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A47714 Reports and cases of law, argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster, in the times of the late Queen Elizabeth, and King James in four parts / collected by ... William Leonard, Esq. ...; with alphabetical tables of the names of the cases, and of the matter contained in each part ; published by William Hughes ...; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster Part 1 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1104; ESTC R19612 463,091 356

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passeth and doth extend into D. and the residue which is in C. shall remain in me in gross v. 9 E. 4. 17. Catesby And if I be seised of a Manor which doth consist of services and of twenty Free-holders and one hundred Acres of Demesnes and I grant the services of my twenty Free-holders and forty or twenty Acres of the said one hundred Acres a Manor shall pass although it was not granted by the name of a Manor but if I grant the services of three four or five of my Free-holders and forty or twenty of the said one hundred Acres upon such a grant no Manor shall pass Windham Iustice contrary We are not here to speak of the creation of a Manor that is a forraign matter but we are here to consider upon the division and apportionment of a Manor They that have argued in this case at the Bar have stood much upon the words of the Conveyance manerium suum de North-kelsey and that Sir Fr. Askew at the time of that assurance had not any Manor of North-kelsey or in North-kelsey but that is not any reason for if Cestuy que use mean between the Statute of 1 E. 3. 27 H. 8. will make a Feoffment of the Manor which was in use by these words manerium suum the same had been good and yet it is not manerium suum but the Manor of the Feoffees but it may be said suum by receiving of the profits according to the trust and confidence reposed in the Feoffees so in our case in as much as Sir Fr. Askew had before this grant aswell demesnes as services in North-kelsey it may collaterally be said a Manor there and notwithstanding that tempore concessionis proprie loquendo no Manor was in North-kelsey yet now upon operation of the Law upon this grant a new Manor shall rise for in divers cases where a thing which was not in esse before upon a grant may rise As if I grant unto you out of my Land a Rent de novo And also a thing which was not in esse before may upon a grant take upon it a new nature As if I. seised of a great Wood grant to you Estovers out of it they were not before in me but as Woods and Trees now by this grant they are become Estovers in the Grantee so as they are in the Grantee in another nature than they were in me So in our case although North-kelsey was not a Manor in Sir Fr. Askew yet now upon the grant it is a Manor in Bard 9 E. 4. 17. And as to the matter which hath been objected because a Court cannot now begin the same is not any reason for the Court Baron is incident to the Manor and also to every part of the Manor and transitory through the whole Manor and if Sir Fr. Askew had sold all the demsnes of the Manor in Castord where the Court Baron for the said Manor had always been held and not else-where yet such a Court might be holden in any part of the Demeans in any other of the said Towns The Lord Anderson to the same purpose It hath been argued of the other side that the Manor doth not pass because the grant is in these words manerium de North-kelsey in North-kelsey I conceive that these words de North-kelsey are void as matter of surplusage and the grant shall be construed as if the words had been manerium suum in North-kelsey And a Manor is such a thing as may be determined divided and suspended As if the Lord of a Manor leaseth for years all the Demeans of the Manor the Manor is suspended during the term for years as lately it hath been adjudged And a warranty may be divided as if a Feoffment in Fee be made to two with warranty and the one of them releaseth the warranty vide L. 5. E. 4. 103. A. seised of a Manor which extendeth in four Towns B. C. D. and E. and he gives his Manor in B. C. and D. by this gift the Manor and all that is in the said four Towns passeth And he cited also a Case 21 E. 4. 3. The Lord of a Manor erected a Chapel within his said Manor as a Chapel of Case c. and afterwards it is a Parish-Church now it is become presentable an Advowson appendant as the soil upon the which the Church is built is parcel of the Manor See 32 H. 6. 9. One Manor may be parcel of another Manor as A. holdeth of B. twenty acres of Land as of his Manor of C. which Manor B. holdeth of D. as of his Manor of E. B. dieth without Heir so as his Manor of C. is escheated unto D. now the twenty acres are holden of the Manor of C. as they were before and the Manor of C. is by the Escheat become parcel of the Manor of E. and by Lease of the Manor of E. it shall pass Post 32. And I do not know any difference between the Case of Parceners and the Case of Ioynt-tenants for now they are both equally compellable to make partition And he cited the Case of one Estopp lately adjudged viz. the Queen was seised of the Rectory of D. which extended into the Counties of Lincoln and York and the Queen granted her Rectory of D. in Lincoln these are several grants and now upon the matter they are become several Rectories And as to that which hath been objected concerning a Court Baron which ought to belong to this new Manor and that such a Court cannot now at this day be erected and therfore here cannot be a Manor here needs not the erection of any new Court but forasmuch as the Court Baron before this grant might be by Law holden in any place within the Manor therefore every part of the Demeans of the Manor is capable of a Court to be holden there As where one is seised of a Manor to which an Advowson is appendant now is the Advowson appendant not only to the said Manor but to every part of it for if he alien an acre parcel of the Manor with the Advowson the Advowson is now appendant to the said acre See 43 E. 3. 26. So in the Case at Bar because this liberty and franchise of a Manor is throughout the whole Manor and in every part of the Services and Demesnes upon this grant of the Services and Demesnes in North-kelsey and of his Manor in North-kelsey a Manor passeth which Windham also granted and agreed unto Note at this time there were but three Iudges in this Court And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Defendant XXXIV Alington and Bales Case Pasch 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench Rot. 584. 1 Cro. 660. 661. ALington and others Executors of Sir W. Cordel late Master of the Ross brought an Action Debt against Bales The Case was this One Bream being seised of certain Lands by Indenture bargained and sold the same to one Platt by these words give grant bargain sell and by
gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff for it is in his election to demand his debt in which of those Coyns he pleased either in the proper Coyn of the Contract or of Sterling scil in currant mony And afterwards the said Iudgment was affirmed LIII Henly and Broads Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer HEnly brought Trespass against Broad in the Kings Bench 3 Len. 77 Trespass and declared that the said Defendant simul cum quodam I. S. clausum suum fregit c. The Defendant pleaded to Issue and it was found for the Plaintiff and it was objected in stay of Iudgment that the count was not good for it appeareth therein upon the shewing of the Plaintiff himself that the Action ought to be brought against another also not named in the Writ Counts and because the same appears of the Plaintiffs own shewing the Declaration was not good and notwithstanding that said Exception Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Vpon which Broad brought a Writ of Error and assigned the same matter for Error And there the Case of 2 H. 7. 16. 17. was cited Error where a difference is taken where the Plaintiff declares that the Defendant with one B. did the Trespass him naming in certain and where the Declaration is that the Defendant cum quibusdam alijs ignotis c. See 8. H. 5. 5. And at length all the Iustices of the common Pleas and Barons of the Exchequer were clear of opinion that by the common Law the Declaration was not good for the reason and upon the difference aforesaid but if in Trespass against one who pleads that the Trespass was done by himself and one B. to whom the Plaintiff hath released and the Plaintiff traverse the Release in that case for as much as the matter doth not appear upon the Plaintiffs own shewing but comes in on the part of the Defendant and not denied by him the Declaration is good enough And it was further agreed by them all that now this defect after Verdict is helped by the Statute of 18 Eliz. for it doth not concern substance but only form And afterwards the first Iudgment was affirmed LIV. Wood and Fosters Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Replevin Owen Rep. 139. Godbolt 113. WOod brought a Replevin against Humfrey Foster and others and made his plaint of the taking of one thousand Cattle Foster pleaded Non cepit and the others that the property was in another upon which matters they were at issue And as unto the first issue the Case upon the Evidence was that the late Lord Windsore was possessed of certain Sheep and by his Will devised them unto Eliz. his Daughter for her advancement in marriage and of his Will made his Wife his Executrix and died his Wife took to her Husband one Puttenham who being thus possessed leased the said Sheep with a Farm for eleven years by Indenture upon which it was agreed between the said parties that the Lessee should keep so much of the Rent reserved upon the said Lease to buy therewith so many Cattle over so as the whole stock of the said Sheep upon the said Farm should amount to the number of one thousand Cattle and the Lessee also covenanted to yeild and render to the said Puttenham at the end of the said Term one thousand Sheep between two years shorne and four years shorne Afterwards Puttenham by his deed gave unto one A. who had married the said Eliz. the said one thousand Cattle to have them after the said Term the Term expired Puttenham sold and granted them unto Wood who brought them away with him And the said A. pretending that the said Sheep passed to him by the said grant of Puttenham during the said Term seised them and the same was noctanter as they were driven in the high-way unde magna contentio orta suit between the said parties the one charging the other with felony whereupon the Constable of the Town where c. supposing the said matter would grow to an Outrage seised the said Cattle as felons goods and afterwards went to the house of the said Foster which was near unto the high-way and asked his advise upon the matter but he would not meddle therewith Afterwards one Perkins who had bought the said Cattle of the said A. came to Foster and shewed to him that the high-ways there were not sufficient for pasturage of the said Cattle until the said controversy be determined and prayed that the Cattle be delivered to him the said Perkins to keep in the mean time to whom Foster answered that if the said Perkins would find sufficient sureties to deliver back the Cattle to him who had right that he would be content the said Perkins should take them whereupon the said Perkins was bound to Foster to that purpose and took away with him the said Cattle And it was also given in Evidence that the servants of the said Foster had seised the Cattle for the use of their Master And by the clear opinion of the Court upon the whole matter shewed Foster non cepit and according to such direction of the Court the Iury found that Foster non cepit and as to the matter of property the Court was clear of opinion that the grant made by Puttenham of the said Cattle during the Term was utterly void for Puttenham during the same Term had not in the said Cattle either a general or a special property nor also after the Term but if after the Term expired the Lessee will not according to his covenant deliver to Puttenham one thousand Sheep then Puttenham is put to his Action of covenant for here the Lessee was bound to deliver to Puttenham at the end of the Term not the same Cattle which were leased but such a number of Sheep and the same ought to be between two years shorne and four years shorne which could not be the Sheep demised for they did exceed such degree before the end of the said term then the grant of Puttenham during the Term is meerly void And then when after the Term the Lessee according to the covenant delivered to Wood one thousand Sheep he might well sell them to the Plaintiff And such was the opinion of the whole Court and it was said by Iustice Windham that if I let certain Sheep to one for two years Property now upon that Lease somewhat remains in me but that cannot be properly said a Property but rather the possibility of a Property which cannot be granted over See 11 H. 4. 177. 178. 22 E. 4. 10. 11. In the same plea it was also holden that in a Replevin where the plaint is of one thousand Beasts and the Defendant justifies by reason of property upon which the parties are at issue Now upon the Evidence the Defendant may surmise a lesser number of Beasts and drive the Plaintiff to prove a greater number than that which the Defendant hath confessed
the Land was entailed by the second Fine But that Exception was disallowed by the whole Court and a difference put by Anderson Where a man pleads the grant of an Advowson in gross by Tenant in tail in such case the life of the Tenant in tail ought to be averred for by his death the grant ceaseth But where a man pleads the Lease of Tenant in tail of a Manor with an Advowson appendant in such case such averment is not necessary So accordingly Smith Stapletons Case 15 Eliz. 431. And here it was moved if in as much as by the first Fine an estate for life was rendred to the Wife and by the second Fine in which she did not joyn an estate tail was limited unto her and now when the Husband dieth if he shall be remitted to her estate for life Co. 1 Inst 357. 2 Cro. 489. which Windham granted for that was her lawful estate and the second estate tortious But by Rhodes Periam and Anderson the Wife is at liberty to make her election which of the two estates she will have And as to the Writ to the Bishop for the Queen the Court was clear of opinion that it ought not to be granted upon this matter But all the question was if Regina inconsulta the Court would or ought to proceed And it was holden clearly by the whole Court that the tenure alledged modo forma could not be a tenure in chief for it is said that the Land was holden of the King as of the Castle of Dover in Capite LXXXVI Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Intr. Pasc 28 Eliz. Rot. 602. Wast ● Cro. 40. 4● WAst was brought by F. and his Wife agaist Pepy and counted that the said Pepy was seised and enfeoffed certain persons to the use of himself for life and afterwards to the use of the Wife of the Plaintiff and her Heirs The Defendant pleaded that the said Feoffment was unto the use of himself and his Heirs in Fee c. without that that it was to the uses in the Count Vpon which they were at issue And it was found by verdict that the said Feoffment was unto the uses contained in the Count But the Iury further found that the estate of the Defendant by the limitation of the use was priviledged with the impunity for Wast that is to say without impeachment of Wast And it was moved if upon this verdict the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment And Anderson and Rhodes Iustices he shall for the matter in issue is found for the Plaintiff and that is the Feoffment to the uses contained in the Count and this impunity of Wast is a forrein matter not within the charge of the Iury and therefore the traverse of it but matter of surplusage As if I plead the Feoffment of I. S. To which the other pleads that he did not enfeoff and the Iury find a conditional Feoffment the Court shall not respect the finding of the condition for it was not in issue and no advantage shall ever be had of such a liberty if it be not pleaded 30 H. 8. Dyer 41. In Dower the Tenant pleaded Ne unques seisi que Dower the Tenant pleaded that before the coverture of the Demandant one A. was seised of the Lands of which Dower is demanded in tail who made a Feoffment to a stranger and took the Demandant to Wife and took back an estate in Fee and died seised having issue inheritable Now although upon the truth of the matter she is not dowable de jure yet when the parties are at issue upon a point certain Hob. 53. Owen 91. no foreign or strange matter not in question betwixt the parties shall be respected in the point of the Iudgment But if the Defendant had pleaded it in bar he might have foreclosed the Demandant of her Dower Vide 38 H. 6. 27. 47 E. 3. 19. In a Praecipe quod reddat in the default of the Tenant one cause and shewed how the Tenant who made default was but Tenant for life of the Lands in demand the reversion in Fee to himself and prayed to be received The Demandant did counter-plead the receit saying the Defendant had fee upon which issue was joyned And it was found that neither the tenant nor he which prayed to be received had any thing in the Land In that case the Court did not regard the matter which was superfluous in the verdict for they were at issue upon a point certain that is whether the Tenant was seised in Fee for it was confessed of both sides that he had an estate for life and with that matter the Iury was not charged and they are not to enquire of it and so it was found against the Demandant for which cause the Receit was granted 7 H 6. 20. The parties were at issue upon a dying seised which is found by verdict but the Iury further find that the other party made continual claim this continual claim shall not be regarded in the point of Iudgment because it was pleaded in avoidance of the descent Windh Iustice contrary Forasmuch as it appeareth unto us upon the verdict that the Plaintiff hath not cause of Action and therefore he shall not have Iudgment As in Detinue No advantage of impunity for Wast shall be taken where the same is not pleaded though found by verdict Judgment Hob. 53. Owen 91. The Plaintiff counteth of a bailment by his own hand the Defendant pleadeth that he doth not detain c. the Iury find the Detinue but upon a bailment by another hand In this case notwithstanding that the Detinue be found yet the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment But Rhodes Periam and Anderson in the principal case were of opinion Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff for in no case the party shall have advantage of such a Liberty of impunity of Wast if he do not plead it And the Iurors are not to meddle with any matter which is not in issue And if it be but matter of surplusage it is to no purpose And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff LXXXVII Bracebridge and Baskerviles Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco AN Action of Debt is brought against three Executors Debt against Executors one of them pleads in Bar a Recovery against himself in the Kings Bench The other two plead plene administr Against the first plea the Plaintiff did aver covin and upon the second plea they are at issue The first issue is found for the Plaintiff and as to the other plea it was found that the Defendants have in their hands thirty pounds of the goods of their Testator not administred Note the debt in demand was one hundred pounds upon which the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover the goods of the Testator and thereupon had execution Now the Plaintiff brought a Scire facias against the said Executors supposing that many other goods of the Testator have come unto their
hands after the Iudgment and prayed execution thereof upon which the Defendant did demur in Law. Vide 2● H. 6. 40. 41. In debt against Executors of forty marks the Defendant pleaded that he had fully administred and it was sound that the Defendant at the day of the Writ brought had of the goods of the dead twenty marks and no more and gave damges five marks There the Plaintiff had Iudgment for the twenty marks of the goods of the dead and the five marks of their own goods And as to the other twenty marks that the Plaintiff should be amerced 33 H. 6. 24. Where Executors plead that they have nothing in their hands which is found accordingly Afterwards goods of the Testator came to the hands of the Executors Now the Plaintiff upon a surmise shall have out of the same Record a Scire facias to have execution of the said goods Scire facias to have Execution of Assets come to Executors hands after ●iens enter maynes pleaded But see 4 H. 6. 4. contrary for there it is said that upon the matter the original is determined and so no Record upon which a Scire facias can be grounded And see Fitzh abridging the Case Scire facias 25. by the verdict and the Iudgment the Original is abated Vide 7 E. 4. 9. by Moile according to 33 H. 6. and so 46 E. 3. 9. by Belknap And the Lord Anderson demanded of the Prothonotaries the manner of the entry of the Iudgments given in such Cases who said that their Entry is in this manner i. e. Quod querens recuperet that which is expresly found by the verdict but nothing of the residue for of that no mention is made at all And the Court seemed to be of opinion that where upon nothing remaining in their hands pleaded It is found that some part of the sum in demand is in the hands of the Executors there the Plaintiff upon a surmise of goods come to the hands of the Executors shall have a Scire facias 3 Cro. 272. Hob 199. 1 Cro. 318. 319 592. 8 Co. 134. contrary where upon such issue it is found fully for the Defendants that they have nothing in their hands LXXXVIII Fordleys Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Tender pleaded 9 Co. 79. Dy. 25. a. 1 Inst 207. Post 69. 70. a. FOrdley brought debt upon an Obligation the Condition was that if the Defendant viz. the Obligor deliver unto the Plaintiff the Obligee at a such a day and place twenty pounds or ten Kine at the then choice of the Obligee c. that then c. The Court was clear of opinion that the Defendant in pleading the performance thereof ought to tender to the Plaintiff as well the twenty pounds as the ten Kine and for default thereof Iudgment was given against the Defendant See the Number Roll T. 29 Eliz. 1. part 324. vide 14 E. 4 4. b. LXXXIX Barker and Pigots Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco EDward Barker brought Debt against Rich. Pigot Executor of the Will of E. Executrix of the Will of R. The Defendant pleaded that he had fully administred the goods of his Testator E. upon which they were at issue Debt which was found for the Plaintiff And it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that here is not any issue joyned which answers to the Action for the Action is brought against the Defendant in the quality of the Executor of an Executor and the verdict extends to the Defendant but is Executor of the said E. for it is found by it that the Defendant hath fully administred the goods of his Testatrix without any enquiry of the Administration of the goods of the first Testator R. in which capacity the Defendant is charged So as here the Writ charges the Defendant in the quality of an Executor of an Executor and in respect of the first Testator and the issue and verdict doth concern the last Testator Execution must follow the nature of the Action And the whole Court was clear of opinion that although that now after verdict Fee-tail be saved and no Iudgment shall be given upon it yet here the Court shall give Iudgment as upon a Nihil dicit in which case the Execution of the Iudgment shall not fall upon the goods of the last Testator according to the verdict but shall follow the nature of the Action which was brought against the Defendant as Executor of an Executor XC Thacker and Elmers Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco THacker recovered in an Assize of Novel disseisin against Elmer certain Lands in Hackney and had execution Re-disseisin and the Judgment in it 1 Cro. 323. Elmer entred upon Thacker and ousted him and Redisseised him Thacker re-entred and afterwards brought a Redisseisin And it was moved whether Thacker against his Entry might have a Redisseisin And the opinion of the whole Court was that he might well maintain the Writ for he is not thereby to recover any Land but the Defendant of that Redisseisin being convicted shall be fined and imprisoned and render double damages Vide Book of Entries 502. the Iudgment in a Redisseisin is Quod recuperet seisinam suam of the Land. XCI Blaunchflower and Fryes Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco BLaunchflower brought debt upon a Bond against Elinor Frye as Executrix of one Andrew Frye her late Husband who pleaded Debt that this Writ was brought 9 July 27 Eliz. whereof she had notice the first of October after within which time one Lawrence had brought an Original Writ against the said Elinor as Administratrix of the said Andrew And after the bringing of the Writ the Bishop of Bath and Wels committed Administration of the goods of the said Andrew to the said Elinor which Elinor confessed the Action upon which Iudgment was given for the said Lawrence beyond which she had not goods upon which the now Plaintiff did demur in Law. And by Anderson the Recovery pleaded in bar shall not bind the Plaintiff because it appeareth unpon the plea of the Defendant that the Administration was committed after the Writ purchased which matter if the Defendant had pleaded Administration granted pendant the Writ Lawrence could not have had Iudgment to recover As where there are three Executors and debt is brought against two of them if they do not plead that matter in abatment of the Writ but plead c. or confess the Action so that the Plaintiff hath Iudgment to Recover that Recovery shall not bind a stranger who hath cause of Action against them but that he may well falsify it and yet it was said that in such Case the Defendant by the obtaining of the Letters of Administration had made the Writ good against her vid. 13 H. 4. Fitz. Executors 118. Administration committed before the Writ purchased shall abate the Writ brought against the Defendant as Executor but such Administration obtained
not set down any place or time of the notification of his contentment for the same is traversable Gawdy The Issue here is non Assumpsit Assumpsit and therefore that matter is out of the Book Cook If one assume to pay twenty pounds to another upon request although the Defendant plead non Assumpsit yet if the place and time of request be not shewed Iudgment many times hath been stayed for no Action without a Request so here without notification of his contentment no Action therefore he ought to shew it Gawdy The ground of this Action is the Assumpsit but that cannot be certain without Declaration and thereof notice ought to be given to make certainty of the duty but not to enforce the promise but in our case without a Request Assumpsit will not lye But here it being but conveyance the certainty of the time and place is not necessary to be shewed but the general form shall serve for it is but inducement As if a man will plead a devise of goods to him and assent of the Executors to take them he need not to shew the time and place of the assent Gawdy at another day said that Iudgment ought to be given for the Plaintiff the Assumpsit is the ground and cause of the Action and the shewing of the contentment is only to reduce the Action to certainty And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CLXVIII Musket and Coles Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. WIlliam Musket brought an Action upon the Case against Cole 1 Cro. 13. and declared that in consideration that the Plaintiff had payed unto the Defendant forty shillings for the Debt of Symon his Son the Defendant promised to deliver to him omnes tales billas Obligationes in which his Son was bounden to him which thing he would not do and it was found by Verdict for the Plaintiff And it was moved for stay of Iudgment because the Plaintiff had not averred in his Declaration that the said Defendant had Bills or Obligations in which Simon his Son was bounden to the Defendant Averment for if there were none then no damage And see Onlies Case 19 Eliz. Dyer 356. D. in consideration that the Plaintiff had expended divers sums of money circa the businesses of the Defendant promised c. Exception was taken to that Declaration by Manwood and Mounson Iustices because it was not shewed in what businesses certain and betwixt what persons Gawdy The Plaintiff here is not to recover the Bills or Obligations but damages only and therefore needeth not to alledge any Bills in certain And 47 E. 3. 3. A. covenants with B. to assure unto B. and his Heirs omnia terras tenementa quas habet in such Counties and for not assurance an Action of Covenant was brought and the Plaintiff declared that the Defendant had broken the said Covenant and that he had required the Defendant to make a Feoffment unto him of all his Lands and Tenements in the said Counties and the plea was not allowed for the Land is not in demand but only damages to be recovered See also 46 E. 3. 4. and 20 E. 3. And in the principal case the Plaintiff had time enough for the shewing to the Iury what Bills or Obligations for the instructing of the Iury of the damages CLXIX English and Pellitary and Smiths Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assault and Battery 1 Cro. 139 140. IN an Action of Trespass of Assault and Battery and wounding The Defendants say that they were Lessees of certain Lands and the Plaintiff came to the said Lands and took certain Posts which were upon the Lands and they gently took them from him S. pleaded that he found the Plaintiff and P. contending for the said Posts and he to part them mollite put his hands upon the Plaintiff which is the same c. The Plaintiff replyed De injuriis suis propriis absque tali causa per ipsos P. S. allegat upon which issue was joyned which was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in arrest of Iudgment that here was not any issue for the Plaintiff ought severally to reply to both pleas aforesaid for here are several Causes of Iustification and his Replication absque tali causa Nomen Collectivum Post 139. Dy. 182. doth not answer to both Cook This word Causa is nomen Collectivum which may be referred to every Cause by the Defendants alledged reddendo singula singulis and their Iustifications are but one matter and the Defendants might have all joyned in one plea. Wray Both pleas depend upon one matter but are several causes for two justifie by reason of their Interest and the third for the preservation of the Peace And by him and the whole Court although it be not a good form of pleading yet by reasonable construction this word Cause shall be referred to every cause and so the pleading shall be maintained And afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff CLXX Cater and Boothes Case Trin. 30. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Intrat Hill. 30 Rot. 58. or 581. IF a Writ of Covenant the Plaintiff declared that the Defendant by his deed bearing date the first of October 28 Eliz. did covenant that he would do every act and acts at his best endeavour to prove the Will of I. S. or otherwise Covenant that he would procure Letters of Administration by which he might convey such a Term lawfully to the Plaintiff which he had not done licet saepius requisitus c. The Defendant pleaded that he came to Doctor Drury into the Court of the Arches and there offered to prove the Will of the said I. S. but because the Wife of the said I.S. would not swear that it was the Will of her Husband they could not be received to prove it Vpon which it was demurred in Law. It was moved by Williams that the Action doth not lie for there is no time limited by the Covenant when the thing should be done by the Defendant for which he hath time during his life for as much as it is a collateral thing See 15 E. 4. 31. if there be not a Request before but admit that the Covenant had been to perform upon request Request then the Plaintiff in his Declaration ought to have shewed an express request with the place and time of it for that is traversable See 33 H. 6. 47 48. 9 E. 4. 22. Gawdy If the Covenant had been eypresly to do it upon request there the request ought to be shewed specially But when a thing upon the exposition of the Law only is to be done upon Request such Request alledged generally is good enough And by Wray the Covenantor hath not time during his life to perform this Covenant but he ought to do it upon request within convenient time but in some case a man shall have time during his life as where no benefit shall be to any of the
magnitudine sufficienti essendi maremium and that the place where they growed was neither Orchard nor Garden It was said by the Court That by the Custom the Copyholder could not cut down such Trees but the Lord might and that the cutting down of such Trees which were not Wast the Copy-holder might justifie without punishment but because by the Verdict it did not appear that the Trees for which the Action was brought were Timber in facto but only de magnitudine effendi maremium the Plaintiff had Iudgment CCCLXVI The Lord Staffords Case Mich. 25 26. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Extent UPon Recovery in debt against the Lord Stafford certain Lands of the Lord were extended by Elegit The Queen because the Lord Stafford was endebted unto her by Prerogative ousted the Tenant by Elegit Fleetwood Serjeant moved the Court in the behalf of him who recovered and surmised to the Court that the Queen was satisfied and therefore prayed a Re-extent but the Court would not grant it because they were not certain of the matter but advised the party to sue a Scire facia against the said Lord Stafford to know and shew cause why a Re-extent should not issue forth the Queen being satisfied c. CCCLXVII Gibbs and Rowlies Case Mich. 25 26. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Tithes SYmon Gibbs Parson of Beddington Libelled in the Spiritual Court against Rowlie for Tithe Milk Rowlie upon surmise of a Prescription de modo Decimandi obtained a Prohibition which was against Symon Gibbs Rectorem Ecclesiae parochial de Nether Beddington and the parties were at Issue upon the Prescription Prohibition and it was found for Rowlie Egerton Solicitor moved against the Prohibition because the Libel is against Gibbs Rectorem Ecclesiae paroch de Beddington and the Prohibition was de Nether Beddington and it was not averred that Beddington in the Libel and Nether Beddington is unum idem non diversa It was said by the Court That upon the matter there is not any Prohibition against Rectorem Ecclesiae de Beddington only and therefore said to the Plaintiffs Counsel let the Parson proceed in the Spiritual Court at his peril CCCLXVIII Russell and Handfords Case Mich. 25 26. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. RUssell brought an Action upon the Case against Handford and declared Quod cum quoddam molendinum ab entiquo fuit erectum upon such a River Nusance de quo one Thomas Russell whose Heir the Plaintiff is was seised in his Demesn as of Fee and dyed thereof seised after whose death the same descended to the Plaintiff by force of which the Plaintiff was seised in his Demesn as of Fee and so seised The Defendant upon the same River had levyed a new Mill per quod cursus aquae praedict coarctatus est and upon Not guilty It was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment That it is not layed in the Declaration that his Mill had been a Mill time out of mind c. And then if it be not an ancient Mill time out of mind Words of Prescription c. it was lawful for the Defendant to erect a new Mill And it was said That these words ab antiquo are not fit or significant words to set forth a Prescription but the words A tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit are the usual words for such a purpose See the Book of Entries 10 11. See 11 H. 4. 200. If I have a Mill and another levies another Mill there and the Miller hinders the Water to run to my Mill or doth any such Nusance Roll. 140. an Action lyeth without any Prescription as it seems by the Book in 22 H. 6. 14. The Plaintiff declared That he was Lord of such a Town and that he and all his Predecessors Priors of N. Lords of the same Town have had within the same Town four Mills time out of mind c. And that no other person had any Mill in the said Town but the Plaintiff and his Predecessors the said four Mills and that all the Tenants of the Plaintiff within the same Town and all other Resiants there c. ought and time out of mind c. had used to grind at the said Mills of the Plaintiff and that the Defendant one of the Tenants of the Plaintiff had erected and set up a Horse Mill within the said Town and there the Resiants grinded c. And it was holden That peradventure upon such matter an Action lyeth because the Defendant being one of the Tenants of the Plaintiff is bound by the Custom and Prescription so as he hath offended against the privity of the Custom and Prescription And as to the Case in question It was the opinion of all the Iustices Hob. 189. Ante 168. 1 Cro. 415. That if the Mill whereof the Plaintiff hath declared be not an ancient Mill that this Action doth not lye upon the matter eo quod cursus aquae coarctatur But yet at last it was holden by the Court to be good enough notwithstanding the Exception Another Exception was taken to the Declaration because that here is set forth the seisin of the Father of the Plaintiff and the Descent to the Plaintiff by force of which he was seised in his Demesn c. without shewing that after the death of the Father that he entred into the said Mill Seisin in fact and in Law. c. so as no seisin in fact is alleadged but only a seisin in Law and if the Plaintiff was not seised in fact he cannot punish this personal wrong but the Exception was disallowed for such a seisin in Law is sufficient for the maintenance of this Action And afterwards the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover his Damages See for the Action it self contained in the Declaration 8 Eliz. Dyer 248. CCCLXIX Cleypools Case Mich. 26. Eliz. In the Exchequer Informations upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Tillage INformation in the Exchequer against Cleypool upon the Statute of Tillage 5 Eliz. setting forth That the Defendant hath converted three hundred Acres of arable Lands of Tillage to pasture and the same conversion hath continued from 15 Eliz. unto the two and twentieth of Eliz The Defendant as to the Conversion pleaded Not guilty and as to the Continuance the general Pardon by Parliament 23 Eliz. upon which the Attorney general did demur in Law. It was argued That that pardon did not extend to the continuance of the said Conversion And first the Barons were clear of opinion That if A. be seised of Arable Lands and converts the same to pasture and so converted leaseth it to B. who continues it in pasture as he found it he shall be charged by that Statute And it is not any good Construction where the Exception in the pardon is excepting the converting of any Land from Tillage to Pasture made done committed or permitted that the Conversion excepted
If now because the Tithes are not expresly named in the Habendum the Grantee shall have them for life only was the Question It was moved by Popham Attorney General That the Grantee had the Tithes but for life and to that purpose he cited a Case adjudged 6 Eliz. in the Common Pleas A man grants black Acre and white Acre Habendum black Acre for life nothing of white Acre shall pass but at will and in the argument of that case Anthony Browne put this case Queen Mary granted to Rochester such several Offices and shewed them specially Habendum two of them and shewed which in certain for forty years It was adjudged that the two Offices which were not mentioned in the Habendum were to Rochester but for life and determined by his death And so he said in this Case The Tithes not mentioned in the Habendum shall be to the Grantee for life and then he dying his Executors taking the Tithes are Intrudors But as to that It was said by Manwood chief Baron That the cases are not alike for the Grants in the cases cited are several intire and distinct things which do not depend the one upon the other but are in gross by themselves But in our Cases The Tithes are parcel of the Rectory and therefore for the nearness betwixt them i. the Rectory and the Tithes the Tithes upon the matter pass together with the site of the Rectory for the term of twenty years and Iudgment was afterwards given accordingly CCCLXXXI The Lord Darcy and Sharpes Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas Mich. 27 28 Rot. 2432. Debt THomas Lord Darcy Executor of John Lord Darcy brought Debt upon a Bond against Sharpe who pleaded that the Condition of the Bond was That if the said Sharpe did perform all the Covenants c. contained within a pair of Indentures c. By which Indentures the said John Lord Darcy had sold to the said Sharpe certain Trees growing c. And by the same Indentures Sharpe had covenanted to cut down the said Trees before the seventh of August 1684. and shewed further That after the sealing and delivery of the said Indenture the said Lord Darcy now Plaintiff Razure of Deeds 11 Co. 27. caused and procured I. S. to raze the Indenture quod penes praedict Querentem remanebat and of 1684. to make it 1685. and so the said Indenture become void And the opinion of the whole Court was clear against the Defendant for the razure is in a place not material and also the razure trencheth to the advantage of the Defendant himself who pleads it and if the Indenture had become void by the razure the Obligation had been single and without Defeasance CCCLXXXII Rollston and Chambers Case Pasch 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Costs where Damages are given 2 Len. 52. ROllston brought an Action of Trespass upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. of forcible Entry against Chambers and upon Issue joyned it was found for the Plaintiff and Damages assessed by the Iury and costs of suit also and costs also de incremento were adjudged And all were trebled in the Iudgment with this purclose quae quidem damna in toto se attingunt ad c. and all by the name of Damages It was objected against this Iudgment that where damages are trebled no costs shall be given as in Wast c. But it was clearly agreed by the whole Court That not only the costs assessed by the Iury but also those which were adjudged de incremento should be trebled and so were all the Presidents as was affirmed by all the Prothonotaries and so are many Books 19 H. 6. 32. 14 H. 6. 13. 22 H. 6. 57. 12 E. 4. 1. And Book of Entries 334. and Iudgment was given accordingly And in this case it was agreed by all the Iustices That the party so convicted of the force at the suit of the party should be fined notwithstanding that he was fined before upon Indictment for the same force CCCLXXXIII Jennor and Hardies Case Hill. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intrat Trin. 27 Eliz. Rot. 1606. THe Case was Lands were devised to one Edith for life upon condition that she should not marry and if she died or married Devises that then the Land should remain to A. in tail and if A. died without Issue of his body in the life of Edith that then the Land should remain to the said Edith to dispose thereof at her pleasure And if the said A. did survive the said Edith that then the Lands should be divided betwixt the Sisters of the Devisor A. died without Issue living Edith Shutleworth Serjeant Edith hath but for life and yet he granted That if Lands be devised to one to dispose at his will and pleasure without more saying That the Devisee hath a Fee-simple but otherwise it is when those words are qualified and restrained by special Limitation As 15 H. 7. 12. A man deviseth that A. Goldsb 135. Shepherds Touch-stone 439. shall have his Lands in perpetuum during his life he hath but an estate for life for the words During his life do abridge the Interest given before And 22 Eliz. one deviseth Lands to another for life to dispose at his will and pleasure he hath but an estate for life And these words If A. dieth without Issue in the life of Edith That then the Lands should remain to Edith to dispose at her pleasure shall not be construed to give to Edith a Fee-simple but to discharge the particular estate of the danger penalty and loss which after might come by her marriage so as now it is in her liberty And also he said That by the Limitation of the latter Remainder i. That the Lands should be divided betwixt the Daughters of his Sister the meaning of the Devisor was not that Edith should have a Fee-simple for the Remainder is not limited to her Heirs c. if A. dieth in the life of the said Edith for the Devisor goeth further That if A. overlives Edith and afterwards dieth without Issue that the said Land should be divided c. Walmesley contrary And he relyed much upon the words of the Limitation of the Remainder to Edith Quod integra remaneat dictae Edithae and that she might dispose thereof at her pleasure Ante 156. for the said division is limited to be upon a Contingent i. if A. survive Edith but if Edith survive A. then his intent is not that the Lands should be divided c. but that they shall wholly remain to Edith which was granted by the whole Court and the Iustices did rely much upon the same reason and they were very clear of opinion That by those words Edith had a Fee-simple And Iudgment was given accordingly Anderson conceived That it was a Condition but although that it be a Condition so as it may be doubted if a Remainder might be limited upon a Condition yet this devise is as
word Children a good name of purchase But the whole Court was against that conceit for these words in the case At the Assignment of Friendship are not void but shew what person should take if the intent of the party should take effect i. he who the Father by Assignment should enable for no Child shall take but he who the Father shall assign that is part of the contract and although by such Assignment no title accrues to the Child assigned yet without Assignment no Child is capable for by the Lease the Father hath such Liberty that he may assign what Child he will And by Wray If the words of the Lease had been at the assignment of the Father within one month and the Father surcease his month Antea 275. the Interest should not vest in any of the Children And by Ayliff Iustice If the words of the Lease had been to the Husband and wife and their Son John where his name is William nothing should vest And peradventure in this case at the Bar if the Father had assigned his Son then born and had assigned him before or at the time of the Lease i. the delivery of the Lease it had been well enough Note that this Action was brought by Cole Lessee of the Son of the Husband and VVife born at the time of the Lease made And afterwards Wray with the assent of all the rest of the Iustices gave Iudgment that the Plaintiff Nihil capiat per Billam CCCXCII Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Execution where joynt where several NOte It was agreed by the whole Court and affirmed by the Clerks That if Debt be brought upon an Obligation against two upon a joynt Praecipe and the Plaintiff hath judgment to recover that a joynt Execution ought to be sued against them both But if the suit were by one Original and several Praecipes execution might be sued against any of them CCCXCIII Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Replevin IN a Replevin The Defendant doth avow for Damage Feasant and shewed that the Lady Jermingham was seised of such a Mannor whereof c. and leased the same to the Defendant for years c. The Plaintiff said That long befor King H. 8. was seised of the said Manor and that the place where is parcel of the said Manor demised and demisable by copy c. and the said King by his Steward demised and granted the said parcel to the Ancestor of the Plaintiff whose Heir he is by copy in fee c. upon which it was demurred because by this Bar to the Avowry the Lease set forth in the Avowry is not answered for the Plaintiff in the Bar to the Avowry ought to have concluded and so was seised by the custom until the Avowant praetextu of the said Term for years entred And so it was adjudged CCCXCIV The Lord Dacres Case Trin. 26. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Ante 227. Stewardship of a Manor Office of Trust Grants per Copy Deputy Steward IN Ejectione firmae the case was That the Lord Dacres was seised of the Manor of Eversham and that I.S. held the place where of the said Manor by copy for term of his life and the said Lord granted the Stewardship of the said Manor to the now Marquess of Winchester who appointed one Chedle to be his Deputy to keep a court ad traden dum the said Lands I.S. being now dead to one Wilkins by copy for life afterwards the said Chedle commanded one Hardy his Servant to keep the said court and grant the said Land by copy ut supra which was done accordingly the copy was entred and the Lord Dacres subsigned it confirmed it It was further found That Hardy had many times kept the said court both before and after and that the custom of the Manor was that the Steward of the said Manor for the time being or his Deputy might take Surrenders 1 Co. 48. 49. and grant estates by copy And if this estate so granted by Hardy were good or not was the question because by the Servant of the Deputy whereas the custom found did not extend further than the Deputy It was argued that the estate granted ut supra was void for a Deputy cannot transfer his authority over for it is an office of trust See 39 H. 6. 33 34. 14 E. 4. 1. and 6 Eliz. it was adjudged That the Duke of Somerset had divers Stewards of his Lands and they in the name of the said Duke made diverse Leases of the Lands of the said Duke rendring Rent and the Duke afterwards assented to the said Leases and received the Rents reserved upon them and yet after the death of the said Duke the Earl of Hertford his Son and Heir avoided them So here the assent and the subsignment of the copy by the Lord Dacres doth not give any strength to the copy which was void at the beginning against which it was said That to take a Surrender and to grant an Estate by copy is not any judicial Act but meerly an Act of service and no matter of trust is transferred to Hardy for trust is reposed in him who may deceive which can't be in our Case for here is an express commandment which if Hardy transgress it is absolute void for nothing is left to his discretion And the admitting of a Copy-holder is not any judicial Act for there need not be any of the Suitors there who are the Iudges And such a Court may be holden out of the Precinct of the Manor for no Pleas are holden which was concessum per totam Curiam And by Ayliff Iustice If the Lord of such a Manor makes a Feoffment of a parcel of his Manor which is holden by copy for life and afterwards the Copy-holder dyeth although now the Lord hath not any Court yet the Feoffee may grant over the Land by copy again And the whole Court was clear of opinion That the grant for the manner of it was good especially because the Lord Dacres agreed to it And Iudgment was given accordingly CCCXCV Burgesse and Fosters Case Trin. 26. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Ejectione firmae the case was 1 Cro. 48 49. That the Dean and Chapter of Ely were seised of the Manor of Sutton whereof the place where c. is parcel demised and demisable by copy according to the custom and by their Deed granted the Stewardship of the said Manor to one Adams to execute the said office per se vel legitimum suum Deputatum eis acceptabilem Surrenders Afterwards Adams made a Letter of Deputation to one Mariot ad capiendum unum sursum redditionem of one I. W. and I. his Wife and to examine the said I. aforesaid ea intentione that the said I.W. and A. might take back an estate for their lives the Remainder over to one John Buck in Fee Note the Surrender ought be de duobus Messuagiis Mariot took two several
Southcotes case Southcotes case So a Title of Cessavit in the Feoffees shall be executed by the Statute So if the King grants to the Feoffees in use a Fair Market or Warren these things shall be executed by the Statute Clerentius case as it was holden in the Case of Clarentius As to the Condition they conceived That it is broken for where the Devisor had allowed to the Devisee to discontinue for life to make a Ioynture to his Wife now he hath exceeded his allowance for he might have made a Ioynture to his wife indefeisable by Fine upon a Grant upon a Render for life c. But this Fine with the Proclamations is a Bar to the former entail which was created by the Devise and hath created a new entail and the former tail was barred by the Fine against the intent of the Devisor Also by this Fine he hath created a new Remainder so as his Issue inheritable to his new entail might alien and be unpunished which was against the meaning of the Devisor And as to the Lease for lives to the Defendants the same is not any breach of the Condition for that is warranted by the Statute of 32 H. 8. which enables Tenant in tail to make such a Lease so as it cannot be said Discontinuance which Anderson and Periam granted But the Fine levied after is a breach of the Condition and then the Re-entry upon the Lessees who have their estates under the Condition is lawful As where the wife of the Feoffee upon Condition is endowed and afterwards the Condition is broken now by the Re-entry of the Feoffor the Dower is defeated And Shutleworth put this case A Feoffment is made upon Condition that the Feoffee shall lease the Lands to A. for life and afterwards grant the Reversion to B. in Fee the Feoffor may re-enter for by this Conveyance he in the Reversion is immediate Tenant to the Lord where by the intended assurance the particular Tenant ought to be Puckering Fenner and Walmesley contrary And by Walmesley By this devise the use only passeth and not the Land it self for the Statute of 1 R. 3. extends only to Acts executed in the life of Cestuy que use and not to devises which are not executed till after the death of the Devisor which see 4 Ma. Dyer 143. Trivilians case See also 6 E. 6. Dyer 74. The Lord Bourchiers case but 10 H. 7. Cestuy que use deviseth That his Executors shall sell the Land now by the sale of the Land in possession for the same is in a manner an Act in his life for the Vendee is in by Cestuy que use and here is a Condition and not a Limitation for the nature of a Condition is to draw back the estate to the Feoffor Donor or Lessor but a Limitation carrieth the estate further And he conceived That the Condition is not broken by this Act for the intent of the Devisor is pursued for his meaning was That the wife should have a Ioynture indefeisable against the issue in tail and that the inheritance should be preserved that both should be observed And he said that this Fine being levied by him in the Reversion upon an estate for life is not any discontinuance but yet shall bar the estate Tail. And the Iustices were clear of opinion that the Condition is broken and also that the intent of the Condition is broken for it might be that Charles had issue by a former wife which by this Fine should be disinherited and a new Entail set on foot against the meaning of the Devisor c. and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCX Simmes and Wescots Case Hill. 31 Eliz. Rot. 355. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared 1 Cro. 147. That in consideration that he would marry the Defendants Daughter the Defendant promised to give him 20 l. and also to procure him all the Corn growing upon such Lands and to provide necessaries for the wedding dinner the Defendant did confess the communication betwixt them and that he promised to give the Plaintiff 20 l. so as he would procure a Lease of certain Lands to his Daughter for her life absque hoc that he promised modo forma The Iury found the promise of the 20 l. but not any other thing it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Assumpsit whereof the Plaintiff hath declared although it consist of divers things yet it is entire and if the whole is not found nothing is found and the Case of 21 E. 4. 22. was cited touching variance of Contract as where an Action of Debt is brought upon a Contract of a Horse and the Iury found a Contract for two Horses the Plaintiff shall never have Iudgment On the other side it was said That the Plaintiff shall recouer damages for the whole that is found i. for the 20 l. See 32 H. 8. Br. Issue 90. In an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared that the Defendant did promise to deliver four Woollen-cloaths the Defendant pleaded That he did promise to deliver four Linnen-cloaths absque hoc that he promised c. the Iury found That the Defendant did promise to deliver two Woollen-cloaths and the Plaintiff did recover damages for the two So in Wast the Wast is assigned in succidendo 20 Oaks upon which they are at Issue the Iury find but ten Oaks the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for so much and shall be amerced for the residue Gawdy Iustice Here are several Assumpstis in Law as Br. 5. Ma. Action sur le Case 108. a man in consideration of a Marriage assumes to pay 20 l. per Annum for four years two years incur the party brings an Action upon the Case for the arrearages of the two years Wray In an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff ought not to vary from his Case as if a promise be grounded upon two considerations Ragula and in an action upon it the Plaintiff declares upon one only he shall never have Iudgment and here the Iury have not found the same promise Clench If promise be made to deliver a Horse and a Cow and the Horse is delivered but not the Cow the party shall have an Action for the Cow but he shall declare upon the whole matter and afterwards Iudgment was given quod querens nihil capiat per billam CCCCXI Stile and Millers Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Tithes 1 Cro. 161 578. 11 Co 13. A Parson Leased all his Glebe Lands for years with all the profits and commodities rendring 13 s. 4 d. pro omnibus exaction ibus demandis and afterwards libelled in the Spiritual Court against his Lessees for the Tithes thereof the Lessee obtained a Prohibition See 32 H. 8. Br. Dis 17. 8 E. 2. Avowry 212. Wray Tithes are not things issuing out of Lands nor any secular duty but spiritual and if the Parson doth release to
yet afterwards he seemed to be of other opinion And as to that which hath been objected That the Lease is void to all intents and purposes according to the words of the Statute for by some it cannot be resembled to the case cited before of the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfeild that such a Grant should bind him and not his Successors for if this Grant in our Case shall not be void presently it shall never be void for the Colledge never dieth no more than Dean and Chapter Mayor and Commonalty To that it was answered by Drew That although there be some difference betwixt such Corporations and that the words of the Statute are general void to all intents constructions and purposes yet they shall construed according to the meaning of the makers of the Act whose scope was to provide for the Successors and not for the present Incumbent and to the utter impoverishing of all Successors without any respect to the party himself as it appeareth by the preamble of the said Statute where it is observed That by long and unreasonable Leases the decay of Spiritual Livings is procured for the remedying and preventing of which long Leases this Act was made and that the Successors should not be bound thereby And these Leases are not void simpliciter sed secundum quid i. e. as to the Successors As upon the Statute of 11 H. 7. cap. 20. Discontinuances made by Women c. shall be void and of none effect yet such a Discontinuance made is good against the Woman her self So upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. concerning Bishops See now Coke Lincoln Colledge Case 37 Eliz. in the third Reports 60. A Lease made by Dean and Chapter not warranted by the said Statute shall not be void untill after the death of the Dean who was party to the Lease So upon the Statute of 13 Eliz. of fraudulent Conveyances such fraudulent Conveyance is not void against the Grantor but against those who are provided for by the said Statute and that the Lease in the principal case is not void but voidable all the Iustices agreed to be avoided by the Colledge or any other who claim by it and by Anderson If such a Lease should be void then great mischief would fall to the Colledge for whose benefit this Statute was made for if such Lease be made rendring a small Rent then if before the defect be found or espied the Rent was arrear the Colledge could not have remedy for the said Rent Also by Periam Such a Lessee might have an Action of Trespass against a stranger who entreth upon the Land which proves that the Lease is not void but voidable and afterwards notwithstanding all the Objections Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff and the chief Authority which moved Periam Iustice to be of such opinion was Lemans case cited before 28 H. 8. Dyer 27. where a Lease was made to a Spiritual person against the Statute of 21 H. 8. and a Bond or Obligation for performance of covenants and thereupon an Action was brought and the Plaintiff therein had Iudgment and recovered which could not have been if the Lease were utterly void against the Lessor and Lessee as the very words of the Statute are and although it is not alledged in the Book that that was any cause of the Iudgment yet in his opinion it was the greatest cause of the Iudgment in that case CCCCXXVIII Bighton and Sawles Case Pasch 35 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN an Action upon the case it ws agreed by the whole Court 1 Cro. 235. That where Iudgment is given that the Plaintiff shall recover and because it is not known what damages therefore a Writ issueth to enquire of the damages That the same is not a perfect Iudgment before the damages returned and adjudged and therefore they also agreed that after such award and before the damages adjudged that any matter might be shewed in Court in arrest of the Iudgment and by Periam Iustice the difference is where damages are the principal thing to be recovered and where not for if damages be the principal then the full Iudgment is not given until they be returned but in Debt where a certain sum is demanded it is otherwise CCCCXXIX Maidwell and Andrews Case Pasch 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. MAidwell brought an Action of Covenant against Andrews Covenant and the Case was this That R. was seised of Lands and leased the same for life rendring Rent and afterwards devised the Reversion to his wife for life and died Andrews the Defendant took to wife the wife of the Devisor the Devisee of the Reversion afterwards Andrews bargained and sold the said Reversion to one Marland and his heirs during his own life and afterwards granted the Rent to the Plaintiff and covenanted that the Plaintiff should enjoy the said Rent during his Term absque aliquo legitimo impedimento of the said Andrews his Heirs or Assigns or any other person claiming from the said Marland Marland died seised and the same descended to B. his heir and the breach of the Covenant was assigned in this i. in the heir of Marland who hath the Rent by reason of the Grant of the Reversion to Marland ut supra the Defendant pleaded the Grant of the Reversion to Marland per scriptum without saying Sigillo suo sigillat hic in Curia prolat absque hoc that the said Reversion and Rent descended to B. and thereupon the Plaintiff did demur in Law and the causes of the Demurrer was assigned by Yelverton Serjeant 1. The Grant of the Reversion is pleaded per sciptum and he doth not say sigillat for a Reversion cannot pass without Deed although it be granted but for years and a bare writing is not a Deed without sealing of it and therefore the pleading ought to be per scriptum suum sigillat or per factum suum for factum suum implies the ensealing and delivery 2. It ought to be pleaded hic in Cur. prolat for the Court is to see such Deed to the end they may know if it be a lawful Deed Traverse 1 Cro. 278. without razure interlining or other defects 3. The Defendant hath traversed the descent where he ought to have traversed the dying seised for of every thing descendable the dying seised is the substance and the descent is but the effect And although the Grant of the Reversion was but for the life of the Grantor yet the estate granted is descendable as 27 E. 3. 31. Tenant by the Courtesie leaseth his estate to one and his heirs the Grantor dieth his Heir entreth and a good Bar against him in the Reversion and see 14 E. 3. Action 56. Annuity granted to one and his Heirs for the term of another mans life the Grantor dieth living Cestuy que vie the Heir of the Grantor brings a writ of Annuity and it was holden maintainable and he said that were the dying seised is confessed and avoided by
Iustice It was a great offence in the Plaintiff but the same ought to be punished according to Law but the Constable cannot imprison a Subject at his pleasure but according to Law i. to stay him and bring him before a Iustice of the Peace to be there examined Wray If the Defendant had pleaded that he stayed the Plaintiff upon that matter to have brought him before a Iustice of Peace it had been a good Plea. Fennor The justification had been good if the Defendant had pleaded that the Plaintiff refused to carry away the Child so all the Iustices were of opinion against the Plea but they would not give Iudgment by reason of the ill Example but they left the parties to compound the matter CCCCLXIII Cole and Walles Case Pasch 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Ejectione Custodiae lieth not upon a Copy-hold Estate 1 Cro. 224. IN an Ejectione Custodiae the Plaintiff declared that A. was seised of the Manor of D. within which Manor are diverse Copyholds of Inheritance and that the Custom of the Manor is that if any Copy-holder of Inheritance of the said Manor dieth his heir within the age of 14 years that then the Lord of the Manor might grant the custody of his Body and Lands to whom he pleased and shewed that one Clevertie a Copyholder of Inheritance of the said Manor died his son and heir within the age of 14 years Hob. 215. Dyer 302 303. upon which the Lord of the Manor committed the custody of his Body and Lands to the Plaintiff and the Defendant did eject him and upon Not guilty it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in arrest of Iudgment That this Action would not lye upon a Copyhold estate Quod tota Curia concessit and yet it was said that an Ejectione firmae lieth upon a demise of Copy-hold Land by Lease of a Copyholder himself but not upon a demise by the Lord of the Copyhold Quod fuit concessum and afterwards the Case was moved on the Plaintiffs side and it was said That this was but an Action upon the Case in the nature of an Ejectione firmae and this interest is not granted by Copy but entred only into the Court Roll so it is not an interest by Copy but by the Common Law for the words are Quod Dominus commisit custodiam c. and doth not say in Curia and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLXIV Bond and Bailes Case Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Judgment upon a Bond where satisfied before a Statute ● Len. 37● Roll. 926. BOnd brought a Scire facias against Bailes Administrator of one T. B. upon a Recovery had against the Intestate in Action of Debt The Defendant pleaded That before the said Iudgment given the Testator did acknowledge a Statute Staple to one C. and that the Son was not paid in the life of the Testator nor after and that they have not in their hands any goods of the Intestate beyond what will satisfie the said Statute upon which there was a demurrer in Law. And Coke argued That the Bar is not good for here is not pleaded any Execution upon the Statute and then the Iudgment the Statute being of things of as high nature that of which Execution is sued shall be first served and if this Action had been brought upon a Bond the Plea had not been good for although that Brian saith 21 E. 4. That Recognizances shall be paid by Executors before Bonds yet that it is to be intended when a Scire facias is to be sued upon it otherwise not And 4 H. 6. 8. in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment fully administred at the day of the Writ brought is a good Plea by which it appeareth That if the Executors had paid the Debt upon the Obligation before the Writ brought it had been good See 12 E. 3. Executors 73. in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment in Debt given against the Testator Enquiry shall be what goods the Executors had the day of the Scire facias and he said it was moved by Anderson 20 Eliz. in this Court. In Debt upon a Bond against Executors the Defendant pleaded that the Testator was indebted by Iudgment to A. and that they had not more than to satisfie the same and it was holden no plea if not that he pleaded further that a Scire facias was sued upon it Wray said The same is not Law and there is a difference when the Iudgment is given against the Testator himself and where against the Executors for where Iudgments are given against Executors the Iudgment which was given before shall be first executed but if two Iudgments be given against the Testator he who first sues Execution against the Executors shall be first satisfied because they are things of equal nature and before Suit it is in the election of the Executor which of them he will pay See 9 E. 4. 12. As if two men have Tallies out of the Exchequer he which first offers his Tally to the Officer shall be first paid but before that it is in the choice of the Officer which of them shall be first satisfied and therefore 19 H. 6. If the Lease enrolled be lost the Enrolment is not of any effect and Pasch 20 Eliz. our very case was moved in the Common Pleas in a Scire facias upon a Iudgment given against the Testator the Executor pleaded That the Testator had acknowledged a Statute before not satisfied Ultra quae c. and it was holden no Plea for a Statute is but a private and pocket Record as they called it and 32 Eliz. betwixt Conny and Barham the same Plea was pleaded and holden no Plea. Also if this Plea should be allowed Conny and Barhams Case great mischiefs would follow for then no Debts should be satisfied by the Executors for it might be that the Statute was made for performance of Covenants which Covenants perhaps shall never be broken and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLXV Crew and Bails Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Iudgment given in the Common Pleas Error 1 Cro. 216. in a Bill of priviledge brought by an Attorney of the said Court upon an Obligation and upon the said Iudgment issued forth process of Execution upon which the Defendant was Outlawed and the Error was assigned in this That upon that Iudgment process of Outlawry doth not lie for Capias is not in the original Action Priviledge and so was the opinion of the whole Court being upon a Bill of priviledge and the Outlawry was reversed and the Error was assigned in the first Iudgment because there were not fifteen days betwixt the Teste of the Venire facias and the return of it but that was not allowed for it is helped by the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 14. CCCCLXVI Wade and Presthalls Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings
Bench. WIlliam Wade brought an Action of Debt against Presthall the Defendant pleaded That he was attainted of Treason Debt Ante 326. not restored nor pardoned and demanded Iudgment if he should be put to answer upon which the Plaintiff did demur It was argued for the Plaintiff that the Plea is not good for the Defendant shall not take benefit of his own wrong A person attainted gives his goods Plea in disability of himself not a●lo●ed he shall not avoid it A Woman takes a Husband thereby she hath abated her own Writ It is true That a person attainted is a dead man it is so as to himself but not as to others 33 H. 6. a person attainted is murdered his Wife shall have an Appeal so as to all respects he is not dead and although as yet the Plaintiff cannot have any Execution against the Defendant yet here is a possibility to have Execution if the Defendant get his pardon As a man shall have Warrantia Chartae although he be not impleaded and yet cannot have Execution but there is a possibility to have Execution 22 E. 3. 19. A Rent granted to one in Fee upon condition that if the Grantee die his heir within age that the Rent shall cease during the nonage the Grantee dieth his heir within age his Wife brought Dower presently and recovered and yet she cannot have Execution but yet there is a possibility to have Execution viz. upon the full age of the heir Coke contr By his Attainder he hath lost his Goods Lands Life Degree for he is now become Terrae filius and he cannot draw blood from his Father nor afford blood to his Son or his posterity so as he hath neither Ancestor nor Heir and as to the possibility the same is very remote for the Law doth not intend that he shall be pardoned and see 6 H. 4 64. A man committed a Felony and afterwards committed another Felony and after is attainted of one of them he shall not be put to answer to the other but if he obtain his Charter of pardon he shall answer to the other See also 10 H. 4. 227. tit Coronae Popham Attorney General The Defendant ought to answer for none shall have advantage of his own wrong The Plaintiff is made a Knight pendant the Writ it shall abate because his own Act but here Treasons are so heinous that none shall have ease benefit or discharge thereby And if the Defendant shall not be put to answer until he hath his pardon then the Action is now suspended and an Action personal once suspended is gone for ever and he cited 29 E. 3. 61. in the Book of Assizes where it is said by Sharp Execution upon a Statute may be sued against a man attainted and he said Execution against a person Attainted That if the Enemy of the King comes into England and becomes bounden to a Subject in twenty pounds he shall be put to answer notwithstanding that interest that the King hath in him Harris Serjeant to the same intent he conceived by 33 H. 6. 1. That Traitors are to answer for if Traitors break the Goal the Goaler shall answer for their escape for the Goaler hath remedy against them contrary of the Kings Enemies Burchets Case and he cited the case of one Burchet who being attainted of Treason struck another in the Tower for which notwithstanding his Attainder he was put to answer Egerton Solicitor General And he said That the Action is not suspended but in as much as every Action is used to recover a thing detained or to satisfie a wrong if it can appear that the party cannot be satisfied according to his case he shall not proceed And in this case the Plaintiff if he should obtain Iudgment could not have Execution by the Common Law Ante 213. for he hath no Goods nor by the Statute of Westm 2. by Elegit for he hath no Lands nor by the Statute of 25 E. 3. by his body for it is at the Kings pleasure and then to what purpose shall the Plaintiff sue and it is a general Rule Regula That in all Actions where the thing demanded cannot be had or the person against whom the thing is demanded cannot yield the thing that the Writ shall abate As in a Writ of Annuity by Grantee of an Annuity for years the term expireth the Writ shall abate Abatement of Writ Tenant in special tail brings Wast and pendant the Writ his issue dieth the Writ shall abate c. 2 E. 4. 1. A man Outlawed of Felony pleaded in dis-affirmance of the Outlawry and yet he was not put to answer until he had his pardon and then he shall answer And as to the Case of 33 H. 6. 1. It doth not appear that the Traitors were attainted and then there is good remedy enough And Burchets Case cannot be resembled to our Case for although that by the Attainder the body of the party might be at the Kings pleasure yet his body may be punished for another offence for the example of others And as to Tressels Case who in such case was put to answer I grant it for he concluded Iudgment if Action and so admitted him a person able to answer and then it could not be a good plea in Bar. And in Ognels Case the Retorn of the Sheriff shall bind them for upon Process against a person attainted they returned Cepi where they ought to have returned the special matter without a Cepi but now this general Return shall bind them and by that he shall be concluded to say that the party was not in Execution And this Plea is not any disabling of the Defendant but he informs the Iudges that he is not a person able to answer to the Plaintiff As in a Praecipe quod reddat the party pleads Non-tenure the same is no disabling of his person but a shewing to the Court that he cannot yield to the party his demand A man shall not take advantage of his own wrong i. in the same thing in which the wrong is supposed or against him against whom the wrong is supposed to be done but in other Cases he shall take advantage of his own wrong as Littleton If a Lease for life be made the Remainder over in Fee and he in the Remainder entreth upon Tenant for life and disseiseth him the same is a good Seisin Cases where a man shall take advantage of his own wrong Marbery and Worrals Case upon which he may have a Writ of Right Littleton 112. 35 E. 3. Droit 30. And yet this Seisin was by wrong And there was a Case betwixt Marbery and Worral in the Exchequer The Lessor entred upon his Lessee for life made a Feoffment in Fee with clause of Re-entry the Lessee re-entred the Lessor at the day came upon the Land and demanded the Rent which was not paid it was holden the same is a good demand of the Rent and yet
hold the Land discharged of the Copy-hold for her life and he put this case If the Lord of such a Manor taketh a Wife a Copy-holder for life dieth the Lord grants a Rent-charge out of the customary land and afterwards grants the said land by copy for life dieth the wife shall hold the land discharged of the Rent but the Copy-holder shall be charged and he put a difference where the Lord grants such Copy-hold in possession and where in Reversion for in the first case the Wife shall hold charged but contrary in the last And he cited the Case of one Slowman who being Lord of a Manor ut supra by his Will devised that his Executors should grant estates by Copy 2. Len 109. and died having a Wife the Executors make estates accordingly Dower discharged of a grant of Copy-hold the Wife in case of Dower shall avoid them Plowden contr the Lord of such a Mannor is bound by recognisance and afterwards a Copy-holder for life of the said Mannor dieth the Lord grants his Copy-hold de novo the said new Grantee shall hold his Copy-hold discharged of the Recognisance which Gawdy Iustice granted and by Wray if the Lord of such a Manor grants a Copy-hold for three lives takes a Wife the three lives end the Lord enters and keeps the lands for a time and afterwards grants them over again by copy and dieth the copy-holder shall hold the Land discharged of the Dower and this is a clear case for the copy-holder is in by the custom which is paramount the title of Dower and the Seisin of the Husband and by him in the case of the Earl of Northumberland 17 Eliz. Dyer 344. That the grant of a copy-hold in Reversion by the Earl of Northumberland doth not make such an impediment as was intended in the condition there for it is by the custom and not by the act of the party And afterwards the same Term Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff that he and his Lessor should hold the lands discharged of the Dower XX. Fringe and Lewes Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. DEbt by Fringe against Lewes upon a Bond who pleaded Debt that the condition was that whereas the Defendant was Executor to one Morris Degle that if the Defendant should perform observe fulfil and keep the Will of the said Morris Degle in all points and Articles according to the true intent and meaning thereof that then c. and pleaded further that the said Morris by the said Will bequeathed to the Poor of such a Town ten pounds to be distributed amongst them and also to the Church-wardens of the Parish ten pounds and to I S. three pounds and that he had distributed the said ten pounds to the Poor and that he had paid the ten pounds to the Church-wardens and as to three pounds Uncore pri●● a good Plea. he said that he is and always was ready to pay the same to the said I. S. if he had demanded it upon which there was a demurrer And as to the ten pounds to be distributed amongst the Poor the same was holden good enough without shewing the names of the Poor amongst whom the mony was distributed so the pleading of the first payment to the Church-wardens was sufficient without nameing of them See 42 E 3. brief 539. Scire facias out of a Recovery against Executors and the Writ was challenged because it was Scire facias Executors not naming their proper names It was holden to be no exception for Executors are as a corporation known in that they are Executors and as to the third part of the Plea scil always ready and yet is the plea is well enough for this Obligation the Condition of which being general to perform the Will c. Poph. 10● hath not altered the nature of the payment of the Legacy but the same remains payable in such manner as before upon request and not at the peril of the Defendant See 22 H 6. 57 58. 11 E 4 10. 6 E 6. Br. Tender 60. And afterwards the same Term the Court was clear of opinion and so delivered the Law to the Counsel on both sides that in this case the Legacies are to be paid upon request and not at the peril of the Executors in such manner as they were before the Obligation and afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff XXI Sir John Smith and Peazes Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. SIr John Smith brought Debt upon an Obligation against Peaze who pleaded that the Bond was upon condition to perform covenants contained in an Indenture and shewed what and that he had performed them the Plantiff assigned the breach of one covenant that where the Plaintiff had leased to the Defendant for years certain messuages by the same Indenture the Defendant by the same Indenture did covenant to repair all the said Messuages Covenant alia quam quae appunctuatae forent divelli per script dicti Johannis Smith and shewed further that the Defendant had not repaired the said Messuages to him demised as aforesaid and averred that the said house in which the breach of the covenant is assigned non fuit durante termino praedicto appunctuata divelli and upon that matter of reparation they were at Issue and found for the Plaintiff It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Averment in the Replication was not sufficient for the Lease was made in November to begin the Michael after Averment and it might be that the Messuage in the not repairing of which the breach of the covenant is assigned was appointed to be pulled down scil divelli before the Term for years began and then the Defendant is not bound to repair it and then the breach of the covenant is not well assigned and so the Averment doth not answer the exception and because this clause alia quam is in the body of the Covenant it ought to be satisfied by him who pleads it scil by him who assigns the breach in the Covenant in which the exception is contained As by the Lord Dyer in his argument in the argument of Stowels Case reported by Plowden 376. Where a man pleaded the Feoffment of Cestuy que use he ought to plead that Cestuy que use at the time of the Feoffment was of full age sanae memoriae c. for that is within the purview contr upon the Statute of 4 H. 7. in pleading of a Fine for that is in a clause by it self which conceit of Plowden the Lord Wray denyed to be Law for he said he that pleads the Feoffment of Cestuy que use or a Fine according to the Statute of 4 H. 7. shall not be driven to shew that the Feoffor or Conusor at the time of the Feoffment or Fine levyed was of full age c. but he who comes in by such Fine 〈◊〉 21 or Feoffment shall shew the same for his own advantage And
at last after many motions it was resolved by all the Iustices Averment ●here super●luous that the Averment aforesaid was superfluous ex abundanti for it had been sufficient for the Plaintiff to have assigned the breach of the Covenant in the not repairing the Messuage without any Averment de non appunctuando and if the house in the not repairing of which the breach of Covenant is assigned was appointed to be pulled down the same shall come in on the defendants part to whose advantage it trencheth for such appointment doth discharge the Covenant as to that In the same plea it was moved in stay of Iudgment that one Sharp Solicitor of the said Sir John in the said suit had given eight shillings to the Iurors mean betwixt the Charge and their Verdict and that matter was testified by the oaths of two men upon which the Court examined the said Sharp who upon his oath denied the matter and also the Foreman of the Iury to whom the mony was supposed to be given who upon his oath denied the same And it was moved if receipt of mony by any of the Iurors should make the Verdict void and by Wray it shall not for it is but a Misdemeanor which is punishable on the person of him who takes the mony But Gawdy and Ayliff Iustices the Verdict is void See 24 E 3. 24. 14 H. 7. 1. 20 H. 7. 30. And for that cause the Iudgment was reversed XXII Cordall and Gibbons Case Pasch 26. Eliz. Intr. Trin. 25. Eliz. Rot. 492. In the Kings Bench. IN an Ejectione firmae upon not guilty pleaded the Iury found the special matter viz. that one Hierom Heydon was seised of two Messuages whereof the Action is brought and came to Cordall the Plaintiff and prayed him to send him ten pounds Cordall asked him what assureance he would give him for the re-payment of it he answered that he would mortgage to him the said two Messuages whereupon Cordall lent him the mony and afterwards they both went to the said two Houses and being before the doors of them Heydon called Tenants at will of the Houses and said to them Sirs I have borrowed of this Cordall ten pounds upon these Houses and if I pay this mony at Michaelmas next I must have my Houses again and if not then I bargain and sell these Houses to Cordall and my Will is that you become his Tenants after which Heydon put the said Cordall into the Houses and seeing him in the Houses he put in the Keys of the said Cordall by the Windows c. And it was adjudged by the whole Court that this conveyance by word of mouth was good enough to pass the estate ut supra and the words of bargain and sale in this Case are as strong as of gift and grant See 38 E 3. 11. 43 E 3. 11. 27 E 3. 62. 28 E 3. 11. XXIII Richards and Bartlets Case Pasch 26 Eliz. Intr. Mich. 25 26 Eliz. Rot. 72. In the Kings Bench. DOrothy Richards Executrix of A. her former Husband Assumpsit brought an Action upon the Case upon a promise against Humfrey Bartlet and declared that in consideration of two weighs of Corn delivered by the Testator to the Defendant he did promise to pay to the Plaintiff ten pounds to which the Defendant said that after the Assumpsit the Plaintiff in consideration that the said two weighs were drowned by Tempest and in consideration that the Defendant would pay to the Plaintiff for every twenty shillings of the said ten pounds three shillings four pence scil in toto thirty three shillings four pence did discharge the said Defendant of the said promise and averred further that he hath been always ready to pay the said sum newly agreed upon which there was a demurrer And the opinion of the whole Court was clearly with the Plaintiff first because that here his not any consideration set forth in the Bar by reason whereof the Plaintiff should discharge the defendant of this matter for no profit but damage comes to the Plaintiff by this new agreement and the Defendant is not put to any labour or charge by it therefore here is not any agreement to bind the Plaintiff See 19 H. 6. Accord 1. 9 E. 4. 13. 12 H. 7. 15. See also Onlies Case 19 Eliz. Dyer then admitting that the agreement had been sufficient yet because it is not executed it is not any Bar And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff XXIV Lendall and Pinfolds Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Trespass for breaking of his Close by Lendal against Pinfold Trespass the Case was that two brake the Close and entred and did the Trespass the Owner of the land brought an Action of Trespass against one of them and had Iudgment and execution accordingly and afterwards brought Trespass against the other Bar. 1 Cro. 667. 2 Cro. 73. 1 Cro. 30. 31. and declared upon the same Trespass And by Ayliff Iustice it is a good Bar and he likened it to the case of one Cobham who brought an Action of Trespass of Assault and Battery and recovered and had execution and afterwards brought an Appeal of Mayhem against the same person upon the same matter the said Recovery and execution is a good Bar c. so here as to the breaking of the close but not as to the Entry But by Wray it is a good Bar for the whole and he likened it to the case of Littleton Pl. 376. A Release to one of the Trespassers shall discharge both Gawdy agreed in opinion with Ayliff XXV Kempe and Hollingbrooks Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Exchequer IN an Ejectione firmae for Tythes the case was upon the Statute of 18. Eliz. Cap. 6. By which it is enacted that no Masters Tithea and Fellows of any Colledge in Cambridge or Oxford shall make any Lease for life or years of any Farm or of any their Lands Tenements or other Hereditaments to the which any Tythes arable Land Meadow or Pasture doth or shall appertain unless the third part at least of the accient Rent be reserved and payed in Corn for the said Colledges c. otherwise every Lease without such Reservation shall be void c. If now the said Statute shall be construed to extend to Leases of such extraordinary pecuniary Tithes which are not natural or paid in kind It was argued that the said Statute is to be intended of Tithes in kind and also of such things to be demised which render Corn Hay c. But the Tithes in London which is the thing demised in our case doth not render any such thing Tithes in London but only mony according to the decree made for payment of Tithes in London in the time of E. 6. And although the words of the Statute be other Hereditaments to the which any Tithes c. Yet the said Statute doth extend to Tithes in gross but they ought to be
the said Goods to the Defendant at London by force of which he took them at London absque hoc that he took them at Coventry and that traverse not holden good for the Defendant by such a gift might justify the taking of the Goods in any place as well as in the place where the gift was made but if in such case the Defendant had pleaded that the Plaintiff delivered the said goods to him at London to deliver them over to A. by force of which he took them at London and delivered them over accordingly in such Cases the Defendant may well traverse the place supposed by the Declaration for by his Plea he hath confessed an immediate delivery of the said goods to him by the Plaintiff and the delivery and the taking all at one time and at one place and it had not been a good plea for the Defendant to say that the Plaintiff delivered to him the said goods at London by force of which he took them at Coventry for the possession is confessed by the first delivery of the goods at London and the supposal of the Plaintiff of a taking in Coventry and the justification of the Defendant of a taking by reason of a delivery at London cannot stand together But if the Defendant plead that the Plaintiff gave to him the goods in London by force of which he took them there there he may take traverse to the place supposed by the Declaration for by the gift it is lawful to the Defendant to take the goods in any place So see 19 H. 6. 35. In false Imprisonment supposed in the County of W. the Defendant doth justify as Sheriff of the County of B. by force of a Writ to him directed to attach the Plaintiff and so he attached him and imprisoned him at C. in the County of B. there the Defendant traversed the County supposed by the Declaration for otherwise he doth not meet with the Plaintiff and the authority of the Defendant doth not extend to the County supposed by the Declaration See also to the same purpose 22 E. 4. 39. by Hussy where the difference is taken when justification is by reason of a Warrant to take goods in any place whatsoever and where in a place certain as to the traverse of the Foundation absque hoc quod praedict Collegium fundatum fuit per nomen Decani Capituli Ecclesiae colleglatae Sancti Petri de Ethelborough apud Westm he hath here traversed that which was not alledged for the placing of the last words of the traverse scil apud Westminst in the end of the traverse seems by common construction to be intended thereby that there is no such Colledge at Westm and not that the Colledge was not founded at Westm for then the traverse should be absque hoc quod collegium praedictum fundatum fuit at Westminster per nomen c. But the most proper traverse that the Defendant could have taken in this case had been absque hoc quod Decanus Capitulum Ecclesiae collegiat de Ethelborough was seised for the Corporation mentioned in the Bill and that which is mentioned in the Bar are not all one but differ in this manner scil in the Bill the Dean and Chapter c. in the Bar the Dean Cannons and Bretheren and perhaps there are two such Corporations and then both cannot be seised and therefore upon the seisin of one of them the traverse shall be taken And afterward Iudgment was given for the Queen L. The Queen against the Bishop of London and Scot. Mich. 28 29. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Quare Impedit 3 Len. 175. THe Queen brought a Quare impedit against the Bishop of London and Scot and the Case was that A. seised of an Advowson in gross holden of the Queen in chief aliened the same by Fine without Licence the Church became void the Conusee presented The Queen without office found brought a Quare impedit the question was if the Queen without office found Office trove should present And it was argued by the whole Court that if the Alienation had been by Deed only that there the Queen without office found should not have had the presentment for upon such an Alienation by matter in fact without Licence no Scire facias should issue without office found of the Alienation Scire facias but upon an Alienation without Licence by matter of Record a Scire facias lyeth before office which was granted by the whole Court And in the last case the Queen shall have the mean profits from the time of the Scire facias returned but in the first case from the time of the office found See for that Stamford Prerogative fol. penult 8 E. 4. 4. It was also moved if the Queen intituled to the presentment as above pardoneth to the Conusee all Alienations without Licence and Intrusions if the estate of the Incumbent be thereby confirmed but the Court would not argue that point but it was adjorned until another day LI. Braybrooks Case Mich. 28 29. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Pines levyed THe Case of one Braybrook was moved which was Land was given to A. for life the Remainder to B. for life the Remainder to the said Braybrook in Fee B. being in possession levyed a Fine to a stranger sur conusans de droit come ceo c. A. dyed if now Braybrook might enter for the forfeiture was the question And it was agreed by the whole Court that by that Fine the Remainder in Fee is not touched or discontinued Co. 1 Inst 251 b. 252. 2 Forfeiture 9 Co. 104. Post 211 212. 1 Cro. 219. 220. but because B. had done as much as in him lay for the disposing of Fee-simple by the Fine and hath taken that upon him the same amounts to a forfeiture And it was also agreed by Anderson and Periam that if Tenant for life in possession leveyeth a Fine c. if the Lessor doth not enter within five years after he shall be bounden Windham contrary for by him it is in the election of the Lessor to re-enter immediatly for the forfeiture or to expect the death of the Lessee LII Willshalge and Davidges Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber WIllshalge brought Error in the Exchequer Chamber En●r upon the Statute of 27 Eliz. Cap. 8. against Davidge upon a Iudgment given in the ●ings Bench Hill. 28. Eliz. and assigned for Error that where Davidge had heretofore brought Debt against the now Plaintiff and declared upon diverse Contracts scil that he had sold to Willshalge such Merchandizes for so many Portugues and such Merchandizes for so many Ducats which in toto amounted to seven hundred pounds Sterling which sum he demanded scil in Sterling many 2 Cro. 88. 3 Cro. 536. Yel 80. 135. 136. and not in Ducats and Portagues according to the Contract And upon the Declaration the said Willshalge had demurred in Law and the Court
in the seisin of the Queen that now is the Church voided by which it belonged to the Queen to present The Defendant did confess the seisin of the Lord Say and the whole matter contained in the Count until the Attainder and pleaded further that after the said Attainder Queen Mary leased the said Manor with the advowson to Rochester and Walgrave for forty years if the said Marquess should so long live who were possessed accordingly and in their possession the Church became void to which Avoidance one Twiniko did present the Defendant who upon his presentment was instituted and inducted Vpon which Plea the Queens Serjeant did demur in Law. It was argued by Serjeant Shuttleworth for the Queen That the counter-pleading of the title of the Queen by the Incumbent without shewing title in his own Patron could not be good nothwithstanding the Statute of 25 E. 3. Cap. 7. before which Statute the Incumbent could not plead any matter which went to the right of the Patronage but only in discharge or excuse of the disturbance and therefore we ought to observe the words of the said Statute sc the possessor shall be received to counter-plead the Kings title and to have his Answer and to defend his Right upon the matter although he claim nothing in the Patronage upon all which words taken together it appeareth that the Incumbent ought not only to counter-plead the title of the King but also to shew and defend his own right and that hath not the Defendant done here For Twiniko of whose presentment he is in the Church doth not claim under the lease made by Queen Mary to Rochester and Walgrave but during their said Lease and their possession of it by usurpation presented the Defendant 46 E. 3. 13. by Finchden The King brought a Scire fac upon a Recovery in a Quare Impedit the Defendant being Incumbent pleaded that after the said Iudgment the King had presented to the said Church I.S. his Clerk who was admitted accordingly and exception was taken because the Defendant did not shew a title in himself to maintain his possession but it was not allowed for a difference is taken betwixt a Plea in a Quare Impedit and a Plea in a Scire facias Where in pleading the party must make title to himself for in a Scire facias it is sufficient to extort the Plaintiff of execution without any title contrary in a Quare impedit And it is a general Rule that in all Cases where an Office is to be traversed none shall be received to traverse the title of the King without making a title to himself which see 38 E. 3. 18. So in the Case of the Lady Wingfield 3 H. 7. 14. and Stamford 63 64. And it is true in Actions real it is sufficient to traverse the title of the Demandant without making title to the Tenant himself As in a Formedon Ne dona pas But in Actions personal it is otherwise as 2 H. 4 14. In Ravishment of Ward it is not sufficient to traverse the title of the Plaintiff but the Defendant ought also to make title to himself Fenner Serjeant contrary who took exception to the Writ 2 Len. 5● because it is brought against the Incumbent only without naming the Patron or Ordinary For here the Defendant hath pleaded that he is Parson impersonee of the Church aforesaid of the presentment of the said Twiniko and that he is admitted instituted and inducted and hath continued in his Church so many days and years in which Case the Writ ought to have been brought as well against the Patron and Ordinary as against him the Incumbent But in some Cases it is sufficient against the Incumbent only as upon a Collation by Lapse 9 H. 6. 32. by Babbington So where the Defendant is disturber without any presentment 7 H. 4. 93. so where the Defendant was deprived and kept himself in 4 E. 4. 18. So where the Pope makes Provision 11 H. 4. Quare Impedit 120. So a Scire facias upon a Recovery in a Quare Imped shall be brought against the Incumbent only 1 H. 5. 8. for by the Iudgment in the Quare impedit the right of the Patronage is bound and the Scire facias is only for the possession which concerns the Defendant only and no other And to prove that by the Common Law a Quare Impedit lay not but upon such special matter against the Incumbent alone it is clear upon the said Statute of 25 E. 3. For before the said Statute the Incumbent could not plead any matter which did trench to the right of the Patronage and therefore we ought not to presume that the common Law was so unreasonable to give an Action against a singular person who could not by the Law shew and defend his own right nor traverse the right of the other party And as to the plea here he conceived that the same plea which the Patron might have now after the Statute of 25 E. 3. the Incumbent shall have but he who is only a disturber not in by presentment c. he shall not plead any matter but in discharge or excuse of the disturbance 47 E. 3. 8. The King in a Quare Impedit counted That King H. was seised and presented one A. King H. died and the Advowson descended to King E. 3. A. died the now King presented B. and now B. is dead so it belongs to the King to present that the Defendant being Incumbent traversed the institution and induction of B. without making title to himself So 44 E. 3. 19. in a Quare Impedit the King declared that he himself was seised and presented one B. who at his presentment was received c. B. died by which it belonged to the King to present to which the Defendant being Incumbent pleaded that the said B. is yet alive and that plea was allowed without other title made to himself Note that at the first Argument of this case that the Court was of opinion against the Defendant because he had not in his plea any interest in the Advowson and by Periam the Patron himself could not have had such plea if he had been party to the Writ therefore not the Incumbent and it is no good pleading in any Action to discover in pleading any wrong as force disseisin usurpation But at length Mutata opinione all the Iustices were agreed that Iudgment should be given against the Queen And the Lord Anderson shewed openly the reason of their Iudgment for here is not bare usurpation pleaded against the Queen but also an estate scil a Lease for years in the said Advowson derived from Queen Mary and that the Avoidance upon which the Action is brought falleth within the said Term so as the Queen who is Plaintiff is encountred with the Lease of her Ancestor against which she cannot make title to present without special matter wherefore Iudgment was given against the Queen LIX Kynters Case Mich. 28 29.
of Lond. in Camera Guild-hall Civitatis pr●ed and demanded 1500 pounds upon such Recognizance acknowledged 20 November 20 Eliz. and upon default of the said Hanmen Owen 25. according to the custom of London used in course of Attachment attached six hundred pounds in the hands of one W. Bolton of Grays-Inn in part of satisfaction of the said debt of one thousand five hundred pounds and now within the year came the said Hanmer ad disonerandum debitum praedicti had a precept of Scire facias against the said Thomas Leigh and after pleaded and demanded Dyer of the said Recognizance and had it quod ipse restitutionem of the said 600 pounds in manibus dict W. Bolton attachiat habere debet And upon the whole Record the Case was thus Rowland Leigh Esquire being seised of certain Manors and other Lands in the County of Glocest had issue Eliz. his Daughter and Heir inheritable to the said Lands and by Indent dated 20 Maii 19 Eliz. granted Custodiam regulam gubernationem educationem maritagium dict Eliz. to the said Thomas Leigh after which the said Thomas Leigh by Indenture 14 Martii 29 Eliz. granted and assign●d the said custody Dyer 190 191. rule government education and marriage and all his interest therein and the said Indenture to Sir John Spencer after which the said Sir John Spencer and Thomas Leigh by their Indenture the 26. of August 20 Eliz. granted and assigned to the said John Hanmer the said custody rule government education and marriage o● the said Eliz. and all their interest in the same and all the recited Indenturs by which last recited Indenture 29 August the said John Hanmer covenanted with the said Leigh that Thomas Hanmer Son and Heir apparent of the said John Hanmer maritaret in uxorem duceret dictam Elizabetham ad vel antequam dicta Eliz. dictus Tho. Hanmer perimplerint suas separales aetates 14 annorum si dicta Eliz. ad id condestendere agreare vellet and afterwards before the said Tho. Hanmer and the said Elizabeth suas separales aetates 14 annorum perimplevissent sc 8 die Sept. 20 Eliz. the said Tho. Hanmer took to wife the said Eliz. the said Tho. Hanmer then being aetatis 13 annorum and no more and the said Eliz. then being of the age of nine years and no more and Tho. Hanmer aforesaid over-lived c. And pleaded further that the said Tho. Hanmer after he attained his full age of fourteen years and before any agreement or assent by the said Tho. Hanmer to the marriage aforesaid betwixt the said Tho. Hanmer and the said Eliz. had at or after idem Thomas Hanmer came to his age of fourteen years scil 10 die Sept. Anno 22 Eliz. ad dictum matitagium disagreavit maritagium illud renunciavit and all this matter was pleaded in Bar as performance of the Covenant contained in the Indenture of defeazance made upon the Recognizance whereupon the Action is brought And concluded his plea unde petit judicium si dictus Tho. Leigh actionem suam praed●ct c. Et quod ipse idem Johannes Hanmer restitutionem dict 600 li sc ut praefert a●achiat habere valeat And all the question here was if this marriage had by this manner and afterwards renounced as is aforesaid be such a marriage as is intended in the Covenant so as the said Covenant be satisfied by it And it was argued before the Mayor Recorder and Aldermen of London in their Guild-Hall by Angier of Grays-Inn on the part of Leigh the Plaintiff and he in his Argument did much rely upon the definition of marriage by Justinian in his Institutions Nuptiae maris faeminae conjunctio individua continens viae societatem and the marriage here in question is not according to the said difinition for the persons parties to this contract are not persons able by Law to make such contract because that non attigerunt annos nubiles Ergo nuptiae esse non possunt but only sponsalia a step unto marriage And there is also rendred one reason of the said definition upon the word individua individuam dico quia non nisi morte aut divortio separandum but the marriage now in question might be dissolved without death or divorce as it is in our case by disagreement And see Jurisprudentiae Romanae Lib. 1. Cap. 33. Societas consortium omni vita inter marem faeminam ad concubitum which is societatis hujus consummatio And as every Act doth consist upon three things 1. Inceptio 2. Progressio 3. Continuatio so is it in the Case of marriage but in this case when Thomas Hanmer took the said Eliz. to Wife that is but an inception but the progression and consummation of it is cut off by the disagreement and he much relyed upon the words of the Covenant s● dicta Eliz. ad id condescendere agreare vellet so as there is not any liberty left to the Defendant for the agreement or disagreement of the Son but he ought to agree at the peril of his Father but if Eliz. will not agree then the Defendant is not at any mischief for in such case the Covenant doth not extend to him and also here the Father is bound that his Son a stranger to the Obligation should marry the said Elizabeth which he ought to procure at his peril or otherwise he shall forfeit his Bond. Egerton Solicitor of the Queen argued to the contrary This marriage as much as concerns this Covenant is to be considered according to the reason of the common Law and not according to the rules and grounds of the Canon or Civil Law not as a marriage to right but as a marriage in possession and marriage in possession is sufficient always in personal things and causes especially where the possession of the Wife is in question 2 Roll. 585. but where the possession of the Husband is in question there marriage in right ought to be and where marriage in possession fals in averment there it shall not be tried by the Bishop as in the Case of a marriage of right where never accoupled in loyal matrimony is pleaded but by the Country for in case of Wife in possession never accoupled in matrimony is no Plea Postea 181. 12 Len 170. 171. ●3 Len. 129. but not his Wife which see 12 E. 3. br 481. A. brought an Action of Trespass against B. and C. B. pleaded that C. is Wife of the Plaintiff and demanded Iudgment of the Writ the Plaintiff by Replication said never accoupled in Lawful matrimony but it was not allowed but was driven to say not his Wife for if C. was the Wife of the Plaintiff in possession or by Reputation it is sufficient to abate the Writ see also 49 E. 3. 18. by Belknap the right of the Espousal is always to be tried by the Bishop but the possession of the marriage not as in Assize by A. and
K. his Wife the Tenant demanded Iudgment of the Writ upon special shatter and concluded so is the said K. our Wife and not the Wife of A. So in a Cui invita by B. and C. his Wife the Tenant pleaded never accoupled in loyal matrimony the same is no answer to the Wife for she demanded in her own right and if he who aliened was her Husband in possession the Wife could not have other Action for Assize doth not lie because he was her Husband in fact at the said time in possession And see also 50 E. 3. 20. adjudged according to the opinion of Belknap And see also 39 E. 3. As to the marriage in right as the case in question is for upon such marriage if the Husband be murdred before disagreement the Wife shall have an Appeal of Murder and a Writ of Dower so where Appeal is brought of the Rape of his Wife although she be his Wife but in possession and not in right 11 H. 4. 13. by Hulls 168. and by Littleton if the Wife be of the age but of nine years she shall have Dower which see also 35 H. 6. and yet Dower shall never accrue but in case of marriage in right for there never coupled in marriage is a good Plea See 12 R. 2. Dower 54. In Dower the Tenant pleaded that the Husband at the time of his death was but at the age of 10 years and the Demandant now but 11 years and yet Iudgment was given for the Demandant for by Charleton the same was a marriage in right until disagreement See 22 Eliz. Dyer 369. A woman at full age marrieth a Husband of 12 years who dieth before the age of consent the same is a good marriage and so ought to be certified by the Bishop and 7 H. 6. 11. by Newton a woman married within age of consent may bring an Action as a feme sole and the Writ did abate Stamford Prerogat 27. 19 E. 3. Judgment 123. In a Writ of Ward the Iury found that the Infant was of the age of 10 years and no more but they did not know whether she was married or not but de bene esse if she be married assess damages one hundred pounds and if not five pounds upon which it appeareth that marriage at such an age is such a marriage upon which the Lord shall recover damages See 13 H. 3. gard 148. such marriage in the life of the Ancestor infra annos nubiles if there be no disagreement shall bind the King And after the death of the Ancestor the heir shall remain in custodia Domini Regis usque ad aetatem ut consentiat vel dissentiat 45 E. 3. 16. In a Writ of Ward the Infant was found of the age of 12 years and the Iurors gave damages 300 marks if he were married and 27 H. 6. gard 118. 47 E. 3. Br. Trespass 420. and Fitz. Action upon the Statute 37. Trespass de muliere abducta cum bonis viri where the wife is within the age of consent and if I be bounden unto another in an Obligation upon condition to pay a sum of mony upon the marriage day of I S. now if I S. be married within the age of consent I am bound to pay the mony the same day although afterwards the parties do dissent and the Wife after such marriage shall be received in a Plea real upon the Default of her Husband and the words si dicta Eliz ad id condescendere agreare vellet are to be understood of an agreement at the time of the marriage and here the time is limited for the solemnization of the marriage scil at or before they shall have accomplished their several ages of 21 years makes the matter clear For it is in the election of Hanmer the Father to procure this marriage scil that his Son shall take to Wife the said Elizabeth at which of the two times he will scil at or before c. to the marriage before c. is as effectual in respect of the performance of this condition as if the marriage had been had after and as the case is the condition could not be better performed for if the marriage had been stayed till after 14 years c. although the marriage doth not ensue yet the Obligation had been forfeited and that the marriage be solemnized just at the age of both of 14 years was impossible for Thomas Hanmer was the elder by 2 years than the said Elizabeth and therfore they ought to be married at such time which might stand with the condition and the same is done accordingly And as to that which hath been objected That now by disagreement the marriage is determined we ought to observe that Hanmer was bounden for the performance of the Covenant and that his son and heir apparent maritaret in uxorem duceret dictam Eliz. ud vel ante c. which is executed accordingly and he is not bounden for the continuance of the said marriage but the continuance of the same ought to be left to the law which giveth to the parties liberty to continue the marriage by agreement or to dissolve it by disagreement And therefore if I am bounden to you that I S. who in truth is an Infant shall levy a Fine before such a day which is done accordingly and afterwards the same is reversed by Error yet notwithstanding the condition is performed c. and afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff LXVIII The Earl of Warwick and the Lord Barkleys Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AMbrose Earl of Warwick and Robert Earl of Leicester brought a Writ of Partition against the Lord Barkley Partition Challenge in which the parties pleaded to issue And now at the day of the Enquest the Defendant did challenge that in the whole Pannel there were but two Hundreders and at the first it was doubted by the Court if upon the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 6. by which it is Enacted That no further challenge for the Hundred shall be admitted if two sufficient Hundreders do appear the Enquest shall be taken But at length the whole Court was clear of opinion that the said Statute did extend but to personal Actions but this Action of Partition is a real Action and Summons and severance lieth in it but not process of outlawry and therefore here four Hundreders ought to be returned so in an Action of Wast although it be in the personalty and therefore the Council of the Plaintiffs prayed a Tales LXIX The Archbishop of York and Mortons Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Archbishop of York recovered in an Assize of Novel disseisin against one Morton before the Iustices of Assize 3 Len. 159. Error upon recovery in Assize upon which Iudgment Morton brought a Writ of Error before the Iustices of the Common Pleas and after many motions at the bar it was adjudged that a Writ of Error upon the said Iudgment
and damages and in an Action upon the Case brought upon that promise the Plaintiff was barred for here is not any consideration for they bailed the Servant of their own head without the request of the Master and the matter which is alledgged for consideration is executed before the Assumpsit and the promise was not before the enlargment and the said bailment was not at the instance Claytons Rep. 45. 1 Cro. 756. or request of the Master And the Case of one Hudson was cited adjudged in the Kings Bench The Defendant in consideration that he was Administrator and natural Son of the Intestate and that the goods of his Father have come to his hands promiseth to pay the debt to the Plaintiff And in an Action upon the Case upon that promise the Defendant pleaded he made no such promise and it was found that no goods came to the hands of the Defendant And it was holden that the consideration that he was Administrator and Son to the Testator was not of any force to maintain the Action and afterwards in the principal Case the Iudgment was affirmed And it was moved by Coke that Iudgment should not be given against the Executor of his own goods if he had not goods of the Testator for the charge doth not extend beyond the consideration i. e. That the goods of the Testator came to the hands of the Defendant But Wray Iustice was of opinion that Iudgment shall be of his proper goods as in Case of confession Kemp Secondary if the Action be brought upon Assumpsit of the Testator Iudgment shall be of the goods of the Testator but of the promise of the Executor of his own goods but the Original Iudgment which is now affirmed was general CXXII Savel and Woods Case Hill. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 71. 3 Len. 203. 265. Post 128. THe Case was That a Parson did Libel in the spiritual Court against a Parishoner for Tythes of such Lands within his Parish the Defendant came into the Kings Bench and surmised and that he and all those whose estate he hath in the Lands out of which the Tythes are demanded have used to pay every year five shillings to the Parish Clark of the same Parish for all the Tythes out of the same place And it was argued by Coke that that could not be for a Parish Clark is not a person corporate nor hath succession But if he had prescribed that they had used to pay it to the Parish Clark to the use of the Parson it had been good Also he ought to shew that the Parson ought of right to find the Parish Clark c. And he cited the Case of Bushie the Parson of Pancras who libelled in the Spiritual Court for Tithes The Defendant to have a prohibition did prescribe that he and all those c. had time out of mind c. used to pay to the Vicar c. and at last a Consultation was awarded because it was triable in the Ecclesiastical Court for both parties as well Vicar as Parson are spiritual persons and the modus decimandi is not in question but cui solvend And at another day it was agreed by the Iustices that of common right the Parson is not tied to find the Parish Clark for then he should be said the Parsons Clark and not the Parish Clark But if the Parson be tied to find such a Clark Challenge and such a sum hath been used to be paid to the Parish Clark in discharge of the Person the same had been a good prescription and so by way of composition and by Clench Tythes are to be paid to spiritual Persons but a Parish-Clark is a Lay-person And afterwards the Court granted a Consultation CXXIII Higham and Reynolds Case Hill. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Trespass the Plaintiff declared that the Defendant 1 Maii 28 Eliz. cut down six posts of the house of the Plaintiff at D. The Defendant doth justifie because that the Free-hold of the house 10 Aprilis 27 Eliz. was to I. S. and that he by his commandment the same day and year did the Trespass c. upon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law because the Defendant did not traverse without that that he was guilty before or after And the opinion of Wray was that the traverse taken was well enough because the Free-hold shall be intended to continue c. Vide 7. H. 7. 3. But all the other three Iustices were of a contrary opinion to Wray But they all agreed that where the Defendant doth justifie by reason of his Free-hold at the day supposed in the Declaration there the traverse before is good enough And afterwards Iudgment was given against the Defendant CXXIV Knight and Footmans Case Hill. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Trespass by Knight against Footman the Case upon the pleading was that one Margaret had issue two Sons Richard and Thomas Surrender of Copy-hold Land. and surrendred to the use of Richard for life and afterwards to the use of Thomas in Fee they both Thomas being within age surrender to the use of one Robert ●ap John in Fee who is admitted Richard dieth Co 1 Inst 248. Thomas dieth having issue A. who is also admitted and enters into the Land and if his entry be lawful or that he be put to his plaint in the nature of a Dum fuit infra aetatem was the Question And Wray was clear of opinion that it was And if a man seised of Copy-hold Land in the right of his Wife or Tenant in tail of a Copy-hold doth surrender to the use of another in Fee the same doth not make any discontinuance but that the issue in tail and the Wife may respectively enter 1 Cro. 372. 380. 391. 483. 717. More 596. and so was it holden in the Serjeants Case when Audley who afterwards was made Chancellor of England was made Serjeant and afterwards it was adjudged that the entry of the Enfant was lawful CXXV Sir Wollaston Dixies Case Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer AN Information was in the Exchequer against Sir Wollaston Dixie upon the Statute of Vsury upon not guilty pleaded Information upon the Statute of 13. Eliz of Usury The Informe● gave in evidence an usurious Contract upon a bargain of Wares The opinion of the Court was that the Information being exhibited for the loan of money that the Evidence was not pursuing nor leading to the Issue And yet the Iury against the opinion of the Court upon that evidence found the Defendant guilty And it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Evidence did not maintain the Information nor prove the Issue ex parte Querentis and it was said there are three things within the Statute i. three words i. bargain loan and cheivizance and these three are several things and therefore if the Information be conceived upon loan and the Informer giveth in Evidence a corrupt
until Michaelmas Term by the Plaintiff himself And Leonard custos Brevium said That the words of the Statute of Westminster 2 cap. 27. Postquam aliquis posuerit se in aliquem inquisitionem ad proximum diem allocet ei esson Imports That the Essoin shall not be taken at the return of the Process against the Iury although the Iury be ready at the Bar. Anderson was of opinion That the awarding of the Nisi Prius ut supra is but a misawarding of the Process and then relieved by the Statute And afterwards the case being moved at another day 1 Cro. 367. the Court was clear of opinion That no Nisi Prius ought to issue forth in this case because that the Plaintiff himself by the adjorning of the Essoin cast by the Defendant until Michaelmas Term had barred himself of all Proceedings in the mean time But afterwards it was surmised to the Court on the Plaintiffs part that he the Defendant was not essoined for the name of the Defendant is Edward Hazel and it appeared upon the tryal that Edward Russel was essoined Amendment but no Edward Hazel and then if no Essoin no adjornment and then the Plaintiff is at large c. and may proceed c. But the Remembrance of the Clark was Edward Hazel as it ought to be and yet it was holden of no effect being in another Term And afterwards the Counsel of the Defendant prayed that the Roll in hac parte be amended according to the Remembrance of the Clark But the Court utterly denied that for no Statute gives amendment but in the affirmance of Iudgments and Verdicts and not in defeazance of Iudgments or Verdicts and afterwards it was resolved by the whole Court That Iudgment be entred for the Plaintiff CLXXXV Sir Henry Goodiers Case Hill. 32 Eliz. Intratur M. 29 30. Eliz. Rot. 2116. IN an Ejectione firmae the Case was Sir Ralph Rowlet possessed of certain Lands for years made his Will and ordained Sir Nicholas Bacon Renouncing of an Executorship Owen 44. Office of Executors 54. 1 Cro. 92. 9 Co. 37. Keeper of the great Seal of England Sir Robert Catline Lord Chief Iustice of England Iustice Southcote and Gerrard Attorney General his Executors and died And afterwards the said persons named Executors sent their Letters to the Chief Officer of the Prerogative Court as followeth Whereas our Loving friend Sir Ralph Rowlet Knight lately deceased made and ordained us Executors of his last Will and whereas our business is so great that we cannot attend the execution of the said Will Therefore we have thought good to move the bearer hereof Mr. Henry Goodier one of the Co-heirs of the said Sir Ralph to take upon him the execution of the said Will. And therefore we pray you to grant Letters of Administration in as ample manner as the justice of the cause doth require and afterwards an Entry was made in this manner in the same Court Executores Testamenti praedict executionem inde super se assumere distulerant adhuc distarent And upon that the said Goodier obtained Letters of Administration and granted a Lease to A. for years of which the said Sir Ralph Rowlet died possessed And afterwards Sir Robert Catline claiming as Executor granted the same Term to another c. and all the matter of difficulty was If this Letter written by the Executors be a sufficient Renunciation of the Executorship in Law so as the Executors cannot afterwards claim or use the said authority c. 2. If the Entry of the said Renuntiation be sufficient and effectual And it was argued by Ford one of the Doctors of the Civil Law That as well the Renunciation as the Entry of it is good and sufficient in Law so that none of the Executors could not after entermeddle And he said That in their Law there is not any certain form of Renuntiation but if the meaning and intention of the Renouncer appeareth it is sufficient without any formal Terms of Renunciation And he put many rules and Maximes in their Law to the same purpose Ego dico me nolle esse haeredem are sufficient words to such intent Non vult haeres esse quin ad aliam transferre debet haereditatem Qui semel repudiavit haereditatem non potest eam repetere Quod semel placuit post displicere non potest Variatio non permittitur in contractibus So that after the Executors have signified to the Officer of their Court their pleasure to renounce the Execution of the Will they cannot afterwards entermeddle nam interest reipublicae ut dominia rerum sint in certo And as to the Entry of the said Renunciation inter acta Curiae distulerint et adhuc distarent that was the error of the Clark. And it is Rule in our Law veritas rerum gestarum non vitiatur Errore factorum And the Lord Anderson demanded of the said Doctor how far those words haeres et haereditas did extend in their Law who answered That haereditas comprehends all Chattels as well real as personal Inheritance as well as Chattels for by their Law Haereditas nihilaliud est quam successio in universum jus quod defunctus habuit tempore mortis suae And afterwards the Court gave day to the other party to hear an Argument of their side but the case was so clear That no Professor of the Civil Law would be retained to argue to the contrary And afterwards Iudgment was given That the said Renunciation and the entry of it was sufficient CLXXXVI Littleton and Pernes Case Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Debt LIttleton brought Debt upon an Obligation against Humphry Pernes who pleaded that the said Obligation was endorced with this condition for the performance of certain Articles and Covenants contained in certain Indentures by which Indentures the Plaintiff first covenanted that Edward brother of Humphry should enjoy such Land until the Feast of Michaelmas next following rendring such Rent at the end of the said Term and the said Humphry covenanted that the said Edward at the Feast aforesaid should surrender quietly and peaceably the said Lands to the Plaintiff and that the said Plaintiff to such of the said Lands as by the Custom of the Country tunc jacebant frisca should have in the mean time free ingress egress c. at his will and pleasure with his servants ploughs c. And as to that Covenant the Defendant pleaded Quod permisit querentem habere intrationem exitum c. in tales terras quales tunc jacebant secundum consuetudinem patriae c. And Exception was taken to this plea because he hath not shewed in certain which Lands they were which then then did lie Frecy according to the custom of the Country which Anderson allowed of but Walmsly strongly insisted to the contrary And he confessed that where an Act is to be done according to a Covenant he who pleads the performance of it ought to
Curiam the same is no offence in the Court but it was an ill act of the Master of the Rolls For we oftentimes have persons here upon Habeas Corpus who are also arrested by Process out of the Exchequer or of the Common Pleas but we will not discharge them before they have found Sureties for their appearance c. and so the said Courts use to do reciprocally and we cannot punish the Sheriff for the Hebas Corpus was first returnable before the Latitat but the party may have an action against the Sheriff but we will speak with the Master of the Rolls c. and afterwards Baill was put in But afterwards another Exception was taken to the Return scil a custodia nostra exoneratus fuit which might be intended as to the Cause in the Chancery only and not for the Cause here for he hath not alledged that he hath not alledged That he was committed to any other in custody and for that cause day was given to the Sheriff to amend his Return CCII. Upton and Wells Case Trin. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Ejectione firmae by Upton against Wells Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff and upon the habere facias possessionem The Sheriff retuned that in the Execution of the said Writ he took the Plaintiff with him and came to the house recovered and removed thereout a woman and two children which were all the persons which upon diligent search he could find in the said house and delivered to the Plaintiff peaceable possession to his thinking and afterwards departed and immediately after three other persons which were secretly lodged in the said house expulsed the Plaintiff again 2 Len. 12 13. Latch 165. upon notice of which he returned again to the said house to put the Plaintiff in full possession but the other did resist him so as without peril of his life and of them that were with him in company he could not do it And upon this Return the Court awarded a new Writ of execution for that the same was no Execution of the first Writ and also awarded an Attachment against the parties CCIII Marsh and Astreys Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 175. MArsh brought an Action upon the Case against Astrey and declared That he had procured a Writ of Entry sur disseisin against one A. and thereupon had a summons for Lands in London and delivered the said Summons to Astrey being Vnder-Sheriff of the same County virtute cujus the said Astrey summoned the said A. upon the Land but notwithstanding that did not return the said Summons Astrey pleaded Not guilty And it was tryed in London where the action was brought for the Plaintiff and it was moved by Cook in arrest of Iudgment That here is a mis-trial for this issue ought to be tryed in the County where the Land is because that the cause is local but the Exception was not allowed for the action is well layed in London and so the trial there also is good Trial. Another Exception was moved because the action ought to be against the Sheriff himself and not against the Vnder-Sheriff for the Sheriff is the Officer to the Court and all Returns are in his Name and I grant that an action for any falsity or deceit lyeth against the Vnder-Sheriff as for embesseling rasing of Writs c. but upon Non feasans as the Case is here the not Retorn of the Summons it ought to be brought against the Sheriff himself See 41 E. 3. 12. And if the Vnder-Sheriff take one in Execution and suffereth him to escape debt lyeth against the Sheriff himself Another Exception was taken because the Declaration is that the said Astrey Intendens machinans ipsum querent in actione sua praedict prosequend impedire c. did not retorn the said Summons but doth not say tunc exist Vnder-Sheriff Snag contrary If a Baily Errant of the Sheriff take one in Execution and he suffer him to escape an action lieth against the Baily himself And that was agreed in the Case of a Baily of Middlesex and Sir Richard Dyer Sheriff of Huntington and his Vnder-Sheriff who suffered a Prisoner to escape the action was brought against the Vnder-Sheriff for it may be the Sheriff himself had not notice of the matter because the Writ was delivered to the Vnder-Sheriff and he took a Fee for it and therefore it is reason that he shall be punished As if a Clerk in an Office mis-enter any thing he himself shall be punished and not the Master of the Office because he takes a fee for it But if the Retorn made by the Baily be insufficient Then the Sheriff himself shall be amerced but in the principal case it is clear That the action lieth against the Vnder-Sheriff if the party will and such was the opinion of Gawdy and Clench As to the other matter because it is not alledged in the Declaration That the Defendant was Vnder-Sheriff at the time the Declaration is good enough notwithstanding that for so are all the Presidents and if the Defendant were not Vnder-Sheriff the same shall come in of the other side See 21 E. 4. 23. And afterwards in the principal Case Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCIV. Hedd and Chaloners Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 1 Cro. 176. 2 Roll. 42. 176. IN an Ejectione firmae by Hedd against Chaloner upon a Demise for years of Jane Berd It was found by especial Verdict That William Berd was seised in fee made a Feoffment to the use of himself for life afterward to the use of his two Daughters Joan Alice in fee and died and Joan entred into the Land and by Indenture by the name of Jane Berd leased the same to the Plaintiff for three years And it was further found That Joan intended in the Feoffment and Jane who leased are one and the same person Wray It hath been agreed here upon good advice and Conference with Grammarians that Joan and Jane are but one Name And Women because Joan seems to them a homely name would not be called Joan but Jane But admit that they were several Names Then he and Gawdy were of opinion it should not be good But afterwards it was said by Gawdy That this action is not grounded meerly upon the Indenture but upon the Demise and that is the substance and the Indenture is but to enforce it sci the lease 44 E. 3. 42. Another matter was moved here the remainder was limited to Joan and Alice in fee by which they are Ioint Tenants and then when one of them enters the same vests the possession in them both Then by the demise of Joan a moyety passeth only to the Plaintiff Wray Here the Term is incurred and the Plaintiff is to recover damages only and no title at all is found for the Defendant and so there is no cause but that Iudgment should be given for
demanded by the name of a house And afterwards the Writ was awarded good but a special Iudgment was given ita quod querens recuperet Messuagium praedict viz. so many feet in length and so many in breadth according to that which was found by the Verdict CCXI. Degory and Roes Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Debt DEgory brought Debt upon an Obligation against Roe as heir to his Ancestor The defendant pleaded That his Ancestor by his deed did covenant with Sir W. Winter and A. Marsh to stand seised to the use of himself for life and afterwards to the use of the Defendant and his heirs and so he had nothing by descent The Plaintiff replicando said non convenit and it was found by special verdict That such a deed of Covenant was made by the Ancestor of the Defendant but the first use was limited to the Covenantor and his wife for their Lives c. And that he delivered the same to I. S. as his deed to the use of the said Sir W. VVinter and the said Marsh if the said Sir W. VVinter would agree to the same and take the charge of it upon him and if he will not agree That then it should not be his deed and further found That Sir W. Winter died before any agreement and it was moved by Periam If the same be presently the Deed of the Ancestor or if it do not take effect till the condition be performed sci until Sir W. Winter hath agreed to it See 14. H. 8. 17 18 19 20 23. And by Walmesly Deeds when to take effect The same is not the Deed of the Ancestor until Sir William hath agreed But by Anderson and Periam although Sir William Winter doth not agree to it yet it is the deed of Roe for although a deed be upon condition ut supra yet because he delivered it as his deed and the Condition is subsequent to it It shall be taken for his deed and the condition after shall be void because repugnant For although that in Estates limited to men the estate may be precedent and the condition subsequent the not performance of the condition may destroy the estate for the estate is always subject to the condition yet it is not so in Deeds for being once the deed of the party it can never cease to be his deed after it is once delivered as his deed Owen Although the same be the deed of the party yet it is not well pleaded he conceived the issue is found against him for the Covenant is pleaded to stand seised unto the use of himself for life the Remainder over To which the Plaintiff Replicando saith non convenit so as the Issue is if any such Deed of Covenant was and the Iury find That the Covenant was to stand seised to the use of himself and his wife c. so as it is not such a Deed as the Defendant hath pleaded for other estates are limitted by it and therefore it shall not be intended the same Deed. Periam The same is not material for the substance of the Plea is Nothing by descent c. and it was adjourned CCXII. The Scholars of All-souls in Oxford and Tamworths Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Writ of Night by the Colledge of All-souls in Oxford against Tamworth Writ of Right 1 Cro. 232. the Writ was Quod clamat tenere de nobis in liberam puram et perpetuam Elemosinam And exeception was taken to it because it ought to be in liberam Eleemosinam sans pura perpetua also it ought to be Eleemosina with a Double e and not Elemosina with a single e but the exception was not allowed For as to the first Exception it is but surplusage and as to the other It is the common course Another exception was taken to the Writ because the words are quod clamat esse jus haereditatem suam without saying in jure Collegii Anderson The Writ is good enough If a Parson plead that he is seised he shall say in jure Ecclesiae for he hath two capacities and without such words here shall be intended seised in his own Right But if an Abbot plead that he was seised there needs not such words for he hath no other capacity so of Dean and Chapter Mayor and Comminalty And afterwards the Writ was awarded good and that the Tenant should answer over c. See Book Entries 236 237. It was also moved If the Colledge shall count of its seisin within 30 years because that the Corporation never dies and then if he count of its own possession the same is without limitation And it was holden that if the Guardian of the Colledge which now is was ever seised he ought to count upon a seisin within thirty years But upon the seisin of his Predecessor he ought to count of a seisin within 60 years as another common person for the change of the Teste of such a seisin is as the dying seised and descent of a common person CCXIII. The Lord Buckhurst and the Bishop of Winchesters Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In Communi Banco Quare Impedit THe Lord Buckhurst brought a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Winc. and counted that he was seised of the Manor of D. to which the Advowson was appendant and that the said Church became void and that he presented Maurice Sackvil his Clark. The Defendant pleaded that he was seised of the said Advowson as in gross and presented one Maurice Sackvil absque hoc that the Advowson was appendant It was moved that the Defendant ought to traverse the Presentment and not the Appendancy especially as the cause is here where they both present one and the same person To which it was said that that doth not appear for the Defendant hath pleaded that he presented Maurice Sackvil but doth not say praedict Maurice Sackvil so as it may be he is not the same person but another See 10 H. 7. 27. The Traverse is well taken contrary where the Plaintiff declares of an Advowson in gross and that he to the same presented and the Defendant pleadeth that he is seised of such a Manor to which the Advowson is appendant c. without that that the Advowson is in gross there he shall traverse the presentment for the presentment shall make it in gross See 13 H. 8. 12. CCXIV. Jennings and Winches Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Assumpsit IN an Action upon the Case by Jennings against Winch. The Plaintiff declared upon an Assumpsit by the Defendant 1 Maii. 32. Eliz. and counted upon a Mutuatus for twenty shillings and an Indebitatus for four pounds The Defendant pleaded that he being endebted to the Plaintiff in five pounds and W. S. in another five pounds they became bounden to the Plaintiff in twenty pounds for the payment of ten pounds in satisfaction of the said sum of five pounds and
Executor of an Administrator 1 Cro. 121. Yel 20. 9 Co. 87. Administratrix of Joan Webb and declared of a Contract without specialty The Defendant pleaded That she had fully administred and it was found against her And now it was moved for the Defendant That upon the matter an action of Debt doth not lye against the Executor or Administratrix which was granted by the Court. But the doubt was If now forasmuch as the Defendant by pleading the plea above hath admitted the action she shall now take advantage of the Law in that point For the reason why this action doth not lye against an Executor or Administrator is because the Testator himself might have waged his Law if he had been impleaded upon it and by intendment of Law the Executor or Administrator cannot have notice of such a Debt or of the discharge of it But now by answering to the Declaration as above the Defendant hath taken notice of the Debt and in manner confessed it And by Rhodes and Anderson Iudgment shall be given against the the Plaintiff because it is apparent to the Court that the action doth not lye And by Anderson If Iudgment be entred against the Administratrix in such an action upon Nihil dicit the Court ex officio shall give judgment against the Plaintiff Periam and Windham doubted at the first that the Defendant by her plea had admitted the whole matter upon the specially administred pleaded and had taken notice of the Debt 41 E. 3. 13. 46 E. 3. 10 11. 13 E. 4. 25. 13 H. 8. Fitz. Execut. 21. And afterwards Anderson ex assensu of the other Iudges caused to be entred Querens capiat nihil per breve CCXXX Hambleden and Hambledens Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intrat Mich. 29. 30 Eliz Devises 1 Cro. 163. 1 And. 381. THe case was William Hambleden the Father of the Plaintiff and the. Defendant was seised of the Lands c. And by his Will devised to his Eldest Son Black Acre to his second Son White Acre and to his third Green Acre in tail And by his said Will further willed That in Case any of my said Sons do dye without issue that then the Survivor be each others heir The Eldest son dieth without issue c It was moved by Gawdy Serjeant That the second Son shall have Black Acre in tail and he cited the Case 30 E. 3. 28. propinquioribus haeredibus de sanguine puerorum for the construction of such devises Walmesley argued That both the surviving Brothers should have the said Black Acre for the words of the devise are quilibet supervivens which amounts to uterque and the Court was in great doubt of this point And they conceived That the estate limited in Remainder to the Survivor c. is a fee-simple by reason of the words Each others heir And also they conceived That both the Survivors should not have the Land for the same is contrary to the express words of the devise The Survivor shall be each others heir in the singular number see 7 E. 6. Br. Devise 38. A man seised of Land hath issue three Sons and deviseth part of his Lands to his second Son in tail Heb. 75. and the residue to his third son in tail and willeth That none of them shall sell the Land but that each shall be heir to the other The second son dieth without issue the same Land shall not revert to the eldest Son but shall remain to the third son 1 Len. 261. notwithstanding the words each shall be heir to the other CCXXXI Slywright and Pages Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Maintenance More 266. 1 And. 201. Golds 101 102. AN Information was in the Common Pleas by John Slywright against Page upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. of Maintenance and declared that the Defendant took a Lease of one Joan Wade of certain Lands whereas the said Joan was not seised nor possessed thereof according to the Statute and upon Not guilty the Iury found this special matter That Edmund Wade was seised and made a Feoffment in fee thereof unto the use of himself and of the said Joan who he then intended to marry and the heirs of the said Edmund The marriage took effect Edmund enfeoffed a Stranger who entred Edmund died Joan not having had possession of the said Land after the death of Ed. her husband nor bing now in possession by Indenture demised the said Land to the Defendant for years without any Entry or delivery of the Indenture upon the Land The said Defendant knowing the said Joan never had been in possession of the said Land and also the Defendant being Brother of the half blood to the said Joan. The first Question was If the Lease being made by one out of possession and not sealed or delivered upon the Land and so not good in Law as to pass any interest be within the Statute aforesaid And the whole Court was clear of opinion that it was for by colour of this pretended Lease such might be undertaken advanced to the trouble disquiet of the possession for amongst the vulgar people it is a Lease it is a Lease by Reputation Another matter was moved because that the entry of the wife is now made lawful by 32 H. 8. and then she might well dispose of the Land. But as to that It was said by the whole Court That the meaning of the Statute was to repress the practises of many That when they thought they had title or right unto any Land they for the furtherance of their pretended Right conveyed their interest in some part thereof to great persons and with their countenance did oppress the possessors And although here the Lease was made by the said Joan to her Brother of the half blood yet by the clear opinion of the Court the Lease is within the danger of the Statute and yet in some Case the Son may maintain his Father the Kinsman his Kinsman And note in this case it was holden by the Iustices That of necessity it ought to be found by verdict That the Defendant knowing that the Lessor never had been in possession And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCXXXII Brokesby against Wickham and the Bishop of Lincoln Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Quare Impedit the Plaintiff counted Quare Impedit 3 Len. 256. 1 Cro. 173. Owen 85 86. Popham 189. That Robert Brokesby was seise of the Advowson and granted the next Avoidance to the Plaintiff and Humphrey Brokesby and that afterwards the Church became void and after during the avoidance Humphrey released to the Plaintiff and so it belongs to him to present And upon this count the Defendant did demar in Law. For it appeareth upon the Plaintiffs own shewing that Humphrey ought to have joined with the Plaintiff in the action for the Release being made after the Church became void
their no cause of Action CCXXXVI Salway and Lusons Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. MAtthew Salway brought a Writ of Right against Luson Writ of Right 2 Len. 36. and the Writ was Messuag 200. acr jampnor bruerae And exception was taken to the Writ because jampnor bruerae are counted together where they ought to be distinguished severally As so many acr jampnor and so many acr bruer although it were objected on the part of the demandant in the maintenance of the Writ that in the Register the Writ of Right is reditu unius librae of Cloves and Mace together Abatement of a Writ without distinction or severance And it was said that in a Writ of Right we ought to follow the Register and therefore a Writ of Right was abated because this word Pomarium was put in the Writ for in the Register there is no such Writ because the word Gardinum comprehends it But in other Writs as Writs of Entry c. it is otherwise See the Case of the Lord Zouch 11 Eliz. 353 In a Writ of Entre sur disseisin mille acr jampnor bruer But this exception was not allowed for it may be that jampnor bruer are so promiscuous that they cannot be distinguished Vide 16 H. 7. 8. 9. The respect the Iustices had to the Register was such as they changed their opinions and conformed the same to the Register Another exception was taken to the Writ because thereby the Demandant doth demand Duas partes Custodiae del Hay in the Forrest of C. And the Court was of opinion that the Writ ought to be Officium Custodiae duarum partium de Hay c. and not Duas partes Custodiae As Advocationem duarum partium Ecclesiae And not Duas partes Ecclesiae Another Exception because the Writ was duas partes c. in tribus dividend where it should be Divis for Dividend is not in any Writ but only in a Writ of Partition And by Windham the parts of this Office are divided in Right which the Court granted Another Exception was taken because that in the Writ it is not set down in what Town the Forrest of C. is so as the Court doth not know from whence the Visne should come For no Venire shall be de vicineto Forestae as de vicineto Hundredi 1 Cro. 200. Manerii And the same was holden to be a material Exception Another Exception was taken Visne because a Writ of Right doth not lye of an Office for at the Common Law an Assise did not lye of it but now it doth by the Statute of West 2. Cap. 25. for it was not Liberum ten but the party grieved was put to his Quod permittat And of this opinion was the whole Court. CCXXXVII Smith and Lanes Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Queen was seised of a Manor whereof Bl. acr was holden by Copy in Fee the Queen leased Bl. acr to B. for one and twenty years who assigned the same to the Copyholder who accepted of it The Queen granted Bl. acr to C. in Fee Copyholder determined by acceptance of a Lease 2 Co. 16 17. the term expired C. entred and his entry was holden to be congeable for by acceptance of the sam Term the Customary Estate was determined as if the Copy-holder had accepted it immediatly from the Queen It was also holden by the Court that a Lease for years under the Seal of the Exchequer may be pleaded and that without making mention of the Commission by which the Court of Exchequer is authorized to make such Leases And so are all the Presidents as well in this Court as in the Court of Exchequer And whereas the Court was upon the point of giving their Iudgment It was objected by Shuttleworth Serjeant That here is pleaded a Bargain and Sale of Land without saying pro quadam pecuniae summa And he stood much upon the Exception and the Court also doubted of it and demanded of the Prothonotaries what is their form of pleading Bargain and Sale and consideration of it And by Nelson cheif Prothonotary these words Pro quadam pecuniae summa ought to be in the pleading Scot Prothonotary contrary Anderson conceived it was either way good but Pro quadam pecuniae summa is the best And so Leonard Custos Brevium conceived And the opinion of the Iustices was that a Bargain and Sale for dives Causes and Considerations is not good without a sum of money 1 Co. Mildmays Case And by Windham Bargain and Sale Pro quadam pecuniae summa although no money be paid is good enough for the payment or not payment is not traversable And by Periam If Pro quadam pecuniae summa be not in the Indenture of Bargain and Sale yet the payment thereof is averrable And for this Exception the Iudgment was stayed CCXXXVIII Bedel and Moores Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber Action upon the Case for not performing an Award BEdel brought an Action upon the Case against Moore in the Kings-Bench and declared That the Defendant did assume to perform the Award of J.S. and assumed also that he would not sue Execution upon a Iudgment which he had obtained against the Plaintiff in an Action of Account c. And shewed further that the Award was made c. which Award in Law was utterly void and that the Defendant had not performed the said Award and also that he had sued Execution against the Plaintiff 10 Co. 131. 5 Co. 108. The Defendant pleaded Non-assumpsit and it was found for the Plaintiff and Iudgment given accordingly Vpon which Moore brought a Writ of Error in the Exchequer-chamber upon the Statute of 27 Eliz. And assigned Error Error because the Plaintiff had declared upon two Breaches whereas for one of them there was not any cause of Action for the Award is void in Law then no breach could be assigned in that and then when the Iury hath assessed Damages intirement for both breaches whereas for one there was not any cause of Action by the Law the Verdict was void then the Iudgment given upon it reversable for it is not reason that the Plaintiff have Damages for such matter for which the Law doth not give an Action And if the Iury had assessed damages severally viz. For the not performance of the Award so much Damages and for the suing forth Execution so much then the Iudgment had been good and the damages assessed for the not performance c. void Manwood Chief Baron The verdict is well enough for here the whole Assumpsit is put in issue and there is but one issue upon the whole Assumpsit but if several issues had been joined upon these several points of the Assumpsit and both had been found for the Plaintiff and damages assessed entirely for both breaches then was the Iudgment reversable for being several
case And at another day it was objected That the Deed could not be acknowledged without a Letter of Attorney being a Corporation which consisted upon divers persons as Prioress and Covent and they are alwaies to be intended to be in their Chapter-house and cannot come into Court to acknowledge a Deed To which it was answered by Cook That this acknowledgment being generally pleaded it shall be intended that it was done by a Lawful means and there is no doubt but that such a Corporation may levy a Fine and make a Letter of Attorney to acknowledge it and see 2 Ma. Fulmerstones case 105. It was further objcted 2 Inst 674. That this Deed was enrolled the same day that it beareth date for the pleading is per factum suum gerens Datum 2 Novemb. 29 Hen. 8. et iisdem die anno irrotulat And by the Statute such a Deed ought to be enrolled within six Months next after the date so as the day of the date is excluded and so it is not enrolled within six Months As to that it was answered by Cook That the time of computation doth begin presently after the delivery of the Deed as in the common Cases of Leases If a man makes a Lease for years to begin from the day of the date the same is exclusive but if it be To have and to hold from the date of the Deed it shall begin presently And an Ejectment supposed the same day is good and then here this Enrolment is within the six Months Dyer 220. b. 1 Cro. 717. and yet see 5 Eliz. 128. Dyer Pophams case It was also objected That it is alledged in the conusans That the Manor was sold to the Lord Audley and that the Deed of Bargain and Sale was acknowledged and enrolled in the Chancery the said Lord being then Lord Chancelor and he cannot take an acknowledgment of a Deed or enrolment of it to himself for he is the Sole Iudge in the said Court so as the Deed is acknowledged before himself and enrolled before himself and that is good enough for here we are not upon the common Law but upon the Statute and here the words of the Statute are performed And the enrolment of the Deed is not the substance of the Deed but the Deed it self Also the acknowledgment of the Deed after it is enrolled is not material for he is estopped to say that it is not acknowledged And as to the matter it self a man shall not have averment against the purport of a Record but against the operation of a Record as not put in view not comprised partes ad finem nihil haberunt c. And against Letters Pattens of the King Non concessit is a good plea which see 18 Eliz. for by such plea it is agreed that it is a Record but that nihil operatur CCLVIII. Osborn and Kirtons Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Rot. 258. IN Debt upon an Obligation The Defendant cast a Protection Debt upon which the Plaintiff did demur Tanfield The Protection is not good for the Defendant is let to Bail and so is intended always in prison for so the Record makes mention and then the Protection quia moratur in portubus Zeland is against the Record Protection and the Court ought to give credit to Records especially Secondly The words of the Protection are That Kirton is imployed in Obsequio nostro which is no cause of protection for the usual form and so is the Law that such a person be imployed in negotio Regni for the defence of England c. For if the King will give aid unto another Princes Subjects employed in such service he shall not have Protection And afterwards variance was objected betwixt the Bill and Declaration and the Protection for the Bill is against John Kirton of A. Gentleman the Protection is John Kirton only But the same was holden no such variance being only in the Addition for before the Statute 1 H 5. additions were not necessary in any actions CCLIX Boyton and Andrews Case Mich. 30 Eliz. Rot. 156. In the Kings Bench. IN Debt upon an Obligation the Condition was Debt 1 Cro. 135. to make sufficient assurance of certain Lands to the Obligee before the tenth day of March 17 Eliz. And if it fortune the said Obligee be unwilling to receive or mislike such assurance but shall make Request to have one hundred pounds for satisfaction thereof Then if upon such Request the Obligor pay one hundred pounds within five months That then the Obligation shall be void And at the day the Obligee doth refuse the assurance and afterwards 27 Eliz. request is made to have the hundred pounds It was the clear opinion of the whole Court That the said Request was well enough for the time and he might make it at any time during his life he is not restrained to make it before the day in which the Assurance is to be made and afterwards judgment was given for the Plaintiff CCLX Knight and Savages Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. Rot. 546. In the Kings Bench. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Iudgment given in Leicester in Debt Tanfield assigned Error Error 2 Cro. 206. 2 Cro. 109. 654. Sty 91. Yel 164. 165. Post 302. because in that Suit there was not any plaint and in all inferior Courts the plaint is as the original at the common Law and without that no process can issue forth And here upon the Record nothing is entred but that the Defendant summonitus fuit c. and therefore the first entry ought to be A. B. queritur adversus C c. Clench A Plaint ought to be entred before process issueth the summons which is entred here is not any plaint and for that cause the Iudgment was reversed It was said That after the Defendant appeared a Plaint was entred but it was said by the Court That that shall not mend the matter for there ought to be a plaint out of which the process shall issue as in the Courts above out of the original Writs CCLXI Kirby and Eccles Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 137. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared Quod cum quaedam communicatio fuisset betwixt the Plaintiff and one Cowper That Cowper should mast certain Hogs for the Plaintiff the Defendant did promise That in consideration that the Plaintiff promised give unto the Defendant three shillings and four pence for the fatting of every Hog That the said Hogs should be redelivered to him well fatted to which promise and warranty the Plaintiff giving faith delivered to the said Cowper one hundred and fifty Hogs to be masted and that one hundred of them were delivered back but the residue were not It was moved That here is not any consideration for which the Defendant should be charged with any promise but it was argued on the other side That the Promise was the cause
upon a Deed. Hutt 102. Dy. 91. 2 Co. 61. 1 Ma. Dyer 91. and also the wife by her disagreement to it and the occupation of the Land after the death of her Husband hath made it the Lease of the Husband only CCLXXV Rockwood and Rockwoods Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Assumpsit 1 Cro. 163. IN an Action upon the case the case was this The Father of the Plaintiff and Defendant being sick and in danger of death and incending to make his Will In the presence of both his Sons the Plaintiff and Defendant declared his meaning to be To devise to the Plaintiff his younger Son a Rent of 4 l. per annum for the term of his life out of his Lands and the Defendant being the eldest Son the intention of his Father being to charge the Land with the said Rent offered to his Father and Brother That if the Father would forbear to charge the Land with the said Rent he promised he would pay the 4 l. yearly to his Brother during the life of his Brother according to the intention of his said Father Whereupon the Father asked the Plaintiff if he would accept of the offer and promised of his Brother who answered he would whereupon the Father relying upon the promise of his said eldest Son forbore to devise the said Rent c. so as the Land descended to the Eldest Son discharged of the Rent and the opinion of the whole Court in this case was clear that upon the whole matter the action did well lye CCLXXVI Petty and Trivilians Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Livery of seisin HUmphrey Petty brought Second Deliverance against William Trivilian and upon especial verdict the case was That A. was seised of certain Land and Leased the same for years and afterwards made a Deed of Feoffment unto B. and a Letter of Attorney to the Lessee C. and D. conjunctim vel divisim in omnia singula terras et Tenementa intrate et seisinam inde c. secundum formam Chartae c. Lessee for years by himself makes Livery and seisin in one part of the Land and C. in another part and D. by himself in another part It was first agreed by the Iustices that by that Livery by Lessee for years his Interest and Term is not determined for whatsoever he doth he doth it as an Officer or Servant to the Lessor Secondly It was agreed That these several Liveries were good and warranted by the Letter of Attorney especially by reason of these words In omnia singula c. So as all of them and every of them might enter and make Livery in any and every part And so it was adjudged CCLXXVII Rigden and Palmers Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. RIgden brought a Replevin against Palmer who avowed for damage feasant in his Freehold The Plaintiff said Replevin That long time before that Palmer had any thing he himself was seised until by A. B. and C disseissed against whom he brought an Assise and recovered Avowry and the estate of the Plaintiff was mean between the Assise and the recovery in it The Defendant said That long time before the Plaintiff had any thing One Griffith was seised and did enfeoff him absque hoc that the said A. B. and C. vel eorum aliquis aliquid habuere in the Lands at the time of the Recovery Walmsley Iustice was of opinion That the Bar unto the Avowry was not good for that the Plaintiff hath not alledged That A.B. and C. Ter-Tenants tempore recuperationis and that ought to be shewed in every recovery where it is pleaded And then when the Defendant traverseth that which is not alledged it is not good Windham contrary For the Assise might be brought against others as well as the Tenants as against disseisors But other real actions ought to be brought against the Ter-Tenants only and therefore it needs not to shew that they were Ter-Tenants at the time of the Recovery and also the traverse here is well enough Another Exception was taken because the Avowry is That the place in which conteineth an 100 Acres of Land The Plaintiff in bar of the Avowry saith that the place in which c. conteins 35 Acres c. but that Exception was not allowed for it is but matter of form is helped by the Statute of 27 Eliz. Another Exception was taken as to the hundred of Cattel and doth not shew in certain if they were Ewes Sty 71. 264. or Lambs or how many of each which also was dissallowed for the Sheriff upon Returno habendo may enquire what cattel they were in certain and so by such means the Avowry shall be reduced to certainty CCLXXVIII RUssell and Prats Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber RUsell brought an action upon the case against Prat and declared That certain goods of the Testator casually came to the Defendants hands and upon matter in Law Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff sed quia nescitur quae damna Error c. Ideo a writ of Enquiry of Damages issued and now Prat brought a Writ of Error in the Exchequer Chamber upon the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 8. But note That the Iudgment was given before the said Statute but the Writ of Enquiry of Damages was retorned after the said Statute Writ of Enquiry of Damages the said Statute doth not extend but to Iudgments given after the making of it And it was moved That the said Iudgment is not to be examined here but by the clear opinion of Anderson Manwood Windham Walmesley Gent and Clark Iustices of the Common Pleas and Barons of the Exchequer the Writ of Error lyeth here by the Statute 1 Cro. 235. for in an action of Trespass as this case is full judgment is not given until the Writ of damages be retorned And if before the Retorn of it any of the parties dieth the Writ shall abate and the first Iudg●ent which is given before Award of the Writ is not properly a Iudgment but rather a Rule and order and so in a Writ of accompt where Iudgment is given that the Defendant computet cum querente he shall not have Error upon that matter for it is not a full Iudgment See 21 E. 3. 9. So as to the Iudgment in a Writ of Trespass scil That no Writ of Error lyeth before the second Iudgment after the Return of the Writ of Enquiry of Damages are given And also it was holden by all the said Iustices and Barons That an Executor shall have an action upon the case de bonis testatoris casually come to the hands and possession of another Action de bonis Testatoris and by him converted to his own use in the life of the Testator and that by the Equity of the Statute of 4 E. 3. 7. de bonis asportatis in vita Testatoris
haeredes nostros upon challenge it was rejected and the party charged and sworn And if the King grant to me to appropriate an advowson which in truth is holden of the King such a grant is void if there be not special words by which it might appear that the King had notice of it and that his intent was that the grant should extend unto it 16 E. 3. Grants 58. 33 E. 3. Grants 103. So here the Presentment is a special chattel and is not usually intended or thought upon when men speak generally of goods and chattels But admit that it be yet the Plea doth not lye in the Defendants to plead for they do not derive any Interest under this grant but are meer strangers to it and therefore they shall not take any advantage by laying this grant in the Queens way for the Q. hath good title against all persons but those who claim under the grant but that is nothing to the Defendants for one cannot cross the title of the King if he do not make a title to himself As 39 E. 3. 18. 37 E. 3. 11. If the title of the King be found by a false Office the party grieved cannot traverse the Kings title without making title to himself found by Office and then the King may choose whether he will maintain his own title found by Office or traverse the title of the other Walmesley contrary This Title of Presentment is a Chattel Rex habebit omnia catalla felonum c. A Term of years is a Chattel so the Issues and Profits of the Lands of men outlawed for Felony so a right of Action for Goods Therefore a Title to present and if such a Title accrue to the King by such general words they shall pass from the King. And as to that which hath been objected That the Gra●● of King Edward the fourth doth not extend but only to such Goods and Chattels which may be seised he cited the Case of 39 H. 6. 35. b. Where the Grantee of a Rent for Term of years granted omnia bona catalla sua tam viva quam mortua the Rent doth pass and yet the Grantor cannot put him in seisin of it but ought to expect the day of payment of it And this Title to present is not a thing in action for if no disturbance be made the party may have the benefit of it without any action Anderson conceived That this Title to present cannot pass by those general words bona catalla for they do not extend to Rights or things in Action for such things only which are commonly known and understod shall pass by such words By grant of Goods Chattels real will not pass for when men speak of Goods Household-stuff mony and such personal things only are understood So a man cannot be said to have a Chattel but where he is possessed of it and here this Interest is but jus praesentandi Periam This Interest is a Chattel for if the Church become void and before presentment the Patron dieth the Executors shall have the presentment for it was a Chattel vested in the Testator It was adjorned CCLXXXI Jones Case Hill. 31 Eliz. Rot. 1527. In the Common Pleas. HEn Jones had stolen the Plate of Trinity Colledge in Oxford and by mediation of his friends it was concluded and agreed that no Evidence should be given against him at the Sute of the Colledge and that the Colledge should be recompenced for the losse and two of his Friends Brien and Brice were bound uto Doctor Underhil Rector of Lincoln Colledge in Oxford but unto the use of the Master and Scholrs of Trinity Colledge upon condition that if the said Obligor paid forty pounds within six months after the said Hen. Jones should be acquitted released of the troubles wherein he now is with the safety of his life that then c. In debt upon the Obligation The Defendants pleaded that he was indicted at the Assises at Ox. arraigned upon it scil for the stealing of the said Plate and found guilty thereof and had his Clergy and was burned in the hand he demanded Iudgment of this Action upon which there was a Demurrer Wind. If the words had been to pay the money after that Henry Jones should be released and acquitted of the troubles in which he now is without any more the Defendants had been bounden to pay the mony Periam If the words of the condition had been that after Henry Jones should be acquitted of the Felony then no mony payable but here the words are with safety of his life but here he conceived that the intent of the Obligation was that no Evidence should be given and so to save his life from the Gallows for which the Defendants might have shewed the special matter Ante. 73. and averred that the Obligation was made for the discharge of a Felon and so against the Law c. but now they cannot take advantage of it and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCLXXXII Castle and Oldmans Case Pasc 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CAstle brought Debt against Oldman for a pain ●ossessed in a Court Baron Debt 2 Roll. 106. 3 Cro. 79. 2 Inst 143. and declared That the Defendant was presented at the Court Baron for such an offence and if he did not amend it before the next Court he should pay such a pain And at the next Court it was presented That the Defendant had not amended it and so he had incurred the pain upon which the Action is brought and now the Defendant would wage his Law and it was much doubted whether wager of Law lay in the Case Shutleworth 13. H. 7. 31. Vpon a Recovery in a Court Baron wager of Law lyes not by Conisby which Periam denyed And by him upon an account by another hand it doth not lye for it is a matter of which the Country may have Conusance so here the matter is notorious whi●h lyeth in the knowledge of all the Iurors who presented it And by him the pain ought to be afferred which Anderson denied For there is a difference betwixt an amercement and a pain which Windham granted And see for the amerciament in the Leet 10 H. 6. 7. 12 R. 2 Ley. 43. But in a Court Baron because it is not a Court of Record so in Debt upon an Arbitrament the Law lyeth And Waler one of the Secondaries shewed unto the Court a President 6 Eliz. Where debt was brought by Sir Thomas Tyndal upon a pain forfeited for the breaking of a By-law in a Court Baron against Tyler and the party was received to Wage his Law. CCLXXXIII Thetford and Thetfords Case Pasch 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN Wast the Plaintiff declared upon the demise of the moyety of the Manor whereof part of the Tenants were Copy-holders and part Freeholders and that A. was seised of the Manor and had 〈◊〉 two Daughters and dyed seised the Daughters entred
chargeth the Defendant with cutting of Wood without the assent and assignment of the Lessor so he would compel us to prove more than we ought for if he did it with their assent only or by their assignment only it is sufficient but if the Covenant had been in the copulative both was necessary And for the nature of Copulatives he cited the Case where two Churchwardens bring an Action of Trespass the Defendant pleads That the Plaintiffs are not Churchwardens upon which they are at Issue The Iury find That the one was Church-warden and the other not and for that the Plaintiffs could not have Iudgment for if the one of them be not Churchwarden then the Plaintiffs are not Churchwardens for the copulatives ought not to be disjoyned And he cited the case lately ruled in the Common Pleas betwixt Ognel and Underwood concerning Crucifield Grange A. leased unto B. certain Lands for forty years B. leased part of the same to C. for ten years A. grants a Rent-charge out of the Lands in tenura occupatione B. It was resolved That the Lands leased to C. should not be charged with that Rent for although it was in tenura B. yet it was not in his occupation and both are exquisite because in the copulative So here the Lessee may cut Wood with the assent of the Lessor without any assignment Also here the substance of the covenant cannot charge the Defendant for although it be in the Negative yet it is not absolute in the Negative but doth refer unto the covenant precedent for the words are That the Lessee shall not cut Woods aliter quam according to the intent of the Indenture where the covenant precedent is not that the Lessee shall not cut Woods but in the Dole but that the Lessor might cut down any Trees in the Dole leaving sufficient for the Lessee which covenant in it self doth not restrain the Lessee to cut down any Trees in any part of the Lands demised nor abridgeth the power which the Law giveth to him by reason of the demise Then when this last covenant comes i. e. That the Lessee will not cut aliter then according to the meaning of the Indenture without the assent c. the same doth not restrain him from the power which the meaning of the Indenture gives and so no breach of covenant can be assigned in this For by virtue of the Lease the Lessee of common Right may take necessary Fuel upon any part of the Land leased Also this first covenant being in the Affirmative doth not abridge any Interest as 28 H. 8. 19. The Lessor covenants That the Lessee shall have sufficient Hedge-boot by assignment of the Baily It is holden by Baldwin and Shelley That the Lessee may take it without assignment because there are no Negative words non aliter So 8 E. 3. 10. A Rent of ten pounds was granted to Husband and Wife and if the Husband overlive his Wife that he shall have three pounds Rent and if the Wife do over-live the Husband she shall have forty shillings there it was holden that the Rent of ten pounds continued not restrained by the severance of any of them And although peradventure it appeareth here that the meaning of the parties was That the Lessee should not cut down any Wood but in the Dole yet forasmuch as such meaning doth not stand with the Law it shall be rejected as it was holden to be in the case betwixt Benet and French where a man seised of divers Lands devised parcel of it called Gages to the erecting of a School and another parcel unto B. in fee and all his other Lands unto one French in Fee The devise of Gages was holden void because too general for no person is named and it was further holden that it passed by the general devise to French and yet that was not the meaning of the Devisor Also the Plaintiff is not Assignee but of parcel of the Reversion for if the Reversion is granted to him for years Owen Rep. 152. 1 Co. 215. and such Assignee cannot have an Action of Covenant for a Covenant is a thing in Action and annexed to the Reversion so that if the Reversion doth not continue in its first course as it was at the time of the creation of the Covenant but be altered or divided the Covenant is destroyed and therefore it was holden 32 H. 8. betwixt Wiseman and Warringer where a Lease for years was made of one hundred Acres of Lands rendring ten pound Rent and afterwards the Lessor granted fifty Acres of it that the Grantee should not have any part of the Rent but all the Rent was destroyed So in our case here the Grantee hath but parcel of the estate a Term for years and so is not an Assignee intended as the case betwixt Randal and Brown in the Court of Wards ● Co 96●●●● Randal being seised of certain Lands covenanted with B. that if he pay unto him his Heirs and Assigns five hundred pounds that then he and his Heirs would stand seised to the use of the said B. and his Heirs Randal devised the Land to his Wife during the minority of his Son the Remainder to his Son in Fee and died having made his Wife his Executrix Brown at the day and place tendred the money generally the Wife having but an estate for years in the Land took the money It was holden that the same was not a sufficient tender for the Wife is not Assignee for she hath an Interest but for years and here the Son is to bear the loss for by a lawful Tender the Inheritance shall be devested out of him and therefore the Tender ought to be made to him and not to his Wife Also as the case is here he is no Assignee for although Charles Grice and his Wife hath the Reversion to them and the Heirs of the body of Charles and levy a Fine without Proclamations nothing passeth but his own estate and then the Conusee hath not any estate Raph. Rep. 91. ● C●o. 804. ●05 but during the life of Charles and then when a man is seised to him and his Heirs during the life of another he hath not such an estate as he can devise by the Statute and then when he deviseth it to his Wife for years it is void c. It was adjorned CCCXL Smith and Hitchcocks Case Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assumpsit ● C●o. 201. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared that whereas the Defendant was indebted to him 19 Maii 30 Eliz. The Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would forbear to sue him until such a day after promised at the said day to pay the debt The Defendant pleaded how that 29 Maii 29 Eliz. he was indebted unto the Plaintiff in the said sum for assurance of which afterwards he acknowledged a Statute to the Plaintiff upon which he had Execution and had levied the money absque
Plaintiff● and Iudgment given accordingly Amercement It was argued on the part of the Plaintiff in the first Action that the same is a thing amendable As 9 E. 4. 14. A Iury was impannelled by the name of I.B. and in the Habeas Corpora he was named W.B. and by such name sworn c. And upon Examination of the Sheriff it was found that he was the same person who was impannelled and it was amended and made according to the Pannel But the opinion of the whole Court was That as this case is it was not amendable and it is not like the case of 9 E. 4. For there the Examination was before the Verdict when the Sheriff was in Court but here it is after Verdict and the Sheriff is out of Court and cannot be examined and for these causes the Iudgment was reversed CCCLXXIV Ognell and the Sheriffs of Londons Case Pasch 26. Eliz. In the Exchequer OGnell brought Debt upon an Escape by Bill in the Exchequer against the Sheriffs of London Escape 1 Cro. 164. the Case was That one Crofts was bound to the now Plaintiff in a Recognisance and afterwards committed for Felony to the Prison of Newgate of which he was attainted and remained in Prison in the custody of the Sheriffs Afterwards Ognell sued a Sc. fac upon the said Recognisance against Crofts the Sheriffs returned a Cepi and the especial matter aforesaid and after Iudgment given against Crofts for Ognell Crofts got his pardon and escaped It was argued That notwithstanding this Attainder Crofts is subject to the Execution obtained upon the Recognizance See the case of Escape betwixt Maunser and Annesley 16 Eliz. in Bendloes case 2 E. 4. 1. It is said by Watman That a man out-lawed for Felony shall answer but shall not be answered See 6 E. 4. 4. One condemned in Redisseisin was taken by a Capias pro fine and committed to Prison and afterwards out-lawed of Felony the King pardons the Felony yet he shall remain in Execution for the party if he will But if the party be once in Execution for the party and then out-lawed of Felony it seems by 6 E. 4. Fitz. Execution 13. that the Execution is gone And all the Barons were clear of opinion in the principal case for the Plaintiff And they also said That if one who hath a Protection from the King be taken in Execution and Escape the Gaoler shall answer for the Escape and that was one Hales Case And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Hales Case and one of the causes of the Iudgment was because that the Sheriffs had returned C●pi upon the Process CCCLXXV Bishop and Redmans Case Hill. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. BIshop a Doctor of the Civil Law brought an Action of Covenant against Redman Archdeacon of Canterbury and declared upon an Indenture by which the Defendant did constitute the Plaintiff Offici●●em suum of his Archdeaconcy for three years and gave to him by the said Indenture Authoritatem admittendi inducendi quoscunque Clericos ad quaecunque beneficia Ecclesiastica infra Archidiaconatum praedict ' and also Probate of Wills and further granted to him omnem omnim●dam Archidiaconatum Jurisdictionem suam praedict ' absque impetitione de●●egatione rest●ictione c. after which Doctor Young was created Bishop of Rochester which is in the Iurisdiction of the said Archdeaconry and the Defendant took upon him to enthronize the said Bishop in his said Church and took of him for his Fee twenty Nobles whereupon the Plaintiff brought this Action It was moved for the Defendant that upon the matter the Action doth lye for the Office of enthronizing or enstalling of a Bishop doth not pass by the said Indenture nor is there any word in the Indenture that doth extend unto it for the Bishop is not a Clark and the Plaintiff by the Indenture hath not to do but with Clarks not with Bishops and it appeareth by the Grant of Subsidies by the Clergy in Parliament that a Bishop and a Clark are distinct things See Instrumentum hereof Praelatus Clericus c. Also the Plaintiff hath not to do with a Bishoprick but with Benefices and a Bishoprick is not a Benefice but a higher thing And further the Plaintiff hath power to admit and induct which doth not extend to installing or inthronization for that belongs to a Bishop and the Court was clear of opinion That by this Grant there did not pass any power to instal or inthronize Bishops and the general words i.e. omnem omnimodam jurisdictionem Archidiaconatum praedictam Words which amount to Covenant did not mend the matter for the word Praedictam doth not restrain the words Omnem omnimodam c. but admitting that It was moved If upon this Indenture Covenant lieth for there is not any express Covenant yet the words absque impetitione denegatione restrictione do amount to so much to make the Defendant subject to his Action if the matter in it self would have served for him and so was the opinion of the Court. CCCLXXVI Lady Lodges Case Hill. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Lady Laxton of London by her Will bequeathed to Matthew Luddington and Andrew Luddington Prohibition Poph. 11. Dyer 59. several Legacies in monies to be paid to them respectively at their several ages c. and made the Lady Lodge her Daughter her Executrix and died Andrew died before his full age Matthew took Letters of Administration of the goods of Andrew and sued the Lady Lodge in the Spiritual Court for the Legacy bequeathed to Andrew before which Suit begins the Lady Lodge with Sir Thomas her Husband gave all the goods which she had as Executor of the said Lady Laxton to Sir William Cordel Master of the Rolls and to William Lodge Son of the said Sir Thomas and his Lady depending which Suit the Lady Lodge died after which sentence was given against her being dead and now a Citation was out of the Spiritual Court against William Lodge Executor of the said Lady Lodge to shew cause why the sentence given against the said Lady Lodge should not be put in Execution against him and sentence was given against the said William Lodge who appealed to the Delegates and there the sentence was affirmed And now came William Lodge into the Kings Bench and set forth the grant of the said Lady Lodge as aforesaid and that the same was not examinable in the Spiritual Court and thereupon prayed a Prohibition And Awbrey Doctor of the Civil Law came into Court to inform the Iustices what their Law was in certain points touching the Case in question and as to the sentence given against the Lady Lodge after her death he said That if the Defendant died before issue joyned which is called Litis contestationem the Suit shall cease but if he dieth after Litis contestationem it is otherwise for in such Case the Suit shall proceed for after
Williams and Powell for that the said Williams had before brought a Quare Impedit against the said Blower and the Bishop Dyer 353. b. 354. and had recovered against them by default whereupon Williams had a Writ to the Metropolitan to admit his Clerk and in the Writ of Disceit Iudgment was given for the Plaintiffs For it was found That the Summons was the Friday to appear the Tuesday after and so an insufficient Summons and in that Writ of Disceit the Defendants Williams and Powell pleaded That Blower the Incumbent was deprived of his Benefice in the Court of Audience which sentence was affirmed upon Appeal before the Delegates and notwithstanding that Plea Iudgment was given against Williams and Powell Defendants in the said Writ of Disceit And upon that Iudgment this Writ of Error is brought Beaumont assigned four Errors First 1 Cro. 65. because the Bishop and Blower joyned in the Writ of Disceit for their Rights are several 12 E. 4. 6. Two cannot joyn in an Action of Trespass upon a Battery done at one time to them So if one distrain at one and the same time the several Goods of divers persons they according to their several properties shall have several Replevins 12 H. 7. 7. By Wood. So if Lands be given to two and to the Heirs of one and they lose by default in a Praecipe brought against them they shall have several Writs the one Quod ei deforceat Joynder in Action the other a Writ of Right 46 E. 3. 21. A Fine levied to one for life the Remainder to two Husbands and their Wives in tail they have Issue and die Tenant for life dieth the Issues of the Husbands and Wives shall have several Scire facias's to execute the Fine by reason of their several Rights Lands in ancient Demesn holden severally of several Lords are conveyed by Fine the Lords cannot joyn in a Writ of Disceit but they ought to have several Writs so here the Plaintiffs in this Writ of Disceit and the Bishop claims nothing but as ordinary and he loseth nothing in the Quare Impedit and therefore by the Writ of Disceit he shall be restored to nothing The second Error was Because the Bar of the Defendants in the Writ of Disceit was good i. the deprivation c. and the Court adjudged it not good for the Clerk being deprived he could not enjoy the Benefice if the Iudgment in the Qu. Impedit had been reversed Regul● Post 330. and where a man cannot have the effect of his suit it is in vain to bring any Action Lessee for the life of another loseth by erronious Iudgment Cestuy que use dieth his Writ of Error is gone for if the Iudgment be reversed he cannot be restored to the Land for the estate is determined 31 E. 3. Incumbent 6. The King brought a Quare Impedit against the Incumbent and the Bishop the Bishop claimed nothing but as Ordinary The Incumbent traversed the title of the King against which it was replyed for the King That the Incumbent had resigned pendant the Writ so as now he could not plead any thing against the title of the King for he had not possession and so could not counterplead the possession of the King. And here in our Case by this deprivation the Incumbent is disabled to maintain this Action of Disceit 15 Ass 8. If the Guardian of a Chappel be impleaded in a Praecipe for the Lands of his Chappel and pendant the Writ he resign the Successor shall have a Writ of Error and not he who resigns for he is not to be restored to the Lands having resigned his Chappel So in our Case A deprivation is as strong as a Resignation The third Error because in the Writ of Disceit it is not set forth that Blower was Incumbent for the Writ of Disceit ought to contain all the special matter of the Case as an Action upon the Case 4 E. 3. Disceit 45. The fourth Error That upon suggestion made after Verdict that Blower was Incumbent and in of the presentment of the Lord Stafford Deprivation and that he was removed and Griffin in by the Recovery in the Quare Impedit by default a Writ to the Bishop was awarded without any Scire facias against Griffin for he is possessor and so the Statute of 25 E. 3. calls him and gives him authority to plead against the King 6 Co. 52. and every Release or Confirmation made to him is good 18 E. 3. Confirmation made by the King after Recovery against the Incumbent is good And 9 H. 7. If a Recovery be had in a Contra formam collationis the possessor shall not be ousted without a Scire facias so in Audita Querela upon a Statute Staple Scire facias Scire facias shall go against the Assignee of the Conusee 15 E. 3. Respon 1. See also 16 E. 3. Disceit 35. 21 Ass 13. A Fine levied of Lands in Ancient Demesn shall not be reversed without a Scire facias against the Ter-tenant Walmesley contrary The case at the Bar differs from the case put of the other side for they are cases put upon original Writs but our case is upon a judicial Writ and here nothing is demanded but the Defendant is only to answer to the disceit and falshood And in this Case the Issue is contained in the Writ which is not in any original Writ and the Iudges shall examine the issue without any plea or appearance of the Tenant and here the Defendant is not to plead any thing to excuse himself of the wrong And here the Iudgment is not to recover any thing in demand but only to restore the party to his former estate and possession and if he hath nothing he shall be restored to nothing And he put many cases where persons who have several Rights may joyn in one Action as a Recovery in an Assize against several Tenants they may joyn in one Writ of Error 18 Ass Recovery in Assize against Disseisor and Tenant they shall both joyn in Error why not also in Disceit 19 E. 3. Recovery against two Coparceners the Survivor and the heir of the other shall joyn in Error As to the second Error Williams and the Sheriff ought not to joyn in the Plea and also the Plea it self is not good for the Writ of Disceit is That Williams answer to the Disceit and the Sheriff shall certifie the proceedings and therefore he shall not plead and also the Plea it self is not good for although the interest of the Incumbent be determined in the Church yet his Action is not gone as if in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant alieneth pendant the Writ and afterwards the Demandant recovereth yet the Tenant although his Interest be gone by the Feoffment yet he shall have a Writ of Error and so here and as to the Scire facias there needs none here against the new Incumbent for he comes in pendant the Writ
firmae against Leonard Lovelace and upon not guilty pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved for the Defendant in arrest of Iudgment That the Declaration was not good because the granting of Letters of Administration is set forth in this manner viz. Administratio commissa fuit Querenti per Willielmum Lewen Vicarium generalem in spiritualibus Epi. Roff. without averring that at the time of the granting of the Letters of Administration the Bishop was in remotis agendis for a Bishop present in England cannot have Vicarium But as to that it was said by the whole Court That the Vicar general in Spiritualibus amounts to a Chancellor for in truth the Chancellor is Vicar general to the Bishop Another Exception was because the Declaration is not Epi. Roff. loci illius Ordinarii but that was not allowed for all the presidents and course of the Court is That by way of Declaration such allegation needs not but by way of Bar it is necessary Another Exception was taken because the Plaintiff hath declared of an Ejectment and also quod bona catalla ibidem invent cepit c. And here in the Verdict the damages as well for the Ejectment as for the Goods and Chattels are entirely taxed It was adjorned CCCCXXXVI Greeves Case Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Replevin Replevin the Defendant made Conusans as Bayliff to one Greeves and Rockwood c. and said That A. was seised of the Lands and 6 Eliz. enfeoffed certain persons in fee to the use of his last Will by which he willed that his Feoffees should stand seised of the said Lands Devises Poph. 188. until the said Greeves had levied of the profits of the said Lands the sum of one hundred pounds It was objected against this Conusans that here is no devise for A. at the time of the devise had not any Feoffees but the Exception was disallowed by the Court And they cited the case of 15 Eliz. Dyer 323. Lingens case A. made a Feoffment in fee to his use and afterwards devised that his Feoffees should be seised to the use of his Daughter that the same was a good devise of the Land. See 29 H. 8. Br. Devises 48. CCCCXXXVII Kempton and Coopers Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN Trespass for breaking of his Close the Defendant pleaded Bar. 3 Len. 194. that before this he had brought an Ejectione firmae against the now Plaintiff and recovered and had Execution c. Iudgment if Action c. And by Periam Windham and Anderson Iustices the same is a good Bar and the conclusion of the Plea is also good Iudgment if Action without relying upon the Estoppel CCCCXXXVIII Leigh and Okeley and Christmass Case Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. OLiphe Leigh Fermor of the Queen of a Wood called Meerherst Wood in Warplesden in the County of Surrey brought an Action of Trespass against Henry Okeley and Robert Christmass for breaking of the said Wood and therein entring and cutting down of two hundred loads of Wood and carrying away the same c. The Defendants pleaded That before the time in which the Trespass was supposed c. That King H. 8. was seised of the Manor of Warplesden Custom whereof the said Wood was parcel of which Manor a Close called Withybod containing eleven Acres eidem bosco adjacent was parcel and that the said Wood is and time out of mind c. was closed and separated with Hedges and Ditches from the said eleven Acres which said Hedges and Ditches per totum tempus praedict fuerunt adhuc sunt praedict bosco spectant pertinent And that the said eleven Acres are and time out of mind we●● customary Lands parcel of the Manor aforesaid and demised and demisable in Fee-simple And that the said King H. 8. at a Court holden 38 H. 8. by his Steward demised the said eleven Acres by copy to John Goring and his Heirs and that within the said Manor there is this Custom That every Copyholder Tenant of the said eleven Acres c. hath used and accustomed per se vel servientes suos per eorum praecept succidere capere asportare subboscum in praedict bosco in quo c. pro reparatione praedictarum sepium defensionum inter praedict boscum in quo c. and the said eleven Acres c. quandocunque eaedem sepes defensiones in decasu extiterint and shewed further That at the time of the Trespass c. the said Hedges and Fences were in decay and so justified Vpon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law. It was argued by Godfrey That the Prescription is not good for it appeareth that this customary Land is contigue adjacens to the said Wood i. where the Trespass was done And of common Right the making of the Hedge doth appertain to the Owner of the Wood And the Prescription is no more but to take Wood in the Lands of another adjoyning to my Land to make the Hedges of the same Land in which the Wood groweth which cannot be a good Prescription for it sounds in charge and not to the profit of him who Prescribes Which see 22 E. 3. Prescription 40. Trespass against an Abbot because where the Plaintiff was Farmor of the King of his Hundred of D. and by reason thereof he might make Attachment and distrain for the Debts of the King within the said Hundred and where for a certain debt of the King he distrained the Beasts of one A. and the Abbot made Rescous to which the Abbot said That he was Lord of the Manor of D. within which Manor there was this custom c. That if any Distress be taken within the said Manor that the same should be put into the Pound of the said Abbot of the same Manor and not driven out of the Manor and there ought the Distress to remain three days so that if the party would agree within the three days that then he should have his Beasts and he said That the Plaintiff would have driven the said Beasts out of the said Manor and that he would not suffer him upon which there was a demurrer because it is not any profit to the Abbot but a charge to keep the Beasts of another Also he said That the King shall not be bound by such a custom as another person shall whereupon Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff So here in the principal case There shall be no damage to the Defendant if the Wood be not fenced for if his Cattel escape into the Wood he may justifie it because it is in default of the Plaintiffs inclosure And if the Beasts of the Plaintiff escape into the Lands of the Defendant he may take them Damage Feasant for the cause aforesaid 21 H. 7. 20. A Custom is pleaded That if any Tenants of the Manor shall take the Cattel of any one Damage Feasant and shall therefore distrain them that
Serjeant this case hath been adjudged 16 Eliz. A Lease to three Habendum to the use of the first for life and after to the use of the second for life and after to the use of the third for life the same is good Clench Iustice this proviso follows the Habendum and is a sentence to explain the sentence Wray Shute it is another sentence although it immediately follows the Habendum Clench if the words had been provided that although it be limited ut supra in the Habendum scil the first named shall have the Lands to himself for life c. it had been good by way of Remainder Wray Our case at Bar is not that any person shall take the Remainder but that any of them shall not take the profits during the life of the other Tanfield took exception to the verdict because the life of Pain is not found in the verdict Coke this is a verdict and no pleading and the opinion of the Court was that the verdict was good notwithstanding the said Exception and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCXLVII Hudson and Leighs Case Mich. 30 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Appeal of Maheim 4 Co. 43. RObert Hudson brought an appeal of Mayhem against Robert Leigh for maiming his right hand and for cutting of his veins and sinews which by that means are become dry so as thereby he hath lost the use of his fingers To which the Defendant pleaded that heretofore the Plaintiff had brought against him an Action of Assault and Battery and wounding and therein had Iudgment to recover and Execution was sued forth by Scire facias and satisfaction acknowledged upon Record Damages of 200 Marks assisted by the Iury for the damages and 11 l. 10 s. de incremento by the Court with averment of all identities Cooper Serjeant the same is a good Bar and although that an Appeal and an Action of Trespass are diverse Actions in nature and in many circumstances yet as to the recovery of Damages the one shall bind the other See 38 E. 3. 17. a good case In Trespass for breaking of his Close and Battery the Defendant pleaded that before that the Plaintiff by Bill in the Marshalsey hath recovered his Damages for the same Trespass c. and vouched the Record and the Record was sent the which was varying from the Record pleaded for the Record vouched was only of Battery without any thing of breaking of the Close and also the Battery is taxed at another day c. and with averment yet as to the Battery it was holden good enough with averment and as to the breaking of the Close the Plaintiff had Iudgment See 41 E. 3. brev 548. 12 R. 2. Coronae 110. and the Case betwixt Rider Plaintiff and Cobham Defendant Pasch 19 Eliz. Rot. 74. it was clearly holden and adjudged that after a Recovery in Trespass an Appeal of Maheim doth not lie and the Book which deceives the Plaintiff is 22 E. 3. 82. where it is said by Thorp That notwithstanding Recovery in Appeal of Maheim yet he may after recover in Trespass but Non dicite contra Popham contrary the Plea in Bar is not good for the Averment is that the stroke and the wounding supposed in the Writ of Trespass and in his Appeal of Maheim are all one but it is not averred that any damages were given for the Maheim or that the Maheim was given in Evidence for it might be that there was not any Maheim when the Trespass was brought but that after by the drying of the wound it became a Maheim and then the Action did rise as if a man upon a Contract promiseth to pay me 10 l. at Michaelmas and other 10 l. at Christmas if he doth not pay the 10 l. at Michaelmas I may have an Action upon the promise for the not payment of that 10 l. and afterwards I may have another Action and recover damages for the not payment of the 10 l. at Christmas but if I do not begin any Action before Christmas I cannot recover damages but once for the whole promise and damages shall be given in Evidence and if I be disseised I may recover damages for the first Entry and notwithstanding that I shall have an Assise and if I do reenter I shall have Trespass and recover damages for the mean profits Ante 302. and the damages recovered for the first Entry shall be recouped and the Book cited before Fitz. Coronae 110 doth not make for the Defendant but rather for the Plaintiff for there it is averred that the Maheim was given in Evidence in the Action of Trespass which it is not in our Case Egerton Solicitor we have shewed That succisio venarum in this appeal specified is eadem succisio vulneratio mentioned in the Trespass Coke Although the identity of the wounding and cutting of the veins are averred yet it is not averred that the damages recovered in the Trespass were given for this Maheim Wray chief Iustice The Iurors are to take consideration of the wound in an action of Trespass and to give damages according to the hurt and we ought to think that they have done accordingly and if they have not so done the party may pray that the Court by inspection would adjudge upon it and so increase the damages But now when the Iury hath given great damages scil 200 Marks with which the party hath been contented it should be hard to give the Plaintiff another Action and if there be any such special matter that it was not become a Maheim at the time of the Action of Trespass brought but it is become a Maheim of later time by drying the Plaintiff ought to have shewed the same to the Court and so have helped himself for otherwise it shall not be so intended but that the averment made by the Defendant is good enough to oust the Plaintiff of this Action and the Iudgment cited 19 Eliz. before was given by me after I was constituted chief Iustice and this Bar as I conceive was drawn out of the pleading in 19 Eliz. and afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff CCCCXLVIII Crosman and Reads Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Intermarriage 1 Cro. 114. THe Case was that I.S. made his wife his Excutrix and dyed I. D. being then endebted to the Testator in sixty pounds upon a simple Contract the Wife Executrix took to Husband the said I.D. I.D. made his Executor and dyed a Creditor of I.S. brought an Action of Debt against the Wife Executrix of I.S. and upon the pleading the matter in question was Debt by Executors If by the entermarriage of the wife with the Debtor of the Testator the same was a Devastavit or not And if the said Debt of sixty pounds due by I.D. should be Assets in her hands And per Curiam It is no Devastavit nor Assets as is supposed For the woman may have an
that was holden by the Court clearly to be Error and afterwards at another day it was moved by Coke That a man attainted of Felony could not make Executors for he is dead in Law and as Bracton saith solus Deus facit Haeredes homo nominat Executores and therefore the Heir only shall have a Writ of Error also an Executor cannot have a Writ of Error but only upon a Iudgment given in a personal Action but this Attainder is a thing of a higher nature as where a Woman poysoneth her Husband the Heir shall not have an Appeal for Murder is changed into Treason and that offence is a thing of a higher nature so this Attainder is of a higher nature than in the personalty Also it may be mischievous to the Heir for the Executor may forthwith bring and pursue his Writ of Error by which the Iudgment shall be affirmed and so the right of the Heir shall be bound also when Error is brought to reverse an Outlawry of Felony a Scire facias ought to be sued against the Lords mediate and immediate which cannot be here at the Suit of the Executors also it was found by Enquest of the Coroner that the Testator fugam fecit so that thereby if he had been acquitted he shall lose his goods and then the Executors have not any reason to bring this Writ of Error but see 11 H. 4. Error 51. That Executors shall have a Writ of Error of an Outlawry pronounced against their Testator and if it be reversed they shall have restitution of the goods of the Testator but it doth not appear there that it was upon an Indictment of Felony Altham As well the Executor as the Heir is a person able for to sue a Writ of Error in such case as 13 E. 4. where a false oath is given against one in Assise and dieth the Heir shall have an Attaint for the Land and the Executor in respect of the damages Popham Attorney General This Outlawry is a real Iudgment therefore the Executor cannot have Error upon it Wray It is good that this case be considered for it may be mischievous for thereby the Executor shall avoid the Attainder against the King and the Lords Fenner That cannot be without a Scire facias Gawdy The Executors shall have this Action and as to that which hath been objected that the party attainted cannot make Executors the same is no reason for the Executors do pretend that their Testator was not lawfully outlawed and so by this Suit they do endeavour to take away that disability and therefore it ought not to be objected against the Executor and if the Case here be That the Testator had not lands but only goods there is no reason but that the Executors should have a Writ of Error otherwise the goods of the Testator should be lost and it was clearly holden by Wray chief Iustice That the Executor might have and pursue this Writ of Error the Outlawry of the Testator notwithstanding and afterwards the Outlawry was reversed accordingly CCCCLX Trussels Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Habeas corpus Owen Rep. 69. ● Cro. 213 516. Co. 3 Inst 213 215. TRussel was removed out of the Counter of London by Habeas corpus into the Kings Bench. Egerton The Queens Solicitor moved the Court that Trussel was a person attainted of Felony and so had not any lands or goods to satisfie c. and also his life was not his own and upon the Return of the Habeas corpus it appeared that Trussel was detained in Prison for an Execution and for divers Actions and it was the opinion of the Court Executions Post 329 330. that as to the Execution he ought not to be discharged for then the party should lose his debt for ever but as to the other actions it was the opinion of all the Iustices that Trussel ought to be discharged of them for a man so attainted ought not to be put to answer nor taken in Execution and so are all our Books And they said that they had conferred with the Iustices of the Common Pleas and with the Barons of the Exchequer which were of a contrary opinion in this case upon the very matter and not upon the manner of the pleading but yet we will discharge our Consciences as we have done for there is not any Book against us Egerton stetit super semitas antiquas and at last it was awarded That Trussel should be discharged of all Actions brought against him CCCCLXI Sovers Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. SOver and others were Indicted upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. Indictments upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. of forcible Entry because they had expulsed one A. out of his Land and disseised the Mayor and Commonalty of London who were in Reversion and the same being removed hither Restitution was prayed thereupon and White for the City who was in Reversion and the Lessor prayed that no Restitution might be for they had let the House to another Restitution Yelv. 81. Dy. 141 142. and that he who had procured this Indictment claimed in by a Custom of London That the Executor of the last Termor should not be put out if he shall give as much for it as any other will whereas in truth there is not any such Custom and for that cause the Restitution was stayed and it was said by the Court that Restitution shall be always made to him in the Reversion and not to the Lessee for years for he who is disseised shall be restored and then the Lessee may re-enter CCCCLXII Beal and Carters Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of false Imprisonment False Imprisonment Owen Rep. 98 287. the Defendant justified because the Plaintiff brought a Child of the age of six years and not above into the Parish Church of W. eundem ibidem relinquere voluisset intendisset without keeping or nourishment to the danger and destruction of the Child contra pacem for which the Defendant being Constable of the said Parish arrested the Plaintiff and put him in prison until he did agree and promise to carry the Child from whence it came upon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law. It was moved that the Iustification was good for every Subject might do it à fortiori a Constable and if in this case the Child being so exposed should be famished for want of nourishment it had been murder as it was holden at Winchester before the Lord chief Baron 20 Eliz. Another Exception was taken to the Plea because he saith quendam infantem without naming him and he ought to say Quendam infantem ignotum Antea 56. but that Exception was not allowed Another Exception ibidem relinquere intendisset but he doth not say that he did depart from it and then his meaning is not traversable or issuable or to be tried by Iurors See 22 E. 4. 45. Gawdy
197 p VVright and the Bishop of Norwiches case 218 p VVhisker and Cleytons Case 219 p VVard and Blunts case 251 p VVeston and Grendons case 255 p VVoodshaw and Fulmerstons case 262 p VVindham and Sir Edward Cleeres case 263 p VVickes and Dennis case 271 p VValgrave and Ogdens case 305 p VVard and Knights case 315 p VViseman and VVaringers case 339 p VVeston and Garnons case 343 p VVillis and Crosbies case 373 p VVilliams and Blowers case 402 p VValpoole and Kings case 407 p VViggot and Clarks case 419 p VVangford and Sectons case 423 p VVilmer and Oldfeilds case 424 p VVolman and Fies case 449 p VVillis and VVhitewoods case 454 p VVade and Presthalls case 466 p VVharton and Morleys case 467 p VValgrave and Agars case 469 p Z. ZOuch and Bamfeilds case 102 p REPORTS AND Cases of Law Argued and Adjudged in the Time of Queen Elizabeth From the twenty fourth to the three and thirtieth year of Her Reign I. Borneford and Packingtons Case Hill. 25. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. IN Trespas It was found by special verdict Custom of Free-Bench That the Defendant was seised of the Manor of B. whereof the place where is parcel demised and demiseable by Copy c. And that B. the Granfather of the Plaintiff was seised of the place where c. according to the custom of the said Manor in Fee-simple and that within the said Manor there is this Custom That if any Copy-holder dieth seised his Wife over-living him shall hold all the Land during her Widowhood as Free-bench and shall be admitted Tenant to the Lord 2 Brownl 21. and that the Heir shall not be admitted to it during the life of his Mother And found also another Custom within the said Manor That if any Copy-holder be convicted of Felony and the same be presented by the Homage that then the Lord might seize c. And it was further found that the Grandfather of the Plaintiff took a Wife and died seised having issue A. Father of the Plaintiff The Wife is admitted to her Free-bench A. is convicted of Felony and that is presented by the Homage and afterwards A. died after which the Wife died c. It was argued by Atkinson that A. is not within the danger of this Custom for during the life of his Mother who by a Claimer is Tenant to the Lord and admitted to it she is Copy-holder and it is not like to the Case lately adjudged of possessio fratris without admittance for there the party was admittable and so he was not here And also it appeareth by the Custom as it is found That the Lord upon such matter shall seize and therefore we ought to make construction that this Custom doth not extend to Cases where the Lord cannot seize but in the Case at Bar the Lord cannot seize by reason of this Free-bench And we ought not by any construction to extend a Custom beyond the words in which it is conceived but it shall be taken strictly and not be supplyed by Equity with a Custom in the place of a Seisure But notwithstanding all this afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff II. Hill. 25 Eliz. in the Kings Bench. A Copy-holder doth surrender to the use of one A. upon trust that he shall hold the said Land until he hath levyed certain monies and that afterwards he shall surrender to the use of B the monies are levyed A. is required to make surrender to the use of B. he refuseth B. exhibits a Bill to the Lord of the Mannor against the said A. who upon hearing of the Cause decrees against A. that he shall surrender he refuseth now the Lord may seize and admit B. to the Copy-hold for he in such Cases is Chancellor in his own Court per totam Curiam III. Wade and Bemboes Case Hill. 25. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. IN a Writ of Error by Wade against Bembo upon a Iudgment given in the Court of the City of Bristol the Case was That Bembo was Plaintiff in the said Court against Wade in an Action of Covenant and declared of a Covenant made by word by the Testator of Wade with Bembo and declared also that within the said City there is a Custom That Conventio ore tenus facta shall bind the Covenantor as strongly as if it were made by writing And it was holden by the Court that that Custom doth not warrant this Action for the Covenant binds by the Custom the Covenantor but doth not extend to his Executors and a Custom shall be taken strictly and therefore the Iudgment was reversed IV. The Lord Paget and Sir Walter Ashtons Case 25 Pasch 25. Eliz. in the Kings Bench THe Lord Paget brought an Action of Trespass against Sir Walter Ashton who justified because he is seised of three Messuages to him and his Heirs and that he and all those whose estate he hath c. have had the Woodwardship of the Forrest of C. within which the place where c. and also have had within the said Forrest Estovers without number And that one Rowland Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield was seised of the Forrest aforesaid in the right of his Church and by Indenture betwixt him and Sir Edw. Ashton his Ancestor whose Heir he is setting forth that divers debates had been betwixt the said parties concerning some profits within the said Forrest It was agreed betwixt them that the said Sir Ed. Ashton should release unto the said Rowland all his right in the said Office and Estovers and that the said Rowland shoud grant de novo unto the said Edw. and his Heirs the said Office and one hundred loads of Estovers per annum out of the said Forrest After which the said Ed. according to the said agreement did release to the said Bishop ut supra after which the said Bishop by Indenture reciting the said former Convenants in compl Indenturae praedict Convent did grant to the said Sir Ed. the said Office and Estovers pro easiamento dicti Edwardi haered suorum by assignment of the Officers of the said Forrest and if the assignment he not made within ten days after request that then the said Ed. and his Heirs should cut dow wood where they pleased and averred the things released were of as great value as the things granted And upon this matter the Plaintiff did demurr in Law and it was adjuded for the Plaintiff for here no Inheritance in the things granted passed to the said Sir Ed. but only an Interest for his own life 1. Inst 148. a. 398. b. ib. Dy. 253. 1 Cro. 644. for the grant was to Sir Ed. only without the word Heirs and the reference to the Indentures by which the Bishop hath covenanted to grant the Inheritance nor the words in the grant imply an estate in Fee s. pro easimento dict Ed. haered suorum and that in default of Assignment it should be lawful for Sir Ed. and his Heirs
the remainder to the use of John Father of the Plaintiff in tail the Grandfather died the Father entred Feoffments and by Indenture by words of bargain and sale without any words of Dedi concessi conveyed the Lands to the use of A. in Fee and in the same Indenture was a Letter of Attorney to make Livery which was made accordingly and the said A. by the said Indenture covenanted that if the said John should pay before such a day to the said A. forty shillings that then the said A. and his Heirs would stand seised c. to the use of the said John and his Heirs and if the said John did not pay c. then if the said A. did not pay to the said John within four days after ten pounds that then the said A. and his Heirs from thenceforth shall be seised to the use of the said John and his Heirs c. and the said John covenanted further by the said Indenture to make such further assurance as the Council of the said John should advise Each party failed of payment John levied a Fine to A. without any consideration it was adjudged upon this matter a good Feoffment well executed by the Livery Hob. 151. Dyer 361. a More 194. Post 195 196 197. More 35. b. notwithstanding that the words of the conveyance are only by bargain and sale and that the Covenant to be seised to the new uses upon payment and not payment being in one and the same deed should raise the use upon the contingency according to the limitation of it and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff accordingly XXXII Bedows Case Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Debt upon a Bill sealed against one Bedow he demanded Dyer of the Bill which was Memorandum that I John Bedow have agreed to pay to R. S. the Plaintiff twenty pounds and thereupon there was a Demurrer first that the Deed wanted the words In cujus rei testimonium c. but notwithstanding that the Court held the Deed good and said so it was lately adjudged Another matter was because the words of the contract are in the preter Tense I have agreed but notwithstanding that exception the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover as by Wray these words dedi concessi according to the Grammatical sence imply a gift precedent but yet they are used as words of a present conveyance Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff XXXIII Marsh and Smiths Case Pasch 27. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 1 Cro. 38. 39. GEorge Marsh brought a Replevin against Smith and Paget who make Conusans as Baylies to Ralph Bard and upon the pleading the Case was That Sir Francis Askew was seised of the Mannor of Castord in his Demesne as of Fee which Mannor did extend unto Daston North-kelsey Grants Mannor 2 Len. 41 42. South-kelsey D. and C. and had demesnes and services parcel of the said Mannor in each of the said Towns and so seised granted totum manerium suum de North-kelsey in North-kelsey to the said Bard and his Heirs and granted further all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in North-kelsey and to that grant the Tenants in North-kelsey did attorn And the Land in which the said Distress was taken is in North-kelsey the only question in the case was if by this grant to Ralph Bard a Mannor passed or not And the case was argued by the Iustices And Periam Iustice argued That upon this grant no Mannor passed for before the grant there was no Mannor of North-kelsey or in North-kelsey therefore no Mannor can pass but the Lands and services in North-kelsey shall pass as in gross for they were not known by a Mannor but for parcel of a Mannor And a Mannor is a thing which cannot be so easily created Mannor what it is for it is an Hereditament which doth consist of many real things and incorporated together before time of memory common reputation cannot be intended of an opinion conceived within three or four years but of long time And appendancy cannot be made presently but by a long tract of time As an Advowson in gross cannot be made by an Act appendant and the Queen her self by her Letters Patents cannot make a Mannor at this day à multo fortiori a subject cannot and the Queen cannot by her Letters Patents without an Act of Parliament annex a Mannor to the Dutchy of Lancaster which see 1 Ma. Dyer 95. And where it is usual that the Queen doth grant Lands Reputation tenendum de manerio suo de East Greenwich in communi soccagio if upon the death of such a Grantee without heir the said Land doth revert unto the Queen in point of Escheat the said Land shall not be parcel of the said Mannor for the Land was not parcel of the Mannor in truth but in reputation And he cited a case that the Lord Sturton was seised of the Mannor of Quincamore and was also seised of the Mannor of Charleton which was holden of the said Mannor of Quincamore The Lord Sturton was attainted of Felony and afterwards Queen Mary gave the said Mannor of Quincamore to Sir Walter Mildmay cum omnibus suis juribus parcellis it was adjudged that the Mannor of Charleton did pass for it is now become parcel of the Mannor of Quincamore and I grant that things which go with the Land shall pass well enough As if the Queen grant to three Coparceners of three Mannors 1 Inst 122. a 32 ●● 6 11. the liberty of Warren in all the said three Mannors they afterwards make partition so as each Coparcener hath a Mannor and the one of them grants her Mannor the Grantee shall have Warren Grants of the King. But if the Queen grant a Leet ut supra and the Coparceners make Partition and each of them hath a Mannor she shall not have also a Leet but the Leet which was grantted doth remain in common and there shall not be there upon such partition several Leets And also I grant that in the case of two Coparceners of a Mannor if to each of them upon partition be allotted demeans and services each of them hath a Mannor for they were compellable to make partition by the common Law being in by descent See 26 H. 8. 4. 9 E. 4. 5. contrary of Ioynt-tenants for they are in by purchase and were not compellable by the common Law to make partition and therefore upon partition betwixt them a Rent cannot be reserved for the equality of the partition And in every Manor a Court is requisite for a Court Baron is incident to a Manor Court Baron but a Court cannot at this day be founded or erected but it ought to be of long time And in our Case no Court hath ever been holden in North-kelsey And if I be seised of the Manor of B. which extends into C. and B. and I grant my Manor of B. in D. now a Manor
Language may easily be learned in a short time by converse with Welsh-men And the Statute of 1 Eliz. which establisheth the Book of Common Prayer ordaineth that the said Book of Common Prayer shall be put in use in all the Parish Churches of Eng. and Wa. without any provision there for the translation of the said Book into the Welsh Language But afterwards by a private Act it was done by which it is enacted That the Bishop of Wales should procure the Epistles and Gospels to be translated and read in the Welsh Language which matter our Presentee might do by a Curate well enough And he conceived that by divers Statutes Aliens by the Common Law were capable of Benefices See the Statute of 7 H 2. Cap. 12. 1 H 5 Cap. 7. 14 H 6. Cap. 6. and before the said last Statute Irish-men were capable of Benefices Gawdy Serjeant contrary and he confessed that at the Common Law the defects aforesaid were not any causes of refusal but now by reason of a private Act made 5 Eliz. Entituled An Act made for the translating of the Bible and of the Divine Service into the Welsh tongue the same defect is become a good cause of refusal in which Act the mischief is recited viz. That the Inhabitants of Wales did not understand the Language of England therefore it was Enacted That the Bishops of Wales should procure so many of the Bibles and Books of Common Prayer to be imprinted in the Welsh Language as there are Parishes and Cathedral Churches in Wales and so upon this Statute this imperfection is become a good cause of refusal And he likened it to the Case of Coparceners and Ioynt-tenants Ante 28. who now because that by the Statute of 32 H 8. Ioynt-tenants are equally capable to make partition as Coparceners were by the Common Law Now Partition betwixt Ioynt-tenants within age is as strong as betwixt Parceners within age But as to that point it was said by the Lord Anderson that it is very true that upon the said Statute the want of the Welsh Language in the Presentee is now become a good cause of refusal but because the said Act being a private Act hath not been pleaded by the Defendant we ought not to give our Iudgment according to that Act but according to the Common Law. Another matter was moved because here appeareth no sufficient notice given to the Patron after the said Refusal for the Plaintiff did present the thirtenth of August the Church voyding the fourteenth of March before the nine and twentieth of August the six months expired the fourth of September the Defendant gave notice to the Patron of the refusal and the fourteenth of September was the Collation and it was said by the Lord Anderson that it appeareth here that there are two and twenty days between the Presentment and the Notice which is too large a delay And the Defendant hath not shewed in his Plea any cause for the justifying or excuse of it and therefore upon his own shewing we adjudge him to be a disturber See 14 H. 7. 22. 15 H. 7. 6. and note by Periam it was adjudged in the Case of Mollineux if the Patron present and the Ordinary doth refuse he ought to give notice to the person of the Patron thereof if he be resident within the County and if not at the Church it self which is void XL. Mich. 27 28 Eliz. At Serjeants Inn. THis Case was referred by the Lords of Council to the Iustices for their opinions I.S. by Indenture between the Queen of the one part and himself of the other part reciting that where he is indebted to the Queen in eight hundred pounds to be paid in form following twenty pounds at every Feast of St. Michael until the whole sum aforesaid be paid covenanted and granted with the said Queen to convey unto the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer and to their Heirs certain Lands to the uses following viz. to the use of the said I.S. and his Heirs until such time as the said I. S. his Heirs Executors or Administrators shall make default in payment of any of the said sums and after such default to the use of the said Queen her Heirs and Successors until her Heirs and Successors shall have received of the issues and profits thereof such sums of money parcel of the said debt as shall be then behind and upaid and after the said debt so paid and received then to the use of the said I.S. and his Heirs for ever I.S. levyeth a Fine of the said Land to the said Lord Treasurer and the Barons to the uses aforesaid and afterwards being seised accordingly by deed indented and enrolled bargains and sels the said Land to a stranger default of payment is made the Queen seizeth and granteth it over to one and his Heirs quousque the money be paid and after the money is paid And upon conference of the Iudges amongst themselves at Serjeants Inn they were of opinion that now I.S. against his Indenture of bargain and sale should have his Lands again for at the time of the bargain and sale he had an estate in Fee determinable upon a default of payment ut supra Post 93. 3 Len. 43. Owen Rep. 6. 1 Inst 49. 2 which accrued to him by the first Indenture and the Fine which estate only passed by the said Indenture of bargain and sale and not the new estate which is accrued to him by the latter limitation after the debt paid for that was not in esse at the time of the bargain and sale but if the conveyance by bargain and sale had been by Feoffment or Fine then it had been otherwise for by such conveyance all uses and possibilities had been carried by reason of the forcible operation of it XLI Taylor and Moores Case Hill. 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. TAylor brought Debt upon an Obligation against Moore Debt Error who pleaded in Bar upon which the Plaintiff did demurre and the Court awarded the Plea in Bar good upon which Iudgment the Plaintiff brought a Writ of Error and assigned Error in this that the Bar upon which he had demurred as insufficient was adjudged good Vpon which now in this Writ of Error the Bar was awarded insufficient and therefore the Iudgment reversed But the Court was in a doubt what Iudgment shall be given in the Case viz. whether the Plaintiff shall recover his debt and damages as if he had recovered in the first Action or that he shall be restored to his Action only c. And Wray cited the Case in 8 E. 4. 8. and the Case of Attaint 18 E. 4. 9. And at last it was awarded that the Plaintiff should recover his debt and damages See to that purpose 33 H 6. 31. H 7. 12 20. 7. Eliz. Dyer 235. XLII Higham and Harewoods Case Hill. 28. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. More Rep. 221. 3 Len. 132. IN an Ejectione firmae the Case was
Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Debt KYnter brought debt upon an Obligation the condition was that whereas the Plaintiff had bought of the Defendant a Ship if then the Defendant shall enjoy the said Ship with all the furniture belonging to the same without being disturbed for the said Ship or any furniture appertaining to it that then c. and the Case was that after the sale of the said Ship a stranger sued the Plaintiff for certain monies due for certain Ballast bought by the Defendant for the same Ship and put into the said Ship before the sale of it and in the said suit the Plaintiff obtained a Iudgment and Execution and thereupon the said Ship was seised and all the matter was if Ballast be furniture of a Ship or not And it was moved by Serjeant Gawdy that it was for Ballast is as necessary to a Ship as a Sail but the Court was against him for somtimes a Ship may sail without Ballast for it may be laden with such Merchandizes which are convenient Ballast in themselves as Coals Wheat c. Periam at the first doubted of it and by him if I be bound upon condition ut supra I am bound to deliver the Guns being in it at the time of the sale but yet he conceived that the Plaintiff should be barred because he had not specially shewed that at the time of the sale the Ballast was in the Ship. LX. Pendleton and Gunstons Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. PEndleton informed against Gunston upon the Statute of 13 Eliz. Cap. 5. for that where the said Pendleton had before brought a plaint of Debt against I.S. in the Guild-Hall of Norwich upon which issued out of the said Court an Attachment against the said I.S. by which the Sheriff of Norw being ready by virtue of the said process to attach the said I. S. by his goods there the now Defendant in disturbance of the said process and the execution of it did publish and shew to the Sheriff a conveyance by which he claimed the said goods as conveyed to him by the said I. S c. and averred the fraud c. and it was moved by Serjeant Snagg that the matter of which the Defendant is charged is not within the said Statute because the avowing of the said conveyance doth not go in delay of the execution for no Iudgment is given but only in delay of process but the Court was clear of opinion to the contrary and that by reason of the Statute and the words of it scil delay hinder or defraud Creditors of their just and lawful Actions sutes c. for here is a delay for want of serving the said Attachment the Appearance of I.S. to the sute of the Plaintiff is delayed which mischief is within the remedy of the said Statute And Periam and Rhodes Iustices conceived that such avowing of such conveyance where no sute is depending is within the said Statute which Anderson doubted See the pleading of this Case reported in the second Book of Entries 207 208. 30 Eliz. per quod secta impedita fult c. LXI Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. FEnner Serjeant moved this Case 4 Len. Alien Purchasor An Alien purchaseth Lands in Fee The Queen confirms it to the Alien Office is found if the confirmation shall bind the Queen and it seemed to some that it should for by the Lord Anderson Confirmation when an Alien is enfeoffed he receiveth by the Livery the Fee-simple of which he shall be seised until Office be found and a Praecipe quod reddat lyeth against him And by Fenner an Alien and Denizen Ioynt-tenants are disseised they both shall joyn in Assize vide 11 H. 4. 26. and by him the Kings Nief being an Inheritrix takes a Husband and hath issue Office is found the Husband shall be Tenant by the Curtesy which see 33 E. 3. Traverse 36. It was argued of the other side that the estate of the Alien is so feeble that a confirmation cannot enure upon it for an Alien cannot take but to the use of the King and cannot be enfeoffed to another use and if he be such use is void for there is not a sufficient seisin in the Alien to carry an use And it hath been adjudged in the Case of one Forcet that where an Alien and the said Forcet were Ioynt-purchasors and the Alien died Forcer had not the whole by the Survivor but that upon an Office found the Queen should have the moyety See Dyer 11 Eliz. 283. LXII Sir Roger Lewknor and Fords Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 1 Cro. 17. Co. 5. Rep. 12. b. SIr Roger Lewknor seised of the Manor of Wallingford leased the same to A. for years and died after which it was Enacted by Parliament That the said Manor should from henceforth be deemed and reputed in the Heirs of the body of the said Sir Roger begotten upon Eliz. his Wife the said Sir Roger having three Daughters only without any other issue The Daughters married Husbands and had issue A. assigned his enterest in the said Manor to B. C. and D. and also to one Shelley B.C. and D. assigned their interest to one Sponer one of the Defendants and Shelly assigned his fourth part to Ford another of the Defendants excepting the Woods and Vnderwoods Wast is committed one of the Daughters having issue dieth living her Husband the two surviving Sisters and their Husbands the Term being expired brought a Writ of Wast leaving out the Husband of the third Sister who was Tenant by the Curtesy against Shelley and Sponer who Tenuerunt Shuttleworth Serjeant took Exception to the Writ scil praedictus Rogerus cujus haeredes ipsae funt which shall be intended Heirs general and by the Declaration it appeareth that the Daughters have to them by Act of Parliament an especial inheritance as Heirs in special tail and that by a special conveyance and therefore the Plaintiffs ought to have brought a special Writ according to their Case as where Cestuy que use maketh a lease for years by the Statute of 1 R. 3. and the Lessee committeth Wast now the Feoffees ought to have a special Writ of Wast according to their Case 26 H. 8. 6. but that exception was disallowed and the case cited out of 6 H. 8. is upon another reason for in such case the estate of the Lessee for years is created by the said Statute Another Exception was taken to the Writ for the Writ is tenuerunt which shall be intended prima facie conjunctim tenuerunt and in the Declaration it appeareth that one of the Defendants is assignee of three parts of the Lands demised and the other Defendant of the fourth part and so separatim tenuerunt but that Exception was also disallowed because originally it was one and intirely demised interest and estate and so it remaineth as to the Plaintiffs although it be devised by the Lessee himself
Another Exception was taken to the Writ because here it appears upon the Plaintiffs shewing that Sir Roger Lewknor had three Daughters and that they have all taken Husbands and that they have issue and that one of the said Daughters is dead living her Husband who is not named in the Writ for which cause the Writ shall abate See 22 H. 6. 24 25. But that Exception was also disallowed for as this Case is there is not any reason that the Tenant by the Curtesy should joyn in this Action for no judgment shall be given here that the Plaintiffs shall recover the place wasted for the term is expired as it appeareth by the words of the Writ scil quas tenuerunt and the Tenant by the curtesy is in possession and where Tenant by the curtesie and the Heir joyn in an Action of Wast Tenant for life shall have Locum vastatum and the Heir the damages which see 27 H. 8. 13. As unto the matter of Law upon the Exceptions of Woods and Vnderwoods it was argued by Shuttleworth that the Action of Wast was not well brought against Ford c. for the Assignment made by Shelley to Ford was with an exception of all Woods and Vnderwoods and therefore Shelley remained Tenant and he ought to answer for the Wood and the Vnderwood in the Action of Wast for upon every demise of Lands the Woods there growing are as well demised as the Land it self for so it appeareth by the Writ of Wast in domibus boscis dimissis ad terminum annorum c. which proves that the Trees are parcel of the demise and so may be execepted See Dyer 28 H 8. 19. by Shelley and Baldwin A man leaseth a Manor except Woods and Underwoods the Lessee cuts the Trees an Action of Wast doth not lie against him for the same for the thing in which the Wast is supposed to be committed was not demised c. and therefore the Lessee shall be punished as a Trespassor and not as Farmer Fenner Serjeant contrary and that the Exception of the Woods and Vnderwoods is meerly void for Shelley who assigns his interest with the said Exception hath not any such interest in the Woods and Vnderwoods so as he can make such exception for he had but an ordinary interest in them as Farmer viz. House-boot Hedge-boot c. which interest cannot by any means upon an Assignment be reserved to the Assignor in gross of the estate no more than if one hath common appendant to his Land and he will make a Feoffment of the Land reserving or excepting the common And he who hath the inheritance of the Land hath an absolute property in the Trees but the Lessee hath but a qualified interest and therefore 21 H 6. 46. the Lessor during the term for years may command the Trees to be cut down and 10 H. 7. 3. Lessee for years hath not any interest in the Trees but for the loppings and for the shadow for his Cattle And in the Case cited where Lessee for life and he in the Reversion make a Lease for life unto a stranger and wast is committed Co. 1 Inst 42. 2. and they bring an Action of Wast the Lessee for life shall have the place wasted and he in the Reversion the treble damages for in him was the true and very property of the Trees and therefore the treble damages do belong unto him and not to the Lessee for life who joyneth with him and the reason wherefore the Lessee for life or years shall recover treble damages against a stranger who cuts down any Trees growing upon the Land to him demised is not in respect of any property that the Lessee hath in the Trees cut down but because he is chargable over to his Lessor in an Action of Wast in which he shall render damages in such proportion So see 27 H. 6. Wast 8. A lease for life is made without impeachment of wast a stranger of his own wrong cuts down Trees against whom the Lessee brings an Action of Trespass in such Case he shall not recover treble damages not for the Trees but only for the breaking of the Close and the loppings for he is not chargeable over to his Lessor for the same because that his Lease was made without impeachment of Wast and if the Lessee hath such a slender interest in the Trees where his Lease is without impeachment of wast his interest is less where it is an ordinary lease without any such priviledge And the property which the Lessee for years hath in the Trees in such Case is so appropriated to the possession that it cannot be severed from it Windham and Anderson Iustices were of opinion that the Exception above is meerly void For Ford the Assignee of Shelly is now Termer and Farmer who alone can challenge interest in the Trees against all but the Lessor and Shelley after his Assignment is meerly a stranger The interest of the Lessee and also of his Assignee in the Trees is of necessity and follows the Farm and the Land as the shadow doth the body And by him where Lessee for years by reason of his lease is to have Wind-fals yet he cannot imploy them but to the benefit and profit of his Farm for if he sell them or spend them elsewhere he shall be punished Rhodes and Periam Iustices that the exception is good as the fruits of the Trees Shovelers c. And afterwards the Case was adjudged upon another point in the pleading so as the matter in Law did not come to Iudgment See Saunders Case 41 Eliz. Where Lessee doth assign excepting the Timber Trees it is a void Exception LXIII Gray and Jeffes Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 55. Action of assault and Batterry IN an Action upon the Case by Gray against Jeffe the Plaintiff declared that where he had placed his Son and Heir apparent with the Defendant to be his Apprentice and to learn of him the Art of a Tailor That the Defendant had so beaten his Son with a Spade that he thereupon became lame by reason of which he could not have so much with his Son in marriage of him as otherwise he might have because the same lameness is a disparagement to his said son And further shewed that he himself might spend twenty pounds per annum in Lands Haulton argued for the Plaintiff The Action Quare filium haeredem cepit abduxit is given to the Father in consideration that the marriage of his Son and Heir doth appertain to him by the Law and here by the Battery the Son is become so same that he is not so commendable to a Marriage as before and if the Father had lost the whole marriage then the Father should have had the Action Quare filium haeredem c. but here he hath not lost the whole marriage but the marriage is lessened by it and therefore he shall have this Action
for that he hath not made his Fresh sute according to the Law for he ought to have begun his Fresh sute within the Hundred where the Robbery was done and it was also objected that the Robbery was done post occasum solis in which Case the Hundreders are not to pursue the Malefactors And Walmsley Serjeant cited a Case out of Bracton Si appellatus se defenderit contra appellantem tota dle usque ad horam in qua Stellae incipiunt apparere recedat quietus de appello and it is not reason to drive the Hundreders to Follow felons at such a time 1 Cro. 270. when for want of light they cannot see them And all the Iustices were clear of opinion that if the Robbery was done in the night time the Inhabitants are not bound to make the pursute And by Rhodes if in a Praecipe quod reddat of Lands the Sheriff summons the Demandant upon the Land in the time of night such a summons is meerly void LXXIII Wiseman and Wisemas Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intrat Trin 28. Rot. 1458. IN an Action of Debt by Wiseman against Wiseman the Case was Debt 1 And. 160. Owen 140. that one Wiseman was seised of the Lands and by his Will devised 1. I will and bequeath unto my Wife B. acre for the Term of her life the remainder to my Son Thomas in tail Item I will and bequeath unto my Son Thomas Devises all my Lands in D. and also my Lands in S. and also my Lands in V. Also I give and bequeath unto the said Thomas my Son all that m● Island or Land enclosed with water which I purchased of the Earl of Essex To have and to hold all the said last before devised premisses unto the said Thomas my Son and the Heirs of his Body The only matter was If the Habendum shall extend to the Island only in which Case Thomas shall have but for life in the Lands in D. S. and V. or unto the Island and also to the Lands in D. S. and V 2 Roll. 60. Roph. 126. in which Case he shall have Fee-tail in the whole And it was argued by Fenner that the Habendum should extend to the Island only as he said the opinion of the Iustices of this Court was in 4 Eliz. in another Case I devise my Manor to D. my eldest Son and also my Land in S. in tail in that Case the entail limited for the Land in S. shall not extend to the 1 Roll. 844. said Manor and of such opinion was Weston Welsh and Dyer Brown contra that the Son hath tail in both But if the words of the devise had been I devise my Manor of D. and my Lands in S. to my Son in tail here the Son had an estate tail in both So it hath been adjudged that if I devise Lands to A. B. and C. successively as they be named the same is good by way of Remainder Walmesley contrary and he relied much upon this that the words of the Habendum are in the plural number 2 Bulst 180. 181. All the last before devised premisses whereas the thing lately devised by the Will was an Island in the singular number which cannot satisfie the Habendum Extent of an Habendum which is in the plural number and therefore to verifie the plural number in the Habendum the Habendum by fit construction shall extend to all the Lands in D. S. and V. and so upon his motion made at another day it was resolved by all the Iustices that the Habendum should extend to all the said Lands and the Habendum should not streighten the Devise to the Island only LXXIV Fullwood and Fullwoods Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Bail renders himself in Court. IN an Action upon the Case the Defendant put in bail to the Court to answer to the Action and now Iudgment being given against him he came into Court and rendred himself and prayed that in discharge of his sureties that the Court would record the rendring of himself which was granted And the Court demanded of the Plaintiff if he would pray execution for the body against the Defendant who said he would not whereupon the Court awarded that the sureties should be discharged and the Rule was entred that the Defendant offered himself in discharge of his sureties and Attornatus Querentis allocatus per curiam c. dixit se nolle c. Ideo consideratum fuit per curiam quod tam praedict defend quam praedict Manucaptores de recognitione praedict denariis in eadem contentis exonerentur LXXV Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was He in the Reversion upon a Lease for years makes a Charter of Feoffment to divers persons to the use of himself for life Feoffments and after to the use of his eldest Son in tail and the words of the Charter were Dedi Concessi Barganizavi Feoffavi and he sealed and delivered the deed but no livery of seisin was made and afterwards he came to his Lessee for years and said to him that he had made a Feoffment and shewed also the uses but did not shew to whom the Feoffment was made to whom the Lessee said you have done very well I am glad of it Attornment And if that were a good Attornment was the Question It was said that that was the Case of one Arden And Gent and Manwood were of opinion that the same was no Attornment because it was not made to the Feoffee scil to the Grantee of the Reversion and so it was ruled in this Case for Attornment ought to be to the Grantee himself and not to Cestuy que use 1 Cro. 251. Tythes and where the spiritual court shall have jurisdiction of them LXXVI The Parson of Facknams Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Parson of great Facknam brought an Action of Trespass against the Parson of Hannington and the Case was If the Parson of one Parish claim by prescription a portion of Tythes out of the Parish of another if the Spiritual Court shall have the Iurisdiction for the tryal of it And the opinion of the whole Court was clear that it should because that the matter is betwixt two spiritual persons and concerning the right of Tithes As 35 H. 6. 39. I. Vicar of B. brought Trespass for taking away of forty loads of Beans c. The Defendant pleaded that he is Parson of the said Church of B. and the Plaintiff is Vicar c. and before the Trespass c. the Beans were growing in the same Town and severed from the nine parts and he took them as belonging to his said Church and demanded Iudgment of the Court c. The Plaintiff said that he and all his Predecessors Vicars c. time out of mind c. have used to have the Tithes of such a Close c. belonging to his Vicaridge and
of the said Manor of Hockley seased the same to Edmund Terrel for years exceptis Reservat grossis arboribus super praemissis crescentibus existentibus Proviso Conditions that if the said Lessee his Executors or Assigns shall do any voluntary Wast in any of the Premisses before demised that then the said demise shall be void and accounted none in Law the said King and Queen after that lease grant the Reversion to the Lord Rich and his Heirs the Lessee cuts down certain great Trees which at the time of the demise were not great but little Trees but after tractu temporis became great and at the time of the cutting down were great upon whom the Lady Rich Wife and Widow of the said Lord Rich being Tenant in Dower the said Manor inter alia being assigned to her in Dower did enter for the condition broken It was moved If the exception did extend to the trees which at the time of the demise were but little trees but afterwards at the time of their cutting down were become great for if the exception do extend to such Trees then upon the matter they were not demised and if so then wast cannot be assigned in the cutting down of them and then by the cutting of them the condition is not broken But if the exception shall be construed to extend to such Trees only which were great Tempore dimissionis then those Trees in which c are demised and by the cutting down of them the condition is broken And the Lord Anderson was of opinion that the exception did extend to Trees which at any time dimissionis praedict became great Where the Tenant in Dower shall take advantage of a condition although at the time of the demise they were but little so as upon the matter such Trees were never demised and so the condition doth not extend to them otherwise it should be if the words had been modo crescentibus existentibus Another matter was moved because if the Lady Rich being Tenant in Dower and so in by the Law not by the party and so not privy nor as Assignee could enter for the condition broken And the Court was clear of opinion that because that the words of the condition are Quando dimissio praedict erit vacua c. and no clause of reentry is reserved so that privity is not requisite the Lady Rich shall take advantage of the condition 11 H. 17. Where the words of a Lease are that upon the not going to Rome that the Lease shall cease it was holden that the Grantee of the Reversion by the common Law should take advantage of such a condition contrary where the condition is conceived in words of re-entry 21 H. 7. 12. It was moved further that here is not any voluntary wast in the Lessee as to the condition Dyer 281. Owen 93. because done by a stranger and not by the Lessee himself and for that the condition is not broken only the Lessee is subject unto an Action of Wast otherwise if the Lessee had expresly commanded the Vendee to cut them down or had given to him express authority The sale was All his Woods growing c. LXXX Gill and Harewoods Case Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. GIll brought an Action upon the Case against Harewood and declared Assumpsit that where the Defendant was endebted to the Plaintiff in such a ●um and shewed how the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff per parvum tempus deferret diem solutionis c. did promise to pay And upon Non Assumpsit pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff and it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that here is not any consideration for no time is limited for the forbearance but generally parvum tempus which cannot be any commodity to the Defendant for the same may be but punctum temporis c. But the exception was not allowed for the Debt in it self is a sufficient consideration LXXXI Pasch 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 2 Co. 74. 5 Co. 38. 8 Co. 155. FEnner Serjeant would have drawn a Fine which was by Dedimus Potestatem and the Fine was to two and their heirs but the Court would not receive such Fine for the incertainty of the Inheritance which always in case of Fine ought to be reposed in a person certain and not left to uncertainty of the Survivor and the said Serjeant prayed presently that the said Fine be received at the peril of the Conusees but the same was denied him by the whole Court. LXXXII Mascals Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Covenant 2 Cro. 644. MAscal leased a House to A. for years by Indenture by which A. covenanted with Mascal to repair the House Leased and that it should be lawful for Mascal his Heirs and Assigns to enter into the House to see in what plight for matter of Reparation the said House stood and if upon any such view any default should be found in the not repairing of it and thereof warning be given to A. his Executors c. Then within four months after such warning such default should be amended the House in the default of the Lessee became ruinous Mascal granted the Reversion over in Fee to one Carre who upon view of the House gave warning to A. of the default c. which is not repayred upon which Carre as Assignee of Mascal brought an Action of Covenant against A. It was moved by Fenner Serjeant that the Action did not lye because the House became ruinous before his interest in the Reversion But the opinion of the whole Court was against him for that the Action is not conceived upon the ruinous estate of the House or for the committing of Waste but for the not repayring of it within the time appointed by the Covenant after the warning so as it is not material within what time the House became ruinous but within what time the warning was given and the default of the Reparation did happen LXXXIII Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Dower IN a Writ of Dower brought by a Woman of the third part of certain Lands c. The Tenant pleaded That the Lands of which Dower is demanded are of the nature of Gavel-kind and that the custom of such Land is that Dower ought to be demanded of the moity of it and not of the third part upon which the Demandant did demur And the opinion of Windham and Anderson Iustices was That such a Woman of such Land might at her pleasure demand her Dower either according to the Custom 1 Cro. 825. Poph. 133. or according to the common Law for by Anderson the common Law was before the Custom quod quaere And by Windham if the Demandant here recover her Dower according to the common Law yet if she taketh another Husband she shall lose her Dower as if she had been endowed according to the Custom Coke an Apprentice
the of Inner Temple being at the Bar when this Case was moved said unto Serjeant Shuttleworth that the Case had been adjudged against the Demandant and Scot Prothonotary did affirm that the Lord Dyer was of opinion that the Woman ought to be endowed according to the Custom and not otherwise And Sayer one of the Clarks of Nelson chief Prothonotary said that it was adjudged accordingly 16. Eliz. and that the Case was betwixt Gelbrand Demandant and Hunt Tenant LXXXIV Beverlie and Cornwals Case Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. BEverlie brought a Quare Impedit against Cornwal Quare Imped 2 Roll. 805. Out-lawry pleaded and had Iudgment to recover upon a Demurrer in Law Which see Mich. 28 29 Eliz. And now the Queen brought a Scire facias upon the matter That the said Beverly after the said Iudgment was out-lawed in an Action of Trespass at the sute of I. S. and upon that a Scire facias issued ad respondendum Quare dicta Domina Regina should not have execution of the Iudgment aforesaid by reason of the Out-lawry aforesaid and declared in all as aforesaid And further that the said Cornwal had resigned Vpon which Beverlie did demur in Law. And this Term it was argued by Puckering Serjeant for the Queen that by that Out-lawry the Interest to present is tranferred to the Queen Which see 5 H. 5. 3. Tenant at will of a Manor to which an Advowson is appendant is out-lawed in an Action of Trespass the Church voided by award of the Court it belongs to the King to present And see 8 R. 2. scil Quare Imped 200 A. seised of an Advowson the Church becomes void A. is Out-lawed in a personal Action the King shall have a Quare Impedit in that Case And as to the Exception taken because the Out-lawry is not sufficiently layed in the Writ but only generally viz. utlagatus in Com. Lincoln ad sectam J.S. in placito transgressionis without shewing the Out-lawry at large There is a difference where an Out-lawry is pleaded by way of ●●r and disability of the person c. and where it is set down in a Writ for a Writ ought shortly and compendiously to comprehend the cause of the Action especially judicial Writs which are not tied to any form certain especially because that the Out-lawry set forth in the Writ is a Record of the same Court For the perclose of the Scire facias is prout per recordum hic in curia plenius apparet And that Record being in the Court the party cannot plead Nul tiel record as if the Record had been in any other Court But he ought to demand Dyer of the Record Which vide 5 H. 7. 24. Walmesley Serjeant contrary By Out-lawry in an Action personal the King cannot seise Land but only take the profits of it 9. H. 6. 20. 21 H. 7. 7. And as our case is nothing doth accrew to the Queen by this Out-lawry for the Queen her self is seised of the Advowson because she usurpando presentavit and her Clerk admitted and although Beverlie hath recovered in a Quare Impedit against the Presentee of the Queen yet because he is not removed by a Writ to the Bishop the Queen continues Patron and nothing remains in Beverlie that may be forfeited But Rhodes and Periam contrary for by Periam if after such Recovery the Incumbent dieth the Patron shall present for by the Iudgment in the Quare Impedit for Beverlie the Patronage is rev●●ted in him without any other execution And by Rhodes If after such Iudgment the Patron dieth his Executors shall have a Writ to the Bishop And by Walmesley the Scire facias doth not lie for the Queen for that Writ always runs in privity of the Record upon which it is grounded to which Record the Queen is a stranger and by Out-lawry in an Action personal no Action real shall escheat and therefore this Scire facias being in the nature of a Quare Impedit upon which it is grounded which is a real Action or at least a mixt shall not be forfeited and also it shall be absurd to grant now a Writ to the Bishop for the Queen whereas Iudgment was given against the Queen as in our case it hath been And in no Case the Iudges shall respect the title of the Queen being a stranger to the Writ But where a title for the Queen doth appear upon the pleading or otherwise within the Record 11 H. 4. 224. by Hankford If a clear title for the King be confessed by the parties upon pleading a Writ to the Bishop shall issue for the King so if such matter appear in Evidence 3 Cro. 427. c. the Land in question is seisable into the Kings hands See 9 H. 7. 9. 16 H. 7. 12. so 21 E. 4. 3. by Choke and F.N.B. 38. e. In a Quare Impedit betwixt two strangers if title doth appear to the Court for the King a Writ to the Bishop shall issue forth for the King but in our Case nothing is within the Record to intitle the Queen but all the matter upon which a Writ to the Bishop is prayed for the Queen is out of the Record and a foreign thing And as to the Out-lawry he conceived it is not sufficiently alledged for he ought to have made mention of the Exigent and of all the proceeding upon it and the Iudgment of the Coroners and for defect of that no title is given to the Queen and of that opinion was the Lord Anderson and that it ought to be set forth in the Writ in what Term the said Beverly was out-lawed and the Number Roll also so that if Beverly had demanded Dyer of the Record the Court might know it And by Nelson chief Prothonotary the Term in which the Out-lawry was ought to be comprised in the Scire facias Vide Book of Entries 485. where in a Quare Impedit for the King upon such a title the King shewed in his Count that A. was seised of such an Advowson and granted the next Avoidance to B. and that afterwards one C. impleaded the said B. in a Writ of Account in such a Court where Nihil was returned upon the summons upon which issued forth a Capias upon which is returned Non est inventus c. upon which an Exigent upon which the Sheriff did return quod ad com tent c. ad v. comitat tunc prox praecedent the said B. exactus fuit non comparuit quia ad nullum eorundem comitat apparuit utlagatus fuit and after the the Church voided and that by reason thereof it did belong to the King to present vide ibid. 196. accordingly And as to the Scire facias all the Iudges agreed that upon the matter the Writ lay well enough And it is good discretion in the Court to grant such a Writ And by Rhodes If two Coparceners of an Advowson make composition to present by turns and afterwards
the Obligation which was made for the further assurance of the duty And here the Defendant ought to have pleaded the tender and see 14. E. 4. 4. A. is bound unto B. that where he hath granted to the said B. a Rent-charge out of such Land now if the said B. shall enjoy the said Rent according to the form and effect of the said Grant that then c. there he needs not to plead any tender for the Rent is not payable in other manner than it was before contrary if the Condition had been for the payment of the Annuity And of that opinion was the whole Court that he ought to have pleaded a tender Another matter of the Award was that the said Audar should yield up surrender relinquish to the Plaintiff all such Houses and Tenements which he had in his possession by reason of the custody of the said Plaintiff As to that the Defendant pleaded that he had yielded up c. All such Houses c. generally without shewing which in certain And for that cause the Court was clear of opinion that the Plea was not good which see 9 E. 4. 16. If I be bounden upon condition to enfeoff the Obligee of all Lands Tenements which were to I.S. in pleading the performance of that Condition I ought to shew what Lands and Tenements in certain for they pass out of me by the Feoffment See also 12 H. 8. 7. 13 H. 8. Non damnificatus generally where no Plea. 19. Another point of the Award was That the said Audar should acquit and discharge and save harmless the Plaintiff of such an Obligation to which the Defendant pleaded that Querens non fuit damnificatus and that Plea was holden insufficient for he ought to have shewed how he had discharged him and it is not sufficient to answer only to the damnification as if I be bounden to convey unto you the Manor of B. in pleading the performance of the condition it is not sufficient to shew that I have conveyed the said Manor but to shew by what manner of conveyance viz. by Fine or Feoffment c. 22 E. 4. 43. If the condition be to discharge the Plaintiff c. then the manner of the discharge ought to be shewed but if it be to save harmless only then non damnificatus generally is good enough 40 E. 3. 20. 38 H. 6. 39. The condition of an Obligation was that the Obligor should keep without damage the Obligee of such a sum of mony against B. to whom he was bounden for the payment of it and the said Obligor pleaded that at such a day c. the said B. at his request delivered the Obligation to the Plaintiff in liew of an acquittance without that that the Plaintiff was damnified by the said Obligation before the delivery of it and it was holden by the Court that if the Defendant had pleaded that he had kept the Plaintiff without damage and had not shewed how that the Plea had not been good See 22 E. 4. 40. The Lord Lisles Case And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff XCVI Heydons Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. RAlph Heydon pretending title to certain Land entred into it and made a Lease of it to try the title Vpon which his Lessee brought an Ejectione firmae in which the parties were at Issue And now at the day of the Enquest the Iurors were called and but five of them appeared whereupon the Defendant came and shewed to the Court that the said Heydon by his Friends and Servants had laboured the Iury not to appear and that for the further vexation of the Defendant who had four Verdicts in affirmance of his title that the said Heydon to procure the Iury not to appear had surmised to them that he and the Defendant were in course of an agreement whereas in truth no such communication of agreement had any time passed betwixt them And all this was openly deposed in Court as well upon the oath of the Defendant himself as upon the oath of one of the Iurors upon which the Court awarded an Attachment against the said Heydon to answer the contempt And also granted to the Defendant that he might sue a Decem tales with proviso for his own expedition XCVII Smith and Kirfoots Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Debt upon Arbitrament SMith brought Debt upon an Arbitrament against Kirfoot and declared that the Defendant and he imposuerunt se in arbitrium ordinationem judicium Johannis Popham ar arbitratoris indifferenter electi de jure titulo inturesse in quibusdam Messuagijs c. Who taking upon him the burthen of the Arbitration ordinavit that the said Defendant should pay unto the Plaintiff ten pounds in plenam satisfactionem c. and thereupon he brought his Action It was moved by Walmesley Serjeant that the Declaration is not sufficient for it appeareth that the Arbitrament set forth in the Declaration is utterly void because whereas ten pounds is awarded to the Plaintiff nothing is awarded to the Defendant and so the Award unequal and so void But the Court was clear of opinion that notwithstanding that such an Arbitrament be void in Law yet it may be for any thing that appeareth that the award is good enough 1 Cro. 904. ● Cro. 354. 355. For the Plaintiff is not to shew in his Declaration all the Award but such part only of it which doth entitle him to the thing c. and if the Defendant will impeach the Award for any thing that is to come in on his part vide ac Book of Entries 152. 123. vide For the Arbitrament 39 H. 6. 12. by Moile 7 H. 6. 41. XCVIII Arundel against Morris Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco RIchard Arundel sued an Audita Querela against Morris and it was comprehended in the Writ That Morris had recovered against him a certain Debt and that he was taken by a Capias ad satisfaciendum Audita Querela at the suit of the said Morris by Hickford Sheriff of the County of Gloucester who let him go at large c. And they were at issue upon the voluntary escape it was found for the Plaintiff It was objected in arrest of Iudgment that the Writ of Audita Querela is not good for the words are that the Plaintiff captus fuit virtute brevis nostri judicialis whereas this word judicialis is not in the Register but only brevis nostri de capiendo But by the whole Court the Writ is good for the word judicialis is but a word of surplusage and shall not make void the Writ And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff XCIX Brook against King. Mich. 29 30. Eliz. IN Debt upon an Obligation by Brook against King the Defendant pleaded that the Bond was endorced with such condition viz. Debt That it the said Defendant King shall procure one I.S. to make reasonable recompence to the
and one A. his Executor wich A. is living and the Plaintiff pleaded that the said A. died within such a Ward before the Writ brought c. and adjudged no plea without traverse without that he was dead for here are 2 affirmatives whereon a good issue cannot rise which see 32 H. 6. 23. The Def. in a Replevin avows for a Rent service the Plaint pleads out of his Fee the Avowant saith within his Fee he ought to traverse without that it is out of his Fee and for default of the traverse the pleading of both parties as to the several allegations of the seisin in Bamfield and Zouch may be true for they both might be Ioynt-tenants of the said moyety at the time of the Fine levyed in which case as to the moyety of the moyety it is good enough And yet when in pleading it is alledged that A. was seised c. If the other party plead that A. had nothing but joyntly with B. he ought to take a Traverse without that that A. was sole seised and yet sole seisin is not expresly alledged but when the other party pleads that A. was seised it ought to be intended a sole seisin Which See 1 E. 4. 9. 37 H. 6. 31. And it was never a plea admittable against a Fine to say that the Conusor had nothing at the time of the Fine levyed which see 41 E. 3. 14. and also 38 E. 3. 13. 8 H. 6. 27. In Trespass the Defendant pleaded the Fine of the Ancestor of the Plaintiff who said at the time of the Fine levyed he himself was seised without that that partes ad finem aliquid habuerunt which see 46 E. 3. 14. and a Fine ought to be avoided by not seisin of the parties to the Fine and not by the seisin of a stranger to the Fine and there is not any Book in the Law that alloweth such an averment of seisin in a stranger to the Fine without answering to the seisin of the parties to the Fine but 13 H. 8. In Assise the Tenant pleaded a Fine upon Render of the Ancestor of the Plaintiff to which the Plaintiff said that before the Fine at the time of the Fine and afterwards continually he himself was seised and the same was held no plea against such a Fine upon a Render notwithstanding the privity of blood contrary against a Fine which proves a gift precedent Anderson to the same intent The Replication for want of Traverse is incurable for we as Iudges do not know what to do because that the truth of the matter in fact doth not appear unto us and so neither the matter in Law for every plea ought to be traversed or confessed and avoided otherwise nothing appears to us and we cannot know whether the Conusor or Bamfield were seised at the time of the Fine levyed for otherwise the matter in Law cannot rise and yet I well know that although a traverse may be spared in respect of a matter in Law which should be choaked and put out of the Book by the traverse or for the mischief of the tryal as aforesaid where a thing is alledged to be done beyond sea 19 E. 4. 6. In debt the Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff was born at Denmark under the obedience of the King of Denmark the Plaintiff by Replication said that he himself was born at D. in England in the County of York there he shall not take a traverse without that that he was born at Denmark for there such tryal connot be but in such case the Defendant by way of Rejoynder shall say that the Plaint was born at Denmark without that that he was born at D. in the County of York And it is true a supposal of a Writ or Count may be answered to an Affirmative but a matter alledged by express words cannot Rhodes admitting now that the Bar be naught and the Replication faulty as it is then I conceive that if the point of the Action be confessed by the Bar the Court shall give Iudgment upon the Bar and shall not meddle with the Replication but if it be not confessed by the Bar that then there shall be a Repleader And I do conceive that a Repleader may be awarded upon a Demurrer in Law which see Plowd 1 Ma. in the Case betwixt Browning and Beston 138. In Trespass the Plaintiff doth suppose the Trespass in two places scil in Bermestreet and in Southwark in the County of Surrey as to the Trespass in Southwark the Defendant doth justifie by special matter of a Lease without answering any thing to the Trespass in Bermestreet The Plaintiff doth reply and makes his title by a Lease more ancient than the Lease to the Defendant upon which the Defendant doth demurr in Law. Now the defect in the Bar appearing the Court awarded a Repleader And 9 H. 6. 35. in a Replevin the Defendant avowed for damage fesant The Plaintiff made title by Common The Defendant pleaded a Release of the Common by deed which was not a perfect deed upon which the Plaintiff did demurr in Law And the Replication in which the imperfect Release was was holden naught but because there was a defect in the Bar to the Avowry by the title of Common the Court awarded that the parties should replead not in respect of the vitious plea upon which it was demurred but in respect of the defect in Bar And so in this Case Periam said that nothing should be awarded in this Case but where an Issue is joyned for an Issue is always joyned upon a point certain But upon a demurrer all the parts of the pleading the Count the Bar c. are referred to the Court as well for the form as for the matter The Book which hath been vouched to the contrary out of 9 H. 6. I have procured search to be made for the Roll but it cannot be found and it is inconvenient that after a demurrer a Repleader should be granted for then Causes should never have an end And as to the Case betwixt Browning and Beston the Repleader there was permitted by the assent of the parties rather then awarded by the Rule of the Court. Windham to the same intent that no Repleader shall be in this Case and he said that in the time of the Lord Dyer the opinion of the Court was so And as this case is the plea a Bar being good and the Demurrer being upon the Replication no Repleader should be for a Repleader shall never be granted where the plea upon a Demurrer is not good but if the Bar be not good and the Defendant doth demurr upon the Replication there a Repleader may be And as to Browning and Bestons Case he conceived that the parties did plead de novo but not replead for if it had been a Repleader then the parties should begin to plead where the first defect was as if the defect be in the Bar there the Repleader shall begin but the Declaration shall stand But
because without summons but where summons issueth and the same is entred upon the Roll there may the vouchee at the Return appear in person or by Attorny at his Election And that was the clear opinion of all the Iustices and also of the Prothonotaries CV Keys and Steds Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco IN a Formedon by Keys against Sted the Case was the Sted and his Wife were Tenants for life Formodon 2 Len. 9. the Remainder over to a stranger in Fee and the Writ of Formedon brought against Sted only who made default after default whereupon came his Wife and prayed to be received to defend her right which was denied her by the Court for this Recovery doth not bind her and it is to no purpose for her to defend her right in that Action which cannot here be impearched Whereupon he in the Remainder came and prayed to be received and the Court at first doubted of the Receit forasmuch as if the Demandant shall have Iudgment to recover he in the Remainder might falsify the Recovery because his estate upon which he prayeth to be received doth not depend upon the estate impleaded scil a sole estate whereas his Remainder doth depend upon a joynt estate in the Husband and Wife Falsifier of Recovery not named in the Writ But at the last notwithstanding the said Exception the Receit was granted See 40 E. 3. 12. CVI. Liveseys Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco Writ of Right IN a Writ of Right against Thomas Livesey of the Mannor of D. de duabus partibus Custodiae Forrestae de C. the Tenant did demand the view and he had it and return was made and now the Writ of Habere facias visum was viewed by the Court and it was Visum Manerii duarum partium Custodiae c. And it was holden by the Court not to be a sufficient view for the Forrest it self ought to be put in view scil the whole Forrest View and not duae partes tantum as where a Rent or Common is demanded the Land out of which the Rent or Common is going ought to be put in view and there a Writ of Habere facias visum de novo issued forth CVII Germys Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco GErmy brought Debt upon a Bond against A. as Executor Debt 2 Len. 119. and the Case was That the Testator of A. by his Will did appoint certain Lands and named which should be sold by his Executors and the moneys thereof arising distributed amongst his Daughters when they have accomplished their ages of one and twenty years the Lands are sold if the moneys thereof being in the hands of the Executors until the full age of the Daughters shall be assets to pay the debts of the Testator And by the clear opinion of the whole Court Assets Post 224. the same shall not be assets for that this money is limited to a special use CVIII Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco IN an Action of Debt upon an Obligation the Defendant saith that the Plaintiff shall not be answered for he is out-lawed and shewed the Outlawry in certain by the name of I. S. of D. in the County of c. The Plaintiff shewed that at the time of the sute begun against I.S. upon whom the Out-lawry was pronounced the said I.S. now Plaintiff was dwelling at S. absque hoc that he was dwelling at D. Vide 21 H. 7. 13. And it was holden a good Replication to avoid the Out-lawry without a Writ of Error by Anderson 10 E. 4. 12. For if he were not dwelling at D. then he cannot be intended the same person See 39 H. 6. 1. CIX Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In Communi Banco IT was agreed by the whole Court and affirmed by the Prothonotaries That if in Account the Defendant be adjudged to account and be taken by a Capias ad computandum and set to mainprize pendent the Account before the Auditors and doth not keep his day before them that now a Capias ad computandum de novo shall issue forth against him CX Glosse and Haymans Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. JOan Glosse brought an Action of Trespass vi armis Trespass vi armis against a Servant for carrying away his Masters goods Owen 52. Mor● 248. against John Hayman who pleaded the general Issue and the Iury found this special matter That the Plaintiff was a Grocer in Ipswich and there held a Shop of Grocery quod illa reposuit fiduciam in the Defendant to sell the Grocery Wares of the Plaintiff in the said Shop And further found that the said Defendant being in the said Shop in form aforesaid cepit asportavit the said Wares and did convert them c. It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that this Action vi armis upon this matter doth not lie but rather an Action upon the Case But the Court was clear of opinion that the Action doth well lie for when the Defendant was in the Shop aforesaid the Goods and Wares did remain in the custody and possession of the Plaintiff her self And the Defendant hath not any Interest possession or other thing in them and therefore if he entermeddle with them in any other manner than by uttering of them by sale according to the authority to him committed he is a Trespassor for he hath not any authority to carry the Wares out of the Shop not sold but all his authority is within the Shop And Rodes put the Case of Littleton 25. If I deliver my Sheep to another to manure his Land or my Oxen to plow his Land and afterwards he kills them I shall have an Action of Trespass against him And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CXI Martin and Stedds Case Mich. 29 30 Eliz. RIchard Martin Alderman of London brought an Action upon the Case against Stedd and declared That whereas the Queen by her Letters Patents dated the 27. of August anno 24. of her Reign had granted to the Plaintiff the Office of Master of the Mint through all England to exercise the said Office secundum formam quarundam Indent betwixt the said Queen and the said Plaintiff conficiendam and that in January following the said Indenture was made by which it was agreed betwixt the said Queen and the Plaintiff that the money in posterum should be made in such manner c. according to the true Standard and declared that he had duly and lawfully made all the money according to the said Standard Yet the Defendant machinans c. had slanderously spoken and given out speeches in these words Mr. Martin hath not made the money as good and fine as the Standard by an half penny in the ounce and so he hath saved four thousand pounds It was objected against this Declaration by Walmesley Serjeant that here the Plantiff hath declared upon
this matter for although the Town in discretion might have stayed the offender before the death of the party yet it is not bound so to do And the Court took time to advise of the Case CXLVI Jerom and Knights Case Pasch 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. JOan Jerom brought an Action upon the Case in the nature of Conspiracy against one Knight and declared Conspiracy 1 Cro. 70. that the said Knight had malitiously caused the Plaintiff to be endicted of Felony and to be arrained upon it and that she was legitimo modo acquietat c. And the Case was that the Defendant came into the Court where the Sessions was holden and complained of the Plaintiff for the said Felony for which the Iustices there comanded her to cause an Indictment to be drawn c. Coke upon the Books of 27 H. 6. 12. 35 H. 6. 14. 27 H. 8. 2. Fitz. 115. It appeareth that if one come voluntarily into the Court and discover Felonies and if it be true which he saith or if he come in Court and draw an Indictment by the command of the Iustices or if he be bound by order of Law to cause the party to be Indicted or to give in Evidence although he do it falsely yet he shall not be punished for the same in Conspiracy or in an Action upon the Case But if he come gratis with malice in him before and maliciosly and falsely cause the party to be Indicted so as falsity and malice are the ground of it c. it is otherwise Gawdy Iustice How shall it be tried if he doth it with malice or not Coke It may be enquired of for malice makes the difference betwixt Murder and Manslaughter and in such case it is to be enquired and here he came to do the same without Process or cohersion in Law. But if he will safely do such office his direct course is to come to a Iustice of Peace and to shew to him that his Goods are stolen and that he doth suspect such a one and then upon examination he shall be bound to come and give in Evidence against the party c. and in such case although that his Evidence he false yet he is not punishable Owen 158. At another day it was said by Coke in the same case ut supra If a man be bound to give Evidence against any person although he give false Evidence no Action lieth Also if one come into Court gratis and discloseth a Felony and gives Evidence if no malice proceed against the party it is not punishable and here fore thought malice is alledged and put in the Declaration to which the Defendant hath pleaded not guilty And now he is found guilty See the Statute of Westminster 2. Cap. 12. Si inveniatur per inquisitionem quod aliquis sit abettator per malitiam c. Wray Iustice It should be hard to charge one with this Action where he hath his goods stolen from him and therefore causeth an Indictment to be drawn against one who he suspects of it who shall be found guilty who should be punished for it for many Malefactors notwithstanding that the Evidence against them be full and pregnant in favour of life are acquitted whereas by Law they ought to be hanged and it is not reason Upon an Acquital of Grace no Conspiracy lieth that upon such an acquital of grace and mercy he should have this Action if such person had used any words of malice before the Sessions an Action upon the case would have lain And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Trin. 27 Eliz. 750. Ratford and afterwards a Writ of Error was brought Trin. 29 Eliz. Rot. 669. In the Original Action the Writ and Declaration were that the Defendant malitiose intendens querentem in nomine vita fama bonis defraudare quandam Billam Indictamenti scribi fecit eam exhibuit to the grand Enquest ibidem false deposuit omnia in ea contenta esse vera which by Coke is full matter of conspiracy for the drawing of an Indictment is not the office of a witness but if it were by the commandment of the Court or of one Iustice of Peace it should be otherwise for there he goes by course of Iustice 21 E. 3. 17. If one conspire with another and afterwards he procures himself to be one of the Indictors his oath shall not excuse his malice before Gawdy If the party had taken upon him to proceed against the party upon any good presumtions he might have pleaded it as to say he found the party in the house suspiciously c. but because he doth not plead any such matter but generally not guilty and the Writ and Declaration stand not answered specially nor controlled with the Verdict there is no reason but that the Iudgment should be affirmed And afterwards the Iudgment was affirmed and it was said by Wray that here the words in the Writ and Declaration are all one as the words in a Writ of conspiracy and the Defendant hath not shewed any special matter to enduce him to the proceedings CXLVII Ferrers Case Pasch 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. HUmphry Ferrers brought an Action upon the case and declared that he is seised of an ancient messuage in the Town of Tamworth Prescription and that he and all his Ancestors whose heir he is owners of the Messuage c. have used time out of mind c. to erect Herdells in aperta platea of Tamworth juxta Messuagium praedict every Market day to make Penns there for Sheep and that he c. have used for such penning of Sheep there to take divers sums of mony of such persons who would Penn their Sheep there and further declared that the Defendant had broken and pulled down his Herdels per quod proficuum suum inde amisit And upon this Declaration Godfrey did demur in Law 1. The Plaintiff hath not shewed in his Declaration specially where he hath used to erect his Herdels but generally in aperta platea without shewing in his own Land or in the Land of another if in the Land of another it is no good title for although that those who fish in the Sea may prescribe to set Stakes on the Land adjoyning to the Sea to hang their Nets to dry after they have done Fishing and that is through the whole County of Kent 8 E. 4. for their prescription is for the common Wealth but the same is not so here but only for a private gain also no prescription is good but where some profit comes to him who prescribes for it which see in the case of the Abbot of Buckfast 21 E. 4. 4. 21 H. 7. 20. Also the Declaration is that the Plaintiff hath taken diversas denariorum summas and see the Prior of Dunstables case 11 H. 6. 19. 19 R. 2. Action surle Case 51. But the certainty of the sums do not appear in this Declaration so as the reasonableness of
the limitation for the life of the Wife cannot extend to both And as to the Book of 24 H. 8. Br. Forfeiture 87. 3 Cro. 167 168. Tenant for life aliens in Fee to B. Habendum sibi haeredibus suis for Term of the life of the Tenant for life the same is not a forfeiture for the whole is but the limitation of the estate And afterwards it was adjudged that it was a forfeiture Gawdy continuing in his former opinion And VVray said that he had conferred with the other Iudges of their House and they all held clearly that it is a forfeiture CLXXII Toft and Tompkins Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Rot. 528. UPon a special Verdict the case was that the Grand-father Tenant for life the Remainder to the Father in tail Discontinuance 1 Cro. 135. that the Grand-father made a Feoffment in fee to the use of himself for life the Remainder to the Father in Fee And afterwards they both came upon the Land and made a Feoffment to Tompkins the Defendant Coke There is not any discontinuance upon this matter for the Father might well wave the advantage of the forfeiture committed by the Grand-father then when the Father joyns with the Grand-father in a Feoffment the same declares that he came upon the Land without intent to enter for a forfeiture It was one Waynmans Case adjudged in the common Pleas where the Disseissee cometh upon the Land to deliver a Release to the Disseissor that the same is no Entry to revest the Land in the Disseissee Then here it is the Livery of the Tenant for life and the grant of him in the Remainder and he in the Remainder here was never seised by force of the tail and so no discontinuance Godfrey Here is a Remitter by the Entry and afterwards a discontinuance for by the Entry of both the Law shall adjudge the possession in him who hath right c. Gawdy This is a discontinuance for when the Father entreth ut supra he shall be adjudged in by the forfeiture and then he hath gained a possession and so a discontinuance for both cannot have the possession Clench The intent of him in the Remainder when he entred was to joyn with the Grand-father and when his intent appeareth that the estate of the Grand-father and his own also shall passe that doth declare that he would not enter for the forfeiture Shute agreed with Gawdy CLXXIII Broake and Doughties Case Hill. 31 Eliz. Rot. 798. Trin. 30. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. AN Action upon the Case for words Action upon the Case for words 1 Cro. 135. viz. Thou wast forsworn in the Court of Requests and I will make thee stand upon a Stage for it It was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Action will not lye for these words for he doth not say that he was there forsworn as Defendant or witness And Trin. 28 Eliz. betwixt Hern and Hex thou wast forsworn in the Court of Whitchurch And Iudgment given against the Plaintiff for the words are not Actionable and as to the residue of the words I will make thee stand upon the Stage for it they are not Actionable as it was adjudged between Rylie and Trowgood If thou hadst Iustice thou hadst stood on the Pillory and Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff Daniel contrary thou wast forsworn before my Lord chief Iustice in an Evidence these words are Actionable for that is perjury upon the matter and between Foster and Thorne T. 23 Eliz. Rot. 882. Thou wast falsly forsworn in the Star-Chamber the Plaintiff had Iudgment for it shall be intended that the Plaintiff was Defendant or a Deponent there And yet the words in the Declaration are not in the Court of Star-Chamber Wray Thou art worthy to stand upon the Pillory are not Actionable for it is but an implication but in the words in the Case at the Bar there is a vehement intendment that his Oath was in the quality of a Defendant or Deponent which Gawdy granted In the Case 28 Eliz. Thou wast forsworn in Whit-Church Court there the words are not actionable for that Court is not known to you as Iudges And it may be it is but a great House or Mansion house called Whit-church Court But here in the principal case it cannot be meant but a Court of Iustice and before the Iudges there juridice and the subsequent words sound so much I will make thee stand upon a Stage for it And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CLXXIV Gatefould and Penns Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Prescription for tythes 1 Cro. 136. 3 Len. 203 265. Antea 94. GAtefould Parson of North-linne libelled against Penne in the spiritual Court for tythes in Kind of certain pastures The Defendant to have prohibition doth surmise that he is Inhabitant of South-linne and that time out of mind c. every Inhabitant of South-linne having pastures in North-linne hath paid tythes in Kind for them unto the Vicars of South-linne where he is not resident and the Vicar hath also time out of mind payed to the Parson of North-linne for the time being two pence for every acre Lewis This surmise is not sufficient to have a prohibition for upon that matter Modus Decimandi shall never come in question but only the right of tythes if they belong to the Parson of North-linne or to the Vicar of South-linne and he might have pleaded this matter in the spiritual Court because it toucheth the right of tythes as it was certified in the Case of Bashly by the Doctors of the Civil Law. Gawdy This prescription doth stand with reason for such benefit hath the Parson of North-linne if any Inhabitant there hath any Pastures in South-linne And afterwards the whole Court was against the prohibition for Modus Decimandi shall never come in debate upon this matter but who shall have the tythes the Vicar of South-linne or the Parson of North-linne and also the prescription is not reasonable CLXXV Gomersal and Bishops Case Hill. 31 Eliz. Rot. 175. Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 136. BIshop libelled in the Spiritual Court for tythe Hay the Plaintiff Gomersal made a surmise that there was an agreement betwixt the said parties and for the yearly sum of seven shillings to be paid by Gomersal unto Bishop Bishop faithfully promised to Gomersal that Gomersal should have the tythes of the said Land during his life And upon an Attachment upon a Prohibition Gomersal declared that for the said annual sum Bishop leased to the Plaintiff the said tythes for his life And upon the Declaration Bishop did demur in Law for the variance between the Surmise and the Declaration for in the Surmise a promise is supposed for which Gomersal might have an Action upon the Case and in the Declaration a Lease But note that the Surmise was not entred in the Roll but was recorded
fide non pro usura and that Issue was tryed in the County of Stafford and was found for the Plaintiff And it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that that Issue ought to be tryed in London where the contract was made Gawdy conceived that the tryal is well As 8 E. 3. 8. In debt upon an Obligation in London the Defendant pleaded that the Obligation was made by duresse at York the same Issue shall be tryed at York At another day the case was put more certain scil that the contract was made at W. in Stafford-shire by which it was agreed that for a Horse and two Tun of Iron the Plaintiff should have for them and the forbearing of the mony for such a small time fifty pounds whereas in truth they were but of the value of forty pounds Tryal and that the said Bond was made for the payment of the said fifty pounds Cook The Issue is well tryed for the ground of the matter is the usurious contract and those of Stafford-shire may better know it than they of London And according to this Tryal it hath been before adjudged H. 28. Eliz. rot 209. Betwixt Sybthorpe and Turner And P. 31. Eliz. rot 303. betwixt Payne and Wilkenson where the Issue was absque hoc that it was a corrupt agreement but the pleading was ut supra And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCVII. The Queen and Buckberds Case Trin. 36 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Queen recovered against Buckberd in a Quare Impedit Quare Impedit 1 Cro. 162. and thereupon a Writ of Error was brought and it was assigned for Error that the Queen post tempus semestre had Iudgment to recover damages for the value of the Church for half a year Cook The same is no Error as it was adjudged 7 Eliz. 236. See also 34 H. 6. 51. And these damages are not as damages but as a penalty inflicted upon the disturbance See Book of Entries 483. The King in a Quare Impedit counted to his damage of forty pounds and 484. 1000 li. and although tempus semestre transierit yet the King shall recover damages but the value of the Church for half a year for the King at all times may present in his own right for nullum tempus occurrit Regi Damages in a Quare Impedit where by King e contra At another day it was moved by Fenner Serjeant and he conceived that here the Queen is not to recover damages for she doth not present in her own right for the Incumbent had two Benefices without Qualifications therefore the first was void and the Lapse encurred and therefore the Queen did present in the right of the Crown and so is not verus Patronus 14 E. 3. Quare Impedit 54. The King shall not recover damages although he count of damages 3 H. 6. Damages 17. And as to the case of 7 Eliz. it doth not appear there that the King did present by reason of his Prerogative he shewed divers Presidents that the King shall not recover damages in such case P. 7. H. 5. rot 402. 2 H. 6. rot 316. For the Statute was intended to give damages to the very Patron and not otherwise Cook Where the King presents by Lapse he is verus Patronus hac vice as Grantee of the next Avoidance Vide T.E. 1. Quare Impedit 181. The King recovered damages in the case of a Prior. Godfrey said he had searched the Roll of 7 Eliz. and there is more reported in the Book than is in the Roll for Iudgment is given for the Presentee but as for the damages the Court would advise of it Gawdy It is clear that the Queen shall not recover double damages Where only single damages for she cannot lose her presentment quia nullum tempus occurrit and because eo quod tempus semestre transierit but she shall have single damages for they are given for the wrong and disturbance and not for the presentment and therefore the damages are well awarded Wray If the King be not within one part of the Statute as it is agreed as to the double damages it is hard that he be within the other branch Popham Attorney general The Queen ought to recover damages but only single damages but not double damages and the words of the Statute are general therefore the Queen shall have the benefit of it and of all Statutes made for the benefit of the Subjects the King shall take advantage The Statute of Gloucester gives damages in a Writ of Cosinage Ai● and Besail and the King brings an Action upon the seisin of his Ancestors he shall recover damages and in construction of Statutes the opinions of them which were next to the making of them is to be much respected Vide 19 E. 2. Rot. 90 19 E. 1. Rot. 255 231 136. And always the King counts to his damage c. and that should be in vain if he should not recover damages And as to the Presidents shewed to the contrary that was the default of those Clerks which the King had presented and when in a Quare Impedit the King had prevailed they contented themselves with the Incumbency without regard of the damages But if damages be not to be given yet the Iudgment to recover the presentment is not erronious And the Iudgment only as to the giving of damages shall be reversed and the Defendant in the Quare Impedit here shall not assign the same for Error because no damages are given 5 Co. 58. for it is for his advantage And always where it is found for the Queen in a Quare Impedit they enquire of the value of the Church A man shall not assign for error that which is for his advantage which should be a trivolous thing if the Queen should not recover damages Gawdy Of things transitorie the Queen may be disturbed and if she be wherefore shall she not recover damages but the doubt is if the intent of the Statute be if the party shall have single damages in any case And here in this case the Iudgment is one and entire and if it be reversed in part it shall be reversed in the whole as in Dower the Tenant pleads that he is always ready c. the Demandant shall have Iudgment to recover her Dower and a Writ shall issue forth to enquire of the damages And see also 17 E. 3. In an Assize of Darrein presentment the Plaintiff had Iudgment to have a Writ to the Bishop And the Assize was taken after for the damages And in the mean time the Defendant brought a Writ of Error and it was holden maintainable for they are several Iudgments but it is not so here for the Entry is Quod querens habeat bre Episcopo quia nescitur quae damna c. for it is one Iudgment Wray It is but one Statute and therefore it shall be construed with one construction and it should
issues the Iury might have assessed the damages severally scil for each issue several damages but here is but one issue and it was the folly of the Defendant that he would not demur in Law upon the Declaration for one part scil the not performance of the Award and traverse the other part scil The suing of the Execution or the Assumpsit of it And in our case it may be that the Iury did assess the damages for the suing of the Execution without any regard had to the performance of the Award And note that the verdict for assessing of the Damages was in these Terms scil Et assidunt damna occasione non performationis Assumpsionis praedict c. And Cook who was of Councel in this Case put this Case The late Earl of Lincoln Admiral of England brought his Action of Scandalis Magnatum and declared That the Defendant exhibited in the Star-chamber against him a Bill of Complaint containing diverse great and infamous slanders viz. That the said Earl was a great and outragious oppressour and used outragious oppression and violence against the Defendant and all the Country also The Defendant pleaded Not guilty and found for the Plaintiff and assessed damages and it was moved in stay of Iudgment first That the Plaintiff had declared upon matter of slander for part for which an Action lyeth and for part not For the oppression supposed to be made to himself no Action lieth because every subject may complain for wrong done unto him and although he cannot prove the wrong an Action will not lye But as for the oppression done to others by the supposal of the Bill an Action lieth for what is that to him he hath not to do with it for he is not pars gravata But because the Iury assessed Damages entirement the Iudgment was arrested for the cause aforesaid And afterwards in the principal case the last day of this term Iudgment was staied CCXXXIX Palmer and Thorps Case Hill. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. BEtwixt Palmer and Thorpe the Case was this 1 Cro. 152 A man demised his Manour of M. for thirty two years and the day after let the same Manour for forty years to begin from Michaelmas after the date of the first Lease and the Tenant attorned And by Cook the same is a good grant although to begin at a day to come for it is but a Chattel and so was the opinion of Wray Chief Iustice for a Lease for years may expect its commencement as a man seised of a Rent in Fee grants the same for twenty years from Mich. following and good for no estate passeth presently but only an Interest See 28 H. 8. 26. Dyer CCXL Sir Anthony Shirley and Albanyes Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Rot. 668. IN an Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit by Sir Anthony Shirley against Albany Assumpsit 1 Cro. 150. The Plaintiff declared That he was seised of the Manor of Whittington for the term of his life the Reversion to the Earl of Arrundel in Fee and so seised surrendered all his Estate to the said Earl who afterwards by his Deed granted a Rent-charge of 40 l. per annum out of the said Mannor to him and afterwards conveyed the Manor to the Defendant in Fee. And afterwards 27 Maii 22. Eliz. upon a Communication betwixt the Plaintiff and the Defendant concerning the said Rent the Defendant did promise to the Plaintiff that if the Plaintiff would shew unto the Defendant any Deed by which it might appear that he ought to pay to the Plaintiff such a Rent he would pay that which is due and that which should be due from time to time And further declared that 27 April 27 Eliz. he shewed unto the Defendant a Deed by which it appeared that such a Rent was granted and due And for eighty pounds due for the two last years he brought the Action The Defendant pleaded that after the said promise and before the shewing of the said Deed scil 14 Jan. 22 Eliz. the Plaintiff entred into the said Land and leased the same for three years The Plaintiff Replicando said that 1 Decem. 27 Eliz. the Defendant did re-enter upon which they were at Issue and it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved by Glanvil Serjeant that by the entry the Promise was suspended and being a personal thing once suspended it is always extinct Wray The Action is brought for the Arrerages due the two last years and so at the time of his re-entry the Plaintiff had not cause of Action and therefore it could not be suspended Suspension of Rent Ante. 110. Gawdy When the Plaintiff sheweth the Deed the Defendant is chargable to arrerages due before and after the promise wherefore if the entry maketh a suspending of the Rent the suspension doth continue but I conceive here is not any suspension for this promise is a meer collateral thing and so not discharged by the entry into the Land for it is not issuing out of the Land. But if the Plaintiff before the Deed shewed had released all Actions the same had been a good Bar and I conceive that the Deed was not shewed in time for it ought to be shewn before any arrerages due after the promise but here it is shewn five years after But that was not denied by all ther other Iustices Another exception was taken that where the promise was that if the Plaintiff shewed any Deed by which it might appear that the Defendant should be charged with the said Rent and the Declaration is by which it might appear that the Plaintiff ought to have the Rent c. so as the Declaration doth not agree in the whole See 1 Ma. 143. in Browning and Bestons Case the Condition of the Lease was if the Rent should be arrear not paid by two Months after the Feast c. and the Rejoynder was by the space of two months c. And the pleading holden insufficient for per duos menses doth not affirm directly post duos menses but by Implication and Argument And here it was holden that the Condition was a good consideration Another exception was taken because the promise is layed All the Rent ad tunc debitum aut deinceps debend It was holden that this word ad tunc doth refer to the time of the shewing of the Deed and not to the promise And as to the last exception but one it was resolved that the Declaration notwithstanding the same was good enough scil ostendit factum per quod apparet quod redditus praedict solvi deberet in forma praedict Another exception was taken because here no breach of the promise is alledged for it is pleaded thath eight pounds de annuali redditu arrer fuer but it is not said de redditu praedict 8 l. ergo it may be another Rent and then the promise as to this Rent is not broken Wray Although the word praedict be wanting yet the Declaration is well enough
and it shall be intended the Rent mentioned before See 21 H. 7. 30. b. Where Villa West shall be intended Villa praedict 19 E. 4. 1. In a Quare Impedit the Plaintiff doth entitle himself by grant of the next Avoydance cum acciderit and doth not shew in his Count that the same was the next Avoydance and yet the Count was holden to be good for so it shall be intended so here And he said It is not necessary that a Declaration be exactly certain in every point but if one part of it expound the other it is well enough And although the Identity of the Rent doth not appear by the word praedict yet it appeareth by other circumstances as by the days of payment c. and no other Rent can be intended And now this Exception is after Verdict and therefore favourably to be taken And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCXLI. Musted and Hoppers Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared Assumsit p 1 Cro. 149. That where he and one Atkinsal were joyntly and severally bounden by Obligation in fifty pounds to a stranger for the only Debt of the said Atkinsal which Atkinsal died and the Defendant married afterwards his Wife and so the Goods of Atkinsal came to his hands yet the Plaintiff the first day of May after which was the day of payment of the money paid five and twenty pounds for avoiding the Forfeiture of the penalty The Defendant as well in consideration of the Premisses as in consideration that he might peaceably enjoy the Goods of the Testator promised to pay the said sum cum inde requisitus fuer And upon Non Assumpsit the Iury found the payment of the said sum and all the precedent matter And that the Defendant in consideration praemissiorum promised to pay the said sum if he might peaceably enjoy the Goods of the said Testator It was moved in arrest of Iudgment that although here the Iury have found sufficient cause of Action yet if the Declaration be not accordingly the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment Verdict And here the Plaintiff hath declared upon two Considerations and the Iury hath found but one scil if he peaceably enjoy the Goods of the Testator Also the Plaintiff declared of a simple promise and the Iury have found a Conditional Si gaudere potest c. And so the promise set forth in the Declaration is not found in the Verdict Gawdy was of opinion That the first consideration is good Consideration for the Plaintiff entred into Bond at the request of the Defendant and then the promise following is good But the second consideration is void scil That the Defendant shall enjoy the goods of the Testator c. as if it had been that he should enjoy his own goods And all the Iustices were clear of opinion That the Promise found by the Iury is not the promise alledged in the Declaration and so the issue is not found for the Plaintiff and so the judgment was stayed CCXLII. Creckmere and Pattersons Case Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Rot. 568. Devise conditional 1 Cro. 146. 1 Roll. 410. 1 Inst 236. b. UPon a special Verdict the Case was this Robert Dookin was seised of certain Lands in Fee and having issue two Daughters devised the same to Alice his Eldest Daughter that she should pay forty pound to Ann her Sister at such a Day the money is not paid whereupon Ann entreth into the moiety of the Land And it was holden by the whole Court that the same is a good Condition and that the Entry of Ann was lawful It hath been adjudged That where a man devised his Land to his wife Proviso My will is That she shall keep my house in good Reparations that the same is a good Condition Wray A man deviseth his Lands to B. paying 40 l. to C. it is a good condition for C. hath no other remedy and a Will ought to be expounded according to the intent of the Devisor CCXLIII Dove and Williots and others Case .. Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 160. IN an Ejectione firmae upon a special Verdict the case was That W. was seised of the Land where c. and held the same by Copy c. and surrendred the same unto the use of E. for life the Remainder to Robert and A. in Fee Robert made a Lease to the Defendant E. Robert A. surrendred the said Land scil a third part to the use of Robert for the life of E. the Remainder to the Right heirs of Robert and of another third part to the use of Robert for life the Remainder to E. the Remainder to Richard c. and of another third part to the use of A. and his Heirs After which Partition was made betwixt them and the Land where c. was allotted to Richard who afterwards surrendred to the use of the Plaintiff It was holden That Iudgment upon this verdict ought not to be given for the Plaintiff For the Lessee of Robert had the first possession and that Lease is to begin after the death of E. who was Tenant for life and when E. and he in the Reversion joyn in a surrender thereby the estate for life in that third part is extinct in Robert who hath the Inheritance and then his Lease took effect for a third Part. So that the Parties here are Tenants in Common 1 Inst 200. betwixt whom Trespass doth not lye CCXLIV Bulleyn and Graunts Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Copyhold UPon Evidence to a Iury the Case was That Henry Bulleyn the Father was seised of the Land being Copyhold and had Issue three Sons Gregory Henry andy Thomas and afterwards surrendred to the use of the last Will Devise 1 Cro. 148. and thereby devised the said Land to Joan his Wife for life the remainder to the said Henry and the Heirs of his body begotten Joan died after admittance Henry died without Issue and afterwards the Lord granted it to Thomas and his Heirs who surrendred to the use of the Defendant then his Wife for life and afterwards died without Issue Gregory eldest Son of Henry Bulleyn entred c. Coke When the Father surrendreth to the use of his last Will thereby all passeth out of him so as nothing accrueth to the Heir nor can he have and demand any thing before admittance Wray The entry of Gregory is lawful and admittance for him is not necessary for if a Copyholder surrendereth to the use of one for life who is admitted and dieth he in the Reversion may enter without a new Admittance It was moved by Coke if this Estate limited to Henry be an Estate tail or a Fee conditional For if it be a Fee-simple conditional then there cannot be another Estate over but yet in case of a Devise an Estate may depend upon a Fee-simple precedent but not
as a Will but as an Executory Devise Wray It is not a conditional Estate in Fee but an Estate tail Coke They who would prove the Custom to entail Copyhold Land within a Manor it is not sufficient to shew Copies of Grants to persons and the Heirs of their bodies Copyhold Estate but they ought to shew that surrenders made by such persons have been enjoyed by reason of such matter VVray That is not so for Customary Lands may be granted in tail and yet no surrenders have been made within time of memory CCXLV Matthew and Hassals Case Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Ejectione firmae betwixt Matthew and Hassal the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover and the Defendant brought a Writ of Error Error 1 Cro. 144. and assigned Error in this that the Iudgment was entred Quod querens recuperet possessionem c. where it should be Terminum vent in ten praedict See 9 Eliz. Dyer 258. Coke contrary That the Iudgment is good enough for the Writ of Execution upon it is Habere facias possessionem and in a real Action the Writ is Quod perens recuperet sesinam and not terram And afterwards Iudgment was affirmed CCXLVI Tempest and Mallets Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Trespass by Tempest against Mallet Iudgment was given and Eror brought and assigned for Error 1 Cro. 153 145. that whereas the Action was brought against four one of them died Mesne betwixt the Award of the Nisi prius and the Inquest taken And it was said on the part of the Defendant in the Writ of Error which was entred upon the Record that the Plaintiff shewed unto the Court the death of one of the Defendants and prayed Iudgment against the others See 4 H. 7. 2 Eliz. 175. And there is a difference where in an Action of Trespass there is but one Defendant and where many Another Error was assigned the Defendant Obtulit se per Higgins Attornat suum without shewing his Christian Name as John or VVilliam for Higgins only without the Christian Name is not any Name for it is but an addition to shew which John or VVilliam Coke The same is helped by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 30. Where it is enacted that after Verdict Iudgment shall be given notwithstanding the lack of Warrant of Attorney of the party against whom the Issue shall be tried or any default or negligence of any the parties their Counsellors or Attorneys and of necessity this default here in the Christian Name ought to be the fault of one of them See also 18 Eliz. Cap. 14. for want of any Warrant of Attorney c. Glanvil The Statute provides for default of Warrant of Attorney c. Then Coke To what end was the Statute of 18 Eliz. made for the Statute of 32 H. 8. provides for defects of Warrants of Attorney Glanvil The first Statutes for Warrants of Attorneys of such persons against whom the Issue was tryed but the later Stat. is general Another Error was assigned Quod defendens Capiatur where the Offence so the Fine is pardoned by Parliament and therefore the entry of the Iudgment ought to be Et de fine nihil quia perdonatur Coke The Iudgment is well enough for in every general Pardon some persons are excepted it doth not appear if the Defendant here were one of them and then the Fine is not pardoned 1 Cro. 768. 778. 3 Cro. 22. for the Court cannot take notice of that as it was holden in Serjeant Harris Case but if the Defendant be charged with the Fine then he ought to plead the pardon and to shew that he was not any of the persons excepted And afterwards at another day the Defendant did alledge that there was a Warrant of Attorney in the Common Pleas. And also it appeareth upon Record that the Defendant did appear upon the Supersedeas by Attorney who had his full Name and therefore prayed a Certiorari de novo to certifie the same matter vide 9 E. 4. 32. VVray A Case here greatly debated betwixt the Lord Norris and Braybrook In nullo est erratum and upon Advice such a Writ of Certiorari was granted after the Plaintiff had pleaded In nullo est erratum for this Plea in nullo est erratum goes but to that which is contained within the body of the Record and not unto collateral matter scil Warrant of Attorneys And afterwards the Writ of Error was allowed and upon the day of return thereof it appeared upon the Record of Supersedeas that the Defendant did appear by such a one his Attorney But it was said by the Court that there ought to be two appearances the one upon the Supersedeas and the other when the Plaintiff declares See as to the name of the Attorney Tirrells Case 1 Mar. Dyer 93. CCXLVII. Palmer and Knowllis Case Hill. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 160. PAlmer recovered Debt against Knowllis and sued Execution by Elegit upon which the Sheriff returned that he had made Execution of the lands of the Defendant by the Oath of twelve men but he could not deliver it to the party Execution for it is extended to another upon a Statute upon which the Plaintiff sued a Capias ad satisfaciendum And now came the Defendant by his Counsel and moved that after Elegit returned the Plaintiff could not resort to the Execution by Capias and therefore prayed a Supersedeas Caplas after Elegit because the Capias erronice emanavit But the whole Court was clear to the contrary for upon Nihil returned upon Elegit the Plaintiff shall have a Capias 17 E. 4. 5. See 21 H. 7. 19. A man shall have a Capias after a Fieri facias or Elegit 34 H. 6. 20. and here the special return doth amount to as much as if the Sheriff had returned Nihil Also the Statute of West 2. which giveth the Elegit is not in the Negative and therefore it shall not take away the Execution which was at the Common Law. And here is no Execution returned for after the former extent ended he ought to have a new Elegit which Wray granted And afterwards the said Knowllis was taken by force of the Capias ad satisfaciend and came into Court in the Custody of the Sheriff and the Case was opened and in the whole appeared to be worthy of favour but by the Law he could not be helped and although he instantly prayed a Supersedeas yet the same was denied unto him CCXLVIII The Church-wardens of Fetherstones Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Action of Trespass was brought by the Church-wardens of Fetherstone in the County of Norfolk and declared Church-wardens 1 Cro. 145. 179. That the Defendant took out of the said Church a Bell and declared that the Trespass was done 20 Eliz. And it was found for the Plaintiffs And now it was moved by
of the Contract and being made at the time of the Communication and contract should charge the Defendant but if the promise were at another time it should be otherwise There was a Case lately betwixt Smith and Edmunds Two Merchants being reciprocally endebted the one to the other agreed betwixt themselves to deliver all their Bills and Bonds into the hands of one Smith who promised that he would not deliver them to the parties until all accounts were ended betwixt them and yet he did deliver them and for that an Action brought against him was adjudged maintainable yet there was not any consideration nor was it material for the action is grounded upon the Deceit and so is it here upon the Warranty And of that opinion were Clench and Wray Iustices but Gawdy was of a contrary opinion CCLXII Woodshaw and Fulmerstones Case Hill. 30. Eliz. Rot. 699 In the Kings Bench. WOodshaw Executor of Heywood brought Debt upon a Bond against Richard Fulmerstone and the Writ was dated October Mich. 29 30 Eliz. and the Condition of the Bond was That if Fulmerstone died before his Age of one and twenty years and before that he had made a Ioynture to A. his Wife Daughter of the Testator Heywood Then if the said Defendant caused one hundred pounds to be payed to the said Heywood within three months after the death of the said William that then the Bond should be void and the said William Fulmerstone died 30 September 30 Eliz. which matter he is ready c. The Plaintiff doth traverse absque hoc that the said Heywood died intestate Tanfield It appeareth of Record that the Plaintiff hath not cause of action for this one hundred pounds was to be paid within three Months after the death of William Fulmerstone 1 Cro. 271 325 565. as the Defendant hath alledged which is also confessed by the Plaintiff and this Action is entred Mich. October 30 Eliz. scil within a month after the death of William Fulmerstone and so before the Plaintiff hath cause of action and therefore he shall be barred Gawdy Where it appeareth to the Court that the Plaintiff hath not cause of Action he shall never have Iudgment as in the Case betwixt Tilly and Wordy 7 E. 4. But here it doth appear that the Plaintiff hath cause of Action for where a man is bound in an obligation the same is a duty presently Obligation and the condition is but in defeazance of it which the Defendant may plead in his discharge CCLXIII Windham and Sir Edward Cleers Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. ROger Windham brought an Action upon the Case against Sir Ed. C. declared that the said Ed. being a Iustice of Peace in the County of N. and where the Plaintiff was a loyal subject Action upon the Case of sclander 1 Cro. 130. and of good fame all his life time nor ever touched or reproched with any offence of Ro●ery c. the Defendant malitiose invide machinams ipsum Rogerum de bonis nomine fama et vita deprivare directed his warrant to divers Baylifs and Constables of the said County to arrest the said Plaintiff And it was alledged in the said Warrant That the Plaintiff was accused before him of the stealing of the horse of A. B. by reason of which the Plaintiff was arrested and so detained until he had entred into a Bond for his appearance c. whereas in truth he was never accused thereof nor ever stole such horse and whereas the Defendant himself knew that the Plaintiff was guiltless by reason of which he was greatly discredited c. And it was found for the Plaintiff And it was moved that upon this matter an Action doth not lye for a Iustice of Peace if he suspect any person of Felony or other such Offence may direct his Warrant to arrest him 14. H. 8. 16 Gaudy and Clench If a man be accused to a Iustice of Peace for Felony for which he directs his Warrant to arrest him although the accusation be false the Iustice of Peace is excused but if the party in truth was not accused before the Iustice it is otherwise It was a Case lately betwixt the Lord Lumley and Foord where Foord in a letter written by him had written It is reported That my Lord Lumley seeketh my life If it was not Reported an Action upon the Case lieth but if reported no Action lieth So here if he was accused no Action lieth but if not an Action lieth And afterwards in the principal Case Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCLXIV Isleys Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. ISley and others were Plaintiffs in an Ejectione firmae and upon the general Issue it was found for the Plaintiffs and 4 days after the verdict given was moved in stay of judgment a special ma●ter in Law whereof the Iustices were not resolved for the law but took advisement and gave day over and in the mean time one of the Plaintiffs died which matter the Defendant shewed to the Court in further stay of the Iudgment But by Coke the same is not any cause for the Postea came in Quindena Pasch which was 16 Aprilis at which day the Court ought to have given Iudgment presently but took time to be advised and the 19 of April one of the Plaintiffs died And the favour of the Court ought not to prejudice us for the Iudgment here shall have Relation to the 16 of April at which time he was alive and it was so of late adjudged in the Case of Derick James who died the day after the verdict and yet Iudgment was not stayed for the Court after verdict cannot examine surmises and they have not a day in Court to plead and in our case It was but a day of Grace and no entry is made of it Although no plea can be now pleaded after verdict yet as amicus curiae one may inform us of such matter And sometimes in such case Iudgment hath been stayed as 9 Eliz. and sometimes notwithstanding such Exception as 2 Eliz. So as I conceive the matter is much in the discretion of the Iustices And because the same was a hard verdict and much against the Evidence It is good discretion upon this matter to stay Iudgment and such was the opinion of the Court. CCLXV. Steed and Courtneys Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Error 1 Cro. 116. Owen 93. More 691. Prescription to levy a fine not good ERror was brought upon a Fine levied upon a Plaint in a writ of Covenant in the City of Exceter And two Errors were assigned First The Plaint was quod teneat convent de duobus tenementis Whereas in truth the word Tenement doth not comprehend any certainty for in the Word Tenement is understood Messuage Land Meadow Pasture c. and whatsoever syeth in tenure And 11 H. 6. 18. by grant of Lands and Tenements Rent or Common shall pass And an Ejectione firmae
appendant to it and conveyed the said capital Messuage and Advowson to the King by the dissolution and from the King to the said Thomas Long who so seised without any Deed did enfeoff the Plaintiff of the said Manor and made Livery and Seisin upon the Demesnes And that the said Thomas Long by his Deed made a grant of the said Advowson to the said Strengham and afterwards the Free-holder attorned to the Plaintiff And by the clear opinion of the whole Court here is a sufficient Manor to which an Advowson may be well appendant and that in Law the Advowson is appendant to all the Manor but most properly to the Demesnes out of which at the commencement it was derived and therefore by the attornment afterwards within construction of the Law shall have relation to the Livery the Advowson did pass included in the Livery And the grant of the advowson made mesne between the Livery and the attornment was void and afterwards Iudgment was given and a Writ to the Bishop granted for the Plaintiff CCXC. Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In Communi Ban●o Debt A Made a Bill of Debt to B. for the payment of twenty pounds at four days scil five pounds at every of the said four days and in the end of the Deed covenanted and granted with B. his Executors and Administrators that if he make default in the payment of any of the said payments that then he will pay the residue that then shall be un-paid and afterwards A. fails in the first payment and before the second day B. brought an action of Debt for the whole twenty pounds It was moved by Puckering Serjeant S●y 31. 32. 1 Cro. 797. That the Action of Debt did not lye before the last day encurred And also if B. will sue A. before the last day that it ought to be by way of covenant not by Debt But by the whole Court the action doth well lye for the manner for if one covenant to pay me one hundred pounds at such a day an action of Debt lyeth a fortiori Owen 42. 1. 2 Rol. 523. when the words of the Deed are covenant and grant for the word covenant sometimes sounds in covenant sometimes in contract secundum subjectum materiae CCXCI. Lancasters Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In Communi Banco Roll. Tit. Covenant pl. 72. AN Information was against Lancaster for buying of pretended Rights Titles upon the Statute of 32 H 8. And upon not guilty pleaded It was found for the Plaintiff it was moved in arrest of Iudgment because the Informer had not pursued the Statute in this that it is not set forth that the Defendant nor any of his Ancestors or any by whom he claimed have taken the profits c. and the same was holden a good and material Exception by the Court although it be layed in the Information that the Plaint himself hath been in possession of the Land by twenty years before the buying of the pretended Title for that is but matter of argument not any express allegation for in all penal Stat. the Plaintiff ought to pursue the very words of the Stat. and therefore by Anderson It hath been adjudged by the Iudges of both Benches that if an Information be exhibited upon the Stat. of Vsury by which the Defendant is charged for the taking of twenty pounds for the Loan and forbearing of one hundred pounds for a year there the Information is not good if it be not alledged in it that the said twenty pounds was received by any corrupt or deceitful way or means And in the principal Case for the Cause aforesaid Iudgment was arrested CCXCII Bagshaw and the Earl of Shrewsburies Case Mich. 32 33. Eliz. In the Common Bench. BAgshaw brought a Writ of Annuity against the Earl of Shrewsbury for the arrerages of an Annuity of twenty Marks per annum Annuity granted by the Defendant to the Plaintiff Pro Consilio impenso impendendo The Defendant pleaded that before any arrerages incurred he required the Plaintiff to do him Service and he refused The Plaintiff by replication said that before the refusal such a day and place the Defendant discharged the Plaintiff of his Service c. And the opinion of the Court was that the Plea in Bar was not good for he ought to have shewed for what manner of Service to do the Plaintiff was so retained and for what kind of Service the Annuity was granted and then to have shewed specially what Service he required of the Plaintiff and what Service the Plaintiff refused Another matter was moved If the discharge shall be peremptory and an absolute discharge of the Service of the Plaintiff and of his attendance so that as afterwards the Defendant cannot require Service of the Plaintiff And by Walmesly Iustice it is a peremptory discharge of the Sevice for otherwise how can he be retained with another Master and so he should be out of every Service VVindham contrary For here the Plaintiff hath an Annuity for his life and therefore it is reason that he continue his Service for his life as long as the Annuity doth continue if he requirreth But where one is retained but for one or two years then once discharged is peremptory and absolute CCXCIII Matheson and Trots Case Mich. 31 32. Eliz. In the Common Bench. BEtwixt Matheson and Trot the Case was Sir Anthony Denny seised of certain Lands in and about the Town of Hertford 2 Len. 190. holden in Socage and of divers Mannors Lands and Tenements in other places holden in chief by Knights-service and having Issue two Sons Henry and Edward by his last Will in writing devised the Lands holden in Hertford to Edward Denny his younger Son in Fee Devises and died seised of all the Premisses Henry being then within age After Office was found without any mention of the said Devise the Queen seised the Body of the Heir and the possession of all the Lands whereof the said Sir Anothony died seised and leased the same to a stranger during the Minority of the Heir by force and colour of which Lease the Lessee entred into all the Premisses and did enjoy them according to the Demise And the Heir at his full age sued Livery of the whole and before any entry of the said Edward in the Land to him devised or any entry made by the said Henry the said Henry at London leased the said Lands by Deed indented to I.S. for years rendring Rent by colour of which the said I.S. entred and paid the Rent divers years to the said Henry And afterwards by casualty the said Henry walked over the Grounds demised by him in the company of the said I. S. without any special entry or claim there made I.S. assigned his Interest to I.D. who entred in the Premisses and paid the Rent to the said Henry who died and afterwards the Rent was paid to the Son and Heir of Henry
Disseisor as well to Robert as to the Infant Then if the Defendant be Disseisor and hath no title by the Infant Robert who hath Right in a moyety may well enter into the whole for he hath the possession per my per tout by his Entry and then when the Defendant doth eject him he hath good cause of Action And after at another day the Case was moved and it was agreed That for one moyety the Infant is bound for Sir Thomas had an estate tail in a moyety for he was Issue of the body of the Comisor But for the other moyety the Fine levyed by Tenant for life William the Father being then Tenant beyond the Sea It was holden by Anderson Windham and Walmesly that the Infant was not barred notwithstanding the objection abovesaid That William the Father never returned into England and notwithstanding the words of the Statute of 4 H. 7. And by Walmesley If an infant make his claim within age it is sufficient to avoid the Fine and yet the said Statute seems to appoint to him time within five years after his full age so that according to the very words a claim made before or after should be vain yet in Equity although he be not compelsable to make his claim until the time allowed by the Statute yet if he make it before it is good enough And by Anderson Although that VVilliam the Father did not return yet if he makes not his claim within five years after the death of his Father being of full age and without any impediment c. he shall be barred If in such case a man hath many impediments he is not compellable to make his claim when one of the impediments is removed but when they are all removed So if the Ancestor hath one of the said impediments and dieth before it be removed and his Heir is within age or hath other impediment he is not bound to make is claim till five years after his impediment is removed And Somes case cited before was holden and agreed to be good Law for the Forfeiture may not be known unto him And as to the objection against the Lease at Will because it was made by an Infant and no Rent reserved upon it nor the Lease made upon the Land and therefore the Lessee should be a Disseisor To that it was answered Be the Defendant a Disseisor or not it is not material here for if the Plaintiff had not title according to his Declaration he cannot recover 1 Cro. 220. 1 Cro. 438. whether the Defendant hath title or not for it is not like unto Trespass where the very possession without other title is good contrary in Actions against all who gave not title but in Ejectione firmae if the title of the Plaintiff be not good and sufficient be the title of the Defendant good or not he shall not recover And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Defendant Hill. 33. Eliz. CCXCVIII Cheny and Smiths Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In Communi Banco IN an Ejectione firmae by Cheny and his Wife against Smith The Plaintiffs declared upon a Lease made by the Master of the House or Colledge of S. Thomas of Acons in London to I.S. who assigned it over to Knevit who by his Will devised the same to his Wife whom he made also his Executrix and dyed and afterwards she took to Husband one VVaters and died VVaters took Letters of Administration of the Goods and Chattells of his Wife and afterwards leased to the Plaintiffs And upon not guilty they were at Issue And it was given in Evidence That the Lease given in Evidence was not the Lease whereof the Plaintiffs have declared for the ori●inal Lease shewed in Court is Master of the House or Hospital where the Lease specified in the Declaration is Master of the House or Colledge 38 E. 3. 28. And some of the Iustices conceived that there is not any material Variance but if the parties would it might be found by special Verdict For by them Colledge and Hospital are all one And afterwards the Court moved the Plaintiffs to prove if the wife were in as Executrix or as Legatee for by Anderson and Periam until election be made he shall not be said to have it as Legatee especially if it be not alledged in fact that all the debts of the Testator are paid And Anderson doubted although that it be alledged that the debts be paid If the Executor shall be said to have the said Lease as a Legacy before she hath made Election vid. Weldens Case and Paramours Case in Plowd And afterwards it was given in Evidence That the wife after the death of the Husband had repaired the Banks of the Land and produced Witnesses to prove it as if the same should amount to claim it as a Legacy and the Court said that that matter should de referred to the Iury 1 Roll. 620. And it was further shewed in Evidence that the said Wife Executrix and her said Husband Waters formerly made a Lease by Deed reciting thereby that where the Husband was possessed in the right of his said Wife as Executrix of her first Husband c. And by the opinion of the whole Court the same was an express claim as Executrix and then when the Wife died if the Husband would have advantage of it he ought to take Letters of Administration of the Goods of her first Husband and not of the Wife but if she had claimed the Land and the Term in it as Legatee and had not been in possession Administration taken of the Rights and Debts of the Wife had been good as to that intent that his Wife was not actually possessed of it but only had a Right unto it and of such things in Action the Husband might be Executor or Administrator to his Wife but here they have failed of their title The Administration being taken of the goods of the Wife where it should be of the Goods of the Testator the first Husband And for this cause the Plaintiffs were non-suit and the Iury discharged And it was agreed by all the Iustices that if the Wife before Election had taken Husband that the Husband might have made the Election in the Case aforesaid CCXCIX The Lord Cobham and Browns Case Mich. 32 33 Eliz. In the Common Bench. THe Case between the Lord Cobham and Brown was that the Abbot of Grace was seised of the Mannor of Gravesend in the County of Kent which Mannor doth extend to the Parishes of Gravesend and Milton and that the said Abbot and all his Predecessors c. time out of mind c. have had a Water-Court within the said Mannor which Court had been holden at Gravesend Bridge in the end of it and that all the Inhabitants within the said Parishes which have Boats either entirely or joyntly with others and have used to transport or carry passengers from Gravesend to London e contra and have used to fasten
hoc that he was indebted to the Plaintiff antea vel post the said day aliquo modo upon which the Plaintiff did demur It was argued that the Traverse was not good for the consideration in Assumpsit is not traversable because it is but conveyance and amounts to the general Issue as in debt upon the sale of a Horse it is no Plea for the Defendant to say that no such Horse was sold to him Patridge If the conveyance be the ground of the Suit it is traversable an Action upon the Case against an Hostler it is a good Plea that he is not an Hostler 2 H. 4 7. See 26 H. 8. Br. Traverse 341. In an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared that whereas the Defendant habuit ex deliberatione of the Plaintiff certain goods the said Defendant in consideration of ten shillings Assumpsit eidem querenti promisit salvo Custodire c. Non habuit ex deliberatione is a good Plea. Godfrey The Defendant doth not answer the point of our Action which is the Assumpsit but only by way of Argument 11 E. 4. 4. In Trespass upon the Statute of 5 R. 2. by the Master of a Colledge and his confreers the Defendant doth justifie by reason of a Lease made by a Predecessor of the Plaintiff and his Confreers by their Deed under their Common Seal the Plaintiff Replicando saith That at the time of the making of the Lease there was no such Colledge and it was holden no Plea for it is no answer but by Argument Gawdy Iustice In all cases where the Defendant may wage his Law there the conveyance is traversable Wray The cause of the Action is the Assumpsit therefore the consideration is not traversable for it is not the point with which the Plaintiff is charged And it is common here that the Declaration in such Action upon the Case Traverse in consideration of divers sums of money without any more certainty is good which should not be good if the consideration were traversable but the consideration is to be given in Evidence and it is also common that in an Action upon the Case in Trover and Conversion the Trover is not traversable for the Conversion is the point of the Action Fenner Iustice The debt here is no cause of the Action but only the Assumpsit In debt upon Arbitrament the Arbitrament is traversable So in debt for Rent upon a Demise the Demise is traversable Antea 189. for the Arbitrament and Demise is the cause and ground of the Action At another day it was moved again and Gawdy mutata opinione said that consideration Executory is traversable As where one in consideration that he may marry my Daughter or of service promiseth to pay the same consideration is traversable contrary of a Consideration executed And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCXLI Estons Case Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Court of Wards ESton was seised of Lands in Fee holden of the King in chief 1 Cro. 243. and took a Wife seised of other Lands holden in Socage they have Inne and the Husband dieth and afterwards the Wife dieth Owen Serjeant conceived That the Queen should not have the Wardship of the Land of the Wife or the primer seisin of it And if the Husband had survived his Wife being Tenant by the Curtesie the Queen should not have Primer seisin of it after his decease Wray If the Father be seised of Lands holden in Soccage and the Mother of Lands holded in Knights service and the Husband over-lives his Wife being Tenant by the Curtesie the King shall have all Anderson denied that and he conceived That the opinion of Stamford is not Law and yet see 13 H. 4. 278. Where the Father is seised of Lands in chief and the Mother of other and the Father dieth and afterwards the Mother dieth both shall be in ward And it was said That if there be Grandfather Father and Son and the Father dieth seised of Lands holden in Socage and afterwards the Grandfather dieth seised of Lands in Knights service the Lands in Socage shall not be in ward Anderson held strongly That the Queen should have Primer seisin of the Lands of the Mother Wray contrary Quaere CCCXLII Ellis Hartops Case Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Court of Wards ELlis Hartop was seised of divers Lands whereof part was holden of the King in Knights service and devised two parts thereof to W. Denham and his Heirs to the use of T. his brother and his wife and afterwards to the use of the said T. and his Heirs males T. died in the life of the Devisor and afterwards a Son is born First it was agreed that a Devise might be to the use of another Then when Cesty que use dyeth in the life of the Devisor the Devisee shall take it and when a Son is born it shall go to him But if the use be void then the Devisee shall have it to his own use for every devise doth imply a consideration Coke was of opinion That the Son takes by descent when Cestuy que use to whom Land is devised doth refuse the use the Devisee cannot take it for he shall not have it to his own use for if the use be void the devise is also void And the use is void for Cestuy que use died in the life of the Devisor which see Bret and Rygdens case A man seised of three Acres bargains and sells one of them without shewing which and that before the Statute of 27 H. 8. The Bargainee dyeth before Election no Election descends to the Heir for then he should be a Purchasor And by Wray and Anderson The devise is void and it is all one with Brett and Rigdens case And by Anderson a man deviseth Lands to the use of one which use by possibility is good and by possibility not good If afterwards Cestuy que use cannot take the Devise shall be to the use of the Devisor and his Heirs CCCLXIII Weston and Garmons Case Trin. 33. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assize 1 Cro. 226. ASsize was brought of a Rent of fifty pounds per annum and the Plaintiff made his plaint to be disseised of his Free-hold in H. E. and H. W And shewed that John Vaughan and Amy his Wife who before was the wife of one Weston and Mother of Sir Henry Weston the Plaintiff in the Assize was seised of the said Manors of H.W. and H.E. lying in Barton and Kinton in Fee. And 18 Eliz. a Fine was levied betwixt Robert Vaughan and Miles Whitney Complainants and the said John Vaughan and Amy his Wife and Francis their Son Deforceants of the said two Manors inter alia per nomen of the Manors of H.E. and H.W. and of fifty Messuages three hundred Acres of Lands two hundred Acres of Meadow cum pertinentiis in the said Towns by which Fine the said Deforceants did acknowledge the right of the said Manors and Tenements to be
barred but if the Wife enter after the death of her Husband and before the Proclamations pass the issue is not bound by the Fine And if Tenant in Tail granteth totum statum and after levieth a Fine thereof with Proclamations come ceo c. The Issue is barred contrary where the Fine is upon a Release c. CCCXLVI Henningham and Windhams Case 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. ARthur Henningham brought a Writ of Error against Francis Windham upon a common Recovery had against Henry his Brother Error Owen Rep. 68. and the Case was That Land was given in special tail to Thomas Henningham Father of the said Henry and the said Arthur the Remainder in general tail the estate tail in possession was to him and the Heirs Mairs of his body Thomas had issue the said Henry and three Daughters by one woman and the said Arthur and two other Sons by another woman and dyed seised Henry entred and made a Feoffnent a common Recovery is had against the Feoffee in which Henry is vouched who vouched over the common Vouchee according to the usual course of common Recoveries Henry dyed without issue Error and Attaint by him to whom the Land is to descend and Arthur brought a Writ of Error being but of the half blood to Henry And it was resolved by the whole Court That Error and Attaint always descends to such person to whom the Land should descend If such Recovery or false oath had not been As if Lands be given to one and the Heirs Females of his body c. and suffers an erronious Recovery and dyeth the Heir female shall have the Writ of Error So upon Recovery of Lands in Borough English for such Action descends according to the Land quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam But it was objected on the Defendants part That because that the Feoffee being Tenant to the Praecipe is to recover in value a Fee-simple and so Henry is to yield a Fee-simple which should descend to the heir at the Common Law if this Recovery had not been therefore he to whom the same should descend should have the Writ of Error for he hath the loss But the said Exception was not allowed And it was said That Tenant in tail upon such a Recovery shall recover but an estate in tail scil such estate which he had at the time of the warranty made c. And afterwards Iudgment was given that the Action was maintainable So if a man hath Lands of the part of his mother and loseth it by erronious Iudgment and dyeth That the Heir of the part of the Mother shall have the Writ of Error CCCXLVII Foster and Pitfalls Case 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Ejectione firmae the Case was 1 Cro. ● Brook devised Lands to his Wife in general Tail the Remainder over to a stranger in Fee and dyed he took another Husband and had issue a Daughter The Husband and Wife levyed a Fine to a stranger The Daughter as next Heir by 11 H. 7. entred It was agreed by the whole Court That an estate devised to the wife is within the words but not within the meaning of the Statute Secondly It was resolved That no estate is within the meaning of the Statute unless it be for the Ioynture of the Wife Thirdly Resolved That the meaning of the Statute was That the wife so preferred by the Husband should not prejudice the issues or heirs of her Husband and here nothing is left in the Issues or heirs of the Husband so as the Wife could not prejudice them for the Remainder is limited over CCCLXVIII Greenes Case 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Acceptance of Rent 1 Cro. 3. 3 Co. 64. b. GReene made a Lease for years rendring Rent with clause of Re-entry and the Rent due at the Feast of the Annunciation was behind being demanded at the day which Rent the Lessor afterwards accepted and afterwards entred for the condition broken and his Entry holden lawful Entry Plow Com. in Browning and Bestons Case for the Rent was due before the condition broken but if the Lessor accepts the next Quarters Rent then he hath lost the benefit of Re-entry for thereby he admits the Lessee to be his Tenant And if the Lessor distrain for Rent due at the said Feast of the Annunciation after the forfeiture he cannot afterwards re-enter for the said forfeiture for by his Distress he hath affirmed the possession of the Lessee So if he make an Acquittance for the Rent as a Rent contrary if the Acquittance be but for a sum of mony and not expresly for the Rent all which tota Curia concessit CCCXLIX 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was Lessee for life the Remainder for life the Remainder in tail the Remainder in fee The two Tenants for life make a Feoffment in fee. Dyer A woman Tenant for life in Ioynture the Remainder for life the Remainder in fee the Tenants for life joyn in a Feoffment Entry for Forfeiture the Entry of him in the Remainder in fee is lawful by 11 H. 7. And if Tenant for life be impleaded and he in the Remainder for life will not pray to be received he in the last Remainder may and so in our case inasmuch as he in the Remainder for life was party to the wrong he in the Remainder in tail shall enter Which Harper and Munson granted Dyer 339. a. i. e. Manwood Although that this Feoffment be not a Disseisin to him in the Remainder in tail yet it is a wrong in a high degree as by Littleton A Disseisor leaseth for life to A. who aliens in fee the Disseisee releaseth to the Alienee it is a good Release and the Disseisor shall not enter although the Alienation was to his disinheritance Lit. 111. which Dyer granted And if Tenant for life alieneth in fee and the Alienee enfeoffeth his Father and dieth the same descent shall not avail him no more than in case of Disseisin Livery of Seism It hath been objected that this is the Livery of the first Tenant for life and the confirmation of him in the Remainder for life Dyer was of opinion That by this Livery the Remainder for life passeth and this Livery shall be as well the Livery of him in the Remainder as of the Tenant in possession and although where an estate is made lawfully by many it shall be said the Livery of him only who lawfully may make Livery Yet where an estate is wrongfully made it shall be accounted in Law the Livery of all who joyn in it And in this the Remainder for life is extinguished by the Livery in the Feoffee and the Livery of him in the Remainder for life shall be holden a void Livery especially when he joyns with such a person who hath not authority to make Livery As if the Lord and a Stranger Disseise the Tenant and make a Feoffment over the whole Seigniory is
extinct as if he solely had been seised so if he in the Reversion and a Stranger disseise for life and make a Feoffment over the Seigniory is gone and yet it is the Livery of the Lessee only And although it be but the confirmation of him in the Remainder for life yet thereby the Remainder is gone and extinct And afterwards Iudgment was given that the Entry of him in the Remainder in tail was lawful And it was said by the L. Dyer That if Tenant for life be the Remainder for life the Remainder in fee Tenant for life in possession alieneth in fee that he in the Remainder in fee cannot enter for it was not to his disinheri●in CCCL 20 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was That a Capias ad Satisfaciend was delivered to the Sheriff 5 Co. 88 89. and after the Sheriff did arrest the party against whom the Capias issued by force of a Capias Utlagatum and then the party in the Capias came to the Sheriff and prayed that the party remain in Execution for his debt also and notwithstanding that the Sheriff let the Prisoner go at large and upon both Writs returned Non est inventus It was the opinion of all the Iustices That the Sheriff was not bound in point of Escape to detain the Prisoner for the Debt of the Plaintiff and it is not like where one is in the Fleet in Execution there if other condemnations in other Courts be notified to the Warden of the Fleet he shall be chargeable with them all It was holden also per Curiam That if the Body had been returned by Capias Utlagatum that the Court at the prayer of the party would grant that the Prisoner might remain in Execution for the debt as in case of a Capias pro fine CCCLI The Lord Saint John and the Countess of Kents Case 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN Evidence given to the Iury in an Action of Debt brought by the Plaintiff against the Defendant Grants of Executors of omnia bona sua 1 Cro. 6. It was said by Dyer and Manwood Iustices That if Executors grant omnia bona sua that the goods which they have as Executors do not pass which see 10 E. 4. 1. b. by Danby but the contrary was holden by Wray chief Iustice of the Kings Bench and by Plowden in Bracebridges case P. 18 Eliz. and they denied the opinion of 10 E. 4. to be Law for by such Grant made by Executors the goods of the Testator do pass CCCLII. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. NOte It was said by Dyer and Manwood Iustices That if one be condemned in an Action upon the Case Abatement of Writ 3 Len. 68. or Trespass upon Nihil dicit or demurrer c. And a Writ issueth forth to enquire of the Damages and before the return of it the Defendant dieth that the Writ shall not abate for the awarding of the said Writ is a Iudgment And it was said by Manwood Account In a Writ of Account the Defendant is awarded to account if the Defendant account and be found in Arrearages and dieth the Writ shall not abate but Iudgment shall be given that the Plaintiff shall recover and the Executor shall be charged with the Arrearages and yet account doth not lye against them CCCLIII 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A. Did recover in Debt against B. whereupon a Fieri facias issued to the Sheriff of Devon and the Defendant seeing the Writ of Execution in the Sheriffs hands Attachment of Goods after the Money is in the Sheriffs hand is void said to him that he would pay the Debt recovered at Exeter such a day to satisfie the Execution at which day the Defendant paid the mony accordingly and presently came an Officer of the City of Exeter and attached the mony in the Sheriffs hand supposing the said A. to be indebted so much to one C. in whose name he made the Attachment Antea 29. 1 Cro. 6● and now on the behalf of the said A. a Certiorare was prayed to remove the Attachment hither and it was therefore holden by the whole Court that the Attachment was void and a Certiorare granted And Wray said If it can be proved by Oath that if the Defendant did procure or was assenting to the said Attachment that Process of Contempt should issue against him and the Sheriff demanded of the Court what return he should make because the monies were attached in his hands and taken from him by force to which Wray answered That the Sheriff ought to answer the monies to the Plaintiff which were once in his hands by force of the Execution and that it was his folly to suffer the mony to be taken from him by colour of the said Attachment and if the mony was taken by force the Sheriff had his remedy by an Action of Trespass for the Attachment was void but the Sheriff at the return of the Writ ought to answer for the Mony. CCCLIV. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. TEnant for life bargained and sold his Lands to A. and his Heirs and afterwards levied a Fine to the Bargainee Forfeiture 4 Len. 124. ● Len. 60 65. Sur conusans de droit come ceo c. It was holden by the Court that it was a forfeiture committed by the Bargainee not by the Bargainor who at the time of the Fine had nothing to forfeit and it was said by Manwood Iustice That if Tenant for life be disseised and takes a Fine ut supra of a Stranger it is a forfeiture and yet he in the Reversion hath but a right in Reversion so that if Tenant for life be disseised and the Disseisor commits Wast he in the Reversion shall have an Action of Wast against Tenant for life and if two Tenants for life be disseised by two A. and B. and one of the Tenants for life doth release unto A. and the other Tenant for life doth re-enter he hath the Moiety in common with the other to whom the Release was made and he hath revested the intire Reversion in him in whom the Reversion was before c. CCCLV. 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Bracebridges Case THe Case was Thomas Bracebridge seised of a Manor in Fee leased a Messuage parcel of it to one Curtes for 21 years and afterwards 35 H. 8. leased the same to one Moore for 26 years to begin after the expiration of the former Lease and afterwards 5 E. 6. he enfeoffed Griffith and others to the use of the Feoffees themselves and their Heirs upon condition That if the Feoffees did not pay to the said Thomas Bracebridge 2000 l. within 15 days after that then immediately after the said 15 days the Feoffees should stand seised of the said Manor to the use of the said Thomas Bracebridge and Joyce his wife for their lives without impeachment of Wast and afterwards to the use of T. B. their second Son in tail with divers Remainders
Litis contestationem the right of the Suit is so vested in the Proctor Swinburn 212. that he is a person suable until the end of the Suit and also he reported their Law to be * Bro. Devise 27. 45. Office of Exce 347. Sh●p Touchstone c. 454. Plowd 345. Orphans Legacy 281. Note It was adjudged contrary to this Mich. An. Dom. 1653. in the Kings Bench. in Do●mlowes Case Poph. 11. That if a Legacy be bequeathed to an Infant to be paid when he shall come to the Age of twenty one years if such a Legatory dieth before such age yet the Executor or Administrator of such Legator shall sue for the said Legacy presently and shall not expect until the time in which if the Infant had continued in life he had attained his full age And as to the Prohibition it was argued by Egerton Solicitor General That the Grant aforesaid is not triable in the Spiritual Court As if the said Lady Lodge had suffered a Recovery to be had against her as Executor by Covin c. the same is not examinable in the Spiritual Court but belongs to the temporal Conusans and therefore he prayed a Prohibition But on the other side it was said That if the Prohibition be allowed the Legatory hath no remedy but that was denied for the party might sue in the Chancery And after the Prohibition granted the Court awarded a special Consultation quatenus non extendat ultra manus Executoris quatenus non agitur de validitate facti i. the Grant aforesaid CCCLXXVII Huddy and Fishers Case Hill. 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Debt DEbt was brought upon a Bond the Condition of which was for the performance of Covenants Grants and Agreements in an Indenture And in the Indenture it was recited That in consideration that the said Huddy should build a Mill upon the Land demised by the Defendant to the Plaintiff by the same Indenture Attaint and a Water-course by the Land demised the Defendant leased the said Land to the Plaintiff and the Lease was by the words Dedi concessi And the Plaintiff assigned the breach of the said Covenant in Law in that the Defendant had stopped the said Water-course so made by the Plaintiff upon which they were at Issue and it was found for the Plaintiff upon which the Defendant brought Attaint and the false oath was found and it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment That here is no Issue and then by consequence no Verdict and then no false Oath and then no cause of Attaint for here the Issue is taken upon the stopping of the Water-course which upon the shewing of the party is not any cause of Action for in the Indenture there is not any express Covenant Clause or Agreement that the Lessee should enjoy the Water-course so to be made only there is a Covenant in Law rising upon these words Dedi concessi which cannot extend to a thing not in esse at the time of the making the Indenture Coke who argued for the Defendants in the Attaint resembled this case to the case in 23 E. 3. Garr 77. Where it is holden that the warranty knit to the Manor shall not extend to the Tenancy escheated And 30 E. 3. 14. The Recovery in value shall not be in larger proportion than the Land warranted was at the time of the warranty made So in our case this Covenant shall not extend to any thing which was not in esse at the time of the Covenant made And see 25 Ass 2. where the Court shall reject a Verdict or part of a Verdict c. And because the now Plaintiff might after the Verdict have alledged the same in arrest of Iudgment which he did not he shall not be helped by Attaint but it shall be accounted his folly that he would not for his own ease and to avoid circuity of Action shew the matter in stay of Iudgment As 9 E. 4. 12. by Littleton If a man be Indicted of Felony if the Iudgment be insufficient but he takes not advantage of it but pleads the general Issue and is acquitted he shall never after have a Writ of Conspiracy c. And for another cause Iudgment ought not to be given in this Case because it doth not appear that Execution hath been sued and then here is no party grieved And then this Action being conceived upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. Cap. 3. which gives it to the party grieved doth not lye for a party grieved cannot be intended without Execution sued See 21 H. 6. 55. by Paston False oath Iudgment and Execution do entitle the party grieved to Attaint And see the Stat. of 23 H. 8. which enacts That the party shall be restored to as much as he hath lost therefore he ought to lose by Execution before he be a person able 〈◊〉 bring this Action But as to that matter see the Statute of 1 E. 3. 6. by which it is Enacted That the Iustices shall not leave to take Attaint for the damages not paid so as before the said Statute no Attaint lay before Execution 33 H. 6. 21. by Prisoit 5 H. 7. 22. t. E. 1. Attaint 70. 8 E. 2. Assize 396. And it was moved That for another cause the Attaint doth not lye as it is pursued in Process upon it for the Plaintiff hath not pursued the Statute upon which the Attaint is grounded for the said Statute gives special Process in this case against the Petit Iury Grand Iury and the party viz. Summons Re-summons and Distress infinite but in this Case the Plaintiff hath sued otherwise which is against the direction of the Statute And that was taken to be a material Exception by Clench and Gawdy Iustices for the Verdict doth not save the matter of Process in this case by the Statute of 18 Eliz. which doth not extend to proceedings in penal Causes w●●ch see by the words of the Statute by an express Proviso But Quaere If it be a penal Statute because a lesser punishment is enacted by it than that which was before inflicted upon such offenders And as to the matter of Execution Quaere If the Plaintiff be not pars gravata in hoc only that he is subject to the said Iudgment and so liable to Execution CCCLXXVIII Penruddock and Newmans Case Hill. 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Ejectione firmae Execution 2 Len. 49. the Plaintiff declared upon a Lease made by the Lord Morley and upon Not guilty pleaded this special matter was found that William Lord Mountegle seised of the Manor of D. whereof c. became bounden in a Statute in such a sum to A. who died the Executors of A. sued Execution against the said Lord i. upon the Extendi facias a Libertate issued forth upon which the said Manor was delivered to the said Executors but was not returned It was further found That the said Executors being so possessed of the said Manor the said Lord
Recovery against Massey Error And in the said Recovery four Husbands and their VVives were vouched and now the Plaintiff brought this Writ of Error as heir to one of the Husbands and Exception was taken to his Writ because the Plaintiff doth not make himself heir to the Survivor of the four Husbands Egerton The Writ is good enough for there is a difference betwixt a Covenant personal and a Covenant real for if two be bound to warranty and the one dyeth the Survivor and the heir of the other shall be vouched and he said each of the four and their heirs are charged and then the heir of each of them being chargeable the heir of any of them may have a Writ of Error And afterwards the Writ of Error was adjudged good Ante 86. And Error was assigned because the Vouchees appeared the same day that they were vouched by Attorney which they ought not to do by Law but they might appear gratis the first day without Proces in their proper persons and so at the sequatur sub suo periculo See 13 E. 3. Attorn 74. and 8 E. 2. ib. 101. Another Error was assigned Because the Entry of the warrant of Attorney for one of the Vouchees is po lo. suo I.D. against the Tenant where it should be against the Demandant for presently when the Vouchee entreth into the warranty he is Tenant in Law to the Demandant Coke As to the first Error Although he cannot appear by Attorney yet when the Court hath admitted his appearance by Attorney the same is well enough and is not Error As to the other Error I confess it to be Error but we hope that the Court will have great consideration of this case as to that Error for there are one hundred Recoveries erronious in this point if it may be called an Error And then we hope to avoid such a general mischief that the Court will consider and dispense with the rigor of the Law As their Predecessors did 39 H. 6. 30. In the Writ of Mesne But I conceive That the Writ of Error is not well brought for the Voucher in the said Recovery is of four Husbands and their Wives and when Voucher shall be intended to be in the right of their Wives which see 20 H. 7. 1. b. 46 E. 3. 28. 29 E. 3. 49. And so by common intendment the Voucher shall be construed in respect of the Wife So also the Plaintiff here ought to entitle himself to this Writ of Error as heir to the Wife And for this cause The Plaintiff relinquished his VVrit of Error And afterwards he brought a new VVrit and entituled himself as heir to the wife CCCXCIX The Queen and the Dean of Christchurch Case Mich. 26 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Praemunire 3 Len. 139. THe Queens Attorney General brought and prosecuted a Praemunire for the Queen and Parret against Doctor Matthew Dean of Christ-church in Oxford and others because they did procure the said Parret to be sued in the City of Oxford before the Commissary there in an Action of Trespass by Libel according to the Ecclesiastical Law in which suit Parret pleaded Son Franktenement and so to the Iurisdiction of the Court and yet they did proceed and Parret was condemned and imprisoned And after that suit depended The Queens Attorney withdrew the suit for the Queen And it was moved If notwithstanding that the party grieved might proceed See 7 E. 4. 2. b. The King shall have Praemuire and the party grieved his Action See Br. Praemunire 13. And by Brook none can have Praemunire but the King Coke There is a President in the Book of Entries 427. In a Praemunire the words are ad respondendum tam Domino Regi quam R.F. and that upon the Statute of 16 R. 2. and ib. 428 429. Ad respondendum tam Domino Regi de contemptu quam dict A. B. de damnis But it was holden by the whole Court That if the Kings Attorney will not further prosecute the party grieved cannot maintain this suit for the principal matter in the Praemunire is The conviction and the putting of the party out of the protection of the King and the damages are but accessary and then the principal being released the damages are gone And also it was holden by the Court That the Presidents in the Book of Entries are not to be regarded and there is not any Iudgment upon any of the pleadings there but are good directions for pleadings and not otherwise CCCC Mich. 26 27. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Fines levied 1 Cro. 35. THe Case was A. gave Lands in tail to B. upon condition That if the Donee or any of his heirs alien or discontinue c. the Land or any part of it that then the Donor do re-enter The Donee hath issue two Daughters and dieth One of the two Daughters levieth a Fine Sur Conusans de droit come ceo Forfeiture to her Sister Heale Serjeant the Donor may enter for although the Sisters to many intents are but one Heir yet in truth they are several Heirs and each of them shall sue Livery 17 E. 3. If one of the Sisters be discharged by the Lord the Lord shall lose the Wardship of her and yet the Heir is not discharged And if every Sister be heir to diverse respects then the Fine by the one Sister is a cause of Forfeiture Harris contrary For conditions which go in defeating of estates shall be taken shortly Conditions and here both the Sisters are one Heir and therefore the discontinuance by the one is not the Act of the other Clench Iustice The words are Or any of his heirs therefore it is a forfeiture quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam And Iudgment was given accordingly CCCCI Mich. 26 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was Assumpsit Hutt Rep. 34. Hob. 284. A Woman seised of a Rent-charge for life took Husband the Rent was arrear the wife died the Tenant of the Land charged promised to pay the Rent in consideration that the Rent was behind c and some were of opinion Because that this Rent is due and payable by a Deed that this Action of the Case upon Assumpsit will not lye no more than if the Obligor will promise to the Obligee to pay the mony due by the Obligation 3 Cro. 5. an Action doth not lye upon the Promise but upon the Obligation But it was holden by the whole Court That the Action did well lye for here the Husband had remedy by the Statute of 32 H. 8. And then the consideration is sufficient and so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCII. Williams and Blowers Case Hill. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. REignold Williams and John Powell brought a Writ of Error against the Bishop of Hereford and Blower Error upon a Recovery had in a Writ of Disceit by the said Bishop and Blower against the said
and that appears by the Record but if it had been in before the Writ brought then a Scire facias would lye See 9 H. 6. It was adjorned CCCCIII Flemmings Case Mich. 26 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. FLemming was Indicted upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. because he had given the Sacrament of Baptism in other form than is prescribed in the said Statute and in the Book of Common Prayer Indictment upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. and the said Indictment was before the Iustices of Assize Wray and Anderson Of such offence done before and now he is Indicted again for which it was awarded that he suffer Imprisonment for a year and shall be adjudged ipso facto deprived of all his Spiritual promotions And upon the Indictment Flemming brought a Writ of Error and assigned Error because in the second Indictment no mention is made of the first Indictment in which case the second Indictment doth not warrant such a Iudgment Wray Iustice If the first Indictment be before us then is a second Iudgment well given contrary if it be before other Iustices Clench The second Indictment ought to recite the first conviction and if one be Indicted for a Rogue in the second degree the first conviction ought to be contained in such Indictment in an Indictment the day and time are not material as to true recovering in facto And it might be that this last Indictment was for the first offence for any thing appeareth Coke who argued to the same intent compared it to the Case of 2 R. 2. 9. and 22 E. 4. 12. 12 H. 7. 25. Indictment certified to be taken coram A.B. Justiciariis Domini Regis ad pacem c. without saying necnon ad diversas felonias c. is void and if a man hath been once convicted he shall not have his Clergy if it appeareth upon Record before the same Iustices that he had his Clergy before CCCCIV The Mayor of Lynns Case Hill. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Mayor of Lynn was Indicted Indictments for that he had received twenty four shillings of one A. for giving of Iudgment in an Action of Debt depending before him against one B. and he was indicted thereof as of Extortion In contemptum dictae Dominae Reginae contra formam Statuti Coke The Indictment is insufficient for there is not any Statute to punish any Iudge for such a matter For the Statute of West 1. Cap. 26. is made against Sheriffs Cap. 27. Clerks of Iustices Cap. 30. The Marshal and his Servants Statute 23 H. 6. against Sheriffs 3 Inst 145. and other Statutes against Ordinaries But no Action lies against a Iudge for that which a Iudge receives is Bribery and not Extortion Et satis poenae est judici quod Deum habeat ultorem and therefore he said the party indicted ought to be discharged Gawdy Iustice If in the Indictment there be words of Extortion or Bribery although such an offence in a Iudge be not materially Extortion if these words contra pacem c. had been in the Indictment it had been good quod Clench concessit And afterwards the party was discharged CCCCV. Crisp and Goldings Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assumpsit 1 Cro. 50. 2 Len. 71. IN an Action upon the Case by Crisp against Golding the Case was That a Feme sole was Tenant for life and made a Lease to the Plaintiff for five years to begin after the death of Tenant for life and afterwards the 18. of October made another Lease to the same Plaintiff for 21 years to begin at Michaelmass next before and declaring upon all the said matter he said Virtute cujus dimissionis i. e. the later Lease the Plaintiff entred and was possessed Crast Fest S. Mich. which was before the Lease made and further declared that in consideration that the Plaintiff had assigned to the Defendant these two Leases the Defendant promised c. and upon non Assumpsit it was found for the Plaintiff and damages taxed 600 l. Coke argued for the Plaintiff against the Solicitor General who had taken divers exceptions to the Declaration i. Where two or many considerations are put in the Declaration although that some be void yet if one be good the Action well lieth and damages shall be taxed accordingly and here the consideration that the Plaintiff should assign totum statum titulum interesse suum quod habet in terra praedict ' 2. Exception that the Lease in possession was made after Michaelmass i. 18 October and the Declaration is Virtute cujus dimissionis the Defendant entred Crastino Mich. and then he was a disseisor and could not assign his interest and right which was suspended in the tortious disseisin and so it appeared to the Iudges and he said there was not here any disseisin although that the Lessee had entred before that the Lease was made for there was an agreement and communication before of such purposed and intended Lease although it was not as yet effected and if there were any assent or agreement that the Lessee should enter it cannot be any disseisin and here it appeareth that the Lease had his commencement before the making of the Lease and before the entry But put case it be a disseisin yet he assigned all the Interest quod ipse tunc habuit according to the words of the consideration and he delivered both the Indentures of the said Demises and quacunque via data be the assignment good or void it is not material as to the Action for the consideration is good enough Egerton Solicitor contrary In every Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit there ought to be a Consideration promise and breach of promise and here in our Case the Consideration is the assignment of a Lease which is to begin after the death of the Lessor who was but Tenant for life which is meerly void and that appeareth upon the Record and as to the second part of the Consideration and the assignment of the second Lease it appeareth that the Plaintiff at the time had but a Right for by his untimely entry before the making of the Lease he was not to be said Lessee but was a wrong-doer c. in 19 Eliz. in the Kings Bench this difference was taken by the Iustices there and delivered openly by the Lord Chief Iustice i. When in an Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit two Considerations or more are laid in the Declaration but they are not collateral but pursuant as A. is indebted to B. in 100 l. and A. promiseth to B. that in consideration that he oweth him 100 l. and in consideration that B. shall give to A. 2 s. that he will pay to him the said 100 l. at such a day if B. bring an Action upon the Case upon this Assumpsit and declares upon these two promises although the consideration of the 2 s. be not performed yet the Action doth well lye
But if they be collateral considerations which are not pursuant as if I in consideration that you are of my Counsel and shall ride with me to York promise to give to you 20 l. in this case all the considerations ought to be proved otherwise the Action cannot be maintained So in our case the considerations are collateral and therefore they ought to be proved and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCVI Fooly and Prestons Case Hill. 28 and 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared 1 Cro. 200. 2 Len. 105. That whereas John Gibbon was bound unto the Plaintiff in quodam scripto obligatorio sigillo suo sigillat and coram c. recognito in forma Statuti Stapul The Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would deliver to him the said Writing to read over promised to deliver the same again to the Plaintiff within six days after or to pay to him 1000 l. in lieu thereof upon which promise the Plaintiff did deliver to the Defendant the said Writing but the Defendant had not nor would not deliver it back to the Plaintiff to the great delay of the Execution thereof and the Defendant did demur in Law upon the Declaration It was objected that here is no sufficient consideration appearing in the Declaration upon which a promise might be grounded but it was the opinion of the whole Court that the consideration set forth in the Declaration was good and sufficient and by Anderson it is usual and frequent in the King Bench If I deliver to you an Obligation to rebail unto me I shall have an Action upon the Case without an express Assumpsit and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCVII Wallpool and Kings Case Hill. 28 and 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. WIlliam Wallpool was bound to King by Recognizance in the sum of 400 l. and King also was bound to Wallpool in a Bond of 100 l. Wallpool according to the Custom of London Attachment in London affirmed a Plaint of Debt in the Gulldhall London against the said King upon the said Bond of 100 l. and attached the debt due by himself to Wallpool in his own hands and now King sued Execution against the said Wallpool upon the said Recognizance and Wallpool upon the matter of Attachment brought an Audita querela and prayed allowance of it and by Gawdy Serjeant such a Writ was allowed in such case 26 Eliz. Anderson at the first doubted of it but at last the Court received the said Writ de bene esse and granted a Supersedeas in stay of the Execution and a Scire facias against King but ea lege that Wallpool should find good and sufficient Sureties that he would sue with effect and if the matter be found against him that he pay the Execution CCCCVIII Hill. 28 and 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Copy-holder with license of the Lord leased for years Copyholder Surrender Hob. 177. 1 Roll. 294 3 Len. 197. and afterwards surrendred the Reversion with the Rent to the use of a stranger who is admitted accordingly It was moved if here need any Attornment either to settle the Reversion or to create a Privity and Rhodes and Windham Iustices were of opinion that the surrender and admittance are in the nature of an Inrolment and so amount to an Attornment or at least do supply the want of it CCCCIX. Ruddall and Millers Case Mich. 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Devise IN Trespass the Case was this William Ruddall Serjeant at Law 18 H. 8. made a Feoffment in Fee to divers persons to the use of himself and his Heirs and 21 H. 8. declared his Will by which he devised his Lands to Charles his younger Son and to the Heirs Males of his body the Remainder to John his eldest Son in Fee upon condition That if Charles or any of his issue should discontinue or alien but only for to make a Ioynture for their wives for the term of their lives that then c. and died The Statute of 27 H. 8. came Charles made a Lease to the Defendants for their lives according to the Statute of 33 H. 8. And levied a Fine with Proclamation Sur Conusans de droit come ceo c. to the use of himself and his wife and the heirs Males of their two bodies begotten the Remainder to himself and the heirs Males of his body the Remainder to the right heirs of the Devisor John the eldest Son entred for the Condition broken upon the Defendants who re-entred upon which Re-entry the Action was brought Gawdy Fleetwood and Shuttleworth Serjeants for the Plaintiffs This Condition to restrain unlawful discontinuance is good Conditions as a Condition to restrain Wast or Felony See 10 H. 7. 11. 13 H. 7. 23. And before the Statute of Quia Emptores terratum If A. had enfeoffed B. upon Condition That B. nor his heirs should alien the same was a good Condition by Fleetwood which was granted per Curiam And this Condition was annexed to good purpose or the Serjeant well knew that Cestuy que use might have levied a Fine or suffered a Recovery by the Statutes of 1 R. 3. 4 H. 7. And this Condition annexed or tied to the use by the Will is now knit to the possession which is transferred to the use by the said Statute Although it may be objected that the Condition was annexed to the use and now the use is extinct in the possession and by consequence the Condition annexed unto it as where a Seignory is granted upon Condition and afterwards the Tenancy escheats now the Seignory is extinct and so the Condition annexed to it But as to that it may be answered That our Case cannot be resembled to the Cases at Common Law but rests upon the Statute of 27 H. 8. scil Cestuy que use shall stand and be seised deemed and adjudged in lawful seisin estate and possession of and in such Lands to all intents constructions and purposes in Law of an in such like estates as he had in the use and that the estate right title and possession that was in the Feoffee shall be clearly deemed and adjudged to be in Cestuy que use after such quality manner form and condition as he had in the use And therefore in the common assurance by bargain and sale by Deed enrolled if such assurance be made upon Condition As in case of Mortgage the possession is not raised by the Bargainee but by the Bargain an use is raised to the Bargainee and the possession executed to it by the Statute and the Condition which was annexed to the use only is now conjoyned to the possession and so it hath been adjudged So if the Feoffees to use before the Statute had made a Lease for life the Lessee commits Wast the Statute comes now Cestuy que use which was shall have an Action to Wast as it was ajudged in Iustice
his Parishioner all demands in his Lands his Tithes thereby are not extinct and afterwards a Consultation was granted CCCCXII Lee and Curetons Case Trin. 31 Eliz. Rot. 902. In the Kings Bench. Debt 1 Cro. 153. IN Debt upon an Obligation the Defendant pleaded Non est factum and it was found for the Plaintiff and Iudgment given and afterwards the Defendant brought Error and assigned for Error that the Declaration was per scriptum suum obligat Error without saying hic in Guria prolat to which it was answered by Coke that the same was but matter of form for which a Iudgment ought not to be reversed for that the Clark ought to put in without instruction of the party and so it was holden in a case betwixt Barras and King 1 Cro. 768. 778. 3 Cro. 22. M. 29 30 Eliz. Another Error was assigned because the Iudgment is entred de fine nihil quia perdonat where it should be quod capiatur although the Plea were pleaded after the General pardon and for that cause the Iudgment was reversed for if the pardon be not specially pleaded the Court cannot take notice of it as it was holden in Serjeant Harris Case CCCCXIII Lacy and Fishers Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN a Replevin the taking is supposed in S. which Land is holden of the Manor of Esthall the Defendant made Conusans as Bailiff of the Lord of the Manor aforesaid and issue was taken upon the Tenure Trial. and it was tryed by a Iury out of the Visne of Esthall only Tanfield The trial is good for the issue ought not to have been tried by both Visnes S. and Esthall for two things are in issue If it be holden or not 2. If it be holden of the Manor of Esthall for which cause the Visne ought to be from both places and the opinion of the Court was That for the manner of it it was not good as if an issue be joyned upon common for cause of vicinage it shall be tried by both Towns See 39 H. 6. 31. by Littleton and Danby and the case in 21 E. 3. 12. was cited in a per quae servitia the Mannor was in one county and the Lands holden in another county the Tenant pleaded that he did not hold of the Conusor and that he was tried by a Iury of the County where the Land was See 2 H. 4. Gawdy denied the Book cited of 21 E. 3. to be Law and the reason wherefore the Visne shall come from both places is because it is most likely that both the Visnes may better know the truth of the matter than the one only Another Exception was taken Exposition of Stat. 21. H. 8. cap. 19. because the Conusans as it seems is made according to the Statute of 21 H. 8. 19. and yet the party doth not pursue the said Statute through the whole Conusans for by the Statute in Avowry or Conusans the party needs not to name any person certain to be Tenant to the Land c. nor to make Avowty or Conusans upon any person certain and now in this Conusans he hath not made Conusance upon any person certain but yet he hath named a person certain to be Tenant c. and in as much as this Conusans is not made either according to the Common-Law or according to the Statute it cannot be good But that Exception was dissallowed by the Court for if the Statute remedieth two things it remedieth one and the Conusance made in form as above was well enough by the opinion of the whole Court. CCCCXIV Diersly and Nevels Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Trespass the Defendant pleaded Not-guilty 2 Roll. 682. and if he might give in evidence That at the time of the Trespass the Freehold was to such an one and he as his servant and by his Commandment entred was the question and it was said by Coke That the same might so be well enough and so it was adjudged in Trivilians Case for if he by whose commandment he entreth hath Right at the same instant that the Defendant entreth the Right is in the other by reason whereof he is not guilty as to the Defendant and Iudgment was given accordingly CCCCXV. Savage and Knights Case Mich. 29 and 30 Eliz. Rot. 546. In the Kings Bench. Error Ante 185. 1 Cro. 106. 2 Cro. 109. 654. Sty 91. Yelv. 164. Sty 115. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Iudgment given in Leicester in Debt Tanfield assigned for Error because in that suit there was not any Plaint for in all inferior Courts the Plaint is as the Original at the Common Law and without that no Process can issue and here upon this Record nothing is entred but only that the Defendant summonitus fuit c. and the first Entrie ought to be A. B. queritur versus C c. Clench Iustice a Plaint ought to be entred before Process issueth forth and this Summons which is entred here is not any Plaint and for that Cause the Iudgment was reversed CCCCXVI Rawlins Case Trin. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Trespass for breaking his Close by Rawlins with a continuando It was moved by Coke that the Plaintiff needed not to shew a Regress to have Damages for the continuance of the first Entry scil for the mean profits and that appears by common experience at this day Gawdy Iustice whatsoever the experience be I well know that our books are contrary and that without an Entry he shall not have damages for the continuance if not in case where the Term or estate of the Plaintiff in the Land be determined and to such opinion of Gawdy the whole Court did incline but they did not resolve the point because a Regress was proved See 20 H. 6. 15. 38 H. 6. 27. CCCCXVII Harris and Bakers Case Trin. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Accompt Damages 3 Len. 192. Collet and Andrews Case 2 Len. 118. 3 Len 149. IN an accompt damages were given by the Iury and it was moved that damages ought not to have been given by way of damages but the damages of the Plaintiff shall be considered by way of Arrearages but see the Case H. 29 Eliz. in the Common Pleas betwixt Collet and Andrews and see 10 H. 6 18. In Accompt the Plaintiff shall count to his damage but shall not recover damages vide 2. H. 7. 13. 21 H. 6. 26. The Plaintiff shall not recover damages expresly but the Court shall ad● quoddam incromentum to the Arrearages Coke It hath been adjudged that the Plaintiff shall recover damages ratione implicationis non Retentionis CCCCXVIII Mich. 26. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe words of the Statute 32 H. 8. cap. 37. of Rents are that the Executor of a Grantee of a Rent-charge may distrain for the arrearages of the said Rent incurred in the life of the Testator so long as the Land charged doth continue in
Action against the Executor of I.D. And it was agreed by the Court that if a man makes his Debtor and a stranger his Executors and the Debtor dieth the surviving Executor may have an Action of debt against the Executor of the Debtor and so it was adjudged in the principal case CCCCXLIX Wollman and Fies Case Mich. 31 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assumpsit 1 Cro. 179. IN an Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit that the Plaintiff should enjoy such Lands for so many years The Defendant pleaded the Statute of 13 14 Eliz. because the Land is the Glebe Land of such a Parsonage and in truth the Defendant did mis-recite the Statute For the Statute is No Lease after the fifteenth day of May And the pleading is hereafter to be made Secondly the Statute is of any Benefice with cure the pleading is of any Benefice Thirdly The Statute is without absence above eighty and the pleading is without absence by the space of eighty days And for these Causes the Plaintiff had Iudgment CCCCL Frond and Batts Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Debt Payment to the wife not good IN debt upon a Bond upon condition to stand to the Award of I.S. The Defendant pleaded That the said I.S. had Arbitrated that the Defendant should pay to the Plaintiff ten pounds and he said he had paid it to the Plaintiffs wife who received it upon which the Plaintiff did demur And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLI Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Grants of the King of the Office of Marshal of the Kings Bench. THe Queen granted to George Earl of Shrewsbury An. 15. of her reign the Office of Earl Marshal of England and now came the said Earl and prayed that I. S. one of his Servants to whom he had granted the Office of Marshal of the Kings Bench might be to it because the same is an Office incident to his Office and in his power to grant and that Knowles to whom the Queen had granted the said Office of Marshal of the Kings Bench by the Attainder of North. be removed And a President was shewed 14 15 Eliz. Betwixt Gawdy and Verney where it was agreed That the said office was a several office from the said great office and not incident to it And as to the Case of 39 H. 6. 33 34. the truth is the said office of Marshal of the Kings Bench was granted expresly by the Duke by express words and so he had it not as incident to his office of Marshal of England On the other side there were three Presidents shewed first in the time of E. 2. That the office of the Marshal of the Kings Bench was appendant to the said office of Marshal of England Secondly 8 R. 2. When the said great office was in the King he granted the said office of Marshal of the Kings Bench But 20 R. 2. both offices were rejoyned as they were before in ancient time and there were also shewed Latters Patents of 4 E. 4. and 19 H. 8. by which it appeared That the said inferiour office had time out of mind been part of the great office And it was moved That when the said great office is in the Kings hands and the King grants the said under office if now this office be not severed from the great office for ever Wray It is no severance for the chief office is an office of Dignity which may remain in the King but this under office is an office of necessity and the King himself cannot execute it by which of necessity he ought to grant it Another matter was moved If the Grant of the King unto the Earl of Shrewsbury were good because in it the Grant to Verney of the said under office is not recited according to the Statute of 6 H. 8. 9. As 26 E. 3. 60. The King seised of the Honor of Pickring to which a Forrest was appendant the Bayliwick of which Forrest he granted in fee rendring rent and afterwards he granted the Honor with Appurtenances and afterwards the Bailiff committed a Forfeiture and that was found in Eyre the Grantee of the Honor shall seise it yet the King shall have the Rent And here the Earl of Shrewsbury shall have this office in his power to grant And so much the rather because it was granted but for life CCCCLII Michill and Hores Case Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. MIchil did affirm a Plaint in the Court of the City of Exeter against Hore for twenty pounds and upon Nihil returned Attachment of goods by custom of Exeter it was surmised That Trosse had certain monies in his hands due to Hore and according to the custom of Exeter the said monies were attached in the hands of Trosse who appeared upon the Attachment and pleaded That he owed nothing to Hore upon which there was a Demurrer Error and Iudgment given against Trosse because that Trosse ought to have pleaded not only that he owed him nothing but further that he had not any goods of Hores in his hands And thereupon Trosse brought a Writ of Error and assigned the Error in the principal matter upon which it was demurred and Iudgment given against the Plaintiff because that the Plea of Trosse that he owed him nothing is good enough for if there be not a Debt it is not attachable upon such Attachment And it is a good Plea to a common intent and altogether in use in London were such custom is Another Error was assingned for that Michill had recovered Costs against Trosse where it ought not to be And also Iudgment is not given that Trosse should be discharged against Hore And afterwards the Iudgment given in Exeter was reversed CCCCLIII Dennis and Saint Johns Case Mich. 30 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Debt 1 Cro. 494. IN Debt upon an Obligation against Oliver Saint John and Alice his wife as heir of her Father The Defendants pleaded Non est factum of the Father And it was found by special Verdict That the Obligation was made by the Father of the Wife to the Plaintiff and another whereas in truth The Plaintiff hath declared upon an Obligation made to himself only without speaking of any other joynt Obligee Non est factum and that the Plaintiff as Survivor hath brought the Action and if upon the matter it shall be said the Deed of the Defendant in manner as the Plaintiff hath declared the Iury refer unto the Court And the case 14 E. 4. 1. b. If three enfeoff me and I plead That two did enfeoff me and the same be traversed it shall be found against me for the Feoffment is a joynt act by them all But if a man enfeoffeth me and two others and they dye so as I have all by Survivor in pleading I may shew the Feoffment was made to me alone So 46 E. 3. 17. a. Three Joynt-tenants in Fee make a
E. 4. 44. A Writ of Annuity is brought against a Prior and it appeared That the Prior and his Successors have used to pay the Annuity as Parson of D. and not as Priors which Parsonage was appointed to the said Priory time out of mind and in the Writ the Defendant was named Prior only and not Parson and therefore the Writ was abated See 14 E. 4. 4. 10 H. 7. 5. In an Action of Wast So Bracebridges Case 14 Eliz. Plowd 420. The Case put by Catiline If the Parson Patron and Ordinary make a Lease for years and afterwards the Lessee becomes there Incumbent the Term is not extinct for he hath the Term in his own Right and the inheritance in the Right of his Church which see 30 H. 8. Dyer 43. A Parson purchaseth and after leaseth his Parsonage he himself shall pay Tithes notwithstanding this Vnity and as to the reason of the other side That if such discharge of Tithes be not intended by the Statute but only a Discharge in Law the Statute should be in vain the same is not so for if the Abbot had been discharged by way of Release of Composition for the Monastery being dissolved the Appropriation had been good if it had not been supported by the Statute and then the Release and Composition of no force and the King should not take advantage of it but by this Statute and as to Whartons Case before cited the same cannot be Law for it hath been holden upon the Statute of 18 Eliz. of Confirmations That if an Infant maketh a Lease to the King the same is not made good by the Statute for the said Statute extends to imperfections in circumstances and not in substance And although the Lease be not good yet because the matter of the surmise is naught although our Bar be naught a Consultation ought to be granted also our Lease is well pleaded and if such defect be in it as hath been objected the same ought to come in by Plea on the other side and it is not like Heydons Case for there it was found by special Verdict not to Cromwells Case where such defect was in the Declaration and so no ground of Action as to the Traverse it is good enough as if special Bastardy be pleaded against one born before the marriage and so Bastard the other party shall traverse generally the Bastardy and not the special matter but for the principal matter i. this unity of possession divers rules have been 5 Eliz. in the Common Pleas the Case was An Abbot had a Manor within the Parish of D. and a Composition was made betwixt the Parson of D. and the said Abbot that the Parson should have yearly certain Loads of Wood out of thirty Acres of the said Manor for and in recompence of all the Tithes of Wood there afterwards the Parsonage was appropriated to the said Abbot and afterwards the house was dissolved and the Manor granted to one and the Rectory to another and it was holden That the portion of the Tithes was removed for he had them scil The Manor and the Tithes in several Rights And Manwood Chief Baron and Periam Iustice to whom a Case depending in the Chancery was referred concerning the discharge of Tithes by unity of possession delivered their opinions That such an Vnity is not any discharge within the said Statute It was adjorned CCCCLXVIII Hoskins and Stupers Case Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared Assumpsit That whereas the Plaintiff had sold to the Defendant 1000 couple of Newland Fishes to the use of the Defendant and in consideration that he should ship and should bring and carry the adventure of them from Bristol in portum of Saint Lucar and should carry back again the value of the said Fish to London or Bristoll secundum usum Mercatorum The Defendant did promise that upon the arrival of the said Fish in portum of St. Lucar he would give to the Plaintiff 112 l. and said that he arrived with the said Fish ad portum of St. Lucar and that afterwards he arrived with goods of the value of the said Fish ad portum of London secundum usum Mercatorum It was holden by all the Iudges that in portum and ad portum is all one Exposition of words as the Statute of Wast is Quod vicecomes accedat ad locum vastatum yet he ought to enter into the Land So the Writ of accedas ad Curiam in plena Curia recordari facias c. Another Exception was because he declared That he returned with goods to the value and doth not say whose goods they were but the Exception was not allowed for these words secundum usum mercatorum imply that they were the goods of the Defendant Quod fuit concessum per Curiam and afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff CCCCLXIX Walgrave and Agurs Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. SIr William Walgrave brought an Action upon the Case against Agur upon these words spoken by the Defendant to a servant of the Plaintiff Action for scandalous words 1 Cro. 191. It is well known that I am a true subject but thou innuendo the said servant servest no true subject and thine own conscience may accuse thee thereof It was moved in arrest of Iudgment That these words are not actionable for no slander comes to the Plaintiff thereby for perhaps the Party served no man but the Queen and if the words may receive such sense S●vage and Cooks Case which is no pregnant proof of infamy they are not actionable as in the Case betwixt Savage and Cook These words Thou art not the Queens friend are not actionable for it might be they were spoken in respect of some ordinary misdemeanours as in not payment of Subsidies or the like Also it is not averred that the party to whom the words were spoken was the Plaintiffs servant Coke Where a man is touched in the duty of his Office or in the course of life an Action lieth although that otherwise the words are not actionable and here is set forth in the Declaration That the Plaintiff at the time of the speaking of the said words was a Iustice of Peace and Sheriff of Suffolk and Captain of a Troop of 120 Horse to attend the Preservation of the Queens person So in respect of place and dignity in the Commonwealth as 2 H. 8. The Bishop of Winchester brought an action upon the Statute of Scandal Magnatum upon these words My Lord of Winchester sent for me and imprisoned me until I made a Release to J. S. and in respect of his Place and Dignity the words were holden actionable and 9 Eliz. Dyer In an action upon the Case by the Lord Aburgaveney against Wheeler My Lord of Aburgaveney sent for us and put some of us into the Coal-house and some into the Stocks and me into a place in his house called Little
293 306 362 383 387 409 436 Construction of them 16 42 To Executors to sell 38 42 78 254 To an use 342 Diminution 28 Distress 16 64 78 315 338 Discontinuance of suit 142 Discontinuance of Lands and Estate 150 157 172 Distent 154 163 Where it takes away Entry 293 Disseisin 163 Dower 48 71 118 119 187 233 383 Of Gavelkind 83 182 431 Dutchy Lands 307 The Kings prerogative in them 15 E. EJectione firmae 331 Not of a Tenement 265 Ejectione Custodiae lieth not of a Copihold estate 463 Elegit 65 247 Election 36 52 67 92 289 342 360 Enrolment 10 Endowment 13 Enfant 156 297 Entry 46 66 79 163 165 427 446 For forfeiture 345 Enquiry of damages 197 278 Escape 165 145 203 321 274 Estates 150 219 221 297 288 311 Vested shall not be divested 345 Essoin 184 Estoppell 122 220 224 286 437 Error 12 28 52 71 137 207 228 238 245 246 260 452 By Executors to reverse an Attainder of their Testator 452 278 317 327 328 343 346 363 397 402 412 415 445 365 By Journeys accounts 28 Upon Outlawry 37 Upon Recovery in Assize 69 In assessing damages 71 For want of Averment 121 Upon a common Recovery 181 To reverse a Fine by an Enfant 445 Evidence 70 192 215 414 Exchange 386 Executors 78 311 459 Where they shall have Error or other Actions 459 Where charged of their own goods 87 121 153 Renunciation of them 185 Have action de bonis testatoris 278 Execution 65 202 247 460 200 313 378 Where joynt where several 392 Against a person attainted where not 466 Exception 158 160 79 Extortion 114 327 Extent 366 Extinguishment 15 135 250 56 Exposition of words and sentences 240 326 439 468 Of the word De and vocat 22● Of the word Term 306 Of the word Uterque 326 Of the Statute of 32 and 33 H. 8. 358 Of the Statute of 21 H. cap. 19. 413 Examination who is to be examined upon the Statute of 27 Eliz. of Huy and Cry 456 F. FAlse imprisonment 462 Feoffments and faits 31 171 172 204 256 288 Per nomen 343 Upon condition 361 Feme covert 166 Fine upon Jurors 181 For Alienation without License 11 50 113 Not paid by Non compos mentis 11 Not payable upon settlement by Parliament 113 Post Fines 338 Fines levied 51 66 81 85 102 187 188 297 330 Where shall not bind a Feme covert 386 Reversed 157 445 Where shall be a breach of Condition 409 Levied by Prescription 265 By Tenant in tail in Remainder 361 Formedon 105 154 Forgery of false Deeds 192 Forfeiture 51 66 84 139 171 297 254 400 Founder and Foundation 49 Fresh Suits 72 Fugitives 12 G. GUardian in socage 454 Gavelkind 154 450 Grants 205 433 380 Of Executors of omnia bona sua 351 Grants of the King 12 33 36 49 162 179 237 280 334 338 451 467 Grants insufficient in point of Limitation shall not be supplied with subsequent words 14 H. HAbendum 13 73 446 Habeas Corpus 93 94 460 I. INtrusion 12 46 49 223 Indictments 9 146 337 363 404 Upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. 461 Upon the Statute of 23. of Recusancy 321 326 322 Upon the Statute of News 390 Informations 162 Upon Statute 1 Eliz. 405 Upon Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 6. 60 Upon the Statute of Usury 125 161 Upon the Statute of Maintenance 231 291 Upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. for Tillage 319 Joynture 44 205 Joynder in Action 402 439 445 Issue 89 169 192 241 Judgment 89 428 In the Kings Court not defeated by particular customs 35 Where satisfied before a Statute 464 Jurors receiving mony doth not make the Verdict void 21 Fined for eating 181 Justification 462 K. KIng not bound to demand Rent 16 L. LEases 44 46 165 198 205 239 274 286 308 316 320 332 391 425 446 454 By Bishops 77 By Guardian of a Colledge 183 Within the Statute of 13 Eliz. 427 Leet 33 Letter of Attorney 427 Livery of Seisin 10 48 276 287 349 427 Doth prevent Enrolment 10 Libel in spiritual Court 13 127 151 174 175 M. MArriage 67 235 In right and possession 67 Mannor 33 289 Misnosmer 25 49 183 204 298 In Indictments 337 Where material where not 228 Mittimus 200 Monstrans de droit 279 Monstrans de faits 427 N. NOn-residency 129 Non-suit 142 Notice 39 139 141 Nusance 234 318 O. OBligation 129 132 164 192 214 281 Office of Marshal of the King 451 Of Herald 337 Of Marshal of the Kings Bench 451 Office Trove 27 50 85 223 Outlawry 84 280 108 148 190 Lies not upon a Judgment upon a Bill of Priviledge 465 P. PArtition 33 68 136 283 Payment where not good to the Wife 450 Post Fines 338 Plaint 415 Plenarty no Plea against the King 307 Pleadings 21 84 102 167 169 176 186 211 274 339 407 430 449 Non cepit where good 47 Nul tiel Record 85 114 Where Recovery is no Bar 90 Wherein Pleading must make a Title 58 Non damnificatus 95 General and particular ib. Good to common intent 102 Of a Fine ib. Amounts to the general Issue 251 Of Nonest factum 257 453 Out of his Fee 294 Fully administred 434 In disability where not allowed 466 Property 54 Primer seisin 85 341 Protection 93 258 Priviledge 365 Of Exceptions from Juries 287 Of London 384 Plurality 442 Prerogative 11 15 Prescription 14 100 102 143 147 199 249 299 315 336 Words of it 318 In a Stranger not Tenant 14 To erect Herdels 14 147 Where it shall not bind the King 438 For Common 100 To be a Justice of Peace 143 To levy a Fine not good 265 To distrain for Amerciaments 327 To Repair 438 by taking Wood in the Lands of another Man ib. Presentation 50 58 84 207 Repealed by the King 218 Passeth not by a Grant of Bona Catalla 28 By the Bishop who Collates shall not put the King out of possession 307 Praemunire 399 Proof 349 Process 65 Prohibition 123 127 174 175 176 177 208 255 325 336 376 367 318 325 388 411 442 467 Q. QUare Impedit 39 50 58 84 85 190 277 213 232 278 280 284 307 312 284 289 455 Causes of Refusal when good c. contr 39 312 R. RAzure of Deeds 381 Ravishment of Ward 152 Refusal of the Bishop 312 Remitter 40 48 85 118 172 Remainder 134 256 266 336 Upon a Contingent 330 Remitter 48 Redisseisin 90 Receipt 105 Retainer 153 320 Return of the Sheriff 65 200 201 202 312 459 Relation 11 355 Of matter of Record 257 Of a Judgment 264 Of an Execution 423 Rents 187 198 209 280 362 441 Reserved upon a Lease of Dutchy Lands 15 To be paid without demand ib. Charge parcel of a Manor 18 Cannot issue out of a Right 205 Charge out of Copyholds 8 Suspended by Entry 110 240 How to be demanded and when severally 271 425 In esse to some purposes and suspended to others 467 Reputation 18 33 49 Replication 56 102 194 Reversion 362 Cannot pass without Deed 429 Reservation 25 446 Restitution 461 Request 167 303 389 Repleader 102 114 Replevin 33 54 56 64 294 Revocation 113 Recovery 30 In Assise where a Bar 30 Vouchee must appear in person 101 Common Recovery by an Infant 296 S. SAles 225 Seals 12 310 Seisin 271 356 In Fact and in Law 318 Seisure 12 84 119 Scire facias 58 84 187 402 Where for the King è contr 84 Against Executors 84 Upon Audita Querela 195 Summons and Severance 445 Stewards of Manors and Courts 309 294 444 Statutes Construction of them 44 Where they ought to be pleaded where not 427 Supersedeas 189 Sur cui in vita 210 Surrenders 378 385 420 226 454 By the Steward out of Court 309 Vide Copyholds Amounts to an Attornment 408 Of one Termor to another not good 420 By Attorney not good 45 T. TAil 297 Tenant by the Curtesie 233 Tender 88 95 Upon a Mortgage 43 Upon an Award 55 Where it is no Revocation of uses 113 Toll 315 Traverse 12 49 53 56 58 64 68 102 207 213 277 304 331 340 429 467 Where the descent where the dying seised 429 Trespass Vi armis 110 Trover and Conversion 304 305 335 Not against a Feme Covert 433 Tithes 13 25 122 174 175 177 208 325 336 367 380 411 467 In London 25 Become Lay Chattels 29 Jurisdiction of them 76 Claimed by Prescription ib. Discharged by Unity 467 Trial 67 116 148 203 206 255 285 310 413 V. VAriance 175 228 33●● Verdict 86 118 181 426 View 30 106 59 Usurpation 58 84 307 Uses 188 288 330 What it is 279 And Declaration of them ib. Not rise out of an Use 10 Not out of a Possibility 279 Contingent raised 31 Void for want of Consideration 279 Limitation of them ib. Raised by Covenant and by Feoffment do differ ib. Suspended yet the Land devised 345 Contingent shall bind the Execution of an Estate in possession 345 Executed to the Possession 409 W. WAger of Law 119 229 282 VVardship 347 VVarning 82 VVills 155 311 VVither●●m 302 VVarrant of Attorney 246 VVarranty 252 VVast 62 79 86 220 282 359 By Cestuy que use 409 VVrit To the Bishop 84 85 278 289 Of right 212 236 the manner of proceeding in it 419 Of Enquiry of damages 278 FINIS
out of the pardon shall be intended and construed the bare Act of Conversion but the whole offence i. the continuance and practise of it is understood As if by general pardon all intrusions are excepted now by that the instant Act of Intrusion i. the bare Entry is not only excepted but also the continuance of the Intrusion and the perception of the profits And note The words of the Statute are conversion permitted and Conversion continued is Conversion permitted And the said Statute doth not punish the Conversion but also the continuance of the Conversion for the penalty is appointed for each year in which the Conversion continues And Egerton Solicitor put this Case 11 H. 8. It was enacted by 3 H. 7. cap. 11. That upon Recovery in Debt if the Defendant in delay of Execution sues a Writ of Error and the Iudgment be affirmed he shall pay damages now the case was That one in Execution brought such a Writ of Error and the first Iudgment is affirmed he shall pay damages and yet here is not any delay of the Execution for the Defendant was in Execution before but here is an Interruption of the Execution and the Statute did intend the Execution it self i. the continuance in Execution ibidem moraturus quousque It was said on the other side That the conversion and continuance thereof are two several things each by it self and so the conversion only being excepted in the pardon the continuance thereof remains in the grace of the pardon And it appeareth by the Statute of 2 and 3. Ph. Ma. That conversion and continuance are not the same but alia atque diversa and distinct things in the consideration of the Law for there it is enacted That if any person shall have any Lands to be holden in Tillage according to the said Statute but converted to Pasture by any other person the Commissioners c. have authority by the said Statute to enjoyn such persons to convert such Lands to Tillage again c. And in all cases in the Law there is a great difference betwixt the beginning of a wrong and the continuance of it As if the Father levyeth a Nusance in his own Lands to the offence of another and dyeth an Assize of Nusance doth not lye against the Heir for the continuance of that wrong but a Quod permittat See F.N.B. 124. It was adjorned CCCLXX Powley and Siers Case Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. POwley brought Debt against Sier Executor of the Will of A Debt The Defendant demanded Iudgment of the Writ for he said That one B. was Executor of the said A. and that the said B. did constitute the Defendant his Executor so the Writ ought to be brought against the Defendant as Executor of the Executor and not as immediate Executor to the said A. The Plaintiff by Reply said That the said B. before any probate of the Will or any Administration dyed and so maintained his Writ Wray Iustice was against the Writ for although here be not any probate of the Will of A. or any other Administration yet when B. made his Will and the Defendant his Executor the same is a good acceptance in Law of the Administration and Execution of the first Will for the Defendant might have an Action of Debt due to the first Testator Gawdy and Ayliff Iustices The Writ is good See Dyer 1 Cro. 211. 212. 23 Eliz. 372. against Wray CCCLXXI Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was A seised of certain Lands Bargain and sale of Trees bargained and sold by Indenture all the Trees there growing Habendum succidendum exportandum within twenty years after the date of the said Indenture the twenty years expire The Bargainee cuts down the Trees A. brought an Action of Trespass for cutting down the Trees And by Wray Iustice The meer property of the Trees vests in the Bargainee Post 288. and the Limitation of time which cometh after is not to any purpose but to hasten the cutting of the Trees within a certain time within which if the Vendee doth not cut them he should be punished as a Trespassor as to the Land but not as to the Trees Gawdy contrary And that upon this Contract a conditional property vests in the Vendee which ought to be pursued according to the direction of the condition and because the condition is broken the property of the Trees is vested in A. CCCLXXII Curriton and Gadbarys Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN in Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared Leases That the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff should make a lease for life to the Defendant of certain Lands Habendum after the death of A. before the tenth of August next following promised to pay the Plaintiff ten pounds the first day of May next after the promise which was before the tenth of August And the truth was That the said ten pounds was not paid at the day ut supra nor the said Lease made And now both sides being in default the Plaintiff brought an Action It was said by Wray Iustice If the Plaintiff had made the Lease according to the consideration and in performance thereof the action would have lyen but now his own default had barred him of the Action But for another cause the Declaration was holden insufficient for here is not any Consideration for the promise is in consideration that the Plaintiff shall lease to the Defendant for life Habendum after the death of A. which cannot be good by way of lease but ought to enure by way of grant of the Reversion so as here is no lease therefore no consideration and notwithstanding that if a Lease be made for life Habendum after the death of A. the Habendum is void and the Lease shall be in possession according to the Premises yet the Law will not give such construction to the words of a Promise Contract or Assumpsit but all the words ought to be wholly respected according to the Letter so as because that no Lease can be made according to the words of the Consideration no supply thereof shall be by any favorable construction And so it was adjudged But before the same imperfection was espied Iudgment was entred and therefore the Court awarded that there should be a cesset executio entred upon the Roll for it is hard as it was said by Wray to drive the party to a Writ of Error in Parliament because Parliaments are not now so frequently holden as they have used to be holden and the Execution was staid accordingly CCCLXXIII Willis and Crosbys Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Error IN a Writ of Error It was assigned for Error That whereas in the first Action the parties were at issue and upon the Venire facias one G●●gory Tompson was returned But upon the Habeas Corpora George T●●●●son was returned and the Iury was taken and found for the