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A34802 Lex custumaria, or, A treatise of copy-hold estates in respect of the lord, copy-holder wherein the nature of customs in general, and of particular customs, grants and surrenders, and their constructions and expositions in reference to the thing granted or surrendred, and the uses or limitations of estates are clearly illustrated : admittances, presentments, fines and forfeitures are fully handled, and many quaeries and difficulties by late resolution setled : leases, licences, extinquishments of copy-hold estates, and what statutes extend to copy-hold estates are explained : and also of actions by lord or tenant, and the manner of declaring and pleading, either generally or as to particular customs, with tryal and evidence holder may recieve relief in the Court of Chancery : to which are annexed presidents of conveyances respecting copy-holds, releases, surrenders, grants presentmets, and the like : as also presidents of court rolls, surrenders, admittances, presentments, &c. / by S.C., Barister at Law. Carter, Samuel, barrister at law. 1696 (1696) Wing C665; ESTC R4622 239,406 434

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and how they differ What Customs for Harriots are good or not Where they shall be apportioned and by whose Acts. Who shall pay Harriot or not and the Pleadings CAP. XXVI What Statutes extend to Copy-hold Lands and within what Statutes Copy-hold Lands shall be contained by Construction of Law without express words and what not and therein how Copy-holds shall be barred by Fine and non-claim c. CAP. XXVII Of Embleaments Who shall have them the Lord or the Copy-holder CAP. XXVIII What shall be said a Disseisin as to Copy-hold Estates or not CAP. XXIX Of Actions and Suits What Actions may be brought by the Lord and what Actions may be brought by Copy-holders or their Executors against the Lord or against Strangers in respect to their Copy-hold Estates and Priviledges CAP. XXX Of Copy-holders being impleaded and impleadable in the Lords Court and a Faux Judgment in the Lords Court and how and where to be relieved CAP. XXXI Of Declarations of for and concerning Copy-hold Estates how to be brought and laid and Presidents in what Cases they have been brought CAP. XXXII Of Pleadings The general Rules of Pleading as to Copy-hold Estates The different Forms of Pleading Customs and Prescriptions Of Pleading in reference to Common belonging to Copy-hold and when to be pleaded by way of Custom or by way of Prescription The manner of Pleading when a Lease is to be answered which is set forth in the Avowry Where in pleading the Commencement of the Estate must be shewed and by whom granted or not And how a Licence must be pleaded by the Lessee Prescription of Copy-holder to be discharged of Tythes how to be pleaded Of Traverses when how and where to be taken Forms of Pleading of Surrenders Admittances Estates in Fee Tayl for Lives or Years Pleadings of Presentments and Grants Presidents of bars by Commons Woods Ways Inclosures Forfeitures and all other Pleadings necessary for the Copy-holder to set forth his Title or defend it CAP. XXXIV Evidence Tryal Issue What shall be a good Evidence to prove the Custom alledged or not What shall be tryed by the Jury and what by the Court Rolls Who may be admitted to give Evidence When Issue is taken upon a Surrender where to be tryed Venue CAP. XXXIV Of Special Verdicts Imperfect Custom not well found Failure of Prescription How the Custom must be found by the Jury Presidents of special Verdicts CAP. XXXV How and in what Cases Copy-holders have been relieved in Chancery Presidents of Conveyances respecting Copy-hold Estates and Presidents of Surrenders Grants Admittances Presentments Lex Custumaria OR A TREATISE OF Copy-hold ESTATES c. CAP. I. Of the Original and Nature of a Manor and of what it consists Of a Manor Real and by Reputation Of a Customary Manor Of Grants and Leases of Manors with respect to this Subject of Copy-holds and what shall be said Parcel of a Manor or what shall be said a Severance FOR the right understanding of the Law as to Copy-hold Estates it 's necessary to premise something of the Nature and Notion of a Manor upon which they depend as the Materia though Custom is the Form thereof And I shall say no more of Manors than what shall have a direct influence upon the Explication of the nature of Copy-hold Original of Manors As for the Original of Manors Take this brief Account out of Perkins 670. Horns Mirror Lib. 1. Cap. de Roy Alfred Fulbeck f. 18. Lambert verbo Thaine Bacon's Elements of the Law 41 42 c. The ancient Kings of this Realm who had all the Lands of England in Demesn that is in their own Hands or totally at their own disposal did grant a certain compass or circuit of Ground upon some great Personages with liberty to parcel out the Lands to other inferior Tenants reserving such Duties and Services as they thought fit with power to keep Courts where they might redress Misdemeanors within such their Precincts and decide Controversies of meum and tuum within their Jurisdictions these Lords and Noblemen performing such Services and paying and yielding such Rents as the said Kings by their Grants reserved These Grantees were called Barons and were such as came to Parliament and from thence it keeps the name of Court Baron to this day though in process of time by the Grants of such Barons these Lands and Manors came into the Hands of meaner Men by Purchase c. as it is at this day And according to this our Custom all Lands holden in Fee throughout France are divided into Feifs and Arrear-Feifs into Feifs or Knights Fees and Mesne Fees whereof the former are such as were granted by the King the second such as the Kings Feudatories do again grant to others Now by Justice Winch in his Argument in the Case of Rowles and Mason 2 Brownlow 195. Manors are divided into three sorts of Tenures 1. The first holds by Knight Service and this is for defence of the Lord. 2. The second holds by Socage and this is to Plow and Manure the Demesns of the Lord c. since turn'd into Rent 3. The third holds by base Tenure and these are at the will of the Lord and these were to do Services and some had greater Priviledges than others to encourage them to perform their Services as it is in Ireland at this day Out of these by length of time and Custom sprang up the Race of Copy-holders For the Name or Etymology of the word Manor Etymology some fancy it to be Manerium quasi Manurium from manuring the Ground and then it takes its Name either from the Lords Demesns which the Tenants are bound to Manure or from the Lands remaining in the Tenants hands and others with more probability think it to be derived from the French word Mesner to govern or guide because the Lord hath the government of the Tenants within his Jurisdiction But that I may come to the thing intended and to leave the flourishes of guess and fancy It is a Maxim common in our Books Of what a Manor consists Demesns what That a Manor consists of Demesns and Services As for the word Demesns Dominicum or Domainium it is taken it two senses It is most properly taken for those Lands which remain in the Kings hands and so all Subjects are excluded from being seized in Dominico and we have little of that now but ancient Demesn Lands which are such as were in the hands of King Edward the Confessor But in a sense less proper Demesn Lands may be said to be in the hands of an inferior Lord or Tenant and as my Lord Coke on Littleton f. observes the form of Pleading shews this difference for an inferior Lord or Tenant never pleads That he is seized in Dominico absolutely but qualified with this addition in dominico suo ut de feodo Pleading and the word Fee or Feif implies that his Estate is not absolute but depending on some superior Lord. So
Lord shall have one Action and the Copy-holder another and each one shall recover Damages according to his Interest Vide Leon. 1. 272. Copy-holder dyes Lord admits a Stranger the Heir may enter and upon a re-entry maintain Trespass without Admittance Noy p. 172. Simpson and Gillion Vide Admittance For non-Admittance no Action by Surrendree Action on the Case against the Lord lyes not for non-Admittance A Copy-holder in the Eye of the Law is but Tenant at the Lords Will and if the Lord will not hold Court he hath no remedy to compel him but by order in Chancery Cro. Jac. p. 368. Ford and Hoskins No Action on the Case by a named Successor By Surrendror Surrendror may have an Action on the Case for not admitting but not the Surrendree 2 Keb. 357. Quaere Remedy in faux Judgment The Demandant in a Pleint in nature of a real Action recovereth the Land erroneously with remedy for the party grieved for he cannot have the Kings Writ of faux Judgment in respect of the baseness of the Estate and Tenure being in the Eye of the Law but a Tenant at Will and the Freehold being in another yet he shall have Petition to the Lord in nature of a Writ of faux Judgment and therein assign Errors and have remedy according to Law Co. Lit. 60. And if there be cause the Judgment may be reversed Assise Tenant by Copy shall not have Assise against his Lord as Tenant in ancient Demesn shall have because he hath no Frank-Tenement 4 Rep. 21. but he shall be relieved in Equity Tothil p. 108. The Copy-holders Actions and Remedies against Strangers and where A man grants all the Coals and Coal-Mines within a Manor and parcel was Copy-hold for Life to J. S. Where Copy-holder shall have Trover for Coals digged out of his Copy-hold Land Lessee enters into the Copy-hold and digs a new Pit in the Copy-hold Land during the Life of the Copy-holder and takes the Coals and converts them c. And Lessee of the Coal-Mine brought Trover against the Lessor Per Curiam he may do it for when the Lessor or Lessee of the Coals or a Stranger enters and digs the Coals out of the Pits these belong to the Lessee and if any one else take the Coals he shall have Trover Jones Rep. 243. Player and Roberts Lessee of a Copy-holder for a year Ejectment shall maintain an Ejectione Firmae for in as much as his Term is warranted by Law by force of the general Custom of the Realm it is but reason if he be ejected that he shall have Ejectione Firmae and it is a speedy course for a Copy-holder to have the possession of the Land against a Stranger 4 Rep. 26. As to the Declaration in Ejectment Vide Tit. Declaration In Cro. El. p. 224. It is said to be adjudged Ejectment Per tot Cur. That an Ejectione Firmae doth not lye of a Copy-hold Estate But it was agreed That an Ejectione Firmae doth lye of a Lease made by a Copy-holder but not of a Demise made by the Lord of a Copy-hold by Copy of Court Roll Cole and Wall 's Case A Copy-holder had Licence from his Lord to let his Land for 21 years he lets it to the Plaintiff for three years who entred and being Ejected brought Ejectione Firmae Ejectment by Lessee upon a Lease not warranted good against a Stranger Per Cur. he may maintain this Action at Common Law for it is a good Lease between the Pa●●●s and against all others but the Lord and as this Case is it is good against him because it is done by his Licence and it is a good Lease and well warranted by the Licence Cro. El. 535. Goodwin and Longhurst A Copy-holder made a Lease for one year excepting one day which was warranted by the Custom Lessee being ousted by a Stranger brings Ejectione Firmae it well lyes and if there were not any Custom yet it shall be good against all but him who had the Inheritance and Freehold So if a Lessee for Will at the Common Law had made a Lease for years for the Tenant at Will is only a Disseisor and the Lease is good against him Cro. Trin. 41 El. p. 676. Spark's Case So 717. Erish's Case Moor n. 709. Stoner and Gibson Ejectment by the Heir without Admittance to presentment If customary Lands do descend to the younger Son by Custom and he enters and leaseth to another who takes the Profits and after is Ejected he shall have an Ejectione Firmae without any Admittance of his Lessor or Presentment that he is Heir 1 Leon. p. 100. Rumny and Eves n. 128. If a Copy-holder had Common by Prescription in the Waste of the Lord and the Lord stores the Waste with Conies every Copy-holder may have Action on the Case against the Lord averring That by this the Common is impaired 1 Rolls Abr. 106. Clayton and Sir Jerom Horsey Trespass for Beasts depasturing his Common by every Commoner Copy-holder prescribes to have Common in the Waste of the Lord and brings Trespass on the Case against a Stranger for his Beasts depasturing on the Common there The Question was whether this Action lyes for 15 H. 7.12 it s agreed a Commoner cannot maintain an Action of Trespass nor no other but the Owner of the Soyl 12 H. 8.2 And the Commoner hath no right till he hath taken it by the mouth of his Beasts and the Damage is to the Tenant of the Land and then every other Commoner may have Action of Trespass and so the Stranger shall be infinitely punishable Per Coke If a Commoner may distrain Damage feasant doing Damage which proves lie hath wrong then by the same reason if the Beasts are gone before his coming he may have Action on the Case otherwise one that hath many Beasts may destroy the Common in a night And it s not like a Nusance for that is Publick and may be punished in a Leet But the other is private to the Commoners and cannot be punished in another course he cited one Whitehand's Case Many Copy-holders prescribe to have the Loppings and Toppings of Pollards the Lord cuts them every Copy-holder may have his Action and also Hill 5. Jac. Rot. 1427. Geo. England's Case and Warburton of the same Opinion 2 Brownl p. 146. Crogate and Morris If a Copy-holder by the Custom of a Manor had used to have Common for all his Beasts Action on the Case for digging Turffs on the Common Levant and Couchant upon his customary Tenements in a certain parcel of the Manor and a Stranger digs Turffs there and takes them away by which his Common is impaired Action on the Case lyes declaring That the Defendant digged so many Turffs there and then with his Horses and Carts Herbam tunc ibid crescen ' predict ambulando conculcando Declaration from the place aforesaid minus rite ceperit abcarriavit
per quod quer ' communiam suam predict pro averiis suis c. in tam amplo beneficiali modo prout antea habuit c. habere non potuit This is a good Declaration though the Commoner cannot have any Damage for the taking and carrying away the Turffs yet the coming on the Land with Horse and Carts is a prejudice to the Common and the per quod the Common is impaired is the cause of Action and the carrying away a means to impair it 1 Rolls Abr. 89. Terry and Goodier and good tho' Damages were entire Action shall be brought in a Copy-holder Lunaticks name for though the custody of the Land was granted to one by the Lord yet no Interest was gained by this commitment and the Lord hath not power over the Lunaticks Lands without a Custom Hobart p. 215 216. Cox and Darson Trespass Quare clausum fregit Copy-holder of Under-Wood without the Soil shall have Trespass Quare clausum fregit Moor n. 480. Account for Profits Account lies not for an Heir Copy-holder for the Profits of his Copy-hold Lands taken during his non-Age where the Defendant hath not entred and taken the Profits as Prochein Amy but claims by Custom and Grant of the Lord to the Use of the Assignee which Custom is good 1 Leon. p. 226. n. 356. Anonymus Faux Judgment Writ of faux Judgment lies not for a Copy-holder Vide supra Writ of Right Close Writ of Right Close lies not for a Copy-holder 4 Rep. 21. Avowry for Rent by Lessee of a Copy-holder Lessee for years of a Manor distrains a Copy-holder for Rent he Replevins Lessee Avows Per Curiam Avowry may be made for the Rent of a Copy-holder in the Kings-Bench and there is difference between an Ejectione Firmae and this Case For the Ejectione Firmae is brought for the Copy-hold it self But this Avowry is for Rent due to the Lord which is a duty at the Common Law and therefore an Avowry may well be for it Cro. El. p. 524. Laughter and Humphry A Copy-holder in Fee by Licence made a Lease for 21 years by Indenture rendring Rent Covenant by Assignee of a Reversion wherein the Lessee Covenants for himself his Executors and Assigns That he will erect a c. The Lessor surrendred to the Use of the Plaintiff and his Heirs who was admitted accordingly and the Plaintiff as Assignee brings his Action of Covenant Whether the Assignee may maintain this Action by the Common Law or by the Statute 32 H. 8. Cap. 34. was the Question for the Defendant demurred upon the Declaration it was adjourned in Cro. Car. 24. Plat and Plummer But it seems by 1 Keb. 356. Baker and Berisford's Case That the Assignee is not within this Statute to have a Covenant Action of Debt doth not lye for Arrearages of Copy Rents for the Stat. of 32 H. 8. Action of Debt for Rent does not extend to them but to Rents out of Free Land Yelv. p. 135. Appleton and Doily And so Executors shall not have Debt for Arreages of such Rents due in the Life-time of the Testator The Lord of a Manor is and Fines No Remedy for Fines Rents c. after vendition for Admittances and Copy-hold Rents are Arrear and then he sells the Manor he is without Remedy both in Law and Equity He hath deprived himself of the Remedy by his own act viz. the vendition 1 Rolls Abr. 374. Serjeant Hitcham and Finch Copy-holder for Life becomes Lunatick A. Action of Trover to be brought in the Lunaticks name he being a Copy-holder sows the Land The Lord grants the custody of the Lunatick to B. A. takes the Corn to the Use of the Lunatick B. Brought Trover in his own name it s ill brought It ought to be brought in the Lunaticks name and not in the name of the Committee Noy p. 27. Cox and Dawson Covenant by Rent Custom is when a Copy-holder dies seized of Copy-hold Lands or Rent That his Wife shall have the one moiety and his Issues the other moiety A. B. so seized takes Mary to Wife and they have Issue John A. B. dies so that Mary is seized of the moiety for her Life and John of the other moiety in Fee and of the first moiety as his Reversion Mary and John her Son make a Lease to J. B. for twenty one years rendring fifty pounds Rent to Mary and fifty pounds to John and after the death of Mary one hundred pounds to John John marries Margaret they have Issue three Sons John dies so that a fourth part comes to his Wife and the other fourth part to his three Sons Rent is behind Margaret brought Debt on Covenant for the Rent Per Curiam it was well brought by her sole Joynder in Action without joyning Mary with her Tenant in Commonn shall joyn in Action so long as the privity of Contract remains but when the privity is determined as it is here they may sever and such Contract shall ensue the nature of the Land and also there is a vesting by Custom and express several Reservations 2 Siderfin p. 9. Baker and Berisford CAP. XXX Of Copy-holders being Impleaded and Impleadable in the Lords Court Vide supra Tit. Customs COpy-hold Lands are as the Demesns of the Manor and are the Lords Freehold and therefore are not impleadable but in the Lords Court Croke Jac. 559. Pymmock and Hilder One recovered certain Copyhold Lands in the Court of the Lord of the Manor by Plaint in the nature of a Writ of Right A Precept cannot be made and awarded out of the Court to execute the said Recovery Posse Manerij and to put him who recovered into possession with the Posse Manerij for force in such cases is not justifiable but by command out of the Kings Courts 3 Leon. 99. A Woman recovered Dower of a Copy-hold within the Manor and 40 l. Damages 40 l. Damages recovered yet no Execution or remedy but by Petition and she brought Debt for the Damages in B.R. Per Cur. it lyes not because the Court Baron cannot hold Plea nor award Execution of 40 l. Damages though the Damages were there well assessed and because no Writ of Error or Faux Judgment lyes upon such a Recovery of a Copy-hold but only a Petition to the Lord of a Manor so that Copy-hold Plaints are not within the Jurisdiction of this Court of Kings-Bench Moor n. 559. Shaw and Tompson If an erroneous Judgment be given in a Copy-hold Court of a common Lord in an Action in nature of a Formedon a Bill may be exhibited in Chancery Faux Judgment how relieved in nature of a Faux Judgment to reverse this Pateshall's Case in Scaccario 1 Rolls Abr. 373. and Co. on Lit. p. 60. a. He cannot have the Kings Writ of false Judgment in respect of the baseness of the Estate and Tenure being in the Eye of the Law but a
be in the Tenant before Admittance and to what purposes not 155 Where there need no Admittance 154 In what cases the Lord shall be compelled to make Admittances 157 Actions Suits What Actions may be brought by the Lord 256 What Actions may be brought by the Copy-holder 256 257 258 What Actions the Copy-holder shall have against Strangers 258 Action on the Case by a Copy-holder for digging Turfs on the Common and Narr ' 261 No Actions or Remedies for Fines Rents Amerciament after Sale of the Manor 263 Of Copy-holders being impleaded and impleadable in the Lords Courts and the remedy there and how to be relieved against faux Judgment there 265 Copy-holder shall not have Assise against his Lord ibid. Copy-hold Inheritance shall not be Assets in the Heirs hands 267 Where Attornment is necessary to the passing of a Manor and where not 9 Attornment not necessary in the Grant of a Reversion of a Copy-hold Authority must be strictly persued Avowry for Rent by Lessee of a Copy-holder 262 Action must be brought in the name of a Copy-holder Lunatick and not in the name of the Committees 263 Acceptance of a Lease by the Tenant destroys the Copy-hold 225 Action on the Case lyes against the Lord for non-Admittance by the Surrendror but not by Cesty que use Chancery will compel the Lord to admit a Tenant 321 Admittance where it shall be pleaded as a Grant 271 B. Baron and Feme Custom That the Wife Feme Covert may devise good 55 Where the severance of the customary Tenants from the Manor shall not prejudice the Wife in her customary Estate 5 If the Lord enfeoff the Copy-holder this destroys the Widows Free-Bench 56 Of the transferring and assigning the Copy-hold Estate of a Bankrupts by Commissioners 251 Where and what acts of the Husband shall forfeit the Wives Estate or not 211 Copy-holds within the Statutes of Bankrupts 201 Of customary By-Laws 48 C. Original and nature of Copy-holds 1 Copy-hold created and guided by Custom 28 How a Copy Copy-holder and bare Tenant at Will differ 14 Three sorts of Copy-holders 70 Who may be said to be customary Tenants and in what respects What Evidence Copy-holders have for their Estates Copy-holders may have Sola separalis pastura in the Lords Soyl and exclude the Lord 66 Where a Copy-holder shall hold his Land charged by the Lord or the Copy-holder as to Dower Rents Charge and Statutes and how and where they shall be avoided 233 Custom The Nature of it 25 To be taken strictly and in many cases Cases Secundum vulgarem conceptum cannot extend out of the Manor 29 What is a good Custom or not and what things are required to the making a good Custom 30 How Customs ought to be certain 32 Of the reasonableness of Customs and when they are said to be unreasonable or not 33 Several Customs in several places 35 Three supporters of Copy-hold Custom 36 Of Customs enabling or disabling 36 37 Where a Custom shall be said to be pursued or not 43 Where one shall be Tenant by the Curtesie of a Copy-hold without Admittance of the Wife 86 Where Copy-hold is extinct Common is lost 62 Severance by the Lord shall not prejudice the Commoner 41 62 The nature of a Court Baron 73 Courts may be held out of the Manor by Custom and where 75 Of warning of Courts being holden at what place Relief for a Copy-holder in Chancery in many Cases where none is at Law 319 Chancery will design the bounds of Fines and of a Copy-hold but not whether parcel or not parcel 321 The Lord Decreed to hold a Court 324 Fines and Rents arrear not relieved after the Sale of the Manor 324 Composition decreed Statute 32 H. 8. cap. 7. against Champertry extends to Copy-hold 251 Copy-hold is not within Statute 31 Eliz. of Cottages 254 Copy-hold is not within the Stat. 32 H. 8. Of Entrys for Conditions broken 150 D. Demesns what 3 Dimis dimissib how to be understood Custom extends not to collateral Discents Discent of a Copy-hold Tolls not an Entry 68 Where the Heir shall be in by Discent or Purchase Copy-hold Estates how discontinued or not Surrender makes not a Discontinuance 175 176 What shall amount to a Discontinuance 69 Distress Avowry for Rent of a Copy-hold 236 Copy-holders Beasts distrainable or not for a Rent Charge 236 What shall be said a Disseisin as to Copy-hold Estates or not 255 Whether in Declaration in Ejectment the Plaintiff need to shew that the Lease was warranted by the Custom 257 Declaration by a Copy-holder That he is seised in Dominico suo ut de feodo secundum consuetud Manerii and also must shew that they are customary Lands 268 Presidents of Declarations ibid. E. Exposition of words Dimiss Dimissibile 16 Solum modo 44 Cum pertin 92 94 Ejectment brought by Copy-holder and how to declare 257 259 Emblements who shall have them upon a Ferfeiture 219 220 254 Evidence What shall be good Evidence to prove a Custom 305 Special Customs within several Limits ought to be shewed 306 Custom found 306 307 Evidence of Prescription 307 308 Where proof by Court Rolls are good Evidence 309 Copy of a Lease where good Evidence ibid. Who and what may be admitted to give Evidence Steward Court Books c. ibid. Extingushment A Copy-hold may be extinct as to the Services and remain as to the Customary Estate Copy-hold though severed from the Manor by the Lords act is not destroyed 222 Acceptance of a Lease by the Tenant destroys the Copy-hold 225 Copy-hold extinct by the Copy-holders Release to the Lord and where or how a Right to a Copy-hold shall shall be exinct by a Release 226 228 Copy-hold suspended and revived 230 231 After Escheat of a Copy-hold the Wife shall not be endowed 233 The Statute of VV. 2. that gives Elegits extends not to Copy-hold 253 F. Copy-hold Estates are within the words and intention of the Statute of Fines and non-claim 247 248 Of Copy-holder compounding for a Fine Fine on Admittance when to be paid 159 Of Fines certain 159 What Evidence shall prove the uncertainty of Fines 160 Excessive Fines how to be determined 160 What Customs are good as to payment of Fines and what not 161 Fine by whom to be Assessed 162 For every several Tenure several Fines 163 How the Lord shall recover his Fine 164 Difference as to what may pass by a Fine or be barred by a Fine at Common Law 176 Outragious Fines relieved in Chancery Forfeiture 319 Notice must be given if the Fines be uncertain before there can be a Forfeiture 198 Refusal to pay an excessive Fine no Forfeiture 198 What shall amount to a Forfeiture of a Copy-hold Estate 69 194 195 Refusal to pay Rent perform Services or Suit of Court when they shall be cause of Forfeitures 195 What words of denyal amount to a Forfeiture 197 Demand must be made of the person of a Tenant for a Fine or
mortem sursum redditionem vel forisfacturam of the Feme and after the Husband Surrenders to the Use of B. for Life and so he is Admitted Tenant and after dyes In this Case C. shall not have this because his Estate is not to commence till after the Death Surrender or Forfeiture of the Feme and the Feme here is in Life and had not made any Surrender or Forfeiture and the Wife had right in this in the nature of a plaint de cui in vita But the Lord in this Case may retain it in his own proper hands or disposition Occupant during the Life of the Husband quasi an Occupant Dyer 9 El. 264. Sect. 38. Surrender to whom To the Wife By the Husband to the Use of the Wife is good vide supra and 4 Rep. 29. Bunting's Case for it is done by Surrender to the Lord and Admittance To the Steward A Surrender made to the Steward to the Use of the Steward is good for the Entry is quod sursum reddidit in manus Domini and the Steward is but the Lords Servant and the surrender is to the Lord and not to him Cro. El. p. 717. Erish and Rives So Infant Vide supra Of Countermand of a Surrender Where the Surrender of a Copy-hold may be Countermanded by the Party himself and what collateral Act without the assent and privity of the Party shall be a countermand and where and what not Grant by Baron and Feme shall bind the Feme notwithstanding the Coverture so Grant by non compos mentis Infant Vide supra Vide supra Where and what Grants by Lords of Manors shall be good or defeasible in respect of the Estate they had therein Surrender is not Countermanded by the death of Surrenderor before Presentment 4 Rep. 29 Bunting's Case VVhere the Customs are not pursued the surrenders are void Vide sparsim and 5 Rep. 84. Peryman's Case Surrender by Steward or Deputy Steward and of persuing their Warrants vide Steward supra What remedy to force a Trustee to Surrender A Copy-holder doth surrender to the Use of one A. in Trust In the Lord's Court. that he shall hold the Land until he hath levied certain Monies and that afterwards he shall surrender to the Use of B. The Monies are levied A. is required to make surrender to the Use of B. he refuseth B. exhibits a Bill to the Lord of the Manor against 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 case is Chancellor in his own Court Per totam Curiam 1 Leon. 2. Or relief may be had in Chancery CAP. XVI Of Presentment How and when to be made How to be pursuant to the Surrender What the Law is if Surrenderor or Cesty que use or the customary Tenants into whose Hands the Surrender was made dye before Presentment or Admittance VVhere two Surrenders are and the second Surrender is presented first Presentment No good Surrender till presented IF the Surrender be made out of Court into the Hands of the Lord himself which the general Custom will warrant or into the Hands of the Bayliff or of two Tenants of the Manor which is warrantable only by special Custom there must be a true Presentment of the Surrender in Court by the same Persons into whose Hands the Surrender was made and the Admittance of the Lord must be according to the effect and tenor of both the Surrender and Presentment It is not an effectual Surrender till it be presented in Court And therefore in an Action on the Case on Assumpsit in Consideration that the Plaintiff would surrender to the Defendant and his Heirs a Copyhold according to the Custom of the Manor Defendant assumed to pay 500 l. and for breach of this promise the Plaintiff brings the Action and had a Verdict but Judgment was arrested because the Consideration on the Plaintiffs part was not performed for the Consideration was That he should surrender the Copy-hold to the Defendant and his Heirs and he hath alledged the surrender to be into the Hands of a Copy-hold Tenant of the Manor to Use of the Defendant which is no surrender untill it be presented at the next Court and so it is uncertain whether it shall take effect or not Stiles p. 256. Shaan and Shaan The Presentment by the general Custom of Manors is to be made at the next Court day When to be be made immediately after the surrender but by special Custom at the second or third day afterwards and by Rolls in Jay's Case Stiles 275. there is no certain time but as the Custom is so that it be within the Life of the Tenant it is to be made by the same persons that took the Surrender and in points material according to the true tenor of the Surrender But if the Surrender be conditional Presentment must pursue the Surrender and the Presentment absolute the Surrender Presentment and Admittance are void except the Steward in the entry of it omits the Condition and upon sufficient proof made in Court of that the Surrender shall not be avoided but the Roll amended and this shall be no conclusion to the Party to plead or give in Evidence the truth of the matter 4 Rep. 25. Kite and Quinton But in May's Case Norf. Summer Assises 1663. The Custom of a Manor was for a Copy-holder in extremis to surrender into one Tenants Hands in the presence of credible Witnesses and a Surrender was made accordingly but presented to be done to another Tenant yet being proved to be done to a Tenant of the Manor It was holden by Wadham Windham Justice to be good Of Presentment where the Surrenderor or Surrendree Cesty que use or customary Tenants dye before Presentment or Admittance Surrenderor dyes If one Surrender out of Court and dye before Presentment if Presentment be made after his death this is good 4 Rep. 29. Bunting's Case Cesty que use dyes If Cesty que use he to whose Use the Surrender is made dyeth before Presentment yet upon Presentment made after his death his Heir shall be admitted Stiles p. 145. Barker and Denhan Surrenderor and Cesty que use both dye If one Surrender out of Court to the Use of one for Life the Surrenderor and the Lessee for Life both dye before the Presentment yet upon Presentment made he in Remainder shall be Admitted Surrendree dyes Surrendree dyes before Admittance his Heir may be Admitted and if it be Burrough-English the youngest Son 2 Siderfin 38 61. The Tenants into whose hands the Surrender was made dye If the Tenant into whose Hands the Surrender was made dye before Presentment yet upon sufficient proof made in Court That such a Surrender was made the Lord shall be compelled to admit Co. Lit. 62. Nothing passeth till presentment But nothing passeth till Presentment
Copy-holder It hath been a Question when a Copy-holder bargains and sells his Copy-hold to the Lord of a Manor in Lease for years whether the Copyhold Estate was extinguished But in Hutton p. 81. it is agreed that this Copy-hold is not extinguished but that the Lord who is Lessee for years is Dominus pro tempore and may grant it by Copy de novo The Lord of a Manor demised Copy-hold Lands to three Sisters Habend to them for their Lives successive the eldest Sister married one C. after which the Lord by Indenture leased the same Land to the eldest Sister the Remainder to the Husband Remainder to the second Sister and no Agreement was made thereunto by the second Sister by Deed before or after making the said Indenture but four days after the Lease made she agreed to it in pais and then married a Husband Agreement to an Indenture by one in Remainder for Life and they claim the Land The point is if by Agreement of the second Sister her Right to the Copy-hold were extinct The Interest of the eldest Sister is gone by her acceptance of the Estate by Indenture now if the second Sister may come and claim her customary Interest Per Cur. it s no extinguishment in the second Sister and yet Judgment was against her for Per Gaudy none can take advantage of the eldest Sister's Estate being determined the Lord against his Lease cannot enter or claim and the second Sister cannot enter during the Life of the eldest Sister for her Remainder takes effect in possession after the death of her said Sister 1 Leon. p. 73. Curtis and Cottell's Case 28 Eliz. Trin. B. R. By acceptance of a new Estate of Free-hold Baron and Feme Copy-holders to them and their Heirs the Baron in consideration of mony paid by him to the Lord obtaineth an Estate of the Freehold to him and his Wife and to the Heirs of their Bodies Baron dieth having Issue the Feme enters and suffers a Recovery and his Heir enters Per Statute 11 H. 7. Per Cur. the Entry is lawful for the Copy-hold by the Acceptance of the new Estate was extinguished Cro. El. 24. Stockbridge's Case Where and how Right to a Copy-hold shall be Extinguished by Release A man makes a Surrender of his Copy-hold Land to J. S. which is not good and after J. S. is admitted he which made the Surrender releaseth to him being in possession and after enters upon him The Question was if his Entry be congeable and if by the Release by Deed the customary Right of the Copy-holder was extinct And Per Cur. it is extinct by the Release for he to whom the Release was made was Copy-holder in possession and admitted to the Tenements and therefore the Release of a customary right may enure to him and the Lord hath no prejudice for he hath received his Fine for Admittance and he to whom the Release is made is in by Title viz. by Admittance of the Lord and so this Release enures by way of extinguishment And there is great difference between transferring of an Estate and an extinguishment of a Right Diversity between the transferring of an Estate and the extinguishment of a Right But if a Copy-holder be ousted per Tort there his Release to the disseisor or other wrong doer does not transfer his Right or Bar him 1. Because there is no customary Estate upon which a Release of any customary Right may enure and then 2. It would be a prejudice to the Lord who would lose his Fines and Services Co. 4 Rep. 25. b. Kite and Queinton In Replevin bar to the Conisance That K.D. was seized of the Manor of R. in Fee and that the Tenements in which c. were customary held of the said Manor and that at such a Court a Copy was granted to the Plaintiff whereby he entred and put in his Beasts The Defendant protesting the Premisses were not customary for Plea saith That before the Plaintiffs Title J. Abbot of the Monastery of B. was seized of the Manor of R. c. and one R. T. being seized of the customary Lands in which c. in Fee at the will of the Lord the said R. surrendred to the Abbot who was possessed and occupied the said Premisses for divers years and afterwards demised the said Manor for 40 years to W. M. and then surrendred the entire Manor and Abbathy to H. 8. who granted the entire Manor to the Duke of Norfolk in Fee and he with the assent of the Termor made a Feoffment to Drury of the Manor to whom the Termor surrendred his Lease Drury dyes and it descends to his Heir who granted the Land in which c. again by Copy to Tillot for his Life who entred and put in his Beasts Demurrer The Question was if the Custom is destroyed or if Drury the Defendant may avoid his Grant by Copy Note The custumary Land was never severed from the Manor but granted with the Manor as part of it and was demisable by Copy by all the Lords of the Manor and so it remained till the 15th of Eliz. when the Defendant granted the Copy to the Plaintiff Winch Ent. 991 992. Where a Copy-hold shall be perpetually extinct or where it shall after become a Copy-hold by regrant Forfeit Escheat If a Copy-hold Estate be forfeit or escheat to the Lord or otherwise come into the Hands of the Lord if the Lord make a Lease for years or for Life or other Estate by Deed or without Deed this Land shall never after be granted again by Copy for the Custom is destroyed for that during such Estates the Land was not demised nor demisable by Copy of Court Roll So if the Lord make a Feoffment and enter for the Condition broken it shall never be granted again by Copy But if the Lord keep it in his Hands a long time or let this at will then he may re-grant it Lach p. 213. 1 Rolls Abr. 498. Downcliff and Minors So if the interruption be tortious as if the Lord be disseised and the disseisor dye seized or the Land be recovered against the Lord by false Verdict or erroneous Judgment yet after the Land recovered or the judgment reversed this is grantable again by Copy Legal Interruptions But if the Land so Forfeited or Escheated before any new Grant be extended upon a Statute or Recognizance acknowledged by the Lord or the Lords Wife hath this assigned to her in a Writ of Dower though these are impediments by acts in Law yet the interruptions are lawful and the Lands may never again be granted by Copy 4 Rep. 31. Frenches Case If Copy-holder takes a Lease for years of the Manor by this his Copy-hold is destroyed but such Lessee may re-grant the Copy-hold again to whom he will for the Land was always demised or demisable If a Copy-hold be surrendred to the Lessor of a Manor or be Forfeited to him he his Executors or Assigns may well
alledge this as a Grant How a Copy-holder shall plead in making Title to a Copy-hold and this the Law allows for avoiding an inconvenience which will otherwise happen for if the Copy-holder in Pleading shall be put to shew the full Grant either it was before the time of memory and then it is not pleadable or within time of memory and then the Custom fails Admittance pleaded as a Grant and for this cause the Law hath allowed the Copy-holder in Pleading to alledge any Admittance upon a Descent or upon a Surrender as a Grant and yet he may if he will alledge the Admittance of his Ancestor as a Grant and shew the Descent to himself and that he entred and good without any Admittance of him but the Heir cannot plead That his Father was seized in Fee at the Will of the Lord by Copy of Court Roll of such a Manor according to the Custom of the Manor and that he died seized and that it descended to him for in truth such an Interest is but a particular Interest at Will in judgment of Law although it is descendible by the Custom for he is Tenant at Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Manor 4 Rep. 22. Brown's Case If one Surrender to the intent that the Lord shall grant it to another and he admitts him it was adjuded good yet he ought to plead it as a Grant Lit. Rep. 175. Tenant in Dower may Grant a Copy-hold in Reversion which shall be good Grant of Copy-hold Land in Reversion must be pleaded as a Grant in Reversion and not as a Grant in possession nor by a per nomen though not executed in the Life of Tenant in Dower But then it must be pleaded as a Grant in Reversion and not as a Grant in Possession therefore in Gray's Case Cro. El. p. 661 662. It was there pleaded That he granted Tenementa praedicta per nomen of a Messuage which A. P. held for Life and Per Cur. it s an uncurable Fault for it is not alledged that he granted the Tenement in Reversion and the per nomen will not help Averment del ' v●e Tenant by curtesie of Copy-hold brings Ejectment or Action it must appear that he is in Life or else he cannot have Judgment 1 Anderson p. 292. Ewer and Astwick Where in Pleading the Commencement of the. Estate must be shewn or by whom granted or not In matter of Conveyance to a Title need not shew the Conveyance Replevin the Plaintiff in bar to the Avowry shews that the Land was Copy-hold Land grantable in possession or reversion for Life or in Fee and that the Lord granted the Reversion to him after the death of W. who was Tenant pur vie and shews the death of W. whereby he entred And demurred because he did not shew the beginning of W. his Estate nor by whom W. had the Estate granted him Per. Cur. this is no cause of Demurrer because it is not the Plaintiffs Title but matter of Conveyance thereunto Cro. Jac. 52. Lodge and Fry Admittance of the last Heir to be shewed instead of an ancient Grant If one pleads Seisin of a Copy-holder in Fee and claims under him he ought to shew of whose Grant as he ought to shew of any other particular Estate but perhaps that is so ancient that it cannot be shewn who was the first Grantee yet it was held sufficient to shew the Admittance of the last Heir which is in nature of a Grant and may be pleaded by way of Grant Cro. Jac. 103. Pyster and Hembling In Trespass the Defendant justifies he confesseth the Close to be Copy-hold Land but pleads That long time before it was parcel of the Manor of c. and that long before the supposed Trespass one Pole and M. his Wife was Lord of the Manor in right of his Wife for Life remainder to Stephen in Tayl and he made a Lease of this Land to the Defendant it s an ill Plea because the Defendant hath not shewed as he ought how Pole and his Wife came to this Estate for Life the remainder over they ought to shew how this particular Estate hath its commencement they claiming a derivative Estate from Pole and his Wife for years 3 Bulstr 281. Sandford and Stephens None may entitle himself to any Copy-hold but he ought to shew a Grant thereof In Trespass the Plaintiff in his Rejoynder intitles himself because the place where is customary Land parcel of such a Manor whereof J. S. is seized in Fee and demisable by Copy at Will in Fee and that J. N. was seized in Fee by Copy c. and dyed seized so as it descended to two Daughters as Heirs of J. N. and that at such a Court Dominus concessit eis extra manus suas c. Habend tenend Tenementa praedicta to the said Daughters and their Heirs whereby they were seized in Fee and afterwards demised to the Plaintiff for years The Plaintiff hath not made a good Title and he shewing such an one was seized in Fee without shewing the Grant thereof Per Cur. it s not good Cro. Car. 190. Shepherd's Case yet it was but default of form and Issue for the Plaintiff being found it is a Jeofail Pleading Custom or Prescription A Copy-holder in Pleading need not alledge a Custom to make a Surrender for that is the Custom of all England A Copy-holder need not alledge a Custom to make a Lease for a year It must be pleaded that he used to do it It is not sufficient to alledge a Custom that one might do such an Act but that he used to do it as to alledge dimissibile and dimissum therefore in Brown and Foster's Case the Defendant avows in Replevin for Damage feasant the Plaintiff makes Title as Copy-holder and shews that within the Manor of A. time whereof c. Talis habebatur habetur consuetudo c. That any Copy-holder may surrender into the Hands of two Customary Tenants c. this is not well pleaded for it is pleaded by Usage and Custom but he doth not plead that ever it was put in ure in that manner which ought to be alledged as in Sir William Hatton's Case where it was pleaded Quod Talis habebatur consuetudo within a Manor Quod licebit Seneschall● to impose a Fine c. But in the principal Case the not naming the Steward made the Avowry ill and then Per Cur. the Avowry being ill although the bar to the Avowry were ill Not naming the Steward in the Avowry ill yet he cannot have return Cro. p. 37. El. 392. Brown and Foster Copy-holder pleads Quod infra Manerium praed talis habetur nec non a toto tempore cujus contrarij memoria hominum non existit habebatur consuetudo videl quod quilibet tenens custumar ' praedict tenementa c. hath used to have Common in such a place parcel of the Manor Question was if the
Attornies by their appointment in the Name or Names of them the said T. S. and M. in case the same Marriage take effect to commence Suit against sue and prosecute all and every the person or persons as occasion shall require for all every of any the said monies that are now owing to the said M. And that he the said T. S. shall justifie all and every such Actions and Suits That he shall not release the Action and shall not Release or discharge the same or any Judgment or Judgments or Execution thereupon to be had without the consent of the said Trustees but shall suffer the said Trustees to receive the same monies and every Sum thereof That what is received shall be at her disposal and all and other the Sum and Sums above the Sum of 300 l. and to preserve and dispose of the same according to the Trust in them reposed by the aforeseid M. And that the said M. shall have full power of the disposal thereof to any person or persons other than the said T. S. without any contradiction of him the said T. S. or any threats or uncivil carriage to deter her thereunto That neither of the Estates be charged with the others Debts due before Marriage And it is farther agreed by and between the said T. S. and M. F. That neither of them nor their Estates shall be charged with the Debts or Engagements of either of the other of them due or payable before the date of these presents And to that end the said T. S. doth covenant promise and grant to and with the said Trustees before named and to and with every of them That he will pay and discharge all his own particular Debts or which he is bound for or stands chargable to pay to any person or persons out of his own particular Estate without having or craving any of the now personal Estate of her the said M. other than the aforesaid 300 l. before mentioned If there appear any Debts on her part Trustees to pay them out of her personal Estate in their Hands And also the said M. F. doth hereby agree That in case the said T. S. after the said intended Marriage shall take effect and be solemnized shall be questioned or molested for any the proper Debts of her the said M. contracted or owing by her before the solemnization of the said intended Marriage or for any Legacy or Legacies which she is any ways chargable to pay to any person or person That the Trustees shall have power and authority hereby to pay and discharge the said Debts and Legacies which she the said M. is so chargable to pay and that out of any her now proper Estate other than the aforesaid 300 l. and in so doing the Trustees shall be discharged of any other account thereof unto the said M. or to the said T. S. after the solemnization of the said intended Marriage And the said Trustees and every of them do hereby declare That they will perform the Trust in them reposed by these presents according to the true intent and meaning thereof And do hereby Covenant every one of them one with the other respectively not to act or do any thing touching the Premisses without the consent of them all In Witness whereof to the first part of these presents remaining with the said T. S. the said M. F. and the said Trustees have put their Hands and Seals to the second part of these Indentures remaining with the said Trustees the said M. F. and T. S. have put their Hands and Seals to the third part of these Indentures remaining with the said M. F. the said T. S. and the said Trustees have put their Hands and Seals the day and year first above written Covenant to Surrender Copy-hold Land after a Bargain and Sale of Free-hold And whereas the said I. W. holdeth to him and his Heirs by Copy of Court Roll at the Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Manor of S. aforesaid the said Parcel of Land in S. aforesaid before excepted It is Covenanted and agreed by and between the said Parties to these presents and the said I. W. for himself his Heirs Executors and Administrators for the Considerations aforesaid doth Covenant to and with the said H. A. RG and I. A. their Heirs and Assigns by these presents That he the said I. W. shall and will before the Feast of St. John Baptist now next ensuing surrender according to the Custom of the said Manor the said Parcels of customary Lands before excepted unto the use and behoof of the said H. A. R. G. and I. A. and their Heirs for ever and procure them to be admitted unto the same accordingly To hold according to the Custom of the said Manor freed and discharged of all Forferfeitures Charges and Incumbrances done or suffered by him the said J. W. or F. W. his Father or either of them In Witness c. Covenant that he is rightfully seized of Copy-hold Land And the said A. B. for the Considerations aforesaid doth for himself his Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns and for every of them covenant promise and grant to and with the said I. G. his Heirs and Assigns by these presents that he the said A. B. now at the sealing and delivery of this c. is solely lawfully and rightfully seized of and in all and singular the said Copy-hold Lands and Premisses herein before mentioned to be granted with their c. Appurtenances of a good Estate in Fee-simple according to the Custom of the Manor of which the same Premisses are holden If the Copy-holds belong to two Manors then thus of a good Estate in Fee-simple according to the Custom of the several Manors of which the said Premisses are respectively holden Covenant to Surrender Copy-hold Lands And also that he the said A. B. or his Heirs shall and will at the next Court-Baron to be held for the Manor of W. in the said County c. or at any other time or times upon the request of the said I. G. his Heirs or Assigns but at the proper Costs and Charges of the said A. B. or his Heirs surrender into the Hands of the Lord of the Manor or to the Steward thereof or otherwise according to the Custom of the said Manor to the use of the said I.G. his Heirs and Assigns all those Lands Tenements and Hereditaments herein after mentioned which he the said A. B. doth hold of the said Manor aforesaid by Copy of Court Roll according to the Custom of the said Manor viz. one piece of Land called c. And all other the Copy-hold or customary Lands of the said A. B. held of the said Manor of W. And the said A. B. for himself c. doth farther Covenant c. to and with the said I. G. his Heirs and Assigns c. that he the said A. B. his Heirs Executors or Administrators shall and will pay the Fines