditis in quibus deli tuit emigrans in loco delecto stabulari incipit unde commoda propinqua sit pabulatio Budeus in posteriori libro philologiae Where also he saith that giste est idem quod lustrum vel cubile Or if it may be probably deduced from the Saxon word Gast i. hospes It signifieth in our Common law to take in and feed the cattel of strangers in the Kings Forest and to gather the money due for the same to the Kings use Charta de foresta an 9. H. 3. cap. 9. The Officers that do this are called agistors in English Guest-takers eodem c. 8. Cromptons Jurisdict fo 146. These are made by the Kings Letters patents under the great Seal of England of whom the King hath four in number within every Forest where he hath any pawnage called agistors or Gist-takers And their office consisteth in these four points in agistando recipiendo imbrevitando certificando Manwood parte prima of Forest laws p. 336. 337. whom you may read more at large Their function is tearmed Agistment as agistment upon the sea banks anno 6. H. 6. cap. 5. Agreement agreamentum i. aggregatio mentium is the assent or concord of more to one thing this by the Author of the new tearms of law is either executed or executory which you may read more at large in him exemplified by cases AY Ayde auxilium is all one in signification with the French ayde and differeth in nothing but the only pronunciation if we take it as it is used in our vulgar language But in the Common law it is applied to divers particular significations as sometime to a subsidie anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 1. sometime to a prestation due from Tenents to their Lords as toward the relief due to the Lord Paramount Glanvile li. 9. ca. 8. or for the making of his sonne Knight or the marying of his daughter idem eodem This the King or other Lord by the ancient Law of England might lay upon their Tenents for the Knighting of his eldest Sonne at the age of 15. yeers or the mariage of his daughter at the age of 7 yeers Regist orig fol. 87. a. and that at what rate themselves listed But Satute West 1. anno 3. Ed. 1. ordained a restraint for so large a demand made by common persons being Lords in this case and tyed them to a constant rate And the Statute made anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 5. ca. 11. provideth that the rate set down by the former Statute should hold in the King as well as in other Lords Of this I find mention in the Statute an 27. H. 8. cap. 10. This imposition seemeth to have descended to us from Normandie for in the grand custumary cap. 35. you have a Tractat intituled des aides chevelz i. de auxiliis capitalibus whereof the first is a faire l'ai●è filz de son seigneur chevalier i. ad filium primogenitum militem faciendum the second son ainee fille marier i. ad filiam primogenitam maritandam And the third a rechapter le corps de son seigneur de prison quand il est prius per la guerre au Duc i. ad corpus domini sui de prisona redimendum cùm captus fuerit pro bello Ducis Normandiae Also I find in Cassan de consuet Burg. Quòd dominus accipit à subditis pro dotanda filia pa. 122. which seemeth to be all one with this our imposition and also in Vincentius de Franchis deseis 131. where he calleth it adjutorium pro maritanda Filia Whence it appeareth that this custome is within the Kingdome of Naples also Touching this likewise you may read these words in Menochius lib. 2. de arbitrat Jud. quaest centuria 2. cap. 181. Habent saepissimè feudorum possessores Domini multa in corum ditionibus privilegia multasque cum locerum incolis conventiones inter quas illa una solet nominari ut possit Dominus collect am illis indicere pro solutione dotium suarum filiarū cùm matrimonio collocantur Hoc aliquando Romae observatum à Caligula fuisse in illius vita scribit Suetonius cap. 42. Hodiè hic usus in subalpina regione est frequens ut scribit Jacobinus de Sancto Georgio in tractu de homagiis col 8. Etiam pro filia quae religionem ingreditur non modò pro una filia sed pluribus filiabus non tamen pro secundis nuptiis exigitur In which place the said author maketh mention of divers other Civilians and Feudists that record this custome to be in other places Of this Ayd our Fleta writeth thus sicut etiam quaedam consuetudines quae servitia non dicuntur nec concomitantia servitiorum sicut rationabilia auxilia ad filium primogenitum militens faciendum vel ad filiam primogenitam maritandam quae quidem auxilia sunt de gratia non de jure pro necessitate et indigentia domini capitalis Et non sunt pradialia sed personalia secundum quod perpendi poterit in brevi ad hoc proviso c. This word Ayd is also particularly used in matter of pleading for a petition made in court for the calling in of help from another that hath an interest in the cause in question and is likely both to give strength to the party that
of summs under forty shillings Crompton fol. 231. agreeth with him It is called a Justicies because it is a commission to the Sheriff ad Justiciandam aliquem to doe a man right and requireth no return of any certificate of what he hath done Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. maketh mention of a Justicies to the Sheriff of London in a case of Dower See the new book of Entries Justicies Justification Justificatio is an upholding or shewing a good reason in Court why he did such a thing as he is called to answer as to Justifie in a cause of Replevin Broke titulo Replevin KE KEeper of the great Seal Custos Magni Sigilli is a Lord by his Office and called Lord-Keeper of the great Seal of England c. and is of the Kings privy Councel under whose hands pass all Charters Commissions and Grants of the King strengthened by the great or broad Seal Without the which Seal all such Instruments by Law are of no force for the King is in interpretation and intendment of Law a Corporation and therefore passeth nothing firmly but under the said Seal This Lord Keeper by the Statute anno 5 Eliz. cap. 18. hath the same and the like place authority preheminence Jurisdiction execution of Laws and all other Customes Commodities and advantages as hath the Lord Chancellor of England for the time being Keeper of the privy Seal Custos privati Sigilli is a Lord by his Office under whose hands pass all Charters signed by the Prince before they come to the broad or great Seal of England He is also of the Kings privy Councell He seemeth to be called Clerk of the privy Seal anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 11. But of late daies I have known none to bear this Office by reason the Prince thinketh good rather to keep his Seal in his own hands and by private trust to commit it to his principal Secretary or some such one of his Councel as he thinketh fit for that function Keeper of the Touch anno 2 H. 6. cap. 14. seemeth to be that Officer in the Kings Mint which at this day is termed the Master of the Assay See Mint Keeper of the Forest Custos Forestae is also called Chief Warden of the Forest Manwood parte prim of his Forest laws pag. 156. c. and hath the principal government of all things belonging thereunto as also the check of all Officers belonging to the Forest And the Lord Chief Justice in Eyr of the Forest when it pleaseth him to keep his Justice Seat doth forty daies before send out his general Summons to him for the warning of all under Officers to appear before him at a day assigned in the Summons This see in Manwood ubi supra KI King Rex is thought by M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 105. to be contracted of the Saxon word Cyninge signifying him that hath the highest power and absolute rule over our whole Land and thereupon the King is in intendment of Law cleared of those defects that Common persons be subject unto For he is alwaies supposed to be of full age though he be in years never so young Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 134. Kitchin fol. 1. He is taken as not subject unto death but is a Corporation in himself that liveth ever Crompton ibidem Thirdly he is above the Law by his absolute power Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. Kitchin fol. 1. And though for the better and equal course in making Laws he do admit the three Estates that is Lords Spiritual Lords Temporal and the Commons unto Counsel yet this in divers learned mens opinions is not of constraint but of his own benignity or by reason of his promise made upon oath at the time of his Coronation For otherwise were he a Subject after a sort and subordinate which may not be thought without breach of duty and loyalty For then must we deny him to be above the Law and to have no power of dispersing with any positive law or of granting especial Privileges and Charters unto any which is his only and clear right as Sir Thomas Smith well expresseth lib. 1. cap. 3. de Repub. Anglica and Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 3. and Britton ca. 39. For he pardoneth life and limme to Offendors against his Crown and Dignity except such as he bindeth himself by Oath not to forgive Stawnf pl. Cor. l. 2. ca. 35. And Habet omnia jura in manu sua Bracton l. 2. c. 24. nu 1. And though at his Coronation he take an Oath not to alter the laws of the Land yet this Oath notwithstanding he may alter or suspend any particular Law that seemeth hurtfull to the publique Estate Blackwood in Apologia Regum cap. 11. See Oath of the King Thus much in short because I have heard some to be of opinion That the Laws be above the King But the Kings Oath of old you may see in Bracton lib. 3. cap. 9. nu 2. for the which look in Oath of the King The Kings Oath in English you may see in the old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacram. Regis Fourthly the Kings only Testimony of any thing done in his presence is of as high nature and credit as any Record Whence it commeth that in all Writs or Precepts sent out for the dispatch of Justice he useth none other Witness but himself alwaies using these words under it Teste me ipso Lastly he hath in the right of his Crown many Prerogatives above any common person be he never so potent or honorable whereof you may read you fill in Stawnfords Tractate upon the Statute thereof made anno 17 Ed. 2. though that contain not all by a great number What the Kings power is read in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. nu pri 2. King of Heralds Rex Haraldorum is an Officer at Armes that hath the preeminence of this Society See Herald This officer of the Romans was called Pater Patratus Kings Bench Bancus Regius is the Court or Judgement Seat where the King of England was wont to sit in his own person and therefore was it moveable with the Court or Kings houshold And called Curia Domini Regis or Aula R●gia as Master Gwin reporteth in the Preface to his Readings and that in that and the Exchequer which were the only Courts of the King untill Henry the Thirds dayes were handled all matters of Justice as well Civil as Criminal whereas the Court of Common Plees might not be so by the Statute anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. or rather by Master Gwins opinion was presently upon the grant of the great Charter severally erected This Court of the Kings bench was wont in ancient times to be especially exercised in all Criminal matters and Plees of the Crown leaving the handling of private contracts to the County Court Glanvil lib. 1. cap. 2 3 4 lib. 10. cap. 18. Smith de Repub. Anglicana lib. 2. cap. 11. and hath President of it the Lord
at least the remedy for the same is likest there to be had by some sodain inrode and happing of such recompence of the injury received as may most conveniently be lighted upon See Reprisalls See Marches Marquis Marchio by the opinion of Hotom verbo Marchio in verbis feudalibus commeth of the German March i. limes signifying originally as much as Custos limitis or Comes praefectus limitis of these Zasius thus writeth de Marchione nihil compertum est nisi quod Gothicum vocabilum putamus And afterwards thus Hujusmodi Marchionum sive ut nos appellamus Margraphiorum origo in limitaneos praepositos sive duces referenda Margraphii dicti quòd limitibus quos vulgo marken appellamus graphii td est praepositi fuerunt c. For in those Territories that have naturally no bounds of great strength or defence there is need of wise and stout men toward their borders for the keeping out of Neighbour enemies But here in England though we have a L. Warden of the Marches northward and a Warden of the Cinque Ports toward the South-east and were wont to have Lord Marchers between us and Wales that served this turn yet those which we call Marquises are Lords of more dignity without any such charge and are in honor and account next unto Dukes At this day I know but one in England and that is the Marques of Winchester being of that noble family of the Powlets See Cassanaeus de consuetud Burg. pag. 15. Marrow was a Lawyer of great account that lived in Henry the seventh this daies whose learned Readings are extant but not in print Lambert Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 1. Marterns see Furre Master of the Rolls Magistri rotulorum is an Assistant unto the Lord Chancellour of England in the High Court of Chancery and in absence heareth Causes there and giveth Orders Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 41. His Title in his Patent as I have heard is Clericus parvae bagae Custos rotulorum domus conversorum This Domus conversorum is the place where the Rolls are kept so called because the Jews in ancient time as there were any of them brought to Christianity were bestowed in that House seperately from the rest of their Nation But his office seemeth originally to have sprung from the safe keeping of the Rolls or Records of Indictments passed in the Kings Courts and many other things He is called Clark of the Rolls anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 2. and in Fortescue his Book cap. 24. and no where Master of the Rolls untill anno 11 H. 7. cap. 20. and yet an 11. ejusdem cap. 25. he is also called Clark In which respect Sir Thomas Smith l. 2. cap. 10. de Repub Angl. well saith That he might not unfitly be called Custos Archivorum He seemeth to have the bestowing of the offices of the six Clarks anno 14 15 Henry the eight cap. 1. Master of the Mint an 2 Hen. 6. cap. 14. he is now called the warden of the Mint whose office see in Mint Master of the Court of Wards and Liveries is the chief principal officer of the Court of Wards and Liveries named and assigned by the King to whose Custody the Seal of the Court is committed He at the entring upon his office taketh an oath before the Lord Chancellor of England well and truly to serve the King in his Office to minister equal Justice to rich and poor to the best of his cunning wit and power diligently to procure all things which may honestly and justly be to the Kings advantage and profit and to the augmentation of the rights and Prerogative of the Crown truly to use the Kings Seal appointed to his Office to endeavour to the uttermost of his power to see the King justly answered of all such profits rents revenues and issues as shall yearly rise grow or be due to the King in his Office from time to time to deliver with speed such as have to do before him not to take or receive of any person any gift or reward in any Case or matter depending before him or wherein the King shall be party wherby any prejudice losse hinderance or disherison shall be or grow to the King an 33 H. 8. cap. 33. Master of the Horse is he that hath the rule and charge of the Kings stable being an Office of high account and alwaies bestowed upon some Noblemen both valiant and wise This Officer under the Emperors of Rome was called Comes sacri stabuli The master of the Horse is mentioned anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. and an 1 Edw. 6. cap. 5. Master of the Posts is an Officer of the Kings Court that hath the appointing placing and displacing of all such through England as provide Post horse for the speedy passing of the K. messages other businesses in the thorow-fair towns where they dwel as also to see that they keep a certain number of convenient Horses of their own and when occasion is that they provide others therewith to furnish such as have warrant from him to take Post-horses either from or to the Seas or other borders or places within the Realm He likewise hath the care to pay them their wages and make their allowance accordingly as he shall think meet This Officer is mentioned an 2 E. 6. cap. 3. Master of the Armoury is he that hath the care and oversight of his Majesties Armour for his person or Horses or any other provision or store thereof in any standing Armouries with command and placing or displacing of all inferiour Officers thereunto appertaining Mention is made of him anno 39 Elizabeth cap. 7. Master of the Jewel-house is an Officer in the Kings houshold of great credit being allowed bouge of Court that is dyet for himself and the inferiour Officers viz. Clarks of the Jewel-house and a special lodging or Chamber in Court having charge of all plate of Gold of Silver double or parcel guilt used or occupied for the Kings or Queens board or to any Officer of account attendant in Court and of all Plate remaining in the Tower of London of Chains and loose Jewels not fixed to any garment Mention is made of this Officer an 39 Eliz. c. 7. Master of the Kings Houshold magister hospitii is in his just Title called Grant master of the Kings Houshold and beareth the same Office that he did that was wont to be called Lord Steward of the Kings most honourable Houshold anno 32 Henry 8. cap. 39. Whereby it appeareth that the name of this Officer was then changed and Charles Duke of Suffolk President of the Kings Councel then enjoying that office was so to be called ever after so long as he should possess that office Master of the Ordinance anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. is a great officer to whose care all the Kings Ordinance and Artillery is committed being some great man of the Realm and expert in marshal affairs Master of the Chancery Magister Cancellariae is an assistant
three morsells of barley bread without drink and the second day he shall have drink three times and as much at each time as he can drink of the water next unto the prison door except it be running water without any bread And this shall be his dyet untill he die Palatin See County Palatin See Cassan de consuctud Burg. pag. 14. Palingman anno 11. Henr. 7. cap. 22. Panell panellum cometh of the French panne i. pellis or paneau a piece or pain as wee call it in English It signifieth in our common law a shedule or rolle containing the names of such Iurors as the Shyreeve provideth to passe upon any triall Register orig fol. 223. a. Kitchin fol. 266. See Broke hoc titulo And thereupon the empannelling of a Iury is nothing but the entering of them into the Shyreeves rolle or book Paunage pannagium is a tolle or contribution Fitz. nat br fol. 227. D. See Pawnage Parramounte aliâs peremounte cometh of these two French words par i. per and Monter i. ascendere It signifieth in our law the highest Lord of the fee for there may be a Tenant to a Lord that holdeth over of another Lord and the former of those is called Lord mesn the second Lord paramount And a Lord paramount as it seemeth by Kitchin fol. 289 consisteth only in comparison as one man may be great being compared with a lesser and little being compared with a greater and as Genus among Logicians may be in divers respects both genus species Fitzh nat br fol. 135. M. So that none seemeth simply to be Lord paramount but only the King as Genus summum is simply Genus For the King is Patron paramount to all the benefices in England Doctor and student ca. 36. See Paravaile Maner and Fee Paravail alias Peravaile is compounded of two French words par i. per and aveller i. dimitteree demittere It signifieth in our common Law the lowest Tenant or him that is tenant to one who holdeth his fee over of another So is it used pl. cor fol. 197. Fitzh nat br fol. 135 M. See Paramounte See Mesn Parcellmakers are two officers in the eschequer that make the parcells of the escheators accompts wherein they charge them with every thing they have levyed for the Kings use within the time of their office and deliver the same to one of the Auditors of the court to make an accompt of the escheator thereof Parceners See Coparceners Parcinarie participatio cometh of the French partir i. dividuum facere It signifieth in our common Law a holding or occupying of land by more pro indiviso or by joynt tenants otherwise called Coparceners of the French parsonier i. parciarius particeps For if they refuse to divide their common inheritance and chuse rather to hold it joyntly they are said to hold in parcinarie Litl fol. 56. 57. This by the Feudists and Lombards is termed adaequatio vel paragium And among the ancient Romans particulones sic enim anthore Nonio à veteribus cohaeredes inter se dicebantur quod paries invicem facerent Spigelius Pardon pardonatio is a French word signifying as much as pax venia gratia It is used most notoriously in our common Law for the remitting or forgiving of a felonious or other offence committed against the King This pardon is two-fold one ex gratia Regis the other per cours de ley by course of law Stawnf pl. cor fol. 47. Pardon ex gratia Regis is that which the King in some speciall regard of the person or other circumstance sheweth or affordeth upon his absolute prerogative or power Pardon by course of Law is that which the law in equity affordeth for a light offence as homicide casuall when one killeth a man having no such meaning Westm parte 2. symbel titulo Inditements sect 46. Of this see the new book of Entries verba Pardon Pardoners anno 22 H. 8. c. 12. were certain fellowes that carryed about the Popes Indulgences and sold them to such as would buy them against whom Luther by Sleydans report incensed the people of Germany in his time exhorting them ne merees tam viles tantiemerent Park parcus cometh of the French parquer i vallo vel fossa cicundare It signifieth with us a piece of ground inclosed and stored with wild beasts of chase Which a man may have by prescription or the Kings grant Cromptons Jurisd fol. 148. M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 148. defineth it thus A park is a place for privilege for wild beasts of venery and also for other wild beasts that are beasts of the Forest and of the chase tam sylvestres quam campestres And all those wild beasts are to have a firm peace and protection there So that no man may hurt or chase them within the park without license of the owner of the same Who also fol. 149. saith thus A park is of another nature than either a chase or a warren is For a park must be inclosed and may not lie open for if it doe that is a good cause of seisure of the same into the hands of the King as a thing forfeited as a free chase is if it be inclosed And moreover the owner cannot have an action against such as hunt in his park if it lie open See Forest See Chase See Warren This word Park Baldwinus deriveth à paradiso enmque locum esse dicit in quo varia animalia ad usum voluptatis aut venationis includuntur possidentur adempta naturali libertate Adtis de rerum divis in Institutionib Parco fracto is a writ which lyeth against him that violently breaketh a Pound and taketh out beasts thence which for some trespasse done upon another mans ground are lawfully impounded Register original fol. 166. Fitzh nat br fol. 100. Parish parochia cometh of the greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i Accolarnm conventus accolaius sacra vicinia it is used in the Canon law sometime for a Bishoprick But in our common Law it signifieth the particular charge of a secular Priest For every Church is either Cathedrall Coven nal or parochiall Cathedrall is that where there is a Bishop seated so called à Cathedra Coventual consisteth of Regular Clerks professing some order of religion or of Deane chapter or other college of spiritual men Parochial is that which is instituted for the sayingof divine Service ministring the holy Sacraments to the people dwelling within a certain compass of ground neer unto it Our Realm was first divided into Parishes by Honorius Archb. of Canterbury in the year of our Lord 636. Cambd. Britan. pag. 104. Of these Parish Churches I find there were in England in the dayes of H. 8. the number of 45000 Hotoman in his disputations de feudis cap. 2. maketh mention of this word parochia out of Pomponius Letus in these words Nam sic quoque Pomponins Letus ve●e●em consuetudinem fuisse scribit
domini si quem habuerit accedat c. And to help this probability I find that the Steward of a manner is termed serviens manerii Coke Vol. 4. Copihold cases fol. 21 a. Then is there a Sergeant at arms serviens ad arma whose Office is to attend the person of the King An. 7 H. 7. ca. 3. to arest Traitors or men of worth or reckning that do or are like to contemn Messengers of ordinary condition for other causes and to attend the Lord high Steward of England sitting in judgement upon any Traitor and such like pl. cor lib. 3. cap. pri Of these by the Statute anno 13 R. 2. cap. 6. there may not be above thirty in the Realm This sort is called del espee In the custumary of Nor. car 5. which read There be also some two of these Sergeants of the Parliament one for the upper another for the lower house whose Office seemeth to serve for the keeping of the Doors and the execution of such Commandements especially touching the apprehension of any offender as either house shall think good to enioyn them See Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. nono See also Vowels aliâs Hookers book of the order of the Parliament There is one of these that belongeth to the Chancery who is also called a Sergeant of the Mace as the rest may be because they carry Maces by their office He of the Chancery attendeth the Lord Chancellor or Keeper in that court for the means to call all men into that Court is either by this Officer or by sub poena West pa. 2. Symb. tit Chauncery Sect. 17. Then be there Sergeants that be the chief officers in their several functions within the Kings houshold which be chief in their places of which sort you may read many named in the statute anno 33 H. 8 cap. 12. There is also a more base kind of Sergeant of the Mace whereof there is a troop in the City of London and other Towns corporate that serve the Maior or other head Officer both for mesnial attendance and matter of Justice Kitchin fol. 143. And these are called Serviontes ad clavam New book of Entries ver scire facias in Mainperners fol. 538. cap. 3. Sergeantie Serriantia commeth of the French Sergeant i. satelles and signifieth in our Common law as service due to the King from his Tenent holding by such service For this service cannot be due to any L. from his Tenent but to the King only And this is either grand or petit as you shall find at large set down in Chivalry Of this also you may read Bra. l. 2. c. 16. c. 37. n. 5.4 et Brit. c. 66. n. 1. et 2. See Servies M. Skene de ver signif calleth this Sergeantery defining and dividing it as we do in England Servientihus as certain writs touching servants and their Masters violating the statutes made against their abuses which see in the Regist. orig fo 189. et 190 et 191. Service servitium though it have a general signification of duty toward them unto whom we owe the performance of any corporal labor of function yet more especially in our Common law it is used for that service which the Tenent by reason of his fee oweth unto his Lord. And so doth it signifie among the Feudists also For Hotoman thus defineth it Servitium est munus obsequit clientelaris verbo Servitium De verbis feudal or rather declareth it so to be defined lib. feud 2. titulo 51. Sect. 8. It is sometime called servage as anno 1 R. 2. cap. 6. This service is either military and noble commonly called Knights service or clownish and base commonly called Soccage of both which read Chiry as also scecage And Bracton lib. 2. ca. 16. Service is divided by Britton into personal and real cap. 66. where he maketh wards mariages homage Reliefs and such like to be real services personal I imagine may those be called that are to be persormed by the person of the Tenent as to follow his Lord into war c. The Civilians divide munera in this sort either in personalia or patrimonalia Then Bracton ubi supra num 7. distributeth servitium in intrinsecum extrinsecum aliâs forinsecum medium Servitium intrinsecum is that which is due to the capital Lord of the Mannro Forinsecum is that which is due to the King and not to the capital Lord but when he goeth in his own person to serve or when he hath satisfied the King for all services whatsoever And again in the same place he saith it is called Fornisecum quia fit capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali See Forein service Of this read him ubi supra more at large and Fleta lib. 2. cap. 14. § Continetur Servitia quae nec intrinseca necforinseca sunt Bract. handleth in the same Chapter nu 8. saying thus sunt etiam quaedam consuetudines quae nec dicuntur intriasecae nec forinsecae sed sunt quaed im servitia concomitantia sicut servitia regalia militaria etiambemagia adeo in cbartis non sunt exprimendae Quia si homagium praecesseris et regale servitium sequitur exinde quod ad capitalem Dominum pertinebit Relivium et custodia et maritagium sive servitium sit militare vel seriantia propter exerci●um c. Here then Relief Ward and Mariage be those services which he calleth nec intrinseca nec forinseca sed concomitantia Service is also divided into frank service and base or villeinous service the one Bracton calleth liberum servitium the other servitium villanum or villenagium lib. 2. cap. 8. num pri This villenagium is Soccage in base tenure as to dung the Lords ground to serve him so many daies in harvest to plash his hedges c. or else copyhold All other services seem to be frank Service consiste●h some in seisance some in render Perkins Reservations 696. Service seemeth also to be divided into continual otherwise annual and casual or accidental An example of the sormer is the seisin of rent and of the other seisin of Relief Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 4. Bevils case fol. 9. a. See Copy hold See Soccage See Ayd Service secular anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. which may be contrary to spiritual viz. the service divine commanded to spiritual men by their founders Servitours of Bills seem to be such servants or messenger of the Marshal belong-to the Kings Bench as were sent abroad with Bills or Writs to summon men to that Court being now more ordinarily called Tipstaffs Servitiis acquietandis is a Writ judicial that lyeth for one distreined for services by Iohn which oweth and performeth to Robert for the acquital of such services Register judicial fol. 27. a. et 36. b. Sessions Sessiones signifieth in our Common law a sitting of Justices in Court upon their commission as the Sessions of oyer and terminer pl. cor fol. 67. Quarter Sessions
Councellors as the case may require Solet et debit See debet solet Solidata terrae See Farding deal of land Solace anno 43. Elizabeth cap. 10. Sommons aliâs summons summonitio commeth of the French semondre i. vocare It signifieth in our Common law as much as vocatio in jas or ciatio among the Civilians And thence is our word somner which in French is semoneur i. vocator monitor The Customary of Normandy for our summons hath semonse ca. 61. summons of the Exchequer anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 19. anno 10. ejusdem cap. 9. How summons is divided and what circumstances it hath to be observed See Fleta li. 6. cap. 6 7. Sollutione feods militis Parlamenti and solutione feodi Burgen Parlamenti be Writs whereby Knights of the Parliament may recover their allowance if it be denied an 35 H. 8. ca. 11. Sontage Stow. pag. 284. is a task of forty shillings laid upon every Knights fee. Sorting Kersies 3 Jacob. cap. 16. Sothale is a kind of entertainment made by Bayliffs to those of their hundreds for their gain Which sometime is called Filctable Of this Bracton lib. 3. tractat 1. cap. prim hath these words De Ballivis qui faciunt cervicias suas quas quandoque vocant sothail quandoque fictale ut pecunias extorqueant ab iis qui sequntur Hundreda sua et Balvas suas c. I think this should rather be written Scotale See Scotale Southvicont Sub vicecomes is the undersheriff Cromptons Jurisd fol. 5. Sowne is a verb neuter properly belonging to the Exchequer as a word of their Art signifying so much as to be leviable or possible to be gathered or collected For example Estreats that sown not are such as the Sheriff by his industry cannot get and Estreats that sown are such as he can gather anno 4 H. 5. cap. 2. SP Speaker of the Parliament is an Officer in that high Court that is as it were the common mouth of the rest and as the honourable assembly consisteth of two Houses one called the Higher or Upper House consisting of the King the Nobility and Kings Councell especially appointed for the same the other termed the Lower or Common House containing the Knights of the Shires the Citizens Barons of the Cinque Ports and the Burgesses of Borough Townes so be their also two Speakers one termed the Lord Speaker of the Higher House who is most commonly the Lord Chancelor of England or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal the other is called the Speaker of the Lower House And the duties of these two you have particularly described in M. Vowels alias Hookers Book intituled The order and usage of keeping the Parliament Speciall matter in evidence See Generall Issue And Brook tit Generall issue and speciall evidence Spiritualities of a Bishop spiritualia Episcopi be those profits which he receiveth as he is a Bishop and not as he is a Baron of the Parliament Stawnf pl. cor fol. 132. The particulars of these may be the duties of his Visitation his benefit growing from ordering and instituting Priests prestation Money that subsidium charitativum which upon reasonable cause he may require of his Clergie Johannes Gregorius de Beneficis cap. 6. num 9. and the Benefit of his Jurisdiction Joachimus Stephanus de Jurisdict lib. 4. cap. 14. num 14. for these reckoneth Exactionem Cathedratic quartam Decimarum mortuariorum et oblationum pensitationem subsidium obaritativum celebrationem Spuedi collationem viatici vel commeatus oum Episcopus Romam proficiscitur jus Hospitii Litaniam et Processionem Spickenard spica nardi vel nardus is a medicinal herb whereof you may for your further instruction read Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 425. The fruit or eare of this for it bringeth forth an care like Lavender is a drug garbable anno 1. Jacob. cap. 19. Spoliation spoliatio is a writ that lyeth for an Incumbent against another Incumbent in case where the right of Patronage commeth not in debate As if a Person be made a Bishop and hath despensation to keep his Rectory and afterward the Patron present another to the Church which is instituted and inducted The Bishop shall have against this Incumbent a writ of Spolatio in curt Christian Fitzherbert nat br fol. 36. See Benevolence SQ Squalley anno 43. Elizab. b. cap. 10. Squyres See Esquires ST Stable stand is one of the four Evidences or presumptions whereby a man is convinced to intend the stealing of the Kings Dear in the Forest Manwood parte 2. of his Forest Lawes cap. 18. num 9. the other three be these Dogdrawe Backbear Bloudy hand And this Staplestand is when a man is found at his standing in the Forest with a Crosse bowe bent ready to shoot at any Deer or with a long Bowe or else standing close by a Tree with Greyhounds in a lease ready to slip Idem eodem Stalkers a kind of net anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. cap. 20. et anno 17. ejusdem cap. 9. Stallage Stallagium commeth of the French Estaller i. merces expenere expedire explicare It signifieth in our Common law money paid for pitching of stalls in Fair or Market See Scavage This in Scotland is called stallange Skene de verbor signific verbo Stallangiatores And among the Romans it was termed Siliquaticum à siliqua primo et minimo omnium pondere apud●llam nationem Stannaries stannaria commeth of the Latin stannum i. tynne signifying the Mines and works touching the getting and purifying of this mettall in Cornwal and other places Of this read Camden Britan. pag. 119 The liberties of the stannarie men granted by Edw. 1. before they were abridged by the Statute anno 50 Edw. 3. see in Plowden casu Mines fol. 327. a. b. Staple Stapulum signifieth this or that Town or Citie whether the Merchants of England by common order or commandement did carry their wools wool-fells cloathes lead and tinne and such like commodities of our land for the utterance of them by the great The word may probably be interpreted two waies one taking it from staple which in the Saxon or old English language signifieth the stay or hold of any thing Lamberd in his Duties of Constables num 4. because the place is certain and setled and again from the French estape i. forum vinarium because to those places whither our English Merchants brought their commodities the French would also meet them with theirs which most o all consisteth in Wines But I think this latter the truer because I find in the Mirrour of the world written in French these words A Calais y avotte Estape de le laine c. Which is as much to say as the staple for wools c. You may read of many places appointed for this staple in the statutes of the Land according as the Prince by his Councel thought good to alter them from the second year of Ed. 3. cap. 9. to the fifth of Ed. the sixth cap. 7. VVhat
in every Tun anno 12 Edw. 4. ca. 3. anno 6 H. 8. ca. 14. anno pri Ed. 6. ca. 13. anno pri Jacobi ca. 33. I have heard it also called a duty due to the Mariners for unloading their Ship arrived in any Haven after the rate of every Tun. Torny See Turney Totted anno 42 Edw. 3. cap. 9. anno 1 Ed. 6. cap. 15. is a word used of a debt which the forein Apposer or other Officer in the Exchequer noteth for a good debt to the King by writing this word Tot unto it Tourn See Turn Tout tempa prist uncore est that is to say in English Alway ready and is at this present This is a kind of Plee in way of excuse or defence unto him that is sued for with-holding any debt or duty belonging to the Plaintiff See of this Broke his Abridgement fol. 258. TR Traile baston See Iustices of trial baston Traitor traditor proditor See Treason Transgressione is a writ called commonly a writ or action of Trespass Of this Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium hath two sorts one Vicountiel so called because it is directed to the Sheriff and is not returnable but to be determined in the County The form whereof differeth from the other because it hath not these words Quire vi armis c. and this see in Fitzherberts natura brev fol. 84 G. The other is termed a writ of trespasse upon the case which is to be sued in the Common bank or the Kings Bench in which are alwaies used these words vi et armis c. And of this you have Fitzh nat br f. 92. E. See Trespass See the divers use of this writ in the Register original in the Table Transcript anno 34 35 H. 8. cap. 14. is the copy of any original written again or exemplified Transcripto Recognitionis factae coram Justiciariis itinerantibus c. is a writ for the certifying of a Recognizance taken before Iustices in Eyre into the Chancery Regist orig fol. 152. b. Transcripto pedis finis levati mittendo in Cancellariam is a writ for the certifying of the foot of a fine levyed before Justices in Eyre c. into the Chancery eodem fol. 169. et Register judicial fol. 14. Travers commeth of the French Traverser i●transfigere It signifieth in our Common law sometime to deny sometime to overthrow or undo a thing done Touching the former signification take these words in Wests Symbol parte 2. titulo Chancery Sect. 54. An answer saith he speaking of an answer to a bill in Chancery is that which the Defendent pleadeth or saith in Bar to avoid the Plaintiffs bill or action either by confession and avoiding or by denying and traversing the material parts thereof And again Section 55. A replication is the Plaintiffs speech or answer to the Defendants answer which must affirm and pursue his bill and confess and avoid deny or traverse the Defendants answer And the formal words of this traverse are in Lawyers French sans ceo in Latine absque hoc in English without that See Kitchin fol. 227. titulo Affirmative et Negative In the second signification I find it in Stawnfords praerog cap. 20. through the whole Chapter speaking of traversing an Office which is nothing else but to prove that an Inquisition made of goods or lands by the Escheatour is defective and untruly made So traversing of an Inditement is to take issue upon the chief matter thereof which is none other to say than to make contradiction or to deny the point of the Inditement As in presentment against A. for a Highway over-flown with water for default of scowring a ditch which he and they whose estate he hath in certain land there have used to scowr and cleanse A. may traverse either the matter viz. that there is no Highway there or that the ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may traverse the cause viz. that he hath not the land c. or that he and they whose estate c. have not used to scowr the ditch Lamb. Earenarcha lib. 4. cap. 13. pag. 521 522. Of Traverse see a whole chapter in Kitchin fol. 240. See the new book of Entries verbo Traverse Treason traditio vel proditio commeth of the French trahison i. proditio and signifieth an offence committed against the the amplitude and Majesty of the Common wealth West parte secund symbol titulo Inditement sect 63. by whom it is there divided into High treason which other call altam proditionem and Petit treason High treason he defineth to be an offence done against the security of the Common wealth or of the Kings most excellent Majesty whether it be by imagination word or deed as to compass or imagine treason or the death of the Prince or the Queen his Wife or his Son and Heir apparent or to deflowre the Kings wife or his eldest Daughter unmarried or his eldest sons wife or levy war against the King in his Realm or to adhere to his enemies aiding them or to counterfeit the Kings great Seal privy Seal or mony or wittingly to bring false mony into this Realm counterfeited like unto the mony of England and utter the same or to kill the Kings Chancellor Treasurer Iustice of the one bench or of the other Iustices in Eyr Iustices of Assise Iustices of Oyer and Terminer being in his place and doing of his office anno 25 Ed. prim cap. 2. or forging of the Kings seal Manuel or privy signet privy seal or forein coyn current within the Realm anno 2 Mar. cap. 6. or diminishing or impairing of mony current anno 5 Eliz. cap. 11. et anno 14 El. ca. 3. et 18 Eliz. ca. pri and many other actions which you may read there and in other places particularly expressed And in case of this treason a man forfeiteth his lands and goods to the King only And it is also called treason Paramount anno 25 Ed. 3. ca. 2. The form of Iudgement given upon a man convicted of high treason is this The Kings Serjeant after the verdict delivered craveth Iudgement against the Prisoner in behalf of the King Then the Lord Steward if the traitor have been noble or other Iudge if he be under a Peer saith thus N. Earl of P. For so much as thou before this time hast been of these treasons indited and this day arraigned for the same and put thy self upon God and thy Peers and the Lords thy Peers have found thee guilty my Iudgement is that thou shalt be conveyed unto the Tower of London whence thou camest and from thence drawn through the midst of London to Tiburn and there hanged and living thou shalt be cut down thy bowels to be cut out and burnt before thy face thy head cut off and thy body to be divided into four quarters and disposed at the Kings Majesties pleasure and God have mercy upon thee Petit treason is rather described by examples than any where logically
16 R. 2. c. Vis● Franciplegii is a writ to exempt him from comming to the view of Frankpledge that is not within the Hundred resident For men are bound unto this view by reason of their habitation and not of Lands held where they dwell not Regist. orig fol. 175. Vitteler victualarius commeth of the French victuailes i. commeatus and signifieth with us him that selleth victuals For these there is a writ in Fitzherbert nat brev fol. 172. if they exercise their trade bearing a magistracy in any Town Corporate VM Vmple anno 3 Edw. 4. cap. 5. VN Vncore prist is a plee for the Defendant being sued for a debt due at a day past to save the forfeiture of his bond saying that he tendred the debt at the time and place and that there was none to receive it and that he is now also ready to pay the same 7 Ed. 6. 83. Dyer See Unquest prist Vncuth is a Saxon word signifying as much as incognitus It is used in the antient Saxon laws for him that commeth to an Inne guest-wise and lyeth there for two nights at the most In which case his Host was not bound to answer for any offence that he committed whereof he was guiltlesse himself But if he laid there the third night then he was called guest hospes and then must the Host answer for him as for one of his own family And if he tarried any longer then was he called Agen hine that is to say familiaris Whom if he offend against the Kings peace his Host was to see forth-comming or if he could not bring him out within a month and a day he must satisfie for his offence Lamb. Archaiono fol. 133. num 7. Of this Bracton lib. 3. cap. 10. num 2. writeth thus Item secundum antiquam consuetudinem dici poterit de familia alicujus qui hospitus fu●rit cum alio per tres noctes quia primâ nocte poterit dici Vncuth secundâ verò Gust tertiâ nocte Hoghenhine c. This law was made for the better preservation of the Kings peace and to shew in what pledge every man was to be accounted that travelled by the way See Tuainnithes gest Vnite nihil habet is a writ See Dote unde nihil habet Vnder-chamberlain of the Exchequer is an Officer there that cleaveth the Tallies written by the Clerk of the Tallies and readeth the same that the Clerk of the Pel and the Controllers thereof may see their Entries be true He also maketh searches for all Records in the Treasury There be two Officers there of this name Vnderescheatour Subescheatour anno 5 Ed. 3. cap. 4. See Escheatour Vndershyreeve Subvicecomes See Shyreeve Vndersitter is an Inmate See Inmate Vndertakers be such as are employed by Purveyours of the King as their Deputies anno 2 3 Phil. Ma. cap. 6. and such as undertake any great work as drying of Fens c. anno 43 Eliz. cap. 11 Vnder●treasurer of England vicethesaurarius Angliae anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. anno 43 ejusdem Subsidy of the Clergy This Officer as some Exchequer men think was first created in the time of King Henry the seventh to chest up the Kings Treasure at the end of every Term and to note the content of mony in each chest and to see it carried to the Kings Treasury in the Tower for the ease of the Lord Treasurer as being a thing too mean for him to be troubled with and yet meet to be performed by a man of great secrecy and trust He in the vacancy of of the Lord Treasurers Office doth all things in the receipt that the Lord Treasurer doth He nominateth the two Praysers of all goods seised as not customed and ordereth whether the party shall have them at the price or not He appointeth the Steward Cook and Butler for the provision of the Star-chamber But this Officer in other mens judgement is far more antient than Henry the sevenths dayes yet named Treasurer of the Exchequer in the Statutes untill Queen Elizabeths time where he is termed Under-treasurer of England Neverthelesse anno 35 Eliz. he is also written Treasurer of the Exchequer Read the Statutes anno 8 Ed. 3. statut 2. cap. 17. 27 ejusdem Stat. 2. cap. 18. 1 Rich. 2. cap. 5. 4 H. 4. cap. 18. 8 H. 6. cap. 17. 27 H. 8. cap. 11. with divers other places that seem to approve this to be true Vnion unio is a combining or consolidating of two Churches in one which is done by the consent of the Bishop the Patron and the Incumbent And this is properly called an union Howbeit that there be two other sorts as when one Church is made subject to the other and when one man is made Prelate of both and when a Conventual is made Cathedral as you may read in the Glosse of the Chapter Licet de licato conducto in Lyndwoods Provincials Sect. E●quia versu Appropriationis Touching Union in the first signification there was a statute anno 37 Hen. 8. cap. 21. that it should be lawfull in two Churches whereof the value of the one is not above six pounds in the Kings books of the First fruits and not above one mile distant from the other Union in this signification is personal and that is for the life of the Incumbent or real that is perpetual whosoever be Incumbent Vnity of possession is called consolidatio usus fructus proprietatis in the Civil law signifying a joynt possession of two rights by several titles For example I take a lease of land from one upon a certain rent afterward I buy the Fee-simple This is an unity of possession whereby the Lease is extinguished by reason that I which had before the occupation only for my rent and become Lord of the same and am to pay my rent to none but my self Also an Abbot being seated within a certain Parish afterward obtaineth an appropriation of the Tithes belonging to that Church for the use of his house Here is an unity of possession by reason that the tythes which before were to be payd to the Incumbent are now to be paid to none but himself by vertue of the appropriation Vniversity Vniversitas is by the Civil law any body politick or corporation but in our language it is at the least most ordinarily taken for those two bodies that are the Nourses of learning and the liberal Sciences Cambridge and Oxford endowed with great favours and privileges for their better maintenance as appeareth not only by anno 2 3 Ph. et Mar. cap. 15. a. 13 El. c. 21. et a. 18. ejusd cap. 6. but much more by their several Charters granted unto them by divers godly and magnanimous Kings of this land Vnlawfull assembly Illicita congregatio illicita assemblata is the meeting of three or more persons together with force to commit some unlawfull act and abiding still not endeavouring the execution thereof as to assault or beat any person to enter into
prayeth in ayd of him and also to avoid a prejudice growing toward his own right except it be prevented For example when a tenent for term of life by courtesie tenent in tail after possibility of issue extinct for term of years at will by Elegit or tenent by Statute-merchant being impleaded touching his estate may petere auxtlium that is pray in ayd of him in the reversion that is desire or intreat the Court that he may be called in by writ to allege what he thinketh good for the maintenance both of his right and his own Terms of the Law Fitzherbet mentioneth both prier in ayde and prier ayde de patron c. auxilium petere à patrono Nat. Brev. fo 50. d. And the new book of Entries Verbo Ayde de parcener auxilium de parcionaria fo 411 Columna 4. This the later practitioners in the Civil Law call authoris laudationem vel nominationem Emericus in practition titulo 48. This ayde prier is also used sometime in the Kings behoof that there be no proceeding against him untill the Kings Councell be called and heard to say what they think good for the avoyding of the Kings prejudice or losse touching the cause in hand For example if the kings tenent holding in chief be demanded a rent of a common person he may pray in ayd of the king Also a City or Borough that hath a fee ferm of the king any thing being demanded against them which belongeth thereunto may pray in ayd of the king c. Terms of the law Of this thing you may read the Statute de bigamis a. 4. Ed. 1. ca. 1. 2. 3. an 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 14. The Civill law in sutes begun between two alloweth a third to come in pro interesse and he that commeth in for his interest commeth either assistendo or opponendo c. The former is like to this ayde prier the other to that which our common Lawiers cal Receite Look Receito Aile avo commeth of the French aieul i. avus signifieth a writ that lieth where the grandfather or great grandfather called of our common lawyers besacle but in true French bisaicul was seised in his demaines as of fee of any land or tenement in fee simple the day that he died and a stranger abateth or entreth the same day and dis●possesseth the heir Fitz. nat br fo 222. AL Alderman aldermannus is borrowed from the Saxon Ealderman signifying as much as Senator in Latine Lamb. in his explication of Saxon words verbo senator See Roger Hoveden par poster suorum annal fo 346. b. Aler sans jour is verbatim to goe without day the meaning whereof is to be finally dismissed the Court because there is no day of farther appearance assigned Kitchin fol. 140. Ale-taster is an officer appointed in every Court leet and sworn to look to the assise and the goodnesse of bread and ale or beer within the precincts of that Lordship Kitchin f. 46. where you may see the form of his oath Alias v. Capias alias Alien alienare commeth of the French aliener and signifieth as much as to transferre the property of any thing unto another man To alien in mortmain is to make over lands or tenements to a Religious company or other body politique Stawnf praerog fo 40. Look Mortmain To alien in fee is to sel the fee simple of any land or tenement or of any incorpore all right West 2. ca. 25. an 13 Ed. 1. Alien alias alion allenigena commeth of the Latine alienus and signifieth one born in a strange Country It is ordinarily taken for the contrary to Denizen or a natural subject that is one born in a strange country and never here infranchised Brook Denizen 4. c. And in this case a man born out of the land so it be within the limits of the kings obedience beyond the Seas or of English parents out of the Kings obedience so the parents at the time of the birth be of the kings obedience is no alien in account but a subject to the King Statute 2. a. 25. Edw. 3. c. unico commonly called the Statute de natis ultra mare Also if one born out of the Kings allegiance come and dwell in England his children if he beget any here be not aliens but denizens Terms of the Law See Denizen Allaye Allaia is used for the temper mixture of silver and gold an 9. H. 5. Stat. 2. c. 4. Stat. 1. ejusdem anni cap. 11. The reason of which allay is with a baser metal to augment the weight of the silver or gold so much as may counter vail the Princes charge in the coining Antonius Faber de nummariorum debitorum solutionibus cap. 1. Allocatione facienda is a writ directed to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer upon a complaint of some accountant commanding them to allow the accountant such summes as he hath by vertue of his office lawfully and reasonably expended Regist orig fol. 206. b. Alluminor seemeth to be made of the French allumer i. accendere incendere inflammare it is used for one that by his trade coloureth or painteth upon paper or parchment And the reason is because he giveth grace light and ornament by his colours to the letters or other figures coloured You shall find the word an 1. R. 3. ca. 9. Almaine rivets be a certain light kind of armor for the body of a man with sleevs of male or plates of iron for the defence of his arms The former of which words seemeth to shew the country where it was first invented the other whether it may come from the French verb revestir i. superinduere to put on upon another garment I leave to farther consideration Almner eleemosynarius is an officer of the Kings house whose function is fragmenta diligenter colligere ea distribuerre singulis diebut egenis agrotos leprosos incarceratos pauperesque viduas et alios egenos vagosque in patria commorantes charitative visitare item equos relictos robas pecuniam et alia ad elecmosynam largita recipere fideliter distribuere Debet etiam regem super eleemosyne largitione crebris summonitionibus stimulare praecipne diebus Sanstorum rogare ne robas suas quae magni sunt pretii histrionibus blanditoribus adulatoribus accusatoribus vel ministrallis sed ad eleemosynae suae incrementum jubeat largiri Fleta lib. 2. cap. 22. Almoine eleemosyna See Frank almoyne Almond amygdalum is well known to every mans sight it is the kernel of a nut or stone which the tree in Latine called amygdalus doth bear within a husk in manner of a walnut of whose nature and diversities you may read Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 87. This is noted among Merchandize that are to be garbled anno 1. Jaco cap. 19. Alnegeor aliâs aulnegeor ulniger vel ulnator commeth from the French aulne an elle or elwand and signifieth an Officer of the Kings who by
called bannimertum which was aunelently tearmed depertatlo if it were perpetual or religatio in insulam if for a time Vincentius de Franchis Petrus de Bellug a in suo speculo fol. 125. num 4. Barbaries Oxycantha is a thornie shrub known to most men to bear a berry or fr●●t of a sharp taste These berries as also the leaves of the said tree be medicinable as Goard in his Herbal sheweth lib. 3. cap. 21. You find them mentioned among Drugges to be garbled Anno 1 Jacob. cap. 9. Bargain and sale as it seemeth by Westpart 1. symb lib. 2. sect 436 is properly acontract made of mannors lands renements hereditaments other things transferring the property thereof from the bargainer to the bargainee But the Author of the new terms of Law addeth that it ought to be for money saying farther that this is a good contract for Land c. and that Fee-simple passeth thereby though it be not said in the deed To have and to hold the land to him and to his heire and though there be no liverie and selfin made by the seller so it be by deed intended sealed and enrolled either in the County where the land lyeth or within one of the Kings Courts of Records at Westminster within six moneths after the date of the Deed intended an 27 H. 8. cap. 16. Barkarie Barkaria is a heath house New book of Entries titulo Assise corp poli● 2. Some call it a Tan-house Baron Barao is a French word and hath divers fignifications here in England First it is taken for a degree of Nobility next unto a Vicount Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. num 4. where he saith they be called Barones quasi robur belli And in this fignification it is borrowed from other Nations with whom Baroniae be as much as Provinciae Petrus Belluga in speculo princip fol. 119. So Barones be such as have the government of Provinces as their Fee holden of the King fome having greater some lesser authority within their territories as appeareth by Vincentius de Franobis in divers of his disceisions and others Yet it may probably be thought that of old times here in England all they were called Barons that had such Seigniories as we now call Court-barons as they be at this day called Seigneurs in France that have any such Mannor or Lordship Yea I have heard by men very learned in our Antiquities that neer after the Conquest all such came to the Parliament and sate as Nobles in the upper-house But when by experience it appeared that the Parliament was too much pestered with such multitudes it grew to a custome that none should come but such as the King for their extraordinary wisedome or quality thought good to call by Writ which Writ ran hac vice tantùm After that again men feeing this estate of Nobility to be but casual and to depend meerely upon the Prine●s pleasure they sought a more certain hold and obtained of the King letters patents of this dignity to them and their heires male And these were called Barons by letters patents or by creation whose postority be now by inhefitance and true delcent of Nobility those Barons that be called Lords of the Barliament of which kind the King may create more at his pleasure It is thought neverthelesse that there are yet Barons by writ as well as Barons by letters patents and that they may be discerned by their titles because the Barons by writare those that to the title of Lord have their own surnames annexed as Crompton North Norice c. whereas the Barons by letters patents are named by their Barronies These Barons which were first by writ may now justly also be called Barons by prescription for that they have continued Barons in themselves and their auncestors came beyond the memory of man The original of Barons by writ Master Camden in his Britaunia Pag. 109. in meo referreth to Henry the third Barons by letters patents or creation as I have heard among our Antiquaries were first created about the days of Henry the sixth the manner of whose creation read in Master Stows Annals pag. 1121. Of all these you may also read Mast Ferns glory of Generofity pa. 125. 126. And see M. Skene de ver signif verb. Baro. with Sir Thomas Smith lib. 1. d●●●pub Anglor cap. 17. who saith that none in England is created Baron except he can dispend a thousand pound by year or a thousand markes at the least To these former Master Seager by office Norrey lib. 4. cap. 13. of Honour civill and militariy addeth a ●ird kind of baron calling them Barons by conure and those be the Bishops of the land all which by vertue of Baronies annexed to their Bishopricks have alwaies had place in the upper house of Parliament and are termed by the name of Lords Spiritual Baron in the next signification is an Officer as Barons of the Exchequer be to the King of which the principal is called Lord chief Baron capitalis Baro and the three other for so many there be are his Assistants in causes of Justice between the King and his subjects touching causes appertaining to the Exchequer The Lord chief Baron at this day is the chief Judge of the Court and in matter of Law Information and Plea answereth the Barr and giveth order for judgement thereupon He alone in the Term time doth sit upon Nist prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers office or out of the office of the Clerk of the Pleas which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He taketh recognisancea for the Kings debts for appearances and observing of orders He taketh the presentation of all the officers in Court under himself and of the Maior of London and seeth the Kings Remembrancer to give them their oaths He taketh the declaration of certain receivers accounts of the lands of the late augmentation made before him by the Anditors of the Shires He giveth the two parcel makers places by vertue of his office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord chief Baron answereth the Barr in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances for the Kings debts apparences and observing of orders He giveth yearly the oath to the late Maior and Escheatour of London for the true account of the profits of his office He taketh a declaration of certain receivers accounts He also examineth the letters and sums of such Sheriffs forrain accounts as also the accounts of Escheatours and Collectours of subsidies and Fifteens as are brought unto him by the Auditors of the Court. The third Baron in the absence of the other two answereth the barr in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances as aforesaid He giveth yearly the oath of the late Major and Gawger of London for his true accounting He also taketh a declaration of certain receivers accounts and examineth the letters and sums of such of the former accountants as are brought unto him The fourth Baron is alwayes a
common consent in the Courts called birlaw courts In the which cognition is taken of complaints betwixt neighbour neighbour which menso chosen are Judges and Arbitratours to the effect aforesaid and are called birlaw men For bawr or bawrsman in Dutch is rusticus so birlaw or burlaw leges rusticorum Hitherto M. Skene Bilinguis though it signifie in the generality a double tongued man yet in our Common law it is used for that Jury that passeth between an English man and an alien Whereof part must be Englishmen and part strangers an 28 Ed. 3. cap. 13. Bille billa is diversly used among our Common lawyers First as West saith pa. 1. symb lib. 2. sect 146. it is all one with an obligation saving that when it is in English it is commonty called a bill and when it is in Latin an obligation But I hear other good Lawyers say that a bill though it be obligatory yet is without condition or forfeiture for non payment and that the obligation hath both Bill secondly is a declaration in writing that expresseth either the grief and the wrong that the complainant hath suffered by the party complained of or else some fault that the party complained of hath committed against some law or statute of the Common-wealth This bill is sometime offered up to Justices errants in the general assises sometime and most of all to the Lord Chancellor of England especially for unconscionable wrongs done sometime to others having jurisdiction accordingly as the law where upon they are grounded doth direct It containeth the fact complained of the dammages thereby suffered and petition of processe against the defendant for redresse West parte 2. Symbol titulo supplications sect 52. whom you may reade at large touching this matter Billa vera is as it were a word of art in our Common law For the grand enquest empaneled and sworn before the Justices in Eyre c. indorsing a bill whereby any crime punishable in that Court is presented unto them with these two words do signifie thereby that the present or hath furnished his presentment or denunciation with probable evidence and worthy of farther consideration And thereupon the party presented by the same bill is said to stand indicted of the crime and so tyed to make answer unto it either by confessing or traversing the indictment And if the crime touch the sife of the person indicted it is yet referred to another enquest called the enquest of life and death who if they find him guilty then he standeth convicted of the crime and is by the Judge to be condemned to death See Ignoramus see Indictment Billets of gold commeth of the French billot i. massa auri anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. ca. 14. Bynny peper anno 1 Jaco ca. 19. BL Black maile is half English half French For in French maille signifieth a small piece of money which we call a half peny It signifieth in the Counties of Cumberland Northumberland Westmerland and the Bishoprick of Duresme a certain rate of money corn cattel or other consideration paid unto some inhabiting upon or near the borders being men of name and power allied with certain known to be great robbers and spoil-takers within the said Counties to the end thereby to be by them fteed protected and kept in safetie from the danger of such as doe usually robbe and steal in those parts anno 43. Eliz. cap. 13. Blacke rodde is the huissier belonging to the order of the Garter so called of his black rodd that he carrieth in his hand He is of the Kings chamber and also huissier of the parliament Blancks commeth of the French blanc i. candidus albus It signifieth a kind of coin that was coine in the parts of France by King H. the fifth that were subject to England the value whereof was eight pence Stowes annals pag. 586. These were forbidden to be current within this Realm an 2 H. 6. cap. 9. The reason why they were called blanks may be because at the time these were coined in France there was also a piece of gold coyned which was called a Salus of the value of twenty-two shillings from which this silver was in name distinguished by the colour Bloudy hand See Backberend Blomary is one of the forges belonging to an iron mill which also seemeth otherwise to be termed a Finary The use whereof if you will understand you must know that first there is a furnace wherein the mine-stones are melted and cast into a raw iron fashioned into long wedges three square that be called sows Then be there two forges like unto Smiths forges but much bigger the one whereof is called the blomary or as it seemeth the finary into the which being maintained with a charcole fire blown with bellowes made to goe by water are cast the said sowes of raw iron and melted again and by a workman called the finary man are wound and wrought round and afterward beaten by a hammer into ●ittle wedges about a yard long which are called bloomes Then is there another forge called the Hammer into which these bloomes are cast and by a workman called the Hammer man again chafed and made soft in a charcole fire blown likewise with bellowes caused to goe by water and after carried by the said Hammerman and put under the great Hammer also driven by the water And so the said bloomes are drawn fashioned and made into such barts of iron of divers sorts and forms as we see commonly sold Of this you may read in the Statute an 27 Elizab. ca. 19. See Baye Bloudwit blodwita is compounded of two Saxon words blout i. sanguis and wit for the which we have the word wite still in the West parts of England signifying a charging of one with a fault or an upbraiding And Speight in his expositions upon Chawcer saith that to twit is as much as to blame To twit in some other places of this land signifie has much as to hitt in the teeth or to upbraid This bloudwit is a word used in charters of liberties antiently graunted and signifieth an amercement for shedding of bloud So that whosoever had it given him in his Charter had the penaltie due for shedding of bloud granted unto him Rastal in his exposition of words Skene de verbo signif writeth it bludveit and saith that veit in English is injuria vel misericordia and that bludveit is an amercement or unlawe as the Scottishmen call it for wrong or injury as bloudshed is For he that is infest with bludveit hath free liberty to take all amercements of Courts for effusion of bloud Fleta saith quod significat quietantiam misericordiae pro effusione sanguinis li. 1. ca. 47. BO Bockland See Charterland See Copie-hold and Free-hold Bonis arrestandis is a writ for the which See Arrestandis bonis Bonis non amovendis is a writ to the Shyreevs of London c. to charge them that one condemned by judgement in an action and prosecuting a
except there were some other farther division whereby to raise of every plow land so much and so consequently of every Knights fee that is of every 680. acres two marks of silver Rastal in his Exposition of words saith that caruage is to be quit if the Lord the King shall tax all the land by carues that is a priviledge whereby a man is exempted from caruage Skene de verb. signif ver Carucata terrae deriveth it from the French charon i. a plough and saith that it containes as great a portion of land as may be tilled and laboured in a year and day with one plough which also is called hilda or hida terrae a word used in the old Britain lawes Master Lamberd among his precedents in the end of his Eirenarcha translateth carucatum terrae a plough land Caruage caruagium see Carue Cassia Fistula is a tree that beareth certain black round and long cods wherein is contained a pulpe soft and pleasant sweet serving for many uses in Physick This tree with her vertues you may find described in Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 77. The fruit is mentioned in the Statute anno 1 Jacob. cap. 19. among drugges and spices that bee to be garbled Cassia Lignea is a sweet wood not unlike to Cynamon and sometime used in stead of Cynamon Whereof you may read in Gerards Herball lib. 1. cap. 141. this is called Cassia lignum in the Statute anno 1. Jacob. c. 19. and is comprised among merchandize that are to be garbled Castellain castellanus is a keeper or a Captain sometime called a Constable of a Castle Bracton lib. 5. tractat 2. cap. 16. lib. 2. cap. 32. num 2. In like maner is it used anno 3 Ed. 1. cap. 7. In the books de feudis you shall find guastaldus to be almost of the same signification but something more large because it is also extended to those that have the custody of the Kings mansion houses called of the Lomberds curtes in England Courts though they be not places of defence or strength M. Manwood part 1. of his Forest laws pag. 113. saith that there is an Officer of the Forest called Castellanus Castelward castelgardum vel wardum castri is an imposition laid upon such of the Kings subjects as ●●en within a certain compasse of any Castle toward the maintenance of such is doe watch and ward the Castle Magna charta cap. 20. anno 32 H. 8. cap. 48. It is used sometime for the very circuit it self which is inhabited by such as are subject to this service is in Stowes annals pag. 632. Casu consim●li is a writ of entrie granted where the Tenent by courtesie or Tenent for Term of life or for the life of another doth alien in fee or in tail or for term of anothers life And it hath the name of this for that the Clerks of the Chauncery did by their common consent frame it to the likenesse of the writ called In casu proviso according to their authority given them by the Starute Westm 2. cap. 24. which as often as there chanceth any new case in Chancery something like to a former case and yet not especially fitted by any writ licenceth them to lay their heads toge 〈…〉 and to frame a new form answerable to the new case and as like some former case as they may And this writ is granted to him in the reversion against the party to whom the said Tenent so alienateth to his prejudice and in the life time of the said Tenent The form and effect whereof read more at large in Fitzh na br fol. 206. Casu proviso is a writ of entry given by the Statute of Glocester cap. 7. in case where a Tenent in dower alieneth in fee or for Term of life or in tail and lyeth for him in reversion against the alienee Whereof read Fitz. nat br more at large fol. 205. Catalls Catalla al. âs chatels cometh of the Normans For in the eighty-seventh Chapter of the grand customary you shall find that all moveable goods with them are called charels the contrary whereof is fief ibid. which we do call fee. But as it is used in our Common Law it comprehendeth all goods moveable and immoveable but such as are in the nature of freehold or parcel thereof as may be gathered out of Stawnf praero cap. 16. and anno Eliz. 1. cap. 2. Howbeit Kitchin in the chapter catalla fol. 32. saith that ready money is not accounted any goods or chatels nor hawkes nor hounds The reason why hawkes and hounds be not he giveth because they be ferae naturae why money is not though he set not down the cause yet it may be gathered to be for that money of it self is not of worth but as by consent of men for their easier traffick or permutation of things necessary for Common life it is reckoned a thing rather consisting in imagination than in deed Catals be either personal or real Personal may be so called in two respects one because they belong immediately to the person of a man as a bow horse c. the other for that being any way with-held injuriously from us we have no means to recover them but by personal action Chatels real be such as either appertain not immediatly to the person but to some other thing by way of dependency as a boxe with charters of land the body of a ward apples upon a tree or a tree it self growing on the ground Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 33. B. or else such as are necessary issuing out of some immoveable thing to a person as a lease or rent for tearm of yeares Also to hold at will is a chatel real New tearms verbo Chatel The Civilians comprehend these things as also lands of what kind or hold soever under bona bona autem dividuntur in mobilia immobilia mobilia verò in ea quae se movent vel ab aliis moventur v. legem 49. l. 208. π. de verb. significa interpretes ibidem Bracton also c. 3. l. 3. num 3. 4. seemeth to be of the same judgement Catallis captis nomine dictrictionis it is a Writ that lyeth within a Borow or within a honse for rent going out of the same and warranteth a man to take the dores windowes or gates by way of distresse for the rent Old nat br Fol. 66. Catallis reddendis is a Writ which lyeth where goods being delivered to any man to keep until a certain day and be not upon demand delivered at the day And it may be otherwise called a Writ of detinew See more of it in the Register orig f. 139. and in the Old nat br fol. 63. This is answerable to actio dispositi in the Civil law Catchep●lle though it now be used as a word of contempt yet in ancient times it seemeth to have been used without reproach for such as we now call Sergeants of the Mace or any other that use to arrest
as were forfeited to the Emperours Treasurie for any offence were bona confiscata so do we those that are forfeited to our Kings Exchequer See more of these goods confiscate in Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 24. Conge d'eslire venia elegendi is very French and signifieth in our Common law the Kings Permission royal to a Dean and Chapter in time of vacation to chuse a Bishop or to an Abbey or Priorie of his own foundation to chuse their Abbot or Prior Fitzh nat br fol. 169. B. 170. B.C. c. Touching this matter M. Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith that the King of England as soveraign Patron of all Arch-bishoprickes Bishoprickes and other Ecclesiastical Benefices had of ancient time free appointment of all Ecclesiastical Dignities whensoever they chanced to be void investing them first per baculum annulum and afterward by his Letters Patents and that in processe of time he made the Election over to others under certain forms and conditions as namely that they should at every vacation before they chuse demand of the King congé de'slire that is license to proceed to Election and then after the Election to crave his royal assent c. And farther he affirmeth by good proof out of Common Law-Books that King John was the first that granted this and that it was afterward confirmed by Westm. pri ca. 1. which statute was made anno 3 Ed. pri And again by the statute Articuli cleri c. 2. which was ordained anno 25 Ed. 3. statuto tertio Congeable commeth of the French conge i. venia It signifieth in our Common law as much as lawful or lawfully done as the entry of the Disseisee is Congeable Litseton fol. 91. in meo Conisance See Cognizance Contzour aliàs cognizour recognitor cometh of the French cognoistre i. cognoscere cernere and is used in the passing of Fines for him that doth acknowledge the Fine and the Conizee is he to whom it is acknowledged West parte 1 symbol l. 2. sect 49. parte 2. titulo Fines sect 114. See Recognizour Conjuration conjuratio is the very French word drawn from the Latine which as it is compounded of con juro so it signifieth a compact or plot made by men combining themselves together by oath or promise to do some publick harm But in our Common law it is especially used for such as have personal conference with the Devil or evil spirit to know any secret or to affect any purpose anno 5 Elizab. cap. 16. And the difference that I have observed how truly let those judge that be better skilled in these matters between conjuration and witchcraft is because the one seemeth by prayers and invocation of Gods powerful names to compel the devil to say or do what he commandeth him the other dealeth rather by friendly and voluntary conference or agreement between him or her and the devil or familiar to have her or his desires and turns served in lieu of blood or other gift offered unto him especially of his or her soul And both these differ from inchantments or sorceries because they are personal conferences with the Devil as is said but these are but medicines and ceremonial forms of words called commonly charms without apparition Consanguineo is a Writ for the which see Avo and see the Register orig De avo proavo consanguinco fol. 226. a. Conservator of the truee and sase conduicts conservator induciarum salvorum regis conductuum was an officer appointed in every port of the Sea under the Kings Letters Patents and had forty pound for his yearly stipend at the least His charge was to enquire of all offences done against the Kings truce and safe conducts upon the main Sea out of the Countries and out of the Franchises of the Cinque ports of the King as the Admirals of Custome were wont and such other things as are declared anno 2 H. 5. cap. 6. Touching this matter you may read another statute anno 4 H. 5. cap. 7. Conservatour of the Peace conservator velcustos pacis is he that hath an especial charge by vertue of his office to see the Kings peace kept Which peace learned M. Lamberd defineth in effect to be a with-holding or abstinence from that injurious force and violence which boysterous and unruly persons are in their natures prone to use toward others were they not restrained by laws and fear of punishment Of these Conservators he farther saith thus that before the time of King Edward the third who first erected Justices of Peace there were sundry persons that by the Common law had interest in keeping of the Peace Of those some had that charge as incident to their offices which they did bear and so included within the same that they were never the lesse called by the name of their office onely some others had it simply as of it self and were thereof name custodes pacis Wardens or Conservators of the Peace The former and latter sort he again subdivideth Which read in his Eirenarcha lib. 1. cap. 3. Consideration consideratio is that with us which the Grecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the material cause of a contract without the which no contract bindeth This consideration is either expressed as if a man bargain to give twenty shillings for a Horse or else implyed as when the law it self inforceth a confideration as if a man come into a common Inne and there staying sometime taking both meat and lodging or either for himself and his Horse the Law presumeth that he intendeth to pay for both though nothing be farther covenanted between him and his Host and therefore if he discharge not the house the Host may stay his Horse Fulb. parel tract Contracts fol. 6. a. b. Consistorie consistorium is a word borrowed of the Italians or rather Lombards signifying as much as praetorium or tribunal vocab utriusque jur It is used for the place of Justice in the Court Christian Convocation-house domus convocationis is the house wherein the whole Clergie is assembled for consultation upon matters Ecclesiastical in time of Parliament And as the House of Parliament And as the house of the Parliament so this consisteth of two distinct Houses one called the higher Convocation-house where the Archbishops and Bishops sit severally by themselves the other the lower Convocation-house where all the rest of the Clergie are bestowed See Prolecutor Conusance See Cognisance Conusour See Cognizour Consolidation consolidatio is used for the combining and uniting of two Benefices in one Broke titulo Union This word is taken frō the Civil Law where it signifieth properly an uniting of the possession occupation or profit with the property For example if a man have by Legacie usum fructum fundi and afterwards buy the property or fee-simple as we call it of the heir hoc casu consolidatio fieri dicitur § 3. De usu fructu in Institut See Union and Unity of
anno 35. H. 8. cap. 26. and the County of Litchfield Cromptons Justice of peace fo 59. a. County is in another signification used for the Countie court which the Sheriff keepeth every month within his charge either by himself or his Deputy anno 2. Ed. 6. ca. 25. Crompt Juris f. 221. Bract. li. 3. c. 7. l. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. Of these Counties or Shires one with another there are reckoned in England 37. beside twelve in Wales The word comitatus is also used for a jurisdiction or territory among the Feudists County court curia comitatus by M. Lamberd is otherwise called conventus in his explication of Saxon words divided into two sorts one retaining the geneeal name as the County-court held every moneth by the Shiereve or his Deputy the under Sheriff wherof you may read in Crompt jurisd f. 231. the other called the Turn held twice every year which see more at large in his place and Cromptons Jurisd fol. 231. This County court had in antient times the cognition of these and other great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2.3.4 by Bracton and Britton in divers places and by Pleta lib 2. cap. 62. But was abridged by the Statute of Magna charta cap. 17. and much more by 1 Ed. 4. cap. unico It had also and hath the determination of certain trespasses and debts under forty shillings Britton cap. 27 28. what manner of proceeding was of old used in this Court see Fleta ubi supra Coursitour See Cursetour Court curia cometh of the French court which signifieth the Kings Palace or Mansion as curtis doth among the Lombards All these spring of the Latine curia which signifieth one of thirty parts into which Romulus divided the whole number of the Romans sometime also the Senat-house as appeareth by Tully in his Offices nihil est quod dignum nobis aut in foro aut in curta agere possumus which in his oration pro Milone he calleth Templum sanctitatis amplitudinis mentis consilii publici caput urbis c. Court with us signifieth diversly as the House where presently the King remaineth with his ordinary retinue and also the place where Justice is judicially ministred of which you find 32 several s●rts in M. Cromptons book of Jurisdictions well described And of them most be courts of record some be not and therefore are accounted base Courts in comparison of the rest Beside these also there are Courts Christian Smith de Repnb Anglor lib. 3. cap. 6. which are so called because they handle matters especially appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledg in Divinity cannot be well judged of being held heretofore by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome because he chalenged the superiority in all causes spiritual but sithence his ejection they hold them by the Kings authority virtute magistratus sui as the Admiral of England doth his Court Whereupon it proceedeth that they send out their precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Justices of the Kings Courts do And therefore as the appeal from these Courts did lye to Rome now by the statute anno 25 H. 8. cap. 19. it lieth to the King in his Chancerie Court baron curia baronis is a Court that every Lord of a manor which in ancient times were called Barons hath within his own precincts Barons in other Nations have great Territories and jurisdiction from their Soveraignes as may be proved out of Cassanaeus de gloria mundi part 5. consideratio 56. by Vincentius de Franchis descis 211. and many others Bu here in England what they be and have been heretofore see in Baron Of this Court Baron you may read your fill in Kitchin that writeth a large Book of it and of a Court Leet Sir Edward Coke in his fourth Book of Reports amongst his Copy-hold cases fol. 26. b. saith that this Court is two after a sort and therefore if a man having a mannor in a Town and do graunt the inheritance of the Copy-holders thereunto belonging unto another this grantee may keep a Court for the customarie Tenants and accept surrenders to the use of others and make both admittances and graunts the other Court is of Free-holders which is properly called the Court Baron wherein the suters that is the Free-holders be Judges whereas of the other the Lord or his Steward is Judge Court of Pypowders See Pie-powders Court of Requests curia requestarum is a Court of equity of the same nature with the Chancerie principally instituted for the help of such petitioners as in conscionable cases deal by supplication with his Majestie This Court as M. Gwin saith in the Preface to his Readings had beginning from Commission first granted by Henry the eighth to the Masters of Requests whereas before that time by his opinion they had no warrant of ordinary jurisdiction but travelled between the King and the Petitioner by direction from the Kings mouth But Sir Julius Caesar in a Tractate of his painfully and very judiciously gathered from the Records of the same Court plainly sheweth that this Court was 9 Henrici septimi though then following the King and not setled in any certain place neither swayed particularly by the Masters of Requests as now it is but more at large by others of the Kings most Honourable Councel whom he pleased to employ in this service For page 148. of the said Tractate you have the form of the oath then ministred to those that were Judges in this Court and à pag. pri usque ad pag. 46. causes of divers natures which in the said Kings dayes were there handled and adjudged This Court as that right honourable and Learned Knight in a Brief of his upon the same Court plainly proveth was and is parcel of the Kings most honoutable Councel and so alwayes called and esteemed The Judges thereof were alwayes of the Kings most Honourable Councel appointed by the King to keep his Councel board The keeping of this Court was never tyed to any place certain but onely where the Counsel sate the suters were to attend But now of late for the ease of suters it hath been kept in the White-Hall at Westminster and onely in Term time It is a Court of Record wherein Recognizances are also taken by the Kings Councel The form of proceeding in this Court was altogether according to the processe of summarie causes in the Civil Law The persons Plaintiffs and Defendants were alwayes either privileged as officers of the Court or their servants or as the Kings servants or as necessary Attendants of them or else where the Plaintiffs poverty or mean estate was not matchable with the wealth or greatnesse of the Defendant or where the cause meerly contained matter of Equity and had no proper remedie at the Common law or where it was specially recommended from the King to the Examination of his Councel or concerned Universities Colleges Hospitals
and the like The causes wherewith they deal and whereof they judge are of all sorts as Maritine Ultra Marine Ecclesiastical Temporal But properly Temporal causes and onely of the other sort as they are mixt with Temporal The manner of proceeding in the said Court is first by Privy Seal Letters Missive or Injunction or Messenger or Bond. Secondly By Attachement Thirdly by Proclamation of Rebellion Fourthly by Commission of Rebellion Fifthly by Sergeant at Arms. The effect of the Defendants apparence is that he attend De die in diem on the Councel till he have mad his answer to the Plaintiffs Bill and be licensed to depart upon caution De judicio sisti judicato solvendo and Constitution of his Atturney and Councel by name The authority of this Court is such as upon cause to graunt injunctions for barring the Defendant from suing the Plaintiff at the Common law and to stay the sute at the Common law before commencement and not to arrest the body of the Plaintiff till further order be taken by the Kings Councel and the execution of a Decree in this Court may be done either by imprisonment of the person disobeying being party or claiming under the party or by levy of the summe adjudged upon his Lands Courtesie of England lex Angliae cometh of the French Courtesie i. benignitas humanitas but with us hath a proper signification being used for a Tenure For if a man marry an Inheritrice that is a woman seised of land in fee-simple or fee-tail general or seised as heir of the tail special and getteth a child of her that cometh alive into the world though both it and his wife die forthwith yet if she were in possession shall he keep the land during his life and is called Tenent per Legem Angliae or by the courtesie of England Glanvil lib. 7. cap. 18. Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 30. num 7 8 9. r itto n. cap. 51. fol. 132. Fleta lib. 6. cap. 56. § lex quaedam Fitz. nat br fol. 149. D. Littleton lib. 1. cap. It is called the law of England West 3. cap. 3. This is in Scotland called curialitas Scotiae Skene de verbo sign verbo Curialitas who there saith that this is used in these two Realms onely and maketh a large discourse of the custome Coutheutlaughe is he that wittingly receiveth a man outlawed and cherisheth or hideth him In which case he was in antient times subject to the same punishment that the outlaw himself was Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 13. num 2. It is compounded of couthe i. known acquainted familiar and utlaughe an outlaw as we now call him Coutilage aliâs curtilage Curtilagium alias curtilegium signifieth a garden a yard or a field or piece of void ground lying neer and belonging to a mesuage West parte 2. Symbolaeo titulo Fines sect 26. And so it is used anno 4 Ed. 1. cap. unico anno 35 H 8. cap. 4. anno 39 Eliz. cap. 2. and Coke vol. 6. fol. 64. a. Of this also Lindwood thus writeth Curtilegium vulgare nomen est non ommum patriarum sed certarum Est enim curtis mansio vel manerium ad habitandum cum terris possession●bus aliis emo●umentis adtale manerium pertinentibus prout satis colligitur in libro feudorum titulo De controversia investiturae § si quis de manso Col. 10. Unde curtilegium dicitur locus adjunctus tali curti ubi leguntur herbae vel olera ●●●c dictus à curtis lego legis pro colligere Thus farre Linwood titulo de decimis ca. Sancta § omnibus verbo Curtelegiorum So that in effect it is a Yard or a Garden adjoyning to a House CR Creansour creditor cometh of the French croyance i. persuasio and signifieth him that trusteth another with any debt be it in money or wares Old nat br fol. 67. Cranage cranagium is a liberty to use a Crane for the drawing up of wares from the Vessels at any creek of the Sea or wharf unto the Land and to make profit of it It signifieth also the money paid and taken for the same New Book of Entries fol. 3. col 3. Creek creca crecca vel crecum seemeth to be a part of a Haven where any thing is landed or disburthned out of the Sea So that when you are out of the Main Sea within the Haven look how many landing places you have so many Creeks may be said to belong to that Haven See Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 110. a. This word is mentioned in the statute as anno 5 Eliz. c. 5. and divers others Creast-tile See Roof-tile Croft croftum is a little close or pitle joyned to a house that sometimes is used for a Hemp-ground sometime for Corn and sometime for Pasture as the owner listeth It seemeth to come of the old English word Creaft signifying handy-craft because such grounds are for the most part extraordinarily dressed and trimmed by the both labour and skill of the owner Croises cruce signati be used by Britton cap. 122. for such as are Pilgrims the reason may be for that they wear the sign of the Crosse upon their Garments Of these and their Privileges read Bracton lib. 5. parte 2. cap. 2. part 5. cap. 29. and the Grand Custumary of Normandy cap. 45. Under this word are also signified the Knights of the order of Saint John of Jerusalem created for the defence of Pilgrims Gregor Syntagm lib. 15. cap. 13. 14. CU Cuckingool tumbrella is an engine invented for the punishment of Scolds and unquiet women called in ancient time a tumbrel Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 1. cap. 12. po 62. in meo Bracton writeth this word Tymborella Kitchin where he saith that every one having view of Frank-pledge ought to have a Pillorie and a Tumbrel seemeth by a Tumbrel to mean the same thing cap. Charge in Court leet fol. 13. a. Cuth other uncuth privatus vel extraneus These be old English words not yet worn out of knowledge for the which see Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annalium fol. 345. a. Cudutlaghe See Couthutlaughe Cui ante divortium is a Writ that a Woman divorced from her Husband hath to recover lands or tenements from him to whom her husband did alienate them during the marriage because during the marriage she could not gainsay it Regist. orig fol. 233. Fitzh nat br fol. 204. Cuinage is a word used for the making up of Tinne into such fashion as it is commonly framed into for the carriage thereof into other places anno 11 H. 7. cap. 4. Cui in vita is a Writ of Entry that a Widow hath against him to whom her Husband aliened her Lands or Tenements in his life time which must contain in it that during his life time she could not withstand it Regist orig fol. 232. Fitzh nat br fol. 193. See the new Book of Entries verbo Cui in vita Cuntey cuntey is a kind of trial as
33. So that hereby I gather that of later times this word signifieth nothing but such an one as by oath of loyalty to his Prince for surety none ordinarily findeth at these dayes is setled in the combination or society of a Dozein And a Dozein seemeth now to extend so farre as every Leet extendeth because in L●ets onely this oath is ministred by the Steward and taken by such as are twelve years old and upwards dwelling within the compasse of the Leet where they are sworn Fitzh nat br fol. 161. A. The particulars of this oath you may read in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. in these words Quibus propositis that is the Commission of the Justices being read and the cause of their coming being shewed debent Justiciarii se transferre in aliquem locum secretam vocatis ad so quatuor vel sex uel pluribus de ma oribus de comitatu qui dicuntur Busones Comitatus ad quorum nutum dependent vota aliorum sic inter se tractatum habeant Justiciarii adinvicem ostendant qualiter à Don●ino Rege erus concilio provisum sit quàd omnes tam milite quàm alii qui sunt quindecim ann●rum ampliùs jurare debent quòd utlagatos murditores robbatores burglatores non recepta●●nt nec eis consentient nec corum receptatoribus si quos tales noverint illos attachiari facient hoc Vicecomiti balivis suis monstrabunt● si hutesium vel clameum de talibus audiverint statim and to clamore sequantur cum familia hominibus de terra sua Here Bracton setreth down fifteen years for the age of those that are sworn to the Kings peace but lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. num 5. he nameth 12 years See Inlaughe A man may note out of the Premisses diversities between the ancient and these our times in this point of law and government as well for the age of those that are to be sworn as also that Decennier is not now used for the chief man of a Dozen but for him that is sworn to the Kings peace and lastly that now there are no other Dozens but Leets and that no man ordinarily giveth other security for the keeping of the Kings peace but his own oath and that therefore none answereth for anothers transgression but every man for himself And for the general ground this may suffice See Franke pledge Declaration declaratio is properly the shewing forth or laying out of an action personal in any sure howbeit it is used sometime and indifferently for both personal and real actions For example anno 36. E. 3. cap. 15. in these words By the ancient terms and forms of Declarations no man shall be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Demonstration and in the Writ See the new Terms of Law See Cownte Dedimus potestatem is a Writ whereby commission is given to a private man for the speeding of some act appertaining to a Judge The Civilians call it Delegationem And it is granted most commonly upon suggestion that the party which is to do something before a Judge or in Court is so feeble that he cannot travel It is used in divers cases as to make a personal answer to a Bill of complaint in the Chaunce●ie to make an Atturney for the following of a sute in the Countie Hundred Wapentake c. Old nat br fol. 20. To levie a Fine West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 112. and divers others effects as you may see by Fitzh nat br in divers places noted in the Index of the Book In what diversity of cases this VVrit or Commission is used see the Table of the Regist orig verbo Dedimus potestatem Deeds Facta signifie in our Common law-writings that contain the effect of a contract made between man and man which the Civilians call Literarum obligationem And of Deeds there be two sorts Deeds indented and Deeds poll VVhich division as M. West saith parte 1. Symbol lib. 1. sect 46. groweth from the form or fashion of them the one being cut to the fashion of teeth in the top or side the other being plain And the definition of a deed indented hee expresseth thus Sect. 47. A Deed indented is a Deed consisting of two parts or more in which it is expressed that the parties to the same Deed have to every part thereof interchangeably or severally set their several seals See the rest where at the last he sheweth the cause of the name viz. for that consisting of more parts each part is indented or cut one of them into the other that by the cut it may appear they belong to one businesse or contract A Deed poll or polled he describeth thus Sect. 46. Q. A polled Deed is a Deed testifying that onely the one of the parties to the bargain hath put his seal thereunto after the manner there by him described which read for your better understanding See the new Terms of law verbo Fait where he sheweth that each Deed consisteth in three points writing sealing and delivery Deer Hayse anno 19 H. 7. cap. 11. seemeth to be an Engine of cords to catch Deer De essendo quietum de telonio is a VVrit that that lyeth for them which are by privilege freed from the payment of Toll which read at large in Fitzh nat br fol. 226. Defalt Defalta cometh from the French Defaut and is an offence in omitting that which we ought to do West parte 2. symbol titulo Indictment sect 2. Of this hath Bracton a whole Tractate lib. 5. tractat 3. By whom it appeareth that a Default is most notoriously taken for non appearance in Court at a day assigned Of this you may read also in Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. Defeisance defeisantia cometh of the French Desfaire or Deffaire i. infectum reddere quod factum est and signifieth in our Common law nothing but a condition annexed to an Act as to an Obligation a Recognisance or Statute which performed by the Obligee or Recognizee the Act as disabled and made void as if it never had been done whereof you may see West at large part 1. symb lib. 2. Sect. 156. Defendant defendens is he that is sued in an Action personal as Tenant is he which is sued in an Action real Terms of the Law Defendemus is an ordinary word in a Feofment or Donation and hath this force that it bindeth the Donour and his Heirs to defend the Donee if any man go about to lay any servitude upon the thing given other than is contained in the Donation Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See also Warrantizabimus Acquietabimus Defender of the Faith defensor fidei is a peculiar title given to the King of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain and Christianissimus to the French King It was first given by Leo Decimus to King Henry the 8. for
are called Ancient Demain and all others be called Frank-fee Kitchin fol. 98. And the Tenents which hold any of those Lands be called Tenents in Ancient Demain the others Tenents in Frank-fee Kitchin ubi supra And also Tenents of the Common law West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Sect. 25. The reason is because Tenents in ancient Demain cannot be sued out of the Lords Court Terms of the Law Verbo ancient Demain And the Tenents in Ancient Demain though they hold all by the verge and have none other evidence but copy of Court rol yet they are said to have Free-hold Kitchin fol. 81. See Ancient Demain Demain cart of an Abbot seemeth to be that Cart which the Abbot useth upon his own Demain Anno 6 H. 3. cap. 21. Demurrer demorare cometh of the French demeurer i. manere in aliquo loco vel morari It signifieth in our Common law a kind of pawse upon a point of difficulty in any action and is used substantively For in every action the controversie consisteth either in the fact or in the law If in the fact that is tried by the Jury if in law then is the case plain to the Judge or so hard and rare as it breedeth just doubt I call that plain to the Judge wherein he is assured of the law though perhaps the party and his councel yeeld not unto it And in such the Judge with his Associats proceedeth to Judgement without farther work but when it is doubtful to him and his Associates then is there stay made and a time taken either for the Court to think farther upon it and to agree if they can or else for all the Justices to meet together in the Chequer chamber and upon hearing of that which the Sergeants shall say of both parts to advise and set down what is law And whatsoever they conclude standeth firm without farther remedie Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 13. West calleth it a Demurrer in Chancery likewise when there is question made whether a parties answer to a Bill of Complaint c. be defective or not and thereof reference made to any of the Bench for the examination thereof and report to be made to the Court parte 2. symb tit Chancery Sect. 29. Denariataterrae See Farding-deal of land Denizen cometh of the French donaison i. donatio And signifieth in our Common law an Alien that is infranchised here in England by the Princes Charter and inabled almost in all respects to do as the Kings native subjects do namely to purchase and to possesse lands to be capable of any office or dignity Yet it is said to be short of naturalization because a stranger naturalized may inherit lands by descent which a man made onely a Denizen cannot And again in the Charter whereby a man is made Denizen there is commonly conteined some one clause or other that abridgeth him of all that full benefit which natural subjects do enjoy And when a man is thus infranchised he is said to be under the Kings protection or Esse ad fidem Regis Angliae before which time he can injoy nothing in Englād Bracton l. 5. tract 5. c. 25. nu 3. Nay he his goods might be seised to the Kings use Horn in his mirrour of Justices lib. 1. c. de la Venue de frane plege Deodand deodandum is a thing given or forfeited as it were to God for the pacification of his wrath in a case of misadventure whereby any Christian soul cometh to a violent end without the fault of any reasonable Creature For example if a Horse should strike his Keeper and so kill him If a man in driving a Cart and seeking to redresse any thing about it should so fall as the Cart wheel runing over him should presse him to death If one should be felling of a Tree and giving warning to company by when the Tree were neer falling to look to themselves and any of them should be slain neverthelesse by the fall of the Tree In the first of these cases the Horse in the second the Cart-wheel Cart and Horses and in the third the Tree is to be given to God that is to be sold distributed to the poor for an expiation of this dreadful event though effected by unreasonable yea senlesse and dead creatures Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 2. whereof also read Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. and Britton cap. 7. and West parte 2. symbolaeog titulo Indictments Sect. 49. And though this be given to God yet is it forfeited to the King by law as sustaining Gods person and an executioner in this case to see the price of these distributed to the Poor for the appeasing of God stirred up even against the earth and place by the shedding of innocent blood thereupon Fleta saith that this is sold and the price distributed to the Poor for the soul of the King his Ancestors and all faithful people departed this life l. 1. c. 25. verbo De submersis And it seemeth that this Law hath an imitation of that in Exo dus cap. 21. Si cornu petierit bos virum vel mulierem ita ut moriatur lapidabitur bos neque comedetur caro ejus ac dominus ejus erit innocens De Deoner anda pro rata portionis is a Writ that lieth where one is distrained for a rent that ought to be paid by others proportionally with him For example a man holdeth ten Oxegangs of land by fealty and ten shillings rent of the King and alienateth one Oxegang thereof to one another to another in fee. Afterward the Sheriff or other officer cometh and distraineth onely one of them for the rent he that is distrained may have this writ for his help Fitzh nat br fol. 234. Departer is a word properly used of him that first pleading one thing in barre of an action and being replyed thereunto doth in his rejoynder shew another matter contrary to his first Plea Plowden in Reniger and Fogassa fol. 7. 8. And of this see divers examples in Broke titulo Departer de son plee c. Departers of Gold and Silver See Finours De quibus sur disseisin is a Writ of entry See Fitzh nat br fol. 191. C. Dereyn disrationare vel dirationare may seem to come of the French disarroyer i. confundere turbare to confound or turn out of order or desranger i. to set out of order of lastly of the Norman word desrene for with the Normans desrene is nothing else but a proof of the denial of mans own fact For Rubigineus in his grand custumarie cap. 122 123. maketh mention of lex probabilis and lex deraisnia legem probabilem or probationem he defineth to be a proof of a mans own fact which he saith he hath done and his adversary denieth His example in this A. sueth R. for a Hog saying thou shouldest deliver me a Hog for two shillings six pence which money F. paid thee wherefore I demand my
the Ordinarie or Institution by the Ordinarie or Induction by his commandement Fitzh nat br fol. 35. E. See the stature anno 8 R. 2. cap. 4. Of this Petr. Gregor de beneficits cap. 11. num 10. hath these words Sitamen Capellaniae fundat●e per Laicos non fuerint à Diocesano approbatae et ut loquuntur spiritualiz atae non censentur beneficia nec ab Episcopo conferri possunt sed sunt sub pia dispositione fundatoris Joh. Fab. ad § Nullius De rerum diuis Iden fundatores et baeredes corum possunt tales Capellanias donare sine Episcopo cui voluerint tanquam profana beneficin Guido Papaeus descis 187. See also Gregorius lib. 15. cap. 29. sui syntagmatis num 11. I sinde in the Preface of M. Gwins readings that as the King might of ancient times found a free Chapel and exempt it from the jurisdiction of the Diocesan so he might also by his Letters Patents license a common person to found such a Chapel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be depriveable by the Founder and his Heirs and not by the Bishop And this is likest to be the original of these Donatives in England Fitzh saith that there be certain Chauntries which a man may give by his Letters Patents nat br fol. 33. C. See him also fol. 42. B. All Bishopricks were Donative by the King Coke lib. 3. fol. 75. b. Dooms day Rotulus Wintoniae domus D i Coke in praefatione ad librum saum is a Book that was made in King Ed. the Confe●ors dates as the Author of the Old nat br faith f. 15. containing in it not onely all the Lands through England but also all the names of those in whose hands they were at that time when the book was made M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo jus Dacorum c. proveth out of Gervasius Tilburiensis that this Book was made in William the Conquerours time with whom agreeth M. Cambden in his Bretan pag. 94. pro●ing it out of Ingulphus that flourished the same time And for the better commendation of the Book it is not amiste to set down the words of Ingulphus touching the contents thereof Totam terram descripsit Nec er at hyda in tota Anglia quin valorem ejus possessorem scivit nec lacus nec locus aliquis q●sin in Regis rotulo extitit descriptus ac ejus reditus proventus ipsa possessio ejus possessor regiae rotitiae manifestatus juxta taxatorum fidem qui elect● de qualibet patria territorium oroprium deseribebant Ifte rotulus vocatns est Rotulus Wintoniae ab Anglis pro sua generalitate quòd omnia tenementa totius terrae continuit Domesday cognominatur So it is called in the statute anno pri Ric. 2. cap. 6. And in Ockhams lucubrations de fisci Regis ratione which seemeth to be taken out of the Book called Liber Rubeus in the Exchequer It is termed Liber Judicatorius and the reason why quia in co totius Regni descriptio diligens continetu● tam de tempore Regis Edwardi quàm de tempore Regis Willielmi sub quo factus est singulorum fundorum valentia expr mitur Dorture dormitorium anno 25 H. 8. cap. 11. is the common room place or chamber where all the Friers of one Covent slept and lay all night Dote assignanda is a Writ that lieth for a Widow where it is found by office that the Kings Tenent was feised of Tenements in Fee or Fee-tail at the day of his death c. and that he holdeth of the King in chief c. For in this case the Widow cometh into the Chancery and there maketh oath that she will not marry without the Kings leave anno 15 Ed. 3. cap. 4. and hereupon he shall have this Writ to the Escheatour for which see the Register Original fol. 297. and Fitzherb nat br fol. 263. And this sort of Widowes is called the Kings Widow See Widow Dote unde nihil habet is a Writ of Dower that lieth for the Widow against the Tenent which hath bought Land of her Husband in his life time whereof he was feised solely in Fee simple or Fee tail in such sort as the issne of them both might have inherited it Fitzh nat br fol. 147. Regist. fol. 170. Dotts admensuratione See Admensurement See the Reg. orig fol. 171. Dotkins a kind of Coin pl. cor fol. 37. I●seemeth to come of the Dutch word ' Duytkin that is the eighth part of a Stufer or French Shilling which in Latine is called Solidus Gallicus Doubles anno 14 H. 6. cap. 6. fignifie as much as Letters Patents being as it seemeth a French word made of the Latine diploma Double plee duplex placitum is that wherein the Defendant allegeth for himself two several matters in barre of the action where of either is sufficient to effect his desire in debarring the Plaintiff And this is nor to be admitted in the Common law wherefore it is well to be observed when a P●ee is double and when it is not For if a man allege several matters the one nothing depending of the other the Piea is accounted double If they be mutually depending one of the other then is it accounted but single Kitchin fol. 223. See Brook hoc titule But why this doublenesse for so Kitchin calleth it fol. 234. should be debarred I see no reason under correction all things being spoken For a man may have two good defences and happily in the issue he shall contrarily to his hope fail in proving the one and yet be able to carry the cause by the other And therefore not onely the Civilians but Bracton also saith Pluribus exceptionibus uti nemo prohibetur libr. 5 aract 5. cap. 5. num 4. whom also read libro 4. cap. 17. And Sir Thomas Smiths reason of this scantly satisfieth me alleging this to be the course of our proceeding because the trial is by twelve rude men whose heads are not to be troubled with over many things at once lib. 2. de Repub. Anglor cap. 13. Double quarrel duplex querela is a complaint made by any Clerk or other unto the Archbishop of the Province against an inferiour Ordinary for delaying of Justice in some cause Ecclesiastical as to give sentence or to Institute a Clerk presented or such like The effect whereof is that the said Arch-bishop taking knowledge of such delay directeth his Letters under his authentical Seal to all singular Clerks of his Province thereby commanding and authorizing them and every of them to admonish the said Ordinatie within a certain number of dayes namely 9 dayes to do the Justice required or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in the said Letters prefixed and there to allege the cause of his delay And lastly to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he neither perform the
carens appaerentiam arboris habet non existentiam Summa Syl. Verbo Usura quaest 6. Est ergo Cambium siccum uxta hanc acceptionem in quà etiam accipitur in extrav Pii quinti idem quod Cambium fictum Non autem habet propriam naturam Cambii sed mutui et usurae At vero secundum Laurentium de Navarra in commento de usuris et Cambiis citatam Cambium siccum in alia acceptione minus communi summum est ●ambium in quo Campsor prius dat quam accipiat Dicitur autem isto modo ficcum quia sine praevia acceptione dat Campsor Quod tamen ut sic acceptum autore Sylvestro licitè celebratur aliquando Quiatun● verum et reale Cambium est diffe ens genere ab eo Cambio in quo Campsor prius recipit Quiae in isto Campsor semper primò dat et de●nde accipit Drift of the Forest seemeth to be nothing but an exact view or examination what cattel are in the Forest that it may be known whether it be overcharged or not and whose the beasts be This drist when how often in the year by whom and in what manner it is to be made See Manwood parte 2 of his Forest Laws cap. 15. Drait d' Advorizen See Recto de advocatione Ecclesiae Droit close See Recto clausum Droit de dower See Recto dotis Droit sur disclaimer See Recto sur diselaimer Droit patens See Recto patens DU Duces tecum is a Writ commanding one to appear at a day in the Chancery and to bring with him some piece of evidence or other thing that the Court would view See the new book of Entries verbo Duces tecum Duke Dux commeth of the French word Duc. In signifieth in ancient times among the Romans Ductorent exercitus such as led their armies who if by their prowesse they obtained any famous victory they were by their Souldiers saluted Imperatores as Hotoman verbo Dux de verbis feudal proveth out of Livy Tully and others Sithence that they were called duces to whom the King or people committed the custody or regiment of any Province Idem cod And this seemeth to proceed from the Lombards or Germans Sigon de reg ' no Ital. l. 4. In some Nations this day the Soveroigns of the Countrey are called by this name as Duke of Russia Duke of Sweden Here in England Duke is the next in secular dignity to the Prince of Wales And as M. Cambden saith heretofore in the Saxons times they were called Dukes without any addition being but meer officers and leaders of Armies After the Conquerour came in there were none of this title until Edward the thirds dayes who made Edward his son Duke of Cornwal After that there were more made and in such sort that their titles descended by inheritance unto their posterity They were created with solemnity per cincturam gladii cappaeque circuli aurei in capite impositionem vide Camd. Britann pag. 166. Zazium de feudis parte 4. num 7. et Cassan de consuetud Burg. pag. 6. et 10. and Ferns glory of generosity pag. 139. Dutchy court is a Court wherein all matters appertaining to the Dutchy of Lancaster are decided by the decree of the Chancellour of that Court. And the original of it was in Henly the fourths dayes who obtaining the Crown by deposing Richard the second and having the Dutchy of Lancaster by descent in the right of his mother he was seised thereof as King and not as Duke So that all the liberties franchises and Jurisdictions of the said Dutchie passed from the King by his grand Seal and not by Livery or Attournment as the possessions of Ever wick and of the Earldom of March and such others did which had descended to the King by other Ancestors than the Kings but at last Henry the fourth by authority of Parlament passed a Charter whereby the possessions liberties c. of the said Dutchy were severed from the Crown Yet Henry the seventh reduced it to his former nature as it was in Henry the fifts dayes Cromptons Jurisd fol. 136. The officers belonging to this Court are the Chancelour the Atturney Recelver general Clerk of the Court the Messenger Beside these there be certain Assistants of this Court as one Atturney in the Exchequer one Atturney of the Dutchy in the Chancery four Learned men in the Law retained of Councel with the King in the said Court. Of this Court M. Gwin● in the Preface to his Readings thus speaketh The Court of the Dutchy or County Palatine of Lancaster grew out of the grant of King Edward the third who first gave the Dutchy to his Son John of Gaunt and endowed it with such Royal right as the County Palatine of Chester had And for as much as it was afterward extinct in the person of King Henry the fourth by reason of the union of it with the Crown the same King suspecting himself to be more rightfully Duke of Lancaster than King of England determined to save his right in the Dutchy whatsoever should befall of the Kingdome and therefore he separated the Dutchy from the Crown and setled it so in the natural persons of himself and his Heirs as if he had been no King or Politick body at all In which plight is continued during the reign of King Henry the fifth and Henry the sixth that were descended of him But when King Edward the fourth had by recovery of the Crown recontinued the right of the house of York he seared not to appropriate that Dutchy to the Crown again and yet so that he suffered the Court and Officers to remain as he found them And in this manner it came together with the Crown to King Henry the seventh who liking well of that Policy of King Henry the fourth by whose right also he obtained the Kingdom made like separation of the Dutchy as he had done and so left it to his posterity which do yet injoy it Dum fuit infra aetatem is a Writ which lieth for him that before he came to his full age made a Feofment of his Land in Fee or for term of life or in tail to recover them again from him to whom he conveyed them Fitz. nat br fol. 192. Dum non fuit compos mentis is a VVrit that lyeth for him that being not of sound memory did alien any Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple Fee-tail for term of life or of years against the alience Fitzherb nat br fol. 202. Duplicat is used by Crompton for a second Letters Patent granted by the Lord Chancellour in a case wherein he had formerly done the same and was therefore thought void Cromptons Jurisd fol. 215. Dures Duritia cometh of the French dur i. durus veldurete 1. duritas and is in our Common law a Plee used in way of exception by him that being cast in prison at a mans sute or otherwise by beating or threats hardly used sealeth any Bond unto him during his
restraint For the Law holdeth this not good but rather supposeth it to be constrained Broke in his Abridgement joyneth Dures and Manasse together i. duritiam minas hardness and threatning See the new Book of Entries verbo Dures And the New Terms of Law EA EAldermans Aldermannus among the Saxons was as much as Earl among the Danes Cambden Britan. pag. 107. If ye go to the true etymologie of the word me thinkoth it should sound more generally so much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the Graecians or Senator with the Romans who were rather Counsellors at large than bestowed upon any particular office as Comites were See Coun. ie And that signification we retain at this day almost in all our Cities and Boroughs calling those Aldermen that are Associates to the Chief Officer in the common Councel of the Town anno 24 H. 8. cap. 13. or sometime the chief Officer himself as in Stawnford Earl Comes in M. Cambdens opinion pag. 107. is a word made by the Danes of Ealderman a word of the Saxons M. Lamberd seemeth notwithstanding to acknowledge that Earl is originally a Saxon word Explica of Saxon words verbo Paganus and interpreteth it Satrapam which word the Romans borrowing of the Persians applyed to those that were praefecti provinciarum M. Verstegan in his restitution of decayed Intelligence deriveth it from two Netherland words ear i. honor and ethel i. nobilis wherein I leave the Reader to his own iudgement This title in ancient time was given to those that were Associates to the King in his Counsels and Marshal actions as Comes was to those that followed the Magistrates in Rome and executed their offices for them as their Deputies and died alwayes with the man Zasius hath of this word thus much Comitum originem in Doctoribus non invenimus sed noveris eam dignitatem vetustissimam esse Nam Cor. Tacitus in libello de Germania scribit apud priscos usu fuisse receptum ut cuilibet Principi seu Duci exercitus duodecim comites assignarentur ideo dictos quia comitarentur eos à Ducum latere non decederent Comitatum it aque originem Germanis moribus or tum esse dictus receptissimus autor testis est Quapropter quod in duodecimo libro codicis aliqui tituli de Comitibus largitionum c. inscribuntur usurpationem Imperatoris ex Germanorum ritibus sumptum credo But the Conqueror as M. Cambden saith gave this dignity in Fee to his Nobles annexing it to this or that County or Province and allotted them for their maintenance a certain proportion of money rising from the Princes profits for the pleadings and forfeitures of the Province For example he bringeth an ancient Record in these words Henricus 2. Rex Angliae his verbis Comitem creavit Sciatis nos fecisse Hugonet Bigot Comitem de Nortfolk sc de tertio denario de Norwic. Nortfolk sicut aliquis Comes Angliae libertus com●tatum suum tenet Which words saith the same Author an old book of Battel Abbey thus expoundeth Consuetudinaliter per totam Angliam mos antiquitùs inoleverat Comites provinciarum tertium denarium sibi obtinere inde Comites dicti And another book without name more fully Comitatus à Comite dicitu● aut vice versa Comes autem est quia tertiam portionem corum quae de placitis proveniunt in quolib●t Comitatu percipit● Sed non omnes Comites ista percipiunt sed bit quibus Rex baereditariò aut personaliter concessit You may read M. Fern in Lacy's nobility something to his effect pag. 12. But he saith that one Duke or Earl had divers Shires under his government as a Viceroy and had Lieurenants under him in every particular Shire called a Sheriff That one Earl was dignified by the appellation of more than one Sheriff it appeareth by divers of our ancient Statutes as namely by the sentence of Excommunication pronounced by the Bishops against the infringers of the great Charter and Charter of the Forest anno 38 H. 3. Roger Bigot is named Earl both of Northfolk and Southfolk and anno 1 Ed. 3. Thomas Earl of Lancaster and Leycester Humfrey Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex Dyer fol. 285. num 39. At these dayes as long since the Kings of England make Eearls by their Charters of this or that County giving them no authority over the County nor any part of the profit rising of it but onely some annual stipend out of the Exchequer rather for honours sake than any great commodity And these be in other Nations accounted Earles improperly Quià illi dicuntur verè Comites quibus datur Comitatus in feudum illi Comites abusivè qui non habent administrationem Vincentius de Franchis descis 115. num 7. The manner of creating Earles is by girding them with a Sword Camden pag. 107. but see the solemnity thereof described more at large in Stowes annals pag. 1121. The occasion why these Earles in latter times have had no sway over the County wherof they bear their name is not obscurely signified in Sir Tho. Smith l. 2. cap. 14. where he saith that the Sheriff is called Vicecomes as Vicarius Comi●is following all matters of Justice as the Earl should do and that because the Earl is most continually attendant upon the King in his wars or otherwise So that it seemeth that Earls by reason of their high employments being not able to follow also the businesse of the County were delivered of all that burthen and onely enjoyed the honour as now they do And the Sheriff though he be still called Vice-comes yet all he doth is immediatly under the King and not under the Earl See Countie and see Hotoman de verb. feudal verb. Comes and Cassan de consuetud Burg. pag. 12. Easement esamentum is a service that one Neighbour hath of another by Charter or prescription without profit as a way through his ground a sink or such like Kitchin fol. 105. which in the Civil law is called Servitus praedii EE Eele fares alias Eele Vare anno 25 H. 8. be the frie or brood of Eeles EG Egyptians Aegyptiani are in our Statutes and Laws of England a conterfeit kind of Rogues that being English or Welsh people accompany themselves together disguising themselves instrange robes blacking their faces and bodies and framing to themselves an unknown Language wander up and down and under pretence of telling of Fortunes curing diseases and such like abuse the ignorant common people by stealing all that is not too hot or too heavie for their carriage anno 1. 2 Philip. Mar. cap. 4. anno 5 Eli. cap. 20. These are very like to those whom the Italians call Cingari of whom Franciscus Leo in suo thesauro fori Ecclesiastici parte prim cap. 13. thus writeth Cingari qui corrupto vocabulo quandoque etiam Saraceni nominantur permissione principum ac aliorum dominorum per Italium vagantur nec unquam
2. 14. Forein answer that is such an answer as is not triable in the County where it is made an 15. Han. 6. ca. 5. Forein service forinsecum servitium that is such service whereby a mean Lord holdeth over of another without the compasie of his own fee. Broke●titulo Tenur●● fo 251. num 12. et 28. et Kitchin fol. 209. or else that which a Tenent performeth either to his own Lord or to the Lord paramount one of the fee. For of these services Bracton speaketh thus lib. 2. cap. 16. n● 7. Item su●t quedam forvitia quae dicuntur forinsoca 〈◊〉 sunt in charta de feoff mento expressa et nominata et quae ideo dici possut forinfeca quia perti nent ad Dominum R●gem et non ad Dominum capitalem nisi cum in propria persona profectus fuerit in servi●i● volnisi cum pro servitio suo satisfecerit domina Regi quocu● que modo et fiunt 〈◊〉 certis temporibus cum casus et necessitas evene●it et varia habent nomina et divorsa Quando● enim vominantur fori●s●●a Largè sumpto vocabitlo quo ad sorvitium Domint Regis quandoque scutaginm quandoque servitium Domini Regis et ideo forinsecum dici potest quia st at capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali v. Brooke Tavuras 28.95 Fore in service seemeth to be Knights service or Es●uage uncertain P●rkins Reservation 650. Forein attachment Attachiamentum forinsoeum is an attachment of foreiners goods found within a Liberty or City for the satisfaction of some Citised to whom the said foreiner oweth money Forein apposer forinsecarum oppositor is an officer in the Exchequer to whom all Sheriffs and Bayliffs doe repair by him to be opposed of their green waxe and from thence draweth down a charge upon the Sheriff and Bayliff to the Clerk or the pipe Forest foresta is a French word signifying a great or vast wood Lieu forestier et sauvage locus-sylvestris et saltuosus The writers upon the Common law define it thus Foresta est locus ubi ferae inhabitant vel includuntur Gloss in ca. cum dilecti extra de donatio et Felinus in cap. Rodulphus versu quid antem foresta extra de rescriptis speaketh to the same effect Some other writers doe say it is called foresta quasi ferarum statio vel tuta mansio ferarum But as it is taken with us M. Manwood in his second part of Forest Lawes ca. 1. nu 1. thus defineth it A forest is a certain territory of woody grounds and fruitfull pastures privileged for wilde beasts and fouls of forest chase and warren to rest and abide in in the safe protection of the King for his princely delight and pleasure which territory of ground so privlieged is meered and bounded with unremoveable markes meers and boundaries either known by matter of record or else prescription and also replenished with wild beasts of Venery or chase and with great coverts of vert for the succour of the said wilde beasts to have their aboad in for the preservation and continuance of which said place together with the vert and venison there are certain particular laws privileges and officers belonging to the same meet for that purpose that are only proper unto a Forest and not to any other place The same definition he hath parte 1. pa. 139. which though it have many superfluities yet it well expresseth the nature of the thing especially the explication adjoyned which there is set down by the said Author in both places in his first part pag. 16. where he fetcheth a forest from such overgrown antiquitie alleging for it the 2 book of Kin. ca. 2. ver 24. ca. 19. ver 23. and the 104 Psalm vers 20. the 131. vers 6. hee taketh license to sport himself for though our English translation have the word Forest to expresse the vastnesse of the desart yet if we look to the original idiome wee shall find no more reason to call those places forests than either chases or parks The manner of making forests as the same Author well setteth down parte 1. pag. 142. is this The King sendeth out his Commission under the broad Seal of England directed to certain discreet persons for the view perambulation meering and bounding of the place that he mindeth to afforest Which returned into the Chancery proclamation is made throughout all the shire where the ground lieth that none shall hunt or chase any manner of wild beasts within that precinct without the Kings speciall license after which he appointeth ordinances lawes officers fit for the preservation of the vert venison so becometh this a forest by matter of record The properties of a forest are these in speciall first a forest as it is truly strictly taken cannot be in the hands of any but the King the reason is given by M. Manwood because none hath power to grant commission to be a justice in Eire for the forest but the King par 1. pag. 87. The second property be the Courts as the Justice sent every three years the Swainmoot thrice every year Idem eod pag. 90. et parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. et 5. and the attachment once every forty dayes Idem eod pag. 92. The third property may be the officers belonging unto it for the preservation of the vert and venison as first the Justices of the forest the Warden or Keeper the Verders the Foresters Agistours Regarders Bayliffs Bedels and such like which you may see in their places See Manwood parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. 5. But the chief property of a Forest both by Master Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. and Master Crompton pa. 146. is the Swainemore which as they both agree is no lesse incident unto it than the court of Pye owders to a Fair. Other Courts and Offices are not so requisite in those forests that are in the hands of subjects because they be not truly forests But if this fail then is there nothing of a forest remaining but it is turned into the nature of a Chace See Chace I read of thus many forests in England The forest of Windsor in Berkshire Cambd. B●it pag. 213. of Pickering Crompt 190. of Shirwood idem fol. 202. of Englewood in Cumberland an 4. Hen. 7. ca. 6. and Crompton fol. 42. of Lancaster idem fol. 196. of Wolmore Stowes Annals pa. 462. of Gillingham idem pa. 113. Knaresborow an 21. H. 8. c. 17. of waltham Cambd. pa. 328. of Breden idem pag. 176. of Whitehart idem p. 150. of Wiersdale idem pa. 589. Lownesall ibidem of Deane idem pa. 266 an 8. H. 6. c. 27. an 19. Hen. 7. ca. 8. of Saint Leonards in Southsex Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. of Waybridge and Sapler Idem codem pa. 63. of Whitvey pa. 81. Of Fekenham Camden pa. 441. of Rockingham idem pag. 396. Forest de la mer idem pag. 467. of
mind cap. 28. where he saith That contracts be some naked and sans garnment and some furnished or to use the literal signification of his word apparelled but a naked Obligation giveth no action but by common assent And therefore it is necessary or needfull that every Obligation be apparelled And an obligation ought to be apparelled with these sive sorts of garnements c. Howbeit I read it generally used for a warning in many places and namely in Kitchin fol. 6. Garnisher le court is to warn the Court. And reasonable garnishment in the same place is nothing but reasonable warning and again fol. 283. and many other Authors also But this may be well thought a Metonymy of the effect because by the warning of parties to the Court the Court is furnished and adorned Garrantie See Warrantie Garter Garterium cometh of the French Jartiere or Jartier i. periscelis fascia poplitaria It signifieth with us both in divers Statutes and otherwise one especiall Garter being the ensigne of a great and Noble Society of Knights called Knights of the Garter And this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Poeta among the Graecians was Homer among the Romans Virgil because they were of all others the most excellent This high order as appeareth by M. Camden pag. 211. and many others was first instituted by that famous King Edward the third upon good successe in a skirmish wherin the Kings Garter I know not upon what occasion was used for a token I know that Polydore Virgil casteth in another suspition of the originall But his grounds by his own confession grew from the Vulgar opinion yet as it is I will mention it as I have read it Edward the third King of England after he had obtained many great victories king John of France king James of Scotland being both prisoners in the Tower of London at one time and king Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed and Don Pedro restored by the Prince of Wales did upon no weighty occasion first erect this order in Anno 1350. viz. He danceing with the Queen and other Ladies of the Court took up a Garter that happened to fall from one of them whereat some of the Lords smiling the king said unto them That ere it were long hee would make that Garter to be of high reputation and shortly after instituted this order of the Blew Garter which every one of the order is bound dayly to wear being richly decked with Gold and precious stones and having these words written or wrought upon it Honi soit qui maly pence which is thus commonly interpreted Evill come to him that evil thinketh But I think it might be better thus Shame take him that thinketh evill See knights of the Garter M. Ferne in his glory of generosity agreeth with M. Camden and expressier setteth down the victories whence this order was occasioned whatsoever cause of beginning it had the order is inferior to none in the world consisting of 26. martial and heroical Nobles whereof the king or England is the chief and the rest be either Nobles of the Realm or Princes of other Countries friends and confederates with this Realm the Honour being such as Emperours and kings of other Nations have desired and thankfully accepted it he that will read more of this let him repair to M. Camden and Polydore and M. Ferne fol. 120. ubi supra The Ceremonies of the chapter proceeding to election of the investures and robes of his installation of his vow with all such other Observations see in M. Segars new book intituled Honour militarie and civill lib. 2. cap. 9. fol. 65. Garter also signifieth the principall kings at Armes among our English Heralds created by king Henry the fifth Stow. pag. 584. Garthman anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. ca. 19. anno 17. ejusd ca. 9. Gavelet is a special and antient kind of Cessavit used in Kent where the custome of Gavell kind continueth whereby the tenent shall forfeit his Lands and tenements to the Lord of whom he holdeth if he withdraw from him his due rents and services The new Expounder of Law Termes whom read more at large I read this word anno 10. Edw. 2 cap. unico where it appeareth to be a Writ used in the Hustings at London And I find by Fleta that it is used in other liberties as the Hustings of Winchester Lincolne York and the Cinque ports lib. 2. cap. 55. in principio Gavelkind is by M. Lamberd in his exposition of Saxon words verbo Terra et scripto compounded of three Saxon words gyfe cal cin omnibus cognatione proximis data But M. Verstegan in his restitution of his decayed intelligence cap. 3. called it Gavelkind quasi give all kind that is give to each child his part It signifieth in our Common law a custome whereby the Land of the Father is equally divided at his death amongst all his Sons or the Land of the Brother equally divided among the Brethren if he have no issue of his own Kitchin fol. 102. This custome is said to be of force in divers places of England but especially in Kent as the said Authour reporteth shewing also the cause why Kentish men rather use this custome than any other Province viz. because it was a composition made between the Conquerour and them after all England beside was conquered that they should enjoy their ancient customes whereof this was one For. M. Camden in his Britannia pag. 239. saith in expresse words thus Cantiani eâ lege Gulielmo Normanno se dediderunt ut patrias consuetudines illaesas retinerent illamque imprimis quam Gavelkind nominant Haec terrae quae eo nomine censentur liberis masculis ex aequis portionibus dividuntur vel faeminis si masculi non fuerint adding more worth the noting viz. Hanc haereditatem cùm quintum decimum annum attigerint adeunt sine Domini consensu cuilibet vel dando vel vendendo alienare licet Hac filii parent thus furti damnatis in id genus fundis succedunt c. This custome in divers Gentlemens lands was altered at their own petition by Act of Parliament anno 31 H. 8. cap. 3. But it appeareth by 18 H. 6. cap. pri that in those dayes there were not above thirty or fourty persons in Kent that held by any other Tenure See the new Terms Gavelet and Gavelkind Gawgeour gaugeator seemeth to come of the French Gawchir i. in gyrum torquere It signifieth with us an Officer of the Kings appointed to examine all Tunnes Hogsheads Pipes Barrels and Tercians of Wine Oil Honey Butter and to give them a mark of allowance before they be sold in any place And because this mark is a circle made with an iron Instrument for that purpose It seemeth that from thence he taketh his name Of this Office you may find many Statutes the first whereof is anno 27 Ed. 3. commonly called the Statute of provision or Purveyours cap. 8. GE Geld signifieth with the
Chief Justice of England with three or four Justices assistants four or five as Fortescue saith cap. 51. and Officers thereunto belonging the Clerk of the crown a Praenatory or Protonotary and other six inferior Ministers or Atturneys Camb. Britan. pag. 112. See Latitat How long this Court was moveable I find not in any Writer But in Brittons time who wrot in K. Ed. the 1. his dayes it appeareth it followed the Court as M. Gwin in his said preface well observeth out of him See Justice of the Kings Bench. Kings silver is properly that money which is due to the King in the court of Common Plees in respect of a licence there granted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fol. 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certain waight of Merchandize to the value of an hundred or somthing under or over acording to the divers uses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger Fogassa KN Knave is used for a man-servant anno 14 Edward 3. stat 1. ca. 3. and by M. Verstigans judgement in his restitution of decayed intelligence ca. 10. is borrowed of the Dutch enapa cnave or knave which signifie all one thing And that is some kind of officer or servant as scild-knapa was he that bore the weaon or shield of his superiour whom the Latins call Armigerum and the Frenchmen Escuyer Knight miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. administer and by M. Camdens judgement pag. 110. derived from the same With us it signifieth a Gentleman or one that beareth arms that for his vertue and especially martiall prowesse is by the King or one having the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of Gentlemen and raised to a higher account or step of dignity This among all other Nations hath his name from the horse because they were wont in antient time to serve in warres on horseback The Romans called them Equites The Italians at these dayes term them Cavallieri The Frenchmen Chevalliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Gavellaros or Varones à Cavallo It appeareth by the Statute anno 1 Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in antient times Gentlemen having a full Knights fee and holding their land by Knights service of the King or other great person might be urged by distress to procure himself to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable service of his Lord in the kings wars To which point you may also read M. Camden in his Britann pag. 111. But these customs be not now much urged this dignity in these dayes being rather of favour bestowed by the Prince upon the worthier sort of Gentlemen than urged by constraint The manner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto g'adio leviter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Chevalier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis eques in nomine Dei The Solemnity of making knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the privileges belonging to a Rnight in Ferns Glorie of Generosity pag. 116. Of these Knights there be two sorts one Spiritual another Temporal Cassanaus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both these sorts and of many subdivisions read him in that whole part The Temporal or second sort of Knights M. Fern in his Glory of generosity pag. 103. maketh threefold here with us Knights of the Sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the Soverain Order that is of the Garter of all which you may read what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the terms especially of our common Law Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Milites saith that in the antient Laws of Scotland Freeholders were called Milities which may seem to have been a custom with us also by divers places in Bracton who saith that Knights must be in Juries which turn Freeholders do serve Knights of the Garter Equites Garterii are an Order of Knights created by Edward the third after hee had obtained many notable victories King John of France and King James of Scotland being both his prisoners together and Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed out of his Realm and Don pedro being restored unto it by the Prince of Wales and Duke of Aquitane called the Black Prince who for furnishing of this Honourable Order made a choice out of his own Realm and all Christendome of the best and most excellent renowned Knights in Vertues and Honour bestowing this dignity upon them and giving them a Blew Garter decked with Gold Pearl and precious Stones and a Buckle of Gold to wear daily on the left legge only a Kirtle Crown Cloak Chaperon a Coller and other stately and magnifical apparel both of stuff and fashion exquisite and heroical to wear at high Feasts as to so high and Princely an Order was meer Of which order he and his successours Kings of England were ordained to be the Soveraigns and the rest fellows and brethren to the number of twentie six Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. prim cap. 20. I have seen an antient monument whereby I am taught that this Honorable Company is a College or a Corporation having a Common Seal belonging unto it and consisting of a Soveraign Gardian which is the King of England that alwayes governs this order by himself or his Deputy of twenty five Companions called Knights of the Garter of fourteen secular Chanons that be Priests or must be within one year after their admission 13. Vicars also Priests and 26. poor Knights that have no other sustenance or means of living but the allowance of this house which is given them in respect of their daily Prayer to the Honour of God and according to the course of those times of Saint George There be also certain officers belonging to this order as namely the Prelate of the Garter which office is inherent to the Bishop of Winchester for the time being the Chancellor of the Garter the Register who is alwaies Dean of Windsor The principal King at Armes called Garter whose chief function is to mannage and marshal their Solemnities at their yearly Feasts and installations Lastly the Usher of the Garter which as I have heard belongeth to an Usher of the Princes Chamber called Blacke rod. There are also certain ordinances or Constitutions belonging unto this Society with certain forfeitures and sometime penances for the breakers of them which constitutions concern either the Solemnities of making these Knights or their duties after their creation or the Privileges belonging to so high an order but are too large for the nature of this poor Vocabularie
Cum Vicecomiti nostro Middlesexiae nupar praeceperimus quod caperct Thomam T. Willielmum W. si invents fuissent in Baliva sua eos salvo custodiret ita quòd haberet copora eorum coram nobis apud Westminster die Veneris proximo post octavas Sanctae Trinitatis ad respondendum Roberto R. de placito transgressionis cumque Vicecomes noster Middlesexiae ad diem illum nobis returnaverit quod praedicti Tho. T. Willielmus W. non sunt i●venti inbaliva sua super quo ex parte praedicti Roberti in curia nostra coram nobis sufficienter testatum est quòd praedicti Thomas Willielmus latitant discurrunt in Comitatu tuo Idcirco tibi praecipimus quod capias eas si inventi fuerint in baliva tua eos salvo custodias ita quod habeas corpora eorum coram nobis apud Westminster die Martis proximo post tres septimanas eodem Trinitatis ad respondendum praefato Roberto de placito pradicto habeas ibi tunc hoc breve Teste Johanne Papham apud Westminster Roper Launcegay anno 7 Richard secundi cap. 13. Law lex commeth of the Saxon lah the general signification is plain only this I thought to note that the Law of this Land hath Leen variable For first Dunwallo Mulmutius otherwise Molincius a Britain that being Duke of Co●nwall reduced the whole Land formerly severed by civil wars into the State of a Monarchy made certain wholesome Laws which long after were called Mulmutius Laws and by Gyldas translated out of the British tongue into Latin Stow in his Annals p. 16. Of these there remain yet certain heads recorded by our Historiographers as followeth 1. Ut Deorum templa civitates hominum consequantur tantam dignitatem ne quis illo confugiens extrahi possit antequàm ab eo quem laeserat veniam impetraverit 2. Ut hujusmodi priv●legium immunitatis habeant etiam ipsae viae q●●● ducunt ad templa ad urbes 3. Imo et jumenta quoque illa quae res rusticae subveniunt 4. Denique colonorum aratra ip sa tali praerogativa libertatis perfruantur 5. Ho● amplius ut ne qua terra vacaret cultur● neve populus inopia rei frumentariae premeretur aut ●a miniseretur si pecora sola oecuparent agros qui ab hominibus coli debent 6. Constituit quot aratra quaelibet dioecesis haberet ac poenam statui iis per quos ill● numerus aratrorum foret dimunitus 7. Item vetuit bovem aratorem pro debito pecuniae assignari debitoribus si alia bona debitoris essent Itae fore ne compendii causa homines pecuarii agros incultos redderent sic etiam fore ne quid earum rerum quas natura praebet hominibus usquam deesse passet Rich. Vitus historiarum Britann●a l. 3. n. 1. And of these Laws we find no obscure remanets in our laws now in use See Mag na Charta cap. 1. et cap. 14. See Sanctuary See Peace Then was there a Law called Merchenlage whereby the Mercians were governed being a Kingdom in the heart of the Land containing those Countries that be now called Northampton shire Leicester-shire Rutland-shire Lincoln-shire Nottingham-shire and Derby-shire Camden Britan. pag. 94. whose power was great in the Heptarchie of the Saxons untill at the last they were conquered by the West Saxons and made subject to them Polydor. in Angl. Hist lib. 5. But whereas the name of these Laws favoureth of the Saxons time it is reported by others that Martia a very learned Queen wife to Quintelinus a Britton King was the Author of them long before the Saxons set foot into England Rich. Vitus histo Brittan li. 3. num 14. who also saith that Alfrea the Saxon King translated both these and also those of Mulmutius into the English or Saxon tongue Thirdly there was the law of the West Saxons called West Saxenlage and the law of the Danes when they set foot into the Realm called Denelage And of these Laws Edward made one Law as some write whereby he ruled his Kingdom But M. Camden ubi supra speaking nothing of Mulmutius laws saith out of Gervasius Tilburiensis that of the other three William the Conqueror chose the best and to them adding of the Norman laws such as he thought good he ordained laws for our kingdome which we have at this present or the most of them Law hath an especial signification also wherin it is taken for that which is lawful with us not else where As tenent by the courtesie of England an 13 Ed. 1. c. 3. and again to wage Law vadiare legem and to make law facere legem Bracton l. 3. tract 2. c. 37. is to challenge a special benefit that the Law of this Realm affordeth in certain cases whereof the first sc vadiare legem is to put in security that he will make law at a day assigned Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 9. and to make law is to take an oath that he oweth not the debt challenged at his hand and also to bring with him so many men as the Court shall assign to avow upon their oath that in their Consciences he hath sworn truly And this law is used in actions of debt without specialty as also where a man comming to the Court after such time as his Tenements for default be seised into the Kings hands will deny himself to have been summoned Glanvile l. b. 1. cap. 9. 12. And see Bracton ubi supra num 1. v. Kitchin fol. 164. See the new exposition of law Terms verbo Ley this is borrowed from Normand● as appeareth by the Grand Customary cap. 85. But Sir Edward Cook saith it springeth originally from the Judicial law of God lib. 4. of his Reports Slades Case fol. 95. b. alleging the 22 Chapter of Exodus verse 7. Whether so or not the like Custome is among the Feudists by whom they that come to purge the Defendant are called Sacramentales libro Feud 1. titulo 4. sect 3. titulo 10. titulo 26. Law of Arms jus militare is a Law that giveth precepts and rule how rightly to proclame war to make and observe leagues and truce to set upon the enemie to retire to punish offendors in the Camp to appoint souldiers their pay to give every one dignity to his desert to divide spoyls in proportion and such like for farther knowledge whereof read those that write de ●re belli Law day signifieth a Leet Cromptons jurisdict fol. 160. and the County Court anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 2. Lawles man is he qui est extra legem Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. num prim See Outlaw Law of Marque See Reprisalls This word is used anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. and groweth from the German word March i. limes a bound or limit And the reason of this appellation is because they that are driven to this law of reprisall do take the
The rest touching this writ see in Fitzh nat brev fol. 75. See Misericordia Modo forma are words of Art in a Process and namely in the answer of the Defendant whereby he denyeth himself to have done the thing laid to his charge modo forma declarata Kitchin fol. 232. It signifieth as much as that clause in the Civil law Negat allegata prout allegantur esse vera Moitie commeth of the French moitiè id est coaequa vel media pars and signifieth the half of any thing Littleton folio 125. Monks Cloths anno 20 Hen. 6. cap. 20. Moniers monetarii Regist orig fol. 262. b. anno 1 Edw. 6. ca. 15. be ministers of the Mint which make and coyn the Kings mony It appeareth by some Antiquity which I have seen that in antient times our Kings of England had Mints in most of the Countries of this Realm And in the Tractate of the Exchequer written by Ockham I find that whereas Sheriffs ordinarily were tyed to pay into the Exchequer the Kings Sterling for such debts as they were to answer they of Northumberland and Cumberland were at liberty to pay in any sort of mony so it were silver And the reason is there given because those two Shires monetarios de antiqua institutione non habent Monstrance de droyt is as much as to say as shewing of his right It signifieth in our Common law a sute in Chancery to be restored to Lands or Tenements that indeed be mine in right though they were by some office found to be in possession of another lately dead See Stawnf praerog cap. 21. at large and Broke titulo Petition Of this also read Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 4. fo 54. b. c. The Wardens of the Sadlers Case Monstraverunt is a writ that lieth for tenents that hold freely by Charter in antient Demean being destreined for the payment of any toll or imposition contrary to their liberty which they do or should enjoy which se in Fitzh na br f. 14. Moriam is all one in signification with the French morion i. cassis a head-piece which word the Frenchman borroweth from the Italian morione anno 4 5 Phil. Mar. cap. 2. Morling aliâs mortling seemeth to be that wool which is taken from the skin of a dead sheep whether dying of the rot or being killed anno 27 H. 6. c. 2. This is written Morkin an 3 Jac. c. 18. Mort d'ancester See Assise Mortgage mortuum vadium vel mortgagium is compounded of two French words mort id est mors and gage id est pignus merces It signifieth in our Common law a pawn of land or tenement or any thing moveable laid or bound for mony borrowed peremptorily to be the Creditours for ever if the mony be not paid at the day agreed upon And the Creditour holding land or tenement upon this bargain is in the mean time called Tenent in mortgage Of this we read in the grand Customary of Normandy ca. 113. in these words Notandum insuper est quod vadiorum quoddam vivumqu oddam mortuum nuncupatur Mortuum autem dicitur vadium quod se de nihilo redimit acquietat ut terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis quam cum obligator retrahere voluerit acceptam pecuniam restituet in solidum Vivum autem dicitur vadium quod ex suis proventibus acquiratur ut terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis usque tres annos quae elapso tertio anno reddenda est obligatori vel tradita in vadium quousque pecunia recepta de ejusdem proventibus fuerit persoluta Glanvile likewise lib. 10. cap. 6. defineth it thus Mortuum vadium dicitur illud cujus fructus vel reditus interim percepti in nullo se acquietant So you see by both these Books that it is called a dead gage because whatsoever profit it yieldeth yet it redeemeth not it self by yielding such profit except the whole sum borrowed be likewise paid at the day See Skene de verb. significat eodem He that layeth this pawn or gage is called the Mortgager and he that taketh it the Mortgagee West parte 2. symb titulo Fines Sect. 145. This if it contain excessive usury is prohibited anno 37 H. 8. c. 9. Morimain manus mortua is compounded of two French words mort i. mors and main i. manus It signifieth in the Common law an alienation of Lands or Tenements to any Corporation Guild or Fratemity and their Successors as Bishops Parsons Vicars c. which may not be done without licence of the King and the Lord of the Manor The reason of the name proceedeth from this as I conceive it because the services and other profits due for such lands as Escheats c. commeth into a dead hand or into such a hand as holdeth them and is not of power to deliver them or any thing for them back again Magna Charta cap. 36. anno 7 Ed. pri commonly called the Statute of Mortmain and anno 18 Edw. 3. statut 3. cap. 3. anno 15 Rich. 2. cap. 5. Polydor. Virgil in the seventeenth Book of his Chronicles maketh mention of this Law and giveth this reason of the name Et legem hanc manum mortuam vocarunt quòdres semel datae collegiis sacerdotum non utique rursus venderentur velut mortuae hoc est usui aliorum mortalium in perpetuum ademptae essent Lex diligenter servatur sic ut nihil possessionum ordini sacerdotali à quoquam detur nisi Regio permissu But the former Statutes be something abridged by anno 39 Elizabeth cap. 5. by which the gift of land c. to Hospitals is permitted without obtaining of Mortmain Hotoman in his Commentaries de verbis feudal verbo Manus mortua hath these words Manus mortua locutio est quae usurpatur de iis quorum possessio ut ita dicam immortalis est quia nunquam haeredem habere desinunt Quâ de causâ res nunquam ad priorem dominum revertitur Nam manus pro possessione dicitur mortua pro immortali Sic municipium dicitur non mori l. An usus fructus 56. D. de usufr ligat quoniam hominibus aliis succrescentibus idem populi corpus videtur l. proponebatur 76. D. de Judiciis Haec Hotomanus and read the rest Amortizatio est in manum mortuam trar slatio Principis jussu Petrus Belluga in speculo principum fol. 76. Jus amortizationis est licentia capiendi ad manum mortuam Idem eodem where you may read a learned Tractate both of the beginning and nature of this Doctrine To the same effect you may read Cass de consuet Burg. pag. 348 387 1183 1185 1201 1225 1285 1218 1274. M. Skene de verbo signif saith that Dimittere terras ad manum mortuam est idem atque dimittere ad multitudinem sive univer sitatem quae nunquam moritur idque per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu à
portionis is a Writ that lyeth for a joint renent or renent in Common that is distreyned for more rent than the proportion of the Land commeth unto Reg. orig fol. 182. b. OP Open Law Lex manifesta Lex apparens is making of Law which by Magna Charta cap. 28. Bayliffs may not put men unto upon their own bare assertions except they have Witnesses to prove their imputation OR Orchel anno 1 R. 3. cap. 8. Orchall anno 24 H. 8. cap. 2. anno 3 4 Ed. 6. cap. 2. seemetst to be all one with Cork Ordinance of the Forest Ordinatio Forestae is a Statute made touching Forest causes in the 34 year of Edward 1. See Assise Ordinary Ordinarius though in the Civil law whence the word is taken it doth signifie any Judge that hath authority to take knowledge of Causes in his own right as he is a Magistrate and not by deputation yet in our Common law it is most commonly and for ought I remember alway taken for him that hath ordinary jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiastical See Brook hoc titulo Linwood in cap. exterior titulo de Constitutionibus verbo Ordinarii saith quòd Ordinarius habet locum principaliter in Episcopo et aliis superioribus qui soli sunt universales in suis ju isdictionibus sed sunt sub eo ali●ordinarii hii viz. quibus competit jurisdictio ordinaria de jure privilegio vgl consuetudine c. v. c. Ordinatione contra servientes is a Writ that lyeth against a Servant for leaving his Master against the Statute Register original fol. 189. Ordel Ordalium is a Saxon word signifying as much as Judgement in some mens opinions compounded of two Saxon words or a privative as a in Greek and dael 1. pars It signifieth as much as expers but it is artificially used for a kind of purgation practised in antient times whereby the party purged was judged expers criminis called in the Canon law purgatio vulgaris and utterly condemned There were of this two sorts one by fire another by water Of these see M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Ordalium where he expresseth it at large with such superstitions as were used in it Of this you may like wise read Holinshed in his description of Britain fol. 98. and also M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 15. But of all the rest Hotoman especially disput de feud p. 41. where of five kind of proofs which he calleth feudales probationes he maketh this the fourth calling it explorationem et hujus furiosae probationis 6. genera fuisse animadvertit per flammam per aquam perferrum candens per aquam vel gelidam vel ferventem per sortes et per corpus Domini of all which he allegeth several exemples out of History very worthy the reading See M. Skene also de verbor significatione verbo Machamium This seemeth to have been in use here with us in Henry the seconds dayes as appeareth by Glanvile lib. 14. c. 1 2. Read also of this in M. Verstegans Restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 3. pag. 63. seq Orfgild aliis Cheapegeld is a restitution made by the Hundred or County of any wrong done by one that was in plegio Lamberd Archaion page 125. 126. Org is anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. is the greatest sort of North sea-fish now a daies called Organ ling. Oredelf is a liberty whereby a man claimeth the Ore found in his soyl New exposition of Termes Ortelli is a word used in the book termed pupilla oculi in the chapter containing the Charter of the Forest parte 5. cap. 22. and signifyeth the clawes of a dogs foot being taken from the French orteils des pieds i. digiti pedum the Toes OS Osmonds anno 32. Henr. 8. cap. 14. OT Oth of the King Juramentum Regis is that which the King taketh at his Coronation which in Bract. is set down in these words Debet Rex in coronatione sua in nomine Jesu Christi praestito sacramento haec tria promittere populo sibi subdito Inprimis se esse praecepturum pro viribus opem impensurum ut ecclesiae dei et omni populo Christiano vera pax omnisuo tempore observetur Secundò ut rapacitates et omnes inquietates omnibus gradibus interdicat Tertiò ut in omnibus judciis aequitatem praecipat misericordiam ut indulgeat ei suam misericordiam clemens misericors Dens ut per justitiam suam firma gaudeant pace universi And in the old abridgment of Statutes set out in King Henry the eighths dayes I find it thus described This is the oath that the King shall swear at his Coronation That he shall keep and maintain the right and the liberties of the Holy Church of old time granted by the righteous Christian Kings of England and that hee shall keep all the Lands Honours and Dignities righteous and free of the Crown of England in all manner whole without any manner of minishment and the rights of Crown hurt decayed or lost to his power shall call again into the ancient estate and that he shall keep the peace of the Holy Church and of the Clergy and of the people with good accord and that he shall doe in all his judgements equity and right justice with discretion and mercy and that he shall grant to hold the Lawes and customes of the Realm and to his power keep them and affiem them which the folke and people have made and chosen and the evill Lawes and customes wholey to put out and stedfast and stable peace to the people of this Realm keep and cause to be kept to his power and that hee shall grant no Charter but where he may doe it by his oath All this I find in the foresaid Book titulo Sacramentum Regit and Charter of Pardon quinto Oth of the Kings Justices is That they well and truly shall serve the King and that they shall not assent to things that may turn to his dammage or disinheritance Nor that they shall take no fee nor livery of none but the King Nor that they shall take gift or reward of none that hath adoe before them except it be meat and drink of small value as long as the plce is hanging before them nor after for the cause Nor that they shall give counsell to none in matter that may touch the King upon pain to be at the Kings will body and goods And that they shall doe right to every person notwithstanding the Kings Letters c. Anno 18. Ed. 3. statut 4. which the old abridgement maketh to be anno 20. ejusdem statu●o perse Otho was a Deacon Cardinal of S. Nichens in carcere Tulliani and Legate for the Pope here in England anno 22 H. 3. whose constitutions we have at this day Stows An. p. 303. and see the first constitution of the said Legat Othobonus was a Deacon Cardinal
de decimis cap. sancta verb. Pannagiis M. Skenede verborum signif calleth it pannagium and defineth it to be the duty given to the King for the pasturage of swine in the forest The french word for this same thing is panage or glandee i. glandatio vel glandium collectio et pastio suum ex glandibus And wee surely take it from the French whence they had it or what etoymolgie they make of it let themselves look PE Peace pax in the generall signification is opposite to war or strife But particularly it signifyeth with us a quiet and harmlesse cariage or behaviour toward the King and his People Lamberd eirenarcha li. 1. cap. 2. pa. 7. And this is one way provided for all men by oath as you may read in Franck pledge but more especially in case where one particular man or some few go in danger of harm from some other For upon his oath made thereof before a Justice of peace he must be secured by good bond See Lamb. eirenarcha lib. 2. ca. 2. pag. 77. See also Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 118. b. c. usque f. 129. This among the Civilians is called cautio de non offendendo Gail de pace publ lib. pri ca. 2. nu 1. Peace of God and the Church pax Dei ecclesiae is anciently used for that rest which the Kings subjects had from trouble and sute of law between the terms See Vacation Peace of the King anno 6. R. 2. stat pri ca. 13. is that peace and security both for life and goods which the King promiseth to all his Subjects or others taken to his protection See Sute of the Kings peace This point of policy seemeth to have been borrowed by us from the Feudists for in the second book of the seuds there is a chapter viz. 53. chapter intituled thus De pace tenenda inter subditos et juramento firmanda et vindicanda et de paena judictbus opposit a qui eum vindicare et justitiam facere neglexerint the contents of which chapter is a Constitution of Frederick the first as Hotoman there proveth expounding it very learnedly and like himself Of this Kings peace Roger Hoveden setteth down divers branches parte poster suorum annalium in H. 2. fol. 144. a. b. and fol. 430. b. he mentioneth a form of an oath which Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury and chief Iustice of England in R. the first his daies sent through the whole realm to be taken by the Kings subjects See Deciners See Surety of peace There is also the peace of the Church for which see Sanctuary And the peace of the Kings highway which is the immunity that the Kings highway hath from all annoyance or molestation See watlin street The peace of the plow whereby the plow and plow cattel are secured from distresses For which see Fitz. nat br fol. 90. A. B. So Fayres may be said to have their peace because no man may in them be troubled for any debt elsewhere contracted See Fayre Pedage pedaginm signifieth money given for the passing by foot or horse through any countrey Extra de Censibus ca. Innovamus I read not this word in any English writer but only the author of the book called pupilla occuli parte 9. ca. 7. A. D. I. I think we rather use passage for it Pedagia dicuntur quae dantur à transeuntibus in locum constitutum à principe Et capiens pedagium debet dare salvum conductum et territorium ejus tenere securum Baldus in usibus Feudorum de pa. jura fir sect Conventionales Cassan de consuetud Burg. pa. 118. hath these words Pedaginm à pede dictum est quòd à transeuntibus solvitur c. Peere pila seemeth properly to be a fortresse made against the force of the sea for the better security of ship that lye at harbour in any haven So is the peer of Dover described in M. Camd. Bris. pag. 259 in meo Peeres pares commeth of the French per i. par It signifieth in our common Law plurally those that are empaneled in an Enquest uppon any man for the convicting and clearing him of any offence for the which he his called in question And the reason thereof is because the course and custome of our nation is to trie every man in this case by his equals West pri cap. 6. anno 3. Edw. prim So Kitchin useth it fol. 78. in these words Mais fi le amerciament soit assirre per pares And this word in this signification is not in use with us only but with other nations also For pares sunt convasalli quorum sententi● vasallus propter felo-xiam est condemnatus Barklaius de Regno lib. 4. cap. 2. Fit pares sunt qui ab ecdem domino feudum tenent lib. prim Feudor cap. 26. But this word is most notoriously used for those that be of the Nobility of the Realm Lords of the Parliament and so it is used in Stawnf pl. of the Crown lib. 3. cap. Trial per les Peeres being the first The reason whereof is because though there be a distinction of degrees in our Nobility yet in all publike actions they are equal as in their voices in Parliament and in passing upon the triall of any Noble man c. This appellation seemeth to be borrowed from Fraunce and from those twelve Peeres that Charles the Great or Lewis the younger in some mens opinion instituted in that kingdome which be next unto the King and are of like dignity among themselves touching their power in publike affairs Or whom you may read Vincentius Lupanus de magist Francia lib. 1. cap. Pares Franciae So that wee though wee have borrowed the appellation and applyed it with some reason to all that are Lords of the Parlament yet we have no set number of them because the number of our Nobles may be more or lesse as it pleaseth the King Pelota is a word used in the book called pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. signifying the ball of the foot of the French pelote i. pila Pein fort dure See Pain fort et dure Pelt wool is the woll pulled off the skinne or pelt of dead sheep anno 8 H. 6. cap 22. Penon anno 11 R. 2. cap. prim is a Standard Banner or Ensigne carried in warr It is borrowed from Fraunce for pennon in the French language signifyeth the same thing See Baronet yee read this word anno 11. R. ca. 1. Penue See Baye Peper Piper is a spice known in a manner to every child being the fruit of a plant that is between a tree and a herb of whose diversities and nature you may read Gerards herball lib. 3. cap. 146. This is set among merchandize that are to be garbled anno 1. Jacob. cap. 9. Peper lowse anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Per cui post See Entrie Perambulatione facienda is a writ that is sued out by two or more Lords of Maners
the right of his Crown And this word Praerogativa is used by the Civilians in the same sense l. Rescriptum 6. Sect. 4. n. de bono muner But that privilege that the Roman Emperour had above common persons they for the most part comprised sub jurefisci●● de jurefisci per totum tit Co. li. 10. tit 1. Among the Feudists this is termed jusregalium jus regaliorum vel à nonnullis jus regeliarum But as the Feudists sub jure regalium so our Lawyers sub praerogativa regis do comprise also all that absolute heighth of power that the Civillians call majestatem vel potestatem vel jus imperii subject only to God which regalia the Feudists divide into two sorts majora minora regalia For to use their own words Quaedam regalia dignitatem praerogat●●am imperii praeeminentiam spectant quaedam verò ad utilitatem comidum pecu niarium immediatè attinent haec propriè fiscalia sunt adjus fisci pertinent Peregr de jure fisci li. 1. cap. 1. nu 9. See also Arnoldus Chapmarius de arcanis imperii lib. 1. cap. 11. s●qq who seemeth to make difference between majectatem jus regaliorum Others make those majora regalia that appertain to the dignity of the Prince and those minera which inrich his coffers Regnerus Sixtinus de jure rega cap. 2. By this it appeareth that the statute of the Kings prerogative made anno 17 Ed. 2. contains not the sum of the Kings whole prerogative but only so much thereof as concerns the profit of his cofers growing by vertue of his regal power and crown for it is more than manifest that his prerogative reacheth much farther yea even in the matters of his profit which that statute especially consisteth of For example it is the Kings prerogative to grant protection unto his debtours against other creditours untill himself be satisfied Fitz. nat br fol. 28. B. to distrein for the whole rent upon one tenent that hath not the whole land Idem fol. 235. A. to require the Ancestors debt of the heir though not especially bound Brit. ca. 28. fol. 65. b. to cease upon mony paid by his debtour into a Court for the satisfaction of an executor Plowden fol. 322. a. to permit his debtours to siew for their debts by a Quo minus in the Exchequer Perkins Graunts 5. to be first paid by one that oweth mony both to him and others Dyer fol. 67. an 20. to take the Lands of accountants into his hands for his own satisfaction Plowd casu Almes fol. 321. 322. to take his action of account against executors codem fol. 320. not to be tyed to the demand of his rent Coke li. 4. fol. 73. a. Now for those regalities which are of the higher nature all being within the compass of his prerogative and justly to be comprised under that title there is not one that belonged to the most absolute prince in the world which doth not also belong to our King except the customes of the nations so differ as indeed they do that one thing be in the one accounted a regality that in another is none Only by the custome of this Kingdom he maketh no laws without the consent of the three Estates though he may quash any law concluded by them And whether his power of making laws be restrained de necessicate or of a godly and commendable policy not to be altered without great peril I leave to the judgement of wiser men But I hold it inconerowlable that the King of England is an absolute King And all learned Politicians do range the power of making laws inter insignia summae absolutae potestatis Majora autem regalia sunt haec clausula plenitudinis potestatis ex ea aliquid statuere leges condere ac eas omnibus singulis dare bellum indicere belli indicendi licentiam alii dare pronunciare it a ut à sent entia appellari non possit committere sive delegare alicui causam cum clausula appellatione remota cognoscere de crimine laesae majestatis legitimare per rescriptum eos qui extra legitimum matrim nium nati sunt ad famam honores natales in integrum restituere veniam aetatis dare creare Duces Marchiones Comites regnum in feudum concedere Huc referri potest jus erigendi scholam quae hodie Universit as vel Academia appellatur etiam jus creandi doctores gradu licentiae aliquem insigniendi creandi magistratus tabelliones sive notarios jus dandi insignia nobilitatis sive nobiles creandi jus cudendae monetae nova vectigalia instituendi vel instituta vectigalia augendi Sixtinus ubisupra So that those other which are mentioned in libris feudorum and the Interpreters of them are at the least for the most part justly called regalia minora as armandiae viae publicae flumina navigaentia portus ripalia vectigalia monetae mulctarum poenarumque compendia bona vacantia bona que indignis aufer entur bona eorum qui incestum matrimonium contrahunt bona à imnatorum postscriptorum angariae et parangariae extraordinariae ad expeditionem imperatores collationes potestas creandornm magistratuum ad justiciam exequendam argentartae palatia in civitatibus constituta piseationum reditus falinarum reditus bona commitentium crimen laesae majestatis thesaurus inventus By setting down these regalities of both sorts as they are accounted in the Empire and other forein Kingdoms they may be the more easily compared with our Kings prerogatives and so the differences noted between us and them And whereas some things are before reckoned both inter regalia majora et minora the Reader must understand that this may be in divers respects For example the power of raising a tribute or of coyning mony is inter majora but the profit that groweth to the Prince by the one or other is inter minora Now may there also be noted out of books a great number of prerogatives belonging to the King of this land which do not bring profit to his coffers immediately and therefore may be accounted inter regalia majora or at the least in a middle or mixt nature or inter majora et minora because by a consequent they tend to the increase of the Kings Exchequer Of these such as I have observed in reading I will set down as they come to my hands without farther curiosity in dividing It is the Kings prerogative that he may not be sued upon an ordinary Writ as tenent to lands but by petition Plowd casu Walsingham f. 553. to have a necessary consent in the approbation of all benefices Idem casu Grendon fol. 499. to waive and to demur and to plead to the issue or to waive the issue and to demur upon the plee of the advers parts yet not to change the issue another term after he and the advers part be once at issue Idem casu Willion fol. 23.6 a. casu
want of heirs c. Privy seal privatum sigillum is a seal that the King useth sometime for a warrant whereby things passed the privy signet and brought to it are sent farther to be confirmed by the great Seal of England sometime for the strength or credit of other things written upon occasions more transitory and of less continuance than those be that pass the great seal Privilege privilegium is defined by Cicero in his Oration pro domo sua to be lex privata homini irrogata Frerotus in paratit lis ad titulum decretal●um de privilegiis thus defineth it privilegium est jus singulare hoc est privata lex quae uni homini vel loco vel Collegio similibus aliis conceditur cap. priv legia distinct 3. priva enim veteres dixere quae nos singula dicimus Infit Agellius li. 10. ca. 20. Idiòque privilegia modò beneficia modò personales constitutiones dicuntur c. It is used so likewise in our Common law and sometimes for the place that hath any special immunity Kitchin fo 118. in the words where debters make feigne dgifts and feoffments of their land and goods to their friends and others and betake themselves to privileges c. Privilege is either personal or real a personal privilege is that which is granted to any person either against or beside the course of the Common law as for example a person called to be one of the Parliament may not be arested either himself or any of his attendance during the time of the Parliament A privilege real is that which is granted to a place as to the Universities that none of either may be called to Westminster hall upon any contract made within their own precincts And one towards the Court of Chancery cannot originally be called to any Court but to the Chancery certain cases excepted If he be he will remove it by writ of Privilege grounded upon the statute anno 18 Edward the third See the new book of Entries verbo Privilege Probat of Testaments probatio testamentorum is the producting and insinuating of dead mens Wills before the ecclesiastical Iudge Ordinary of the place where the patty dyeth And the Ordinary in this case is known by the quantity of the goods that the party deceased hath out of the Dioces where he departed For if all his goods be in the same Dioces then the Bishop of the Dioces or the Arch-deacon according as their composition or prescription is hath the probat of the Testament if the goods be dispersed in divers Dioceses so that there be any sum of note as five pounds ordinarily out of the Dioces where the party led his life then is the Archbishop of Canterbury the ordinary in this case by his prerogative For whereas in old time the will was to be proved in every Dioces wherein the party deceased had any goods it was thought convenient both to the subject and to the Archiepiscopal See to make one proof for all before him who was and is of all the general ordinary of his Province But there may be antiently some composition between the Archbishop and an inferiour ordinary whereby the sum that maketh the prerogative is above five pound See Praerogative of the Archbishop This probat is made in two sorts either in common form or pertestes The proof in common form is only by the oath of the executor or party exhibiting the Will who sweareth upon his credulity that the Will by him exhibited is the last Will and Testament of the party deceased The proof per testes is when over and beside his oath he also produceth witnesses or maketh other proof to confirm the same and that in the presence of such as may pretend any interest in the goods of the deceased or at the least in their absence after they have been lawfully summoned to see such a Will proved if they think good And the later course is taken most commonly where there is fear of strife and contention between the kindred or friends of the party deceased about his goods For a VVill proved only in common form may be called into question any time within thirty years after by common opinion before it work prescription Procedendo is a writ whereby a plee or cause formerly called from a base Court to the Chancery Kings bench or Common plees by a writ of privilege or certiorare is released and sent down again to the same Court to be proceeded in there after it appeareth that the Defendant hath no case of privilege or that the matter comprised in the Bill be not well provided Brook hoc titulo and Terms of the law Cook vol. 6. fol. 63. a. See an 21 R. 2. ca. 11. in fine letters of procedendo granted by the Keeper of the privy seal See in what diversity it is used in the table of the original Register and also of the Iudicial I●roces processus is the manner of proceeding in every cause be it personal or real civil or criminal even from the original writ to the end Britton fol. 138 a. wherein there is great diversity as you may see in the table of Fitz. nat br verbo Proces and Brooks Abridgement hoc titulo And whereas the writings of our Common Lawyers sometime call that the Proces by which a man is called into the Court and no more the reason thereof may be given because it is the beginning or the principal part thereof by which the rest of the business is directed according to that saying of Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divers kinds of Proces upon Inditements before Iustices of the peace See in Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 133 b. 134.135 But for orders sake I refer you rather to M. Lambard is his tractat of Processes adjoined to his Eirenarcha who according to his subject in hand divideth criminal Proces either into Proces touching causes of treason or felony and Proces touching inferiour offences the former is usually a capias capias aliàs exigifacia● The second is either upon inditement or presentment or information that upon inditement or presentment is all one and is either general and that is a venire facias upon which if the party be returned sufficient then is sent out a Distringas infinitè untill he come if he be returned with a Nihil babet then issueth out a Capias Capias aliis Capias pluries and lastly an Exigi facias The special proces is that which is especially appointed for the offence by statute For the which he referreth his reader to the eighth chapter of his fourth book being very different Processum continuando is a writ for the continuance of a Proces after the death of the chief Iustice in the writ of oyer and terminer Register original fol. 128. a. Prochein amy proximus amicus vel propinquier is word for word a neer friend It is used in our Common law for him that is next of kinne to a child in his
be impeached or excepted against either in this or any other thing The next chapter viz. the 103. sheweth how many persons suffice to make a Record in the Exchequer The next how many in an assise c. I find not that we in our Courts especially the Kings Courts stand much upon the numbers of Recorders or witnesses for the strength of the testimony which the Record worketh but that we take it sufficient which is registred in each Court Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. num 4. Bretton in the Proeme of his book saith that the Iustices of the Kings Bench have a Record the Coroner Vicounr Iustices of the Exchequer Iustices of the Gaol delivery the Steward of England Iustices of Ireland Iustices of Chester Iustices assigned by the Kings letters patents in those causes they have Commission to take knowledge of All which as I take it must be understood with that caveat of Brook titulo Record num 20. 22. that an act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the term wherein it is written is alterable and no record but that term once ended and the said act duly enrolled it is a record and of that credit that admitteth no alteration or proof to the contrary Yet see Sir Edward Cooks Reports lib. 4. Rawlius case fol. 52. b. anno 12 Ed. 2. cap. 4. It is said that two Iustices of either Bench have power to record Non-sutes and defaults in the Country It appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 1. et 11. that quatuor milites habent recordum being sent to view a party essoined de malo lecti and lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 4. nu 2. that Serviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And in the Statute of Carleil made anno 15 Ed 2. it is said that one Iustice of either Bench with an Abbot or Prior or a Knight or a man of good fame or credence hath a record in the view of one that is said by reason of sickness to be unable to appear personally for the passing of a fine And anno 13 H. 4. cap. 7. et anno 2 H. 5. cap. 3. that two Iustices of peace with the● Shyreeve or Under-shyreeve have power to record what they find done by any in a ryot or rout c. That which is before mentioned out of Briton touching the Shyreeve seemeth to be limited by Fitzh nat br fol. 81. D. Who alloweth him a record in such matters only as he is commanded to execute by the Kings Writ in respect of his office And thence it commeth that Kitchin fol. 177. saith that the Escheator and Shyreeve be not Iustices of record but officers of record In which words he signifieth that their testimony is authentical only in some certain things that are expresly injoyned them by vertue of their Commission as Ministers to the King in his higher Courts whereas Iustices of record have in generality a record for all things within their cognisance done before them as Iudges though not expresly or particularly commanded Fitzh in his Nat. br fol. 82. in principio something explaineth this point writing to this effect Every act that the shyreeve doth by vertue of his commission ought to be taken as matter of Record no lesse than the Justices of peace His reasons be two the former because his patent is of record the other because he is a conservatour of the peace And then he addeth that the plees held before him in his County be not of record Yet is the County called a Court of record Westm 2. cao 3. anno 13 Ed 1. But it seemeth by Briton cap. 27. that it is only in these causes whereof the shyreeve holdeth plee by especial writ and not those that he holdeth of course or custome And in that case also it may be gathered out of the same Author that he hath a record but with the testimony of those annexed that be suters to the Court. Which seemeth to agree with Bractons words above specified Scrviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And to this purpose read Glanvile l. 8. c. 8 9 et 10. One Iustice upon view of forcible detinue of land may record the same by statute anno 15 R. 2. cap. 2. the Maior and Constables of the staple have power to record recognisances of debt taken before them anno 10 H. ● ca. 1. Brook titulo Record seemeth to say that no Court ecclesiastical is of record how truly it is to be inquired For Bishops certifying bastardy bigamy excommunication the vacancy or plenarty of a Church a mariage a divorse a spiritual intrusion or whether a man be professed in any religion with other such like are credited without farther enquiry or controlment See Brook titulo Bastardy See Fleta lib 6. cap. 39 40 41 42. Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. pri cap. 13. Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 14 et 15. the Register original fol. 5. b. Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 20. nu 5. Briton cap. 92 94 106 107 109. Doct. and Stud. lib. 2. cap. 5 but especially Cosius apology parte pri cap. 2. And a testament shewed under the seal of the Ordinary is not traversable 36 H. 6.31 Perkins Testament 491. Fulb. paral fol. 61. b. But it may be that this opinion groweth from a difference between that law whereby the court Christian is most ordered and the Common law of this Land For by the Civil or Canon law no instrument or record is held so firm but that it may be checked by witnesses able to depose it to be untrue Co. plus valere quod agitur quàm quod simulate concipitur ca. cum Johannes 10. extra de fide instrumentorum Whereas in our Common law against a record of the Kings court after the term wherein it is made no witnesse can prevail Briton cap. 109. Coke lib. 4. Hinds case fol. 71. lib. assisarum fol 227. nota 21. This reconciliation may be justified by Brook himself titulo Testaments num 4.8 14. and by Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. The King may make a Court of record by his grant Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Briton cap. 121. as for example Queen Elizabeth of worthy memory by her Charter dated 26 Aprilis anno 3. regni sui made the Consistoty court of the University of Cambridge a court of record There are reckoned among our common Lawyers three sorts of Records viz. A record judicial as attainder c. A record ministerial upon oath as an office found A record made by conveyance by consent as a fine deed inrolled or such like Coke lib. 4. Andrew Ognels case fol. 54. b. Recordare facias or recordari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeve to remove a cause depending in an inferiour court to the Kings bench or common plees as out of a court of antient Demeasn Hundred or County Fitz. nat br fol. 71. B. out of the county court idem fol.
licence Register original fol 298. a. Safe conduct See Saulf conduct Salus is a coyn of Gold stamped by King Henry the sixth in France which only coyn with another of Blanes of eight pence a piece was current in those places of France where King Henry was obeyed Stowes Aunals pag. 589. Safe pledge Salvus plegius is a surety given for a mans apparence against a day assigned Beacton lib. 4. cap. 2. nu 2. where it is also called certus plegius Sailing ware anno prim R. 3. cap. 8. Sak See Sac. Sakeber in Britton cap. 15. et 29. seemeth to be he that is robbed or by theft deprived of his goods with whom Bracton also agreeth lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. 32. nu 2. in these words Fartum vero manifestum est ubi latro deprehensus sit seisitus de aliquo latrocino se Hondbabende et Backberend et insecutus fuerit per al●quem cujus res illa fucrit qui dicitur Sacaburthe c. or Sathaber as Stanford calleth it pl. cor lib. pri cap. 21. The interpretation of this word I find not Only M. Skene de verbo interpretatio ne verbo Sacreborgh thinketh it should rather be written Sackerborgh of Sacker i. Securus and Borgh i. plegius signifying a sure cautioner or surety which one findeth to another for theft or slaughter whereof he offereth to accuse him judicially For in this case it behoveth the pursuer to oblige or bind himself into the hands of the Officer or before a ludge competent with Sicker Borg or sure caution that he will pursue in form of Law And by this means it may be that the accuser was wont with us to be called Sakbere of a circumstance because in this case he was surely bound to pursue Sycker is also an old English word signifying as much as sure secure or certain and see Borowe Salet is a head-piece anno 4 et 5. Phil. et Mar. it seemeth to come from the French Salut i. Salus Salmon sewse seemeth to be the young fry of Salmon quasi salmon issue anno 13. Rich. 3. stat pri cap. 19. Salva Gardia is a security given by the King to a stranger fearing the violence of some of his subjects for seeking his right by course of Law the form whereof see in the Register original fol. 26. a. b. Sanctuarie Sanctuarium is a place privileged by the Prince for the safeguard of mens lives that are offenders being foanded upon the Law of mercie and upon the great reverence honour and devotion which the Prince beareth to the place wherunto he granteth such a privilege Of this you may read a sufficient treatise in Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 38. This seemeth to have taken beginning from the Cities of refuge which Moyses appointed them to flye unto for safegard of their lives that had by casualtie slain a man Exodus cap. 21. In bastardly imitation whereof first the Athenians then Romulus erected such a place of immunity which they and he after them called Asylum Polydor Virg de inventione rerum li. 3. cap. 12. The Emperours of Rome made the places of their own statues or Images a place of refuge as appeareth Cod. lib. 1. titulo 15. De iis qui adstatuas consugium as also the Churches codem titulo 12. De iis qui ad ecclesias confugiunt c. But among all other nations our anci-ne Kings of England seem to have attributed most to these Sanctuaries permitting them to shelter such as had committed both felonies and treasons so that within forty dayes they acknowledged their fault and so submitted themselves to banishment during which time if any man expelled them if he were Lay he was excommunicated if a Clerk he was made irregular But after forty daies no man might relieve them Stawnf ubi supra See of this the new book of Entries verb. Sanctuary and Fleta lib. 1 cap. 29. And how by degrees they have been taken away you may read partly in him and partly in the statutes a. 26 Hen. 8 cap. 13. et anno 28 ejusdem cap. 7. et anno 32 ejusd cap. 12. et anno 33 ejudsem cap. 15. et anno pri Ed. 6. cap. 12. et anno 2 ejusdem cap. 2. et cap. 33. et anno 5 ejusdem cap. 10. See Abjuration Salarie salarium is a recompence or consideration made to any man for his pains or industry bestowed upon another mans businesse So called as Pliny saith qui tam necessarium quam sat homini The word you have anno 23 Ed. 3. cap. pri Salmon pipe anno 25 H. 8. cap. 7. is an engine to catch Salmons and such like Fish Sandal anno 2 Rch. 2. cap. 1. is a merchandize brought into England And it seemeth to be a kind of wood brought out of India For Sandal in French so signifieth and in Latin it is called Santalum Sarkling time or time of sarcling Seemeth to be all one with hey seel Or the time when the Country man weedeth his Corn. And it proceedeth from the Latin sarculore to rake or weed Or from the French Sarcler which hath all one signification Sarplar sarpleralana is a quantity of VVooll This in Scotland is called Serpliathe and containeth fourscore stone for the Lords of the Councel in anno 1527. decreed four Serpliathes of packed wool to contain sixteenscore stone of wool by the traffique of Merchants now used The Merchants use to fraught for their goods to Flanders by the Sack to France Spain and England by the Tunne and to Danken and the Eastern Seas by the Serpliath Skene de verborum significatione verbo Serpliat e with us England a load of wooll as I have been informed consisteth of eighty Todde each Todde consisting of two stone and each stone of fourteen pound And that a Sack of wool is in common account equal with a Load and a Sarplar otherwise called a pocket is half a Sack Further that a pack of wooll is a Horse load which consisteth of seventeen stone two pounds Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. saith that all our English measures are compounded of the penny sterling which weigheth 32. VVheat corns of the middle sort and that two of those pence make an ounce and twelve ounces a pound in weight or twenty shillings in number and that eight pound of VVheat maketh a jallon or a gallon as we now call it and eight gallons a bushell and eight bushels a common quarter Also that fifteen ounces of the quantity aforesaid do make a Mérchants pound And that 12. such pounds and a half make a stone and that fourteen stone make a waigh and that two waighes or twenty eight stone make a sack of Wool which ought to weigh a quarter of Wheat and that 12 Sacks make a Last So that a weigh and a Sarpler seemeth to be all one but that the Sarpler is the case and the weigh respecteth the quantity of the Wooll it self and that a load and a sack is all one Saunkefin is a
of Courts Seneshat de l'hostel de Roy Steward of the KINGS Houshold Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 102. Senescallo Mareshallo quod non teneant placita de libero tenemento c. is a writ directed to the Steward or Marshal of England inhibiting them to take cognizance of any action in their Court that concerneth either Freehold debt or Covenant Register original fol. 185. a. 191. b. Senie aliâs Sene sena is a leaf of a medicinable herb that bringeth forth stalks of a cubit high purging Phlegmatick Cholerick and also Melancholick humours without great violence The farther use whereof you may read in Gerrards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 8. This is mentioned among other Drugs and spices to be garbled anno 1 Jac cap. 19. Septuagesima is a Sunday certain and alwaies the third Sabbath before Shrove sunday from the which until the Octaves after Easter the solemnizing of mariage is by the Canon laws forbidden The reason whereof is given for that all this time until Easter is a time of mourning for the fall of Adam and for the misery of man thereof insuing And Easter with the Octaves thereof is a time of Christs glorification and so of ours also in him for his and by him our conquest over death and sin And that therefore all carnal affection onght during that space to be wholly mortified in us See Quinquagesima see Advent see Rogation week Sequitur sub suo periculo is a writ that lyeth where a summons adwarrantizandum is awarded and the Sheriff returneth that he hath nothing whereby he may be summoned For then goeth out an Aliâs and Pluries And if he come not at the Pluries then shall go out this writ Old nat br fol. 163. Sequestration sequestratio is a separating of a thing in controversie from the possession of both those that contend for it And it is double voluntary or necessary Voluntary is that which is used by the consent of each party Necessary is that which the Judge of his Authority doth whether the parties will or not It is used also for the act of the ordinary disposing of office the goods and chattels of one deceased whose estate no man will meddle with Dyer fol. 232. num 5. fol. 256. num 8. fol. 160. num 42. fol. 271 num 26. as also in the gathering of the fruits of a Benefice void to the use of the next Incumbent anno 28 H. 8. cap. 11. Fortescue cap. 50. and in divers other cases Sequestro habendo is a writ judicial for the dissolving of a seqnestration made by the Bishop at the Kings commandement of the fruits of a benefice thereby to compell the Parson to appear at the sute of another for the Parson upon his appearance may have this writ for the release of the sequestration Register judicial fol. 36. a. Sergeants servians commeth of the French sergeant i. satelles accensus a man of the Guard a kind of Souldier so called because he was sepè accitus ad res necessarias in exercitu peragendas Calepin M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Serjeant hath these words Sergeant commeth from Sergent quae est vox composita de Serrer quod est inclndere gent. quod pro gente populo vel plebe usurpatur Itaque Serjandus disitur qui jussu magistratus quemlibet de populo reum crimints in carcerem corjicit seu includit This word Sergeant is diversly used in our Law and applyed to sundry offices and callings First a Sergeant at Law or of the Coyfe is the highest degree taken in that profession as a Doctor in the Civil law And to these as men best learned and best experienced of all others is there one Court severed to plead in by themselves and that is the Court of Common pleas where the Common law of England is most strictly observed These are made by the Kings mandat or VVrit directed unto them commanding them upon a great penalty to take upon them that degree by a day certain therein assigned Dyer fol. 72. num 1. see Counte And of these one is the Kings Sergeant being commonly chosen by the King out of the rest in respect of his great learning to plead for him in all his causes as namely in causes of treason pl. cor li. 3. ca. pri And of these there may be more if it so please the King This is called in other Kingdomes Advocatus Regius Cassan de consuet Burgund pag. 850. VVith what solemnity these Sergeants be created read Fortescue cap. 50. This word Sergeant seemeth to be used in Britton for an Officer belonging to the County who in his first Chapter speaking of Appeals made before the Coroner hath these words in effect And then let the Coroner cause his appeal to be entred and the names of his sureties And afterward let commandement be given to the Sergeant of the County where the felony was committed that he have the body of the persons appealed at the next County And it is probable that this Officer was all one with him whom Bracton in his fifth book cap. 4. num 2. calleth Servientem Hundredi of whom he hath these words Post probationem defaltae faciet serviens Hundredi incontinenti summonitionem vel affidet partibus diem si praesentes sint ad proximum Comitatum c. This is like to be the same Officer which in antient time was called the Bayliff of the Hundred who as is declared in Bayliff had the like authority in his Hundred that the Shyreeve had in the County though inferiour to him and to be controlled by him as appeareth by divers antient presidents set down by Kitchin in his Tractat of Returns in Court Hundred Court-Baron c. I read also in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 28. Of the Kings Sergeant who is like to be also an Officer in the County in these words speaking of a woman ravished and what she ought to do for the pursute of the Ravisher sic ire debet ad prepositum Hundredi ad servientem Domini R●gis ad coronatores ad Vicecomitem ad primum comitatum faciat appellum suum And again eod l. c. 32. in these words si sine secta cognoverit se inde esse latronem coram vicecomite vel coronatore vel serviente Domini Regis c. And again lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 4. num 8. in these words Quid si servien Domini Regis dederit partibus diem ad Comitatum c. And by Fleta it seemeth that this Term was general to the Shyreeve Coroner and Bayliffs of Counties who in his sixt book cap. 3. § 1. hath these words Com. quis igitur senserit dominum suum vel euriam suam sibi de recto defecisse tunc ost ense hoc Vicecomiti statim praecipiat ballivo Hundredi vel iteneranti vel alteri servienti Regis quòd assumptis sibi l beris legalibus hominibus de viceneto illo ad curiam illius
otherwise called general Sessions an 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. or open Sessions ibidem Opposite whereunto are especial otherwise called privy Sessions which are procured upon some special occasion for the more speedy expedition of Iustice in some cause Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 110. what things be inquirable in general Sessions See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are kept by the high Constable of every Hundred for the placing of servants anno 5 Eliz. cap. 4. in fine Sessour an 25 Ed. 3. cap. 6. seemeth to signifie so much as assessing or rating of Wages at this day Set Cloathes anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Setwell Valeriana is a medicinal herb the nature and divers kinds whereof you have in Gerards herbal lib. 2. cap. 424. The root of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled an 1 Iac. cap. 19. Severance is the singling of two or more that joyn in one Writ or are joyned in one Writ For example if two joyn in a VVrit de Libertate probanda and the one afterward be nonsute here severance is permitted so that notwithstanding the nonsute of the one the other may severally proceed Fitzherbert natura brevium fol. 78. l. K. Of this see Brook titulo Severance and Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases severance is permitted than what it is There is also severance of the Tenents in an Assise when as one or two or more disseisours appeareth upon the VVrit and not the other New Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And severance in Attaints eod fo 95. col 2. And severance in Debt verbo debt fol. 220. col 1. see the said Book verbo Severance Seneral tayl tallium separatum is that whereby Land is given and entayled severally to two For example land is given to two men and their VVives and to the Heirs of their bodies begotten the Donees have joynt estate for their two lives and yet they have several Inheritance because the issue of the one shall have his moyetie and the issue of the other the other moyetie Kitchin ibid. Several tenancy tenura separalis is a Plee or exception taken to a writ that is laid against two as joynt which are several Brook titulo Severall tenancie fol. 273. Sevantly woven anno 35. Eliza. cap. 10. Sewer hath two significations with us one applyed to him that issueth or commeth in before the meat of the King or other great personage and placeth it upon the table the other to such passages or gutters as carry water into the sea or river in Lawyers Latine called Sewera an 6. H. 6. c. 5. which is also used in common speech for commissioners authorised under the broad seal to see drains and ditches well kept and maintained in the Marish and Fenne Countries for the better conveyance of the water into the Sea and the preserving of the grasse for seed of Cattel stat an 6. H. 6. cap. 5. It is probable to bring this word from the French issir or issue as if we should call them Issuers because they give issue or passage to the water c. And the Latine word suera some time used in these commissions for these drains is a competent reason of this conjecture See Fitz. nat brev in Oyer and Terminer Yet I find in an old French Book containing the Officers of the King of Englands Court as it was antiently governed that he whom in Court we now call Sewer was called Asseour which may seem to come from the French Asseour wherein his Office in setting down the meat upon the Table is well expressed And Sewer as it signifieth an Officer is by Fleta latined Assessor li. 2. c. 15. All which argueth that the descent of this word is from the French Asseoir as signifying a disposing or placing of any thing or as we say in English an assessing of any person toward the performance of a Duty Sexagesima See Septuagesima SH Shanck See Fur. Share See Flotzon Shewing is to be quit of Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in plaints shewed and not avowed New exposition of law terms verbo Shewing See Scavage Shipper An. 1 Iac. ses 1. cap. 33. is is a Dutch word signifying the Master of the ship Shire Comitatus shyra is a Saxon word signifying Satrapian of the verb scyran 1. partiri Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Centuaria The word is in use so rife that every Child understandeth it Who first thus divided this land into shires appeareth by M. Cambdens Britan. pag. 102. in these words Nec dum tamen florente Hepterchia Anglia it a in Comitatus divisa sic enim vulgò vocant sed pestea cum solus aluredus rerum potiretur Vt enim Germani majores nostri teste Tacito jura per pagos vicosque reddebant et centeni ex plebe comites adrem admistrandam adjungebantur sic ille ut ingulfi Croulandenfis verbis utar pr mus Angliam in Comitatus divisit qued indiginae rapinas committerent exemplo et colore Danorum Comitatus porro in Centurias i. Hundreds et Decimas i. Tythings distribui fecit praecipitque ut omnis indigena in aliqua esset Centuria Decima Praefectos etiam provinciarum qui antea Vicedomini vocabantur in duo officia divtsit viz. Iudices nunc Iusticiarios Vicecomites qui adhue idem nomen retinent See the rest Shereeve Vicecomes is compounded of these Saxon words Scyre i. satrapia and Reeve i. praefectus and accordingly he is the chief Officer under the King of his Shire or County See Ferme in Lacies Nobility pag. 12. M. Cambden pag. 104. Thus describeth his Office Singulis verò annis nobilis aliquis ex incolis praeficitur quem Vicecomitem quasi vicarium comitis nostrâ linguâ Shyref i. Comitatus praepositum vocamus qui etiam comitatus vel provinciae Quaestor rectè dici potest Ejus enim est Publicas pecunias provinciae suae conquirere mulctas irrogatas vel pignoribus ablat is eolligere aerario inferrae Iudicibus praesto adesse eorum mandata ex●qui duodecim viros cogere qui in causis de facto cognoscunt et ad Iudices referunt Iudices enim apud nos juris solum non facti sunt Iudices condemnatos ad supplicium ducere in minoribus litibus cognoscere in majoribus autcm jus dicunt justiciarii quos itinerantes ad Assisas vocant qui quotannis hos Comitatus bis adeunt ut de causis cognoscant et ad carceratis sententiam ferant Henricus secundus hos itinerantes instituit vel potius restituit Ille ut inquit Mathaeus Parisiensis consilio filii sui et Episcoporum constituit Iusticiarios per sex paertes regni in qualibet parts tres qui jurarent quod cuilibet jus suum conservarent illaesum Of the antiquity and authority of this Officer read Sir Edwards Cooks Reports lib. 4. Mittons Case The manner of appointing
in this signification is it borrowed from the Feudists with whom Investitura signifieth a delivery of possession by a spear or staff and vestura possession it self Hotomon in verbis feudal verbo Investura Vesture of an acre of land anno 14 Ed. prim stat prim is the profit of it anno 13 Edw. 1. cap. 25. VI Vice-treasurer of the Exchequer 1 Jacob. 26. See Under-treasurer of England See Treasurer of the Exchequer View of frank pledge visus Franci plegii is the office which the Sheriff in his County Court or the Bayliffin his Hundred performeth in looking to the Kings peace and seeing that every Free-man be in some pledge This is called of Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. nu 7. in fine Res quasi saora quia solam personam Regis respicit quod introductus sit pro pace et communi utilitate eodem cap. 16. num 8. in fine See frankpledge and Leet and Dece●nier See the new book of Entries verb. view of frankpledge Veiours visores commeth of the French Veoyer i. cernere intueri despicere prospicere videre and signifieth in our Common law those that are sent by the Court to take view of any place in question for the better decision of the right Old nat br fol. 112. So doth Bracton use it lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 8. per totum It signifieth also those that are sent to view such as essoin themselves de malo lecti whether they be in truth so sick as they cannot appear or whether they counterfeit Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 10. et cap. 14. per ●totum Lastly it is used for those that are sent or appointed to view an offence as a man murdered or a Virgin ravished See View Vicario deliberando occasione cujusdam Recoguitionis c. is a writ that lyeth for a spiritual person imprisoned upon forfeiture of a Recognisance without the Kings writ Reg. orig fol. 147. See statuto mercatorio contra personam ecclesiasticam Viois et venellis mundandis is a writ that lyeth for a Maior and Bayliffs of a Town c. For the clean keeping of their streets Regist orig fol. 267. b. View visus commeth of the French veve i. visus aspectus conspectus prospectus and signifieth with us the act of viewers For as the Author of the Terms of Law saith when any action real is brought and the Tenent knoweth not well what land it is that the Defendent asketh then he may pray the view that is to say that he may see the land which is claimed of this Briton speaketh ca. 45. This point of proceeding we have received from the Normans as it appeareth by the Grand customary cap. 66. where you shall read to this effect It is to be known that there be divers sorts of views one of a fee another of a man in sicknesse another of an offence as of a man slain or a Virgin deflowred all which he describeth in that place and again cap. 80 et 96. which are worth the reading this view at this day is used in an Assise of rent service rent charge or rent seck Fitzh nat br fol. 178. D. and in a writ de Curia claudenda Idem fol. 128. B. In a writ of Nusance Idem fol. 183. L. N. O. In a writ Quo jure Idem fol. 128. L. In the writ de rationalibus divisis Idem fol. 129. D. And in the writ de secta ad molendinum Idem fol. 123. B. See the new book of Entries verb. View and see Fleta how this view is made lib. 4. cap. 6. See Veiours Vicechamberlain called underchamberlain anno 13 R. 2. stat 2. cap. 1. is a great Officer in Court next under the Lord Chamberlain and in his absence hath the command and controlement of all Officers superior and inferior whatsoever appertaining to that part of his Majesties houshold which is called the Chamber wherein is included as well the Bed-chamber as the Privy-chamber the Presence and the great Chamber and all other Rooms as Galleries c. thereto belonging with the Councell-chamber Privy Closet c. And in the Lord Chamberlains absence he keepeth his Table in the great Chamber commanding and overseeing the attendance of all to whom it appertainesh to be ready and waiting on his Majesty going to the Chapel or to speak with Ambassadors or else walking or riding forth Vicount alias Viscount vicecomes commeth of the French vicompte i. Procomes and signifieth with us as much as Sheriff Between which two words I find no other difference but that the one commeth from our Conquerors the Normans and the other from our Ancustors the Saxons wherefore see more of this in Shyreeve Vicount also signifieth a degree of Nobility next unto an Earl which as M. Camden Britan. pag. 70. saith is an old name of office but a new one of dignity never heard of amongst us untill Henry the sixth his daies But this degree of honor is more antient far in other Countries Casson in gloria mundi parte 5. consid 55. whom you may read Vicountiel is an Adjective made of Vicountie and signifieth as much as belonging to the Vicount as Writs Vicountial are such Writs as are triable in the County or Sheriffs Court Old nat br fol. 109. Of this kind you may see divers Writs of Nusance set down by Fitzherberi in his Nat. br fol. 184. b. There be also certain ferms called Vicountiels which the Sheriff for his time payeth a certain rent for to the King and maketh what profit he can of them See the Statute anno 33 34 H. 8. cap. 16. anno 2 et 3 Ed. 6. cap. 4. and anno 4 H. quint. capite secund Vi laica removenda is a writ that lyeth for the removing of forcible possession of a benefice kept by lay men And this writ is granted some time upon the Certificate of the Bishop into the Chancery that there is such a force in his Dioces some time upon a surmise made thereof by the Incumbent himself without the Certificate of the Bishop and hath a several form for either case Fitzh nat br fol. 54. Register origin fol. 59. 60. Villanis Regis subtractis reducendis is a writ that lyeth for the bringing back of the Kings bondmen that have been carried away by others out of his Manors whereto they belonged Registor origin folio 87. b. Villein villanus commeth of the French vilain i. illiberalis impurus vilis turpis and signifieth in our Common law a bondman or as much as Servus among the Civilians Of these there be two sorts in England as Sir Thomas Smith saith in his Repub Anglo lib. 3. cap. 8. one termed a villein in grosse which is immediately bound to the persons of his Lord and his heirs the other a villein regardant to a Manor whom the Civilians term glebae aseriptitium being bound to their Lord as members belonging and annexed to such a manor whereof the Lord is owner This division is
duty in mony to be paid by the Sheriff upon his account in the Exchequer anno secundo tertio Ed. 6. cap. 4. Prest mony is so called of the French word Prest i. explicatus tromptus expeditus for that it bindeth those that have received it to be ready at all times appointed Primage is a duty due to the Mariners and Saylers for the loading of any ship at the setting forth from any Haven anno tricesimo secundo Henrici octavi capitulo decimo quarto Primier seisin prima seisina ad verbum signifieth the first possession It is used in the Common law for a branch of the Kings Prerogative whereby he hath the first possession of all lands and tenements through the Realm holding of him in chief whereof his tenant dyed seised in his demeasn as of fee and so consequently the rents and profits of them untill the heir if he be of age do his homage if he be under years untill he come to years See Stawnf praerog capite tertio Bracton libro quarto tract 3. cap. prim Primo beneficio See Beneficio Prince Princeps is a French word and taken with us diversly sometime for the King himself but more properly for the Kings eldest son who is Prince of Wales as the eldest Son to the French King is called Dolphire both being Princes by their nativity Master Fern in the glory of generosity page 138. For Edward the first to appease the tumultuous spirits of the Welch-men who being the antient Indigene of this Land could not in long time bear the yoak of us whom they call Strangers sent his wife being with child into Wales VVhere at Carnarvan she was delivered of a Son thereupon called Eaward of Carnarvan and afterward asked the VVelsh-men seeing they chought much to be governed by strangers if they would be quietly ruled by one of their own nation who answering him Yea Then quoth he I will appoint you one of your own Country-men that cannot speak one word of English and against whose life you can take no just exception and so named unto them his son born in Carnarvan not long before From which time it hath continued that the Kings eldest Son who was before called Lord Prince St ronf praerog cap. 22. fol. 75. hath been called Prince of Wales Stowes Annals pag. 303. See anno vicesimo septimo Henrici octavi cap. 26. et anno 28 ejusdem cap. 3. Principality of Chester anno 21 Rich. 2. cap. 9. See County palatin● and Cromptons divers jurisdictions fol. 137. Prior perpetual or dative et removeable an 9 R. 2. cap. 4. and anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. paulo ante finem Lord prior of Saint Johns of Jerusalem anno 26 H. 8. cap. 2. Priors aliens Priores alieni were certain religious men born in France and governours of religious houses erected for outlandish men here in England which were by Henry the fifth thought no good members for this land after such conquest obtained by him in France and therefore suppressed Whose livings afterwards by Henry the sixth were given to other Monasteries and houses of learning Stowes Annals pag. 582. See anno 1 H. 5. cap. 7. but especially to the erecting of those two most famous colleges called the Kings Colleges of Cambridge and Faton Priority prioritas signifieth in our common law an antiquity of tenure in comparison of another not so antient As to hold by priority is to hold of a Lord more antiently than of another Old nat br fol. 94. So to hold in posteriority is used by Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fol. 11. And Crompton in his jurisdiction fol. 117. useth this word in the same signification The Lord of the priority shall have the custody of the body c. fol. 120. If the tenent hold by priority of one and by posteriority of another c. To which effect see also Fitzh nat br fol. 142. Bartolus in his Tractate de insigniis et armis useth these very words prioritas et posterioritas concerning two that beat one coat armour Prisage seemeth to be that custome or share that belongeth to the King out of such merchandize as are taken at sea by way of lawfull prize anno 31 Eliz. cap. 5. Prisage of Wines anno 1 H. 8. cap. 5. is a word almost out of use now called Butlerage it is a custome whereby the Prince challengeth out of every bark loaden with wine containing less than forty tun two tun of wine at his price Prise prisa commeth of the French prenare i. capere It signifieth in our Statutes the things taken by purveyours of the Kings subjects As anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 7. et anno 28 ejusdem stat 3. cap. 2. It signifieth also a custome due to the King anno 25 ejusdem cap. 5. Register origin folio 117. b. Prisoner priso commeth of the French prisonn●er and signifieth a man restrained of his liberty upon any action civil or criminal or upon commandement And a man may be prisoner upon matter of Record or matter of fact prisoner upon matter of record is he which being present in Court is by the Court committed to prison only upon an arest be it of the Shyreeve Constable or other Stawnf pi cor li. pri ca. 32. fo 34 et 35. Privie commeth of the French privè i. familiaeris and signifieth in our Common law him that is partaker or hath an interest in any action or thing as privies of bloud Old nat br fol. 117. be those that be linked in consanguinity Every heir in tayl is privy to recover the land intayled eodem fol. 137. No privity was between me and the tenent Littleton fol. 106. If I deliver goods to a man to be carried to such a place and he after he hath brought them thither doth steal them it is felony because the privity of delivery is determined as soon as they are brought thither Stawn pl. co lib. prim cap. 15. fol. 25. Merchants privy be opposite to Merchants strangers anno 2 Edw. tertii cap. 9. cap. 14. anno ejusdem stat 2. cap. 3. The new Expositour of law-terms maketh divers sorts of privies as privies in estate privies in deed privies in law privies in right and privies in blood And see the examples he giveth of every of them See Perkins Conditions 831 832 833. and Sir Edward Cook lib. 3. Walkers case fol. 23. a. lib. 4. fol. 123. b. 124. a. where he maketh four kinds of privies viz. privies in bloud as the heir to his Father c. privies in representation as executors or administratours to the deceased privies in estate as he in the reversion and he in the remainder when land is given to one for life and to another in fee the reason is given by the Expositour of law-terms for that their estates are created both at one time The fourth sort of privies are privies in tenure as the Lord by escheat that is when the land escheateth to the Lord for