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A21071 The lavves resolutions of womens rights: or, The lavves prouision for woemen A methodicall collection of such statutes and customes, with the cases, opinions, arguments and points of learning in the lavv, as doe properly concerne women. Together with a compendious table, whereby the chiefe matters in this booke contained, may be the more readily found. Edgar, Thomas, lawyer.; Doddridge, John, Sir, 1555-1628.; I. L. 1632 (1632) STC 7437; ESTC S100217 253,135 400

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an issue of ne vnques accople in loyall Matrimonie and that must be tried by the Bishop Therefore for the better direction of Brides take the case verbatim as it is propounded with the solution 22. Eliz. Dyer 369. A woman of full age contracts Matrimonie by words of the present instant with a young man of twelue yeares age and this being solemnized in face of the Church with consummation after a sort the young man being put to bed to her died vnder age quaere if the Ordinarie ought to certifie an accomplement in loyall Matrimonie Solutio doctorum quindecem We be all of opinion that she is to be taken for a loyall wife coupled in loyall Matrimony and in question of Dower that the Bishop ought so to certifie for albeit that in other regards these were but Sponsalia de futuro yet in case of Dower and the priuiledge thereof they are extended to Matrimony consummate Et iudicium datum pro dote heere ye say was the Law as cleere as Christall on your side when supper is done dance a while leaue out the long measures till you be in bed get you there quickly and pay the Minstrels tomorrow SECT II. Baron and Feme one person NOw that Matrimony is celebrated and consummate here is so strait a fellowship or rather identitie of person that if a feoffement bee made to a man and his wife iointly with I. S. the Baron Feme take but a moity and in a feoffement to Baron and Feme and I. S. and T. K. they take but a third part and where a feoffement is made to a man and his wife ioyntly they take not seuerall moities as other ioynt Feoffees doe but the Baron and feme take intirely together and in Law they are said to be seised by intierties and there is no halfing betwixt them For if the Baron charge the whole land or part of it with a rent the wife shall hold it discharged after his death and if he sell all or part and die the wife shall recouer all by Writt of cui in vita See 40. assi pla 7. If a Villeine and his Wife purchase land ioyntly the Lord enter and the Villeine die the Feme or her Heyre shall haue the whole Land Eadem lex videtur where the Husband ioynt-purchaser is an Alien borne or attaint in premunire or of fellonie But the booke of Assises goeth not so farre The videtur is Parliament 43. in Brooke where likewise ye shall see it was holden 5. H 7. fo 31. that if T. infeoffe W. and A. his wife afterward it is by Parliament enacted that all estates made by T. to W. shall bée voyde that the feoffement shall be voyd as well towards the wife as towards the Husband because they are but one person in Law and the Feme taketh nothing but by agréement of the husband And vpon the like reason is the case Dyer 3. Eliz. fo 196. Sir Rob. Catline purchase land held in capite to him and his wife and his heyres without licence and the Queene pardons all offences pro quacunque alienatione sibi facta and doth not speake of the wife in the pardon and yet it was allowed in the Exchequer But if the feoffement had beene to W. and I. S. this I. S. should haue held his moity notwithstanding the Parliaments decrée and this seemeth to bee the better opinion though there were in manner equall number to maintaine That if the feoffement were before couerture the Parliament should voyd it for a moity but if it were after couerture it should voyde for no part against the Feme when shee was discouerte leauing to Parliaments their omnipotencie it is cléere the husband cannot seuer the Ioynture betwixt him and his wife as an other Ioynt-tenant may if the Ioynture were made during Couerture because there is then no moity Otherwise it is if the Ioynture were made before the Marriage And if lands be giuen to a man and his wife habendum one moity to the husband and habendum the other moity to the wife now they bee seised of moities as Tenants in Commom But for this I finde no other authority then the opinion of Knightly in Dyer 28. H. 8. 10. b. SECT III. Baron feme cannot infeoffe one another MOreouer this Conglutination of persons in Baron and feme forbiddeth all manner of feoffing or giuing by the one vnto the other for a man cannot giue any thing vnto himselfe therefore 27. H. 8. fo 27. In action of debt vpon an obligation to performe couenants where it passed for the Plaintiffe because the Defendant had not paid annually seauen pound to his wife it is alleaged in arest of Iudgement that the Couenant was impossible in it selfe c. But Chomeley Shelley and Fitzherbert moued the husband to agrée with the Plaintiffe Car le exception sert de riens for although in strict intelligence of Law money and Chattels paid deliuered or giuen to the wife by the husband are still his owne yet a man may giue his wife a paire of hose saith the booke as a man is bound by honesty so he may be bound by red waxe and parchment to finde his wife sustenance and to bee bound to giue her money for her securitie is all one from this Lanthorne I thinke he tooke his light which bound a gentleman of mine acquaintance to giue his Wife the Obligée his Daughter yearely such and so many g●wnes Hertles c. And the meaning must bee taken and obserued in the booke of 4. H. 7. fo 4. is another memorable Cause A man was bound to I. S. by obligation to make a sure estate to a woman in certaine tenements within three moneths after his fathers death The Obligor marrieth the woman in his fathers life time and the Matrimony continueth till the three moneths be expired the obligation is forfeited Vauisor said the husband might well haue performed the condition by fine leuied vpon a writt of Couenant brought by a stranger against the Baron and feme Fisher said he might haue performed it by making a Lease vnto a stranger the remainder to the wife quaere of that Vauisors performance had beene good I thinke if there had beene in the beginning a full purpose and intent of intermarriage betwixt the woman and the Obligor But that appeares not and therefore being that hee hath brought himselfe to an impossibility of performance either of words or meaning the Obligée must néeds be allowed the aduantage If the obligation had béene to the woman her selfe the condition by inter-marriage had béene dispensed with for where the Obligee is a cause that the condition cannot be performed the not performing is without penalitie to the Obligor as if in the old dayes I had béene bound to an Abbot that A. should infeoffe him c. before Christmas if A. had presently entred into Religion my bond had presently beene forfeited not so If A. had béene professed vnder the obedience
a di●●ringas shall goe against him Againe 11. H. 4. a 〈…〉 ●api●s went against Baron and Feme the Baron appeared and the wife made default the Plaintiffe could not obtaine exigent against them both but he had it against the Feme and an idem dies giuen to the Baron For though in a praecipe quod redd●● in 〈…〉 of the grand 〈…〉 and such like and for losse of 〈…〉 returned vpon Baron and Feme the wiues default be the husbands default yet the wiues default onely shall ●ot ●ée so 〈…〉 to him as to driue him to a corporall punishment as to the capias or exigent Likewise 39. Ed ● 3. fol. 18. 〈…〉 against Baron and Feme at the exigent the Baron appeared the wife made default and because shée was misnamed in the writ a new exigent went out and a● idem dies to the husband yet he was compelled here to answer maintenants 8. H. 4. fol. 6. in appeale of Mayhem against Baron and Feme after exigent awarded the Baron alone came and found suerty and had a supersedeas though the wife neuer appeared 12 H. 4. fo 1. in a writ of debt against Baron and Feme processe continued till capias was awarded then the Baron appeared of his ow●● accord and the wife made default an idem dies was giuen to the husband and a capias sicut alias went against the wife which came and finding suerties had a supersedeas to the Sheriffe then at the day of appearing the wife c●me and the Baron made default therein was awarded that the wife should haue another day of maineprise and processe went out against the husband But this he said should be no example in temps a vener SECT XLVII Of Fourching THis interchange or shifting of appearance and default by Baron and Feme is called sourching or fourcher The terme being of no greater linage than from a hay forke or pitchforke which in french is fourth The Logicians call their dilemma a forke And our Ancients haue giuen a like name to a subtill kinde of delay which parceners ioyntenants and married couples had at the common Law when suits were commenced against them called forcher for euen as a cunning fighting bull when he is bayted offering to the dog first one horne and then another might be said to forth so these conioyned aduersaries were wont to play with both tynes when first one should appeare and his fellow be ●ssoyned and at the next day of appearance he should make default which formerly appeared and be essoyned by him which first made default Against this West 1. ca. 42. complaining that demandants were greatly delayed by 〈…〉 which might not answer but together and by ioyntenants which knew not their owne seuerall that vsed to four●h by ●ssoine till euery one were once essoined Ordeineth that such tenants henceforth shall bée allowed no essoine more than at one day and as one person The Statute of Gloucester made 6. eius●em Regis 〈…〉 the first reciteth the former Statute thus Whereas it is established that parceners and tenants in common shall not fourth by essoine after they haue once appeared in Court It is ordeined that the same Law shall bée obserued when a man and his wife are impleaded c. In the booke 12. H 4. fo 1. Culpeppe● affirmeth that fourcher which was at the common Law in a writ of debt is not to be re 〈…〉 died by this Statute of 〈…〉 And Thi 〈…〉 confesseth that the Statute i 〈…〉 l●●d 〈…〉 yet saith he at the common Law 〈…〉 and 〈…〉 might neuer fourth by distresses infinet in a writ of debt for that they are in a manner one person in law Thus much of sourching SECT XLVIII The Baron and Feme appeare BVt admitting that there is no delay vsed how shall Baron and Feme plead I suppose it is hardly comprehended within rules Brooke setteth downe that in a quid ●uris clamat against Baron and Feme they may deny the deed by which the Feme should bee bound and a quid iuris clamat was brought against a Feme couert 18. H. 6. fo 1. Titulo Baron Feme 83. And where the Baron is estopped from pleading non tenure the wife is so t●● Titulo lou●nes accompts Br. 17. ●6 assisar p. 44. An Assise was brought against Baron and Feme the Baron canus in proper person and pleaded the Plaintiff 〈…〉 the wines Atturney was asked if hée would ass●●t to the plea who answered he would be aduised therefore thes d●●● was deliuered ba●● againe to the husband to the intent that it should not bée allowed vnlesse the wines Atturney consented who alterward agreed Thus doth Fitzh titulo Assise abridge the case 243. very néere the originall for Brooke mist●ke it or I mistake him in the title of Baron and Feme 72. In an action of debt against Baron and Feme executrix It in a good pleading to say that the wife hath fully administred and a good replication to say that the wise hath asserts sins pa●ler del Baron ●● Hen. 6. fo 4. And there it is said that a wife 〈…〉 may administer and distribute gods without the assent of her husband And if that she sell the Testator goods and redeme them yet still they remaine assets If a Fame tenant for life take a husband and they sine being 〈…〉 of a stranger if the Baron die he in 〈…〉 cannot enter for that is the act of the husband If a Feme tenant for life take a husband which alieneth in Fee and hee in reuerston entereth if now the Baron dye the wife shall haue the land againe 29. assisar p. 43. Brooke 86. Titulo Baron and Feme The case is of an estate made to baron and Feme in the booke of assises in a writ of entry in nature of assise against Baron and Feme the Baron pleaded non tenure for his wife and for himselfe Ioyntenantie with a stranger This was Bolden a good plea per Curian● and not double for he must answer for both 16. H. 6. fo 22. 12. Rich. 2. Baron and Feme were acquit in appeale it was found by verdict that they had béene imprisoned to damnages C. l. By Thinne H●ll Iustices the dammages ought to be seuered the Baron to haue one iudgement for himselfe and he and his wife another iudgement for his wife for if the husband should dye before execution the wife ought to haue execution of her da●u●ages and not the husbands executors which could not bee if the recouery were in common Fitzh Titulo Iudgement 108. SECT XLIX Outlarie of Baron and Feme or of one of them 44. Ed. ● fo 3. The Baron and Feme being outlawed in an action of debt got each of them a seuerall Charter of pardon sued scire facias against the Plaintiffe and found maineprise ioyntly the Viscount returned that the scire facias came tardy at which returne the Baron appeared without his wife and praying to haue scire facias sicut alias
by the better opinion 3. Ed. 4. ● 9. 10. such a partition is good enough if it be vpon the ground but see the bookes of 2. Eliz. Dyer 179. 18. Eliz. Dyer 350. There is also a prety case of a mill parted betwéen two brethren ioynt-tenants by an award of a third that one should repaire the mill on the one side of a certaine poste and the other on the other side imperpetuum c. which was awarded a good partition without any writing 47. Ed. 3. 24. ●9 Assi p. 1. It hath béene also much doubted whether iudgement may be giuen to hold in seuerall when in assise of nouell disseisin brought by one ioynt-tenant or tenant in common against another it is found for the plaintiffe as it is cleare it may be if the action were betwixt partners 7. assi p. 10. Herle would not haue giuen iudgement to hold in seueraltie had the parties beéne ioynt-tenants But 10. Assi p. 17. such a iudgement is giuen and no bones made of it yet 28. assi p. 35. R. Thorp in like case would giue no iudgement but generally to hold a moity per my per tont though he were besought in the Country at the assises at West again and again for Iudgement to hold seuerally 7. H. 6. fo 4. Weston glanceth on such a iudgement and Strange denyeth that it may be for it destroyeth the suruiuor But Chine saith that it may be and hath béen often the reason why the Law was more scrupulous in those points betwéene tenants in Common and ioynt-tenants then betwéen partners was as I guesse because coheyres haue their estate by course of law and the other are in either by the act of some body which made the estate or by their own doing so that though for necessity they may alien that which belongeth to them or charge it yet otherwise the Contract made by consent may not without manifest assent be vndone Bract. saith fo 206. sufficit femel voluisse nec dissoluitur mutua voluntas nisi mutua voluntare contraria It is perceiued how the law was before the Statutes 31. 32. H. 8. a summarie of which is set downe already now that it may the better in part be vnderstood how the law hath béene taken since those Statutes obserue the causes following out of my Lord Dyers Reports The puisne of thrée Coparceners of a reuersion vpon estate for life gauel-kind alieneth by a fine the lessée dieth the eldest parcener entreth into all his Inheritance the middlemost and the Alienée bring a ioynt Writt of partition vpon the Statute the eldest pleadeth the generall issue non tenent insimul pro indiviso the case appearing by the euidence it was holden vpon a demurrer cleere that the action was not maintainable for the one ought to haue her Writt by the Common Law and the other by the statute but ioyne they could not Quaere saith Dier if the entry of the eldest giue seisin to the rest that it should giue it to the stranger were hard 2. 3. Phi. Ma. fol. 12. 8. One of three Coparceners alieneth that which to her belongeth one of the other two bringeth a Writt of partition against her fellow parcener and the alienée vpon the statute because in this case she might haue had a Writ by the Common Law this Writ vpon the statute abated But if the two Coparceners had ioyned against the alienée and the one had beene at non-suite she should haue been summoned and seuered and her part beene diuided as well as the others quaere by the Register when the husband vnto one of thrée partners purchaseth one part c. he and his wife may haue a speciall Writt against the third euen so it séemeth if one of thrée Coparceners purchase a fellowes part the purchaser may haue a speciall writt against the third parcener 7. ct 8. Eliz. 243. in Dyer by Anthony Browne and Dyer ioint-tenants cannot at this day make partition by paroll out of the countie where the land lieth for 31. and 32. c. change not the law in this point But the partition must bee by Writt out of Chancery Humfrey Browne and Weston 2. Eliza. Dier 179. a man deuised socage lands to his two daughters and to the heyres of their two bodies loyally engendred and died the two daughters tooke husbands and at full age c. partition was made by paroll one husband had issue by his Wife and shée dyed By the opinion of the whole Court the other Husband and his wife shall haue the whole Land by suruiuor for partition by word onely betwixt ioint-tenants or tenants in Common of estate of Inheritance is voyd yet of a tearme peraduenture saith Dier such a partition is good enough fo 350. in Dier If ye doubt now of any thing somthing more then you did before yée are the better learned and warned to worke surely The manner of partition by Writ c. THe Iudgment vpon a writ de partit faciend if that diuision be made betwéene the parties and that the Viscount in proper person going to the lands and tenements by the oath of 12. loyall men of his Countie make the partition deliuering one part to the plaintiffe or to one of the plaintiffes and another part to another parcener c. making no mention in the iudgement more of the eldest then the youngest Sister The Sheriffe must giue notice to the Iustices of the partition which he hath made aswell vnder the seale of the 12. men as vnder his owne seale And in this partition there is no primer election giuen to any but the second may haue liuery before the eldest or the younger before either of them euen as it pleaseth the Sheriffe And this difference is betweene partition by Writ here and the other partition which is by agreement In the first the Viscount shall make to euery partner her distinct share but in the other they may agrée that one shall hold in seueraltie and the rest shall occupie that which remaineth in common Thus farre Littleton Bractons partition THere is in Bracton a large discourse of partition which I sée not why for the forme at this day should not be good if not of all other the best And this partition is by commission to men either chosen by the parties or appointed by the King as Iustices or extenders with commandement to the Sheriffe to make them come before those Commissioners or extenders tam milites quam alios legales homines nulla affinitate attingentes per quos negotium melius expedire poterit He hath also a precept to the Coroners where the Sheriffe is negligent Tepidus remissus in executione preceptorum domini Regis with a rule for valuation of an aduowsan viz. that a marke annuall to the parson shall be rated a shilling to the parcener to whom the aduowsan shall be alotted And when the extent and diuision is made euery part being written by
the Statute of 21. H. 8. hath béene taken A sonne of Charles Duke of Suffolke by a second venter hauing certaine goods by his fathers Will dyed intestate and without wife or issue his mother who was daughter to the Lord Willough by tooke Administration which was afterward reuoked after great argument in the spirituall Court as well by common Lawyers as Ciuilians in the behalfes of the said mother Dutchesse of Suffolke and Lady Francis wife to the Marquis Dorset sister of the halfe ●loud to Henry the Intestate which sued to reuerse the Administration and obteined it her selfe though shee were but sister de demy sanke for the mother is not next of kin to her aw●e sonne in thi●●a●ter but must descend and not ascend either by one Law or the other and children be ●● sanguine patris matris ●●● pater mater non sunt de sa●g●ine puerorum Contrary it is of brethren and sisters 5. Edw. 6. 47 in Brooke titulo Administraton There is also this Case William Rawli●s Clericus died inte●●ate administration was committed to Sir Humphrey Browne who had married Rawlins his sister William Shelton and Iohn Shelton sonnes to the Lady Browne by her first husband reuersed the administration and obteined ● for themselues But sée in Sir Edward Cokes 3. Rep. in Ratcliffs ca. fol. 40. it is said that the booke of 5. Edw. 6. haue beene often times resolued to bée no Law and that the goods of the sonne or daughter ought to be granted to the father or mother as the next of bloud and there is Littleton ●ited who saith that although the sonnes lands goe to the vncle yet the father is next of bloud SECT II. Are●son●ble part of the goods IF there bée a will proued the widow must take such goods as were bequeathed her by deliuery from the Executors but whether here were a will or none in some places she shall haue a third part of all her late husbands goods For this there is an ordinary writ to the Sheriffe where she cannot haue a third part of that which remaines after funerals discharged and legacies payd and performed to summo● the Executors to appeare and make answer why she should not haue as the custome of the Court is that women ought to haue rationabilem partem de bonis ca●al●●s vir●rum The like writ is for children whether they be sonnes or daughter● or both And this writ speaketh of a custome in the County that children which are not heires nor promoted in the fathers life time shall haue their reasonable part 3. Edw. 3. A Writ of debt was brought by a man Alice his wife against the Executors of his wiues father declaration was vpon custome of the Shire that children not aduanced should haue their reasonable part of their fathers goods the Executors said that Alice was married by her father in his life time iudgement si action c. It is no answer said one to say that she was married by her father except you say also by or with her fathers goods and to her conueniable aduancement and here the husband at time of the marriage or after had neuer any land The Executors said still shée was conueniently married by her fathers procurement c. And in the end the Baron and Feme offered to auerre not married by the father on which point the issue was ioyned Fi●zh Dett 156. 40. Edw. 3. In a rationabili parte bonorum brought by a daughter counting on the custome of the Towne that euery son and daughter should haue a reasonable part the defendant pleaded a reuersion discended to her which she might sell for her aduancement in marriage iudgement si action c. Mowbray said the Lords in Parliament would not agrée that this action is maintenable by any common custome or Law of the Realme Doctor and St. fol. 132. a. by the custome of some Country the children the d●bts and legacies payd shall haue a reasonable part of the goods of the dead 39. Edw. 3. fol. 9. 10. One brought a Writ of Detinue for certaine goods shewing the custome of Sussex That where the father dyed intestate his heire should haue a reasonable part of his Chattels and vpon this custome hee demanded goods come to the Defendants hands It was argued whether the custome were good or no. Morris such a custome hath béene allowed in Eyre 21. Hen. 6. fol. 1. 2. In fine ●asus a woman brought a Writ of detinew against her husbands Executors for a ●●ity of his goods as for her reasonable part by custome and the Defendant was compelled to answer 7. Edw. 4. fol. 20. 21. I● a ra●io●abili parte bo●●rum iudgement was asked of the declaration because the custome was that where the Baron dyed sans issue the wife should haue a moity of his goods after debts and ●u●erals discharged but if there were issue shee should haue but a third part and here the Plaintiffe had a demanded moity without alleaging that the baron died sans issue c. The Plea was amended by permittance of the Iustices for Da●by said the widow had as good title to the goods as to lands at the common Law But Cat. by spied another fault in the Count viz. Continuance of the custome not alleaged 18. Hen. 6. fo ● in a rationabili parte bonorum one Executor appearing confessed the action and the others made default whereupon the Plaintiffe recouered presently by equity of the Statute 9 Edw. 3. cap. 3. by which the Executor comming first must answer Like or the same learning is in the former Booke 7. Ed. 4. where Choke said that alwayes if ne vnques executor ne vnques administrat cōe executor be a good plea vt hic the Executor first appearing must answer I see that many tunes in stead of this writ de rationabili parte bonorum a writ of debt sometimes and many times of detinue hath serued and you may finde further 52. and 56. titulo Detinue in Fitz● And the great variance is in this that the action is founded on a custome sometime of the Towne sometime of the County and sometime of the Realme for indéed many haue holden that it is generall like an action of the Case against an Hostler or an action de●igne custodiendo So teacheth Glanuil and so Fitzh who relieth vpon magna Charta cap. 18. which prescribi●g how the Kings debts shall bée leuied of his goods that is dead willeth the surplussage to remaine for the Executors ad testamentum defuncti pimplend saluis vxori pueris eius partibus rationabilibu● which being of a reasonable part may be restrained to places where custome yéeldeth it for ought that I perceiue Bracton in this passage is like a péece of Romane ancient coyne that time hath rusted and defaced If a man saith he make a Testament he ought to remember his Lord of whom hée holdeth his land with the best thing he hath and the Church with the next
this Warrantor be vnder age yet the Law fauoureth widdowes so much that the plaint shal not attend his full age Therefore if the Tenant shew forth any Charter Déed or speciall cause whereby the Court may perceiue that the Infant is bound to Warrantie by the Ancestors act he shall answer presently what age soeuer he be of And though the Infant in ward be aliened by his Gardian or Gardians from hand to hand this shall not preiudice the Voucher for alwayes he shall vouch to warrantie the Heire and not the Gardian who is bound to present his ward so vouched in Court without difference whether it be one or many parceners Thus saith Britton and 48. Ed. 3. fol. 5. agreeth that he which voucheth an heire vnder age must vouch him in ward de vntiel If he be a ward it is said there also that hee which voucheth an heire at full age must shew a Déed quaere But when the lands are in the Gardians owne possession to his owne profit and vse the writ of Dower must ●ée brought against the Gardian and not against the Infant 46. Ed. 3. fol. 19. Where Mowbray saith where an Infant is vouched in ward of the King the woman shall recouer Dower maintenant 3. H. 6. fol. 17. It was agréed per curiam that in Action of Dower if the tenant vouch the heire in the Kings ward within the same Countie where the writ is brought the Demandant shall not recouer before the warrantie be determined but the Law is contra if the Voucher had prayed summons in another Countie for then the Demandant should recouer maintenant yet by the Register fol. 7. if in a writ of Dower the tenant vouch in Durham the Demandant shall abide triall of the warrantie and not recouer presently But by Fitzherbert for a rule in titulo Voucher if the tenant vouch in a forraine Countie shee shall recouer maintenant and neuer attend triall of the warrantie but when Voucher is in mesme l● countie If the heire vouched to warrantie aft●r ●hee hath appeared and count●● pleaded the warrantie or before appearance being lawfully summoned do 〈…〉 ke default the Defendant shall haue execution against him maintenant if hee haue lan●s within the Countie Brooke Dower 5. And also Dower the 6● when the heire is vouched in the same Countie the woman shall recouer against the heire Dyer 3. Eliz. ●●● In Dower the tenant vouch the heire in the same Countie who co 〈…〉 as one that hath nothing by descent in ●ée and renders Dower the tenant auers that he hath ass●●● by descent qu 〈…〉 if he should not say in fée for by Weston and Browne if the lands be in taile it doth not 〈…〉 the tenants lan●s And the opinion of the Court was that the Demandant shall haue Iudgement presently aga 〈…〉 the heire if he hath lands c. and if not against the tenant and that before the issue of the ass●●s tried 1 Ed. ● fol. 24 In a writ of Dower against Tenant for life if he vouch his Lessor which is heire to the husband the woman shall recouer against the Tenant and he ouer against the Vouchee But when the heire i● vouched by Charter of his Ancestor the Demandant shall 〈…〉 couer against the Vouchee and the Tenant shall hold 〈…〉 peace Yet in a Writ of Dower against Lessée for 〈…〉 e of the Barons demise if the heire bee vouched to Warrantie though here the reuersion which is the cause of the Warrantie were made by the Baron the Demand 〈…〉 shall recouer against the Tenant and he against the heire If the tenant vouch in a writ of Dower and the Vouch 〈…〉 counter plead the Warrantie the woman shall recouer maintenant though in other actions it bée otherwise 46. Ed. 3. fol. 25. and 49. Ed. 3. fol. 23. In a Writ of Dower the Tenant vouched himselfe to s●●e the 〈…〉 taile 2. H. 4. fol. 18. in Dower the Tenant vouched the heire Processe went on to sequatur sub suo periculo sicut alias the Vouchée came not it was awarded the Demandant should recouer against the Vouchée if hee had lands in the same Countie If not that shee shall recouer against the Tenant and hee ouer in value But first it was examined if the Vouchee were heire to the Baron 21. Ed. 3. fol. 30. In Dower the tenant voucheth the Barons heire in ward of the demandant per cause de nurture shewing the Ancestors Déed he was compelled to plead in barre because now the woman might be endowed De la plus beale for Gardeine pur nurture hath alwayes intendment to Soccage tenure Vide Brooke Dower 42. 5. Ed. 3. The fathers wife was endowed the Grandmother brought a writ of Dower against her ●he vouched the heire in reuerston the Demandant recouered against the tenant and shee against the heire a third part of two parts remaining but not in value Sée Brooke Dower 79. If the Grandmother die the mother may enter into the first dower and the heire into the second SECT IX Plees in a writ of Dower ADmitting there were no Voucher let vs run ouer other matters vsually pleaded 14. H. 4. 33. in Dower was demanded a third part of two mils of other lands y● tenant asked Iudgement of the plaintiffe for they were during the whole time of couerture but the ●●te of two mills viz. to●ts 38. Ed. 3. fol. 13. In a writ of dower against one as Gardian of land and heire of K. de R. the defendant answered that the Infants father was ● de R. Iudgement del briefe and if the writ were good hee was ready to render dower You cannot said Knyuet plead to the writ render dower both at one day so the demandant praying Iudgement seisen was awarded her And because she auerred that the defendant was not touts temps prist to render dower an Inquest of dammages was awarded and that execution should cease till the Inquest were past 13. Ed. 4. fol. 7. In action of dower the tenant pleaded touts temps prist de render Dower vncore est The demandant said that I. S. her husband died seised and that such a day and yeere she required the tenant to indow her at Dale which refused c. he replyed that at the same day he offered to goe with her to the lands and to assigne her dower but she refused sans ceo that he refused The Court held the Issue well taken by this speciall pleading But if hee had said generally and barely hee refused not some thought it had not beene sufficient insomuch as it denies not the request Bryan said the demandant here might not haue seuerall Iudgements of one thing for note shee was to recouer dower vpon the first plea but all the other Iustices were of opinion cleere that shee should haue Iudgement of Dower maintenant and 18. Ed. 3. In action of Dower Iudgement was to recouer dower with an inquest for dammages As in a Quare
hath not the force of a negatiue implying in nul auter manner then is therein described Amy is therefore a ioynt purchaser with her husband in estate for life and not in or by descent of estate ta●●e Now to say that her right and estate should change by silent operation of the Law after shee was repossessed that cannot be for the whole entry is tolled and if she be not remitted by her first possession and reprisall she is neuer remitted If a Disseisour make feoffement to the vse of the Disfeisée and after the Disseisor enter he shall be remitted but before his entry he shall not be remitted for he shall be adiudged in possession by vertue of the Statute but so soone as hee entreth he is remitted for his entry was neuer tolled But Amy Townesends entry was cleane taken away by the discontinuance c. further if she should be remitted by the Statute of 27. the remainders should be all destroyed contrary to the text of the same Statute And to the inconue●iencie alleadged if she shall not be remitted shee shall hold incombred with the charges of her Husband that is none at all for Amy after her husbands death might haue disagréed and relinquished the vse with possession annexed to it by bringing a cui in vita against him next in remainder for in him by such disagréement or vser of action had the remainder vested as though the woman had beene a Monke or dead person in Law or neuer named in the limitation If the vse had béene to Amy Townsend in fée she might haue brought her cui in vita against the Feoffor or his heyre by which they shall be Tenants to her action and so might the in●umbrance haue béene auoyded for when a feoffement is to the vse of one which refuseth the vse it shall be in effect as if the vse had beene limited to Paules stéeple or to Charing-Crosse all falling or reflecting because the Feoffor hath no recompence or consideration to his vse and hee shall be Tenant to euery Precipe It was further agreed that as the Cause fell out Amy Townesend could not be remitted though her possession had returned by refeoffemēt at the Common Law because Sir Roger Townesend her Husband outliued her for 21. Ed. 3. the Case is Baron made a Feoffement the Feoffée ●einfeoffe the Baron and Feme and heyres of the wife she woman dyed the Heyre entred the Baron brought an Assise which was iudged maintainable for whilest the Baron liued he was tenant to the heyres action And the th● Iudgement was that Amy Townsend was neuer remitted the reason was indéed because there is nothing in the Statute of 27. to make a remitter for the clause of sauing of Dr●its Titles and Actions is of such right c. as was before the Statute and not of any right title or action risen since or after it Now note that as a Lease made for twenty yeares by Baron and feme Tenants for life binds not any remainder by the Statute which speaketh onely that Leases made by Tenants of Inheritance shall binde heyres and Successors so I would inferre that if the Leassors inheritance be determined whether it were iure vxoris in taile or otherwise in taile the remainder must be frée from the Statute But note that the point which made me choose this case for illustration of the Statute is this Amy Townesend was iudged not remitted because she had no title of entry but onely by the 27 c. of vses and therefore she must néeds claime her possession according to the vse But put Case the Feoffement had béene since the Statute of 32 the Law would then haue iudged a remitter for by Littleton where any persons entry is congeable which taketh estate for life or in fée it is a remitter if the reprisall be not by Indenture or record or some matter of estoppell for alwayes where there is a double right or title the Law must iudge for the best as well in the entry as in the possession and an Indenture made by Baron and Feme is none estoppell to the Wife by the Common Law Concerning the Case 21. Ed. 3. Wilby which gaue iudgement thought the Barons aduantage a hinderance to the Remitter yet if he died the wife should be remitted But if you looke Brooke remitter 21. and 41. ye shall finde that the Feme was maintenant remitted though to saue the husbands aduantage of warranty they would not so iudge it quod mirum saith Brooke and quaere quia contrarium a ceo iour SECT XXVII Whether acceptance or taciturnity may not take away an entry at this day NO fine feoffement or other act done by the husband onely shall make any discontinuance or be preiudiciall to the wife but that she may enter c. what if Baron and Feme make a feoffement or Lease for life by solemne Indentures with Liuery and seisin cleere this takes not away at this day the wiues entry after Couerture ended But admit when shee is a widdow shee refuseth to enter and accept payment of rent or performance of couenants is not now both her entry and her action gone also euen as in case of an Infant which makes such a feoffement or Lease and accepts the rent when he is of full age The question must be answered out of the Statute and in mine opinion there is nothing in it to ayde a woman after such ratification by acceptance volenti non fit iniuria nec inuitis confirmantur beneficia A Lease by Baron Feme per Indenture is not voyd presently by the Barons death But whereas before she was driuen to suit and action shee may now enter by the Statute yet it compels her not to enter neither ca●teth any frée-hold vpon her In like manner if the Baron alone alien his Wiues Land by fine with proclamation the Wife may enter by force of this Statute but per opinionem totius curiae Ed. 6. Dyer fo 72. If she suffer fiue yeares to passe and expire without entry or vser of action she and her heyres shall be barred for euer for this Statute of 32. though it limit no time for the womans entry yet it speaketh nothing of fines with proclamation and therefore it takes not the generall Law made 4. Hen. 7. cap. 24. of fines with proclamation And sée Sir Ed. Cokes 8. Rep. fo 72. in Grenlies case SECT XXVIII Of Fines SEe further the case 18. Eliz. Dyer 351. Land holden in socage was giuen to a man and his wife in taile the remainder in sée to the Barons right heyres the Baron alone leuied a fine with proclamation to his owne vse and afterward by his last will and Testament in writing deuised the Land to his wife for life the remainder ouer to a Stranger vpon condition to pay certaine rent annually out of the land with Clause of distresse c. the Baron died the wife entering and claiming estate onely for life paid rent
Ienny Defendant entred in Banco Regis Hillar 2. Iacobi Rot 571 where the Plaintiffe declared that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiffe had formerly married his Daughter at his speciall request the Defendant promised the Plaintiffe to pay him euery yéere during the life of the Defendant ten pound c. and as my report saith the Plaintiffe vpon non assumpsit pleaded had verdict and iudgement in the Kings Bench but vpon a writ of error in Exchequer Chamber the Iudgement was reuersed for that the Marriage was executed before the promise made and yet the declaration supposed that the Defendant requested the Plaintiffe to Marriage c. But let me not run so farre from my Tert as neuer to finde the way backe againe A man may sue for Marriage money in his owne name onely and so is it generally where that which is in demand or to be recouered commeth méerely and onely to the Baron Example 43. Ed. 3. fo 8. The Earle of Arundell brought a Writt of Trespasse against one for chasing in a free Chace that he held in right of his Wife and the Writt awarded good though the Wife were not named in it because nothing was to be recouered by damages Likewise is it if the Baron bring a Writt of Trespasse for strayes taken in Lands holden in right of his Wife And eod anno fo 26. for breaking of a house and carrying away of timber the Husband alone shall haue the action because hee may when hee list pull downe a house or sell timber standing vpon his Wiues Inheritance or make a release to any body vpon such manner of trespasse and the Wiues action is gone for euer There is also the same yeare fo 16. another Case wherein because a decies tantum was brought by Baron and Feme the Writt abated for though the first action concerned the Wiues Interest yet nothing is to be recoueredin a decies tantum but damages c. Sée the Booke of 20. H. 6. fo 1. a Writt of maintenance wherein nothing is recouerable but damages was brought by Baron and Feme vpon maintenance in a bill of fresh force against them by the better opinion they might ioyne c. And the Defendant passeth Ouster but not by award 41. Ed. 3. f. 9. a Writ of Champertie brought by the Baron onely vpon an assise which had passed against him and his wife was allowed good notwithstanding exceptions taken of the wiues Interest c. vpon the reasons before expressed And by Finch if a man haue a Ward in right of his Wife Dower shall be demanded against him onely because the gard is a Chattell vested But if a Writt of Wardship be to be brought it shall be against the Baron and feme c. because of voucher And in trespasse if the Plaintiffe recouer against Baron and Feme by false verdict they both must wyne in the attaint for that must be according to the record 46. Ed. 3. fo 20. a man brought a Writt of rauishment de gard declaring vpon a possession iure vxoris and the Writ held good yet in this case there is more then damages to be recouered for the Plaintiffe shall haue the Infant restored by the very words of his Writt But there againe it was agréed that an action to recouer a Ward must be against them both because of voucher though in a writt of Dower it be vt supra because therein there is no voucher c. If Baron and Feme sell the Wiues Inheritance by fine for twenty pound an action of debt for the money shall bee brought by the Baron onely for the grant was onely the Barons grant and if he die the Executors shall haue the action and not the Feme 48. Ed. 3. fo 18. And a reple●●n must bee brought by the Baron onely because a Feme Couert cannot haue a propertie in any goods or Chattels But for such goods as the Wife hath as Executrix it séemeth the Baron and Feme may ioyne in ar pleuen so shall they for goods of the Wife taken dum sola fuit Fitz. in the title reception In trespasse at Common Law or vpon the Statute Anno 5. Rich. 2. the Baron alone shall haue action of trespasse and so likewise for taking away Charters concerning the Wiues inheritance So is it if he alone deliuer such Charters he alone may haue action against the Bayliffe c. But a Writt of Detinue of Charters of the Wiues inheritance must be sued by both c. because the Charters themselues are to be recouered And therefore vpon recouery of them the Baron and Feme must ioyne for recouery A quare impedit was brought 50. of Ed. 3. fo 13. and the Baron declared of an agréement betwixt thrée Sisters to present by turne to a Church whereof they had the Aduousan and this was the turne of his Wife c. The Defendant demands Iudgement of the Writt because the Wife being still aliue was not named but this Writt also was awarded good because nothing was to be recouered here but onely the Presentment and not the Aduousan And if a Writt should be awarded to the Bishop against the Baron the Wife thereby should not be out of possession because she is not partie to the Iudgement besides that she is ayded by West 2. cap. 3. And for a generall rule where the Husbands release is good the action may be brought in his name onely as vpon cutting of trées grasse Corne c. And such actions may be brought in the name both of the Husband and the Wife An assise of ●arraigne presentment is a mixt action and the Aduousan it selfe shall be recouered in it therefore of necessity it must be brought both by Baron and Feme 15. Ed. 4. fo 9. The Baron Seignior in right of his wife ioyned in a writt of rescous and it was argued that he alone ought to haue brought the writt But it was awarded well brought by them both Though per Littleton it were good enough in nosme le Baron tantum And per Pigot when an obligation is made to Baron and Feme the Baron alone may haue the action or they may ioyne ●adem lex in trespasse c. maintenance c. for alwayes where the action may suruiue to the wife the wife may ioyne in the writt They which shall read these two last Cases argued 50. Ed. 3. and 15. Ed. 4 in the yeares at large shall not néed to repent it SECT XLII When a Wife may sue or be sued alone IT is seldome almost neuer that a marryed woman can haue any action to vse her writt onely in her owne name her husband is her sterne her primus motor without whom the cannot doe much at home and lesse abroad But if her Huusband commit felonie take the Church and abiure the Realme she is now in case as a Widdow inabled to make alienation of her owne land as a Feme sole or to bring a cui in vita for
a man and his wife be bound by Obligation a Writ against them both vpon that Obligation shall abate car fait del Feme couert est void See 15 Ed. 4 fol. 10. that if an Obligation bee made to Baron and Feme and the husband dieth the wife or husbands Executor which of them shall hap to haue the Obligation shall sue c. as it is said by Bryan And Detinue of Charters shall bee brought by Baron and Feme for Charters concerning her ioynt possession 38. H. 6. fol. 25. If Baron and Feme make a Lease for yeares of the wiues lands they must ioyne in an action of waste or else the Writ shall abate 7. H. 4. 15. yet 3. H. 6. fol. 53. a Writ of waste so brought was doubted of because forsooth a Feme couert cannot make any Lease But at the last the Writ was holden good for the wife might accept the rent or distraine for it and make auowrie after the husbands death at what time and not before shee hath power to agree or disagree but during the Couerture the lease was the Act of them both baron feme tenants for yeares may ioyne in an Action of couenant against the Lessor that outeth them for the wife suruiuing shall haue the terme if the husband doe not aliene 47. of Ed. 3. fol. 12. And where a remainder is to bee executed to a Feme couert by force and conueyance of a fine c. the Baron and Feme may haue a Scire facias to shew why the land should not remaine to I. S. and to N. his wife for the land cannot remaine to one of them but it must remaine to them both But a Formidon in Discender or Reuerter or a Writ of Escheat differeth 11. H. 4. fol. 15. 44. Ed. ● fol. 10. a Writ of Dower was brought by Baron and feme and the tenant pleaded that the former baron had neuer any thing in the land during the espousals which the Demandants did not deny therefore the Tenant prayed they might be barred and their confession recorded but it would not be granted because it should bee preiudiciall to the wife yet at the request of the Tenant they were receiued to acknowledge their right by fine and the woman was examined Quod nota for she shall not be examined vpon confession of an Action SECT XLVI Actions against Baron and Feme AS Actions are rightly pu●sued by Baron and Feme when right is withholden from her or wrong done to her selfe her interest or possession so when the wife is or is supposed a wrong doer or her husband doth wrong vnder pretext of her interest writs must be sued against them both for as it hath béene shewed already if a Feme couert bee condemned in any ciuill Action without her husband she and her husband may haue a Writ of error Therefore if a woman which is indebted take a husband an Action of Debt shall be against her and her husband in the Debent 9. E. 4. fol. 24. 7. H. 7. fol. 2. agréeth and if any thing were owing to the Feme before marriage the Writ of such a debt shall bee Quas●is debet If a man baile goods to a Feme sole which marrieth afterward an Action of Detinue shall be against her and her husband for these goods per curiam 39. Ed. 3. 17. And 1. H. 4. fol. 31. a Writ of trespasse sur le case was brought for not repairing certaine bankes vpon lands which the defendant had in Dale by reason wherof the plaintiffes ground was surrounded and because the Defendants whole interest in Dale was only jure vxoris which wife was not named in the Writ it abated for they ought to haue béen ioyned 3. H. 4. fol. 1. Upon a Lease made to Baron and Feme for yeares rendring rent the Lessor brings a Writ of Debt c. against Baron and Feme and Iudgement was asked of the Writ because it was not brought against the Baron onely Thi●●ing holdeth the Writ good aswell as an Action of waste shall bee against both Baron Feme vpon such a Leafe and so doth one other Iustice but some pleaders argued contra And in Actions against Baron and Feme the woman must be named wife 42. Edw. 3. fol. 23. A writ of trespasse is brought against Iohn and Alice with others Alice saith shee was and is the wife of Iohn iour del briefe purchase iudgement del briefe and this is a good plea in abatement of the writ So if a writ be against Iohn and Alice his wife Alice if shée be single may plead not the wife Iudgement del briefe But Iohn shall not haue that plea per totam curiam for none as Brooke maketh the reason shall plead Misnosmer but the partie 7. H. 6. fol. 9. In Assise against Baron and Feme the Uicount returned that hee had attached the Baron per centum ones matrices but the wife had nothing to be attached of within his B●●liwicke he● e●● in eádem inuenta the best opinion is that the returne is not good for he was commanded to attach the wife which the Law would neuer command if the thing were impossible but it is possible enough for the wife to be attached by her husbands goods and by him shee must bee brought into the Court. Babington saith an Attachment must bee by a meere chattle which shall be forfeited by Default but not by any Chattell reall as a Lease for yeares or a ward or by appartell c. Now note it hath béene said that in an Action of debt or trespasse or other personall Actions if the Baron appeare and the wife make default or if the wife appeare and the baron make default they shall not answer the one without the other 44. Ed. 3. fol. 1. A writ of debt was brought against Baron and Feme the wife outlawed the Baron rendred himselfe at the Exigent at returne whereof hee appeared in ward and the Plaintiffe prayed because the Processe was determined against the wife that the husband might answer sed non alocatur But sée in the next lease a writ of trespasse pursued against Baron and Feme to the Exigent the Uicount returned that hee had taken them at the day the Baron came inward without the wife c. The Plaintiffe declared against him he was compelled to answer and pleaded not culpable le Vicont fuit charge de le corps le Feme amerc●e and a writ went out to haue the wife at Westminster at a certaine day with a Venire facias betwixt the Plaintiffe and the husband returnable the same day sée 34. H. 6. fol. 29. A writ of trespasse against Baron and Feme and the Baron as seruant to the Chancellor brought a Super●edeas for himselfe and his wife Littleton said it was to be allowed for neither of them no more than where trespasse is brought against one of the Chancery and another man c. Nay not so much saith Prisot for in that case the
vnques seisi que Dower c. THere are other pleas that goe to the action and verie right of Dower as Ne vnques seisi que Dower c. id est The husband had neuer any seisin or state of Inheritance where of the wife can claime Dower sée 45. E. 3. fol. 13. The tenant in Dower leased her whole estate to the heire rendring rent for terme of her life the heire died and this was adiudged a seisin whereof the heires wife might demand Dower though the first tenant in Dower were still aliue for the lease was a Surrender and if a stranger had entred immediately after the heires death his heire must haue had a Mordancester Ergo said one the wi●e dowable Yet marke this case ●bid a man seised c. in fée simple dies his sonne entreth and he dies the sons sonne enters and endowes his Ayl●s●e she dies a stranger abateth In this case it is cleere the sons wi●e shall haue no Dower of the portion assigned to the Aylesse though the sonnes sonne may haue a Mordancester per Kirton Finch and Mowbray But betwi●t this cas● and the other they say is great oddes for here the Grandmother endowed was in from her hus●●●● and she sonnes possession and estate howsoeuer to his ●●ire in whom the fée rested it were not destroyed but hee might bring a Mordancester yet to his wi●e it was cleane adnihilate whereas in the first case the Fée and Franckten●ment not a whit impeached by the life of her which surrendred were perfectly con●●●ned in the Baron to whom the Surrender was made And if a r●uersion be granted to I. S. of certaine lands per fai● in pais in which lands I. T. and his wi●e haue ●state for life which doe atturne and afterward surrender there is no doubt but I S. his wife if hee die shall hau● Dower though it bee indéed defeasible after death of T. K. if his wi●e suruiue and will vnd●● the Surrend●r whereas in our first case the Surrender is no way auoydable but the heires wife shall pay rent according to her portion per Finch ●b●● 14. Ed. 4. fol. 6. Tenant by the courtes●e granted his estate to him in reuersion rendring rent with clause of re-entrie for non payment the Grantée married the rent was arréere tenant per le curte●●e re-entred hee in the reuersion died his wife wa●●arred of Dower for the Surr●nder might well bee vpon candition 2. H. 4. fol. 22. In action of Dower it was pleaded that the Demandants husband had nothing in the land ●ut by 〈◊〉 done to the tenant Iudgement si action c. The woman shewed how her husbands father hauing two sonnes leased his land to the eldest sonne and to hi● wife for 〈◊〉 of the●r liues and that shee her selfe married with the youngest sonne the eldest died and his wife married with the tenant the father died the reuersion descended to the second sonne being her husband the tonants wife died and he kept possession the Demandants husband did put him out he re-entred she prayed seifin c. Brooke thinketh she ought to haue trauersed the Disseisin And if the Baron had not entred after the death of the eldest sonnes wife she should not haue béene endowed yet saith he 〈◊〉 if without entrie there had not beene a seising in Law and whether the Francktenement which the tenant had once in right of his wife ●e determined in puncto by her death 11. H. 4. 73. In action of Dower the Tenant saith That N. gaue the land to the Baron and his first wife for terme of their liues the remainder in taile to the tenant remainder in Fée to the right heires of the Baron his first wife di●d he married this demandant and then hée died and the tenant entred c. he demands Iudgement if of this estate she shall haue Dower This amounted plaine to ne vnques seisi que Dower la puit but per Hanke Thirn that plea might not serue by reason of the Fée simple in remainder which might ingender doubt●ulnesse a layes gentes But where a lease was made to Baron for life the reuers●on to the Lessor or remainder to a stranger there in action of Dower ne vnques ●ei●● ●ec i● good for no manner of Inheritance was in the husband 11. H. 4. 83. Dower was demanded of twentie pounds rent respondetur the Baron had nothing but ●oyntly with ● N. who is yet aliue ●udgement si Dower c. and he was not compelled to shew whether he pleaded as ●ertenant or as Pernor of the rent the Demandant replyed that I. N. had released all his right in the rent ●● her husband But becauss she shewed not the Déed of ●●●ease shee pleaded by aduisement of the C●urt seisie que Dower la puit Quaere of the generall ●ssue against the ●●eciall matter 11. H. 4. 88. A woman shall haue Dower of rent 〈◊〉 chased by her husband in fée though hee die before d●● of payment And if it be pleaded against her Ne vnques f●●●● que Dower c. she shall not shew the speciall matter but say seisi que Dower la puit and shew the matter i●●●●dence 22. H. 6. 4● per Newton In action of Dower the ●●nant plead Ioynt estate to the Baron and I. N. in plein vy whose estate he hath the demandant shall not say ●●●●● que dower c. vnlesse shee shew how or trauerse that I. N. tooke nothing by she Feo●ment ●9 H. 6. fol. 9. Against Dower the Tenant pleade● that I. S. seised in Fée infeoffed him and hee leased to the Baron to hold at will which estate hee continued all his life time s●ns c●o that he was seised of any such estate que Dower la puit the Iudges orderad that for the long continuance of the possession and dought deslais g●●● all should be entred 10. H. 6. 17. It is not a good plea against Dower ●o say the Baron had nothing but for terme of his life for this amounts to the generall 〈◊〉 Ne vnques seisi que Dower la puit But to say the Baron had nothing but 〈◊〉 ment with A. in fée and that A. suruiued c. This by ●●● Fée simple confessed makes a good plea. 14. H. 6. 5 6. In action of Dower the tenant said ●e was seised till by the Baron disseised vpon whom he re-entred Iudgement c. the Demandant said that before this tenant had any thing in the land W. being seised in Fée infeoffed her husband iss●●t seisi c. and she pr●●●● to be endowed per Marti● the replication is not good ●●● this might ●e before the Disseisin and before couerture too and if so then the Baron Ne vnques seisi que Dower la pu●● That yée may yet perceiue further how 〈◊〉 a point it is to take or relinquish this plea rightly mar●● well the case 30. H. 8. Dyer fol. 41. In a Writ of Dower the issue was Ne vnques
seisi que Dower la puit It was giuen in e●idence to the Inquest on the Demandants ●ehal●e that a feosment was made to the ●aron in fee y● déed of feofment was shewed to the Court it was answered that long time before the feofment the Earon was seised to him and his first wife in speciall taile and how afterward hee discontin●ed that and takes backe an estate in fée simple to himselfe by ●he 〈◊〉 aforesaid of which estate hee died seised so that the heire in speciall taile was remitted and the second wife being now Demandant not dowable Mountague would haue demurred and dis●●ssed the ●ury but the Iustices were cleare in opinion that the ●ury ought to 〈◊〉 for the Demandant because their charge was only vpon the issue viz. whether the Baron had euer ●ei●in of such ●state that th● wife might haue dower And they were not to ●●g●●d the Remitter but onely to looke to the generall issue giuen them in charge But if the spe●i●ll matter had 〈◊〉 pleaded the Demandant must n●●d● haue ●éene ●arred for if he which makes a feoffement with condition to r●●nter for the condition broken and then in a Writ of d●●er brought by th●fe●●●●●s wi●● hee will plead ne vnques ●●i●●● qu● dower it shall be found against him Knigh●ly therefore would haue the sp●●iall matter found by the Iury and a verdict at large but the Iust●ces would not consent Yet ●empore Edw. 1. There was a case that the Baron discontinued his wi●es 〈◊〉 and died his wife recouered against the discontinue and he died the discontinues wife brought a Writ of Dower against the woman Recou●rer and she pleaded the generall issue ne vnques ●eisi que dower la puit All this matter was found ●y ●pe●iall ver●●●● and ●udgement gi●●n vpon the issue 〈◊〉 foolishly ●●yn●d that the Demandant should reco●er Dower which shee should neuer haue done had the 〈◊〉 ●éene good S●● and marke well this case and 21. Edw. ● fol. 60. and the ●●se 28 A●s pl. 4. SECT XIV Recouerie against the husband 14. H. 4. 33. IN action of Dower the Tenant pleaded a recouery in Assise against the husband iudgement si action c. the Demandant said her husband was seised c. and married her and infeofed the Tenant and afterward disseised him against whom the Tenant recouered in Assise the Baron died she prayed to bee indowed The Tenant said he was seised till by the Baron disseised against whom hee recouered by Assise sans c●o that the Baron was seised before the disseisin que dower la puit the Demandant said seised before the disseisen que dower la puit Likewise 47. Edw. 3. 13. the Baron makes a feofment and ousteth the feofée the feofée recouers in assize the baron dieth now in a writ of Dower if the feoffée plead recouery in assize the widdow cannot ●al●●●●● the recouery but she may plead that long time before it c. her husband was seised que dower la puit and the Defendant contra 12. H. 4. 20. 21. The Tenant said he brought a Formedone against the husband which Writ hanging he shewed to the husband a d●ed of intailment whereupon presently he rendred the land in p●is to the Tenant which entred and now au●rreth the entail● Iudgement si action Thi●● said the Statute was si vir reddat aduersario suo de plen● Iusticiarii adiudicent mulieri dotem but he and the whole Court agréed that rendring in pais doth not defeat me●●● estates of them which were neither parties nor priuy to the rendring and therefore they awarded the wo●●● should recouer Dower Hanke said fée simple might not be rendered without liuery and seisin and where there is Lord and Tenant the Tenant may not surrender to his Lord Of falsifying of recoueries I haue spoken already Note If land bee recouered in value against the husband because of warranty made by his Ancestors the widdow shall haue Dower of those lands notwithstanding for if the Baron had ali●ned the land before voucher it should not haue beene rendred in value Consequently therefore the womans title is more ancient than the vouchers which beginneth but the day of vouching By F●●zh in his Abridgem●nt Dower 129. And his ●at● ●re 150. d. SECT XV. Ne vnques accouple c. SOmetime the vnlawfulnesse of marriage is pleaded in barre of Dower As 39. Edw. 3. 15. the Tenant pleaded the Demandant was first married to A and hée liuing she married B. of who●e dow●ent she claimeth A. being still aliue this was hold●n no good pleading and therefore he added ●ss●●t nient accouple in loyall matrimony The entry was only ne vnques accouple c. and a Writ awarded to the Bishop to certifie but for all such pleas deduced at length by old Writers as stand vpon the inualidity of marriage I will ref●rre widdowes to that which is gone before of marriage and diuorce The pleas also of vnder 9. yéeres of age of attainder of non tenure ioyntenure or seuerall tenure I will not tarry on them 39. Ed. 1. fol. 4. A woman brought Dower against tw● by seuerall precipes and one of them prayed ●yd of the other as parceners so that it appeareth that seuerall tena●cie is a good plea in action of Dower Contra in Assise Brooke 99. SECT XVI Plea that t●e Baron is ye● aliue THe Writ de dote vnde nihil habet affords another e●ception against Dower because it saith quond●● viri sui for though the fundamentall cause of dower be matrimony quoad le title yet as to the possession a woman cannot claime it till matrimony be dissolued therefore by Fitzherbert if the Baron take habit of religion the wife shall not be endowed till the husband be dead re vera yet by Britton it is issuable whether the Baron be entred into religion or no and that issue shall be tried by the Ordinary and iudged according to his certificat ●ut when the deforcer will barre Dower by ●l●a that the husband is yet aliue if the widdow reply he is dead the proofe regularly belongs to the Plaintiffe But if the Defendant say the husband is in plein vy ceo est prist auerrer he must proue his a●er●ent and sometime ●oth parties shall be heard to make their pr●●e which if it ●e a●●●e strong on either ●●●e the De●andant may haue i●dg●ment o●●eisi● finding surety such as the Court shall ●ward to res●ort if h●r husband hereafter ●ee brought into Court the ●a●d with the issues and pro●●●s ther●●● i● t●e interim reco●●●d But if the matter be doubtfull and the woma●●a●●ot ●●●●e such surety the seisen shall r●●●●●e where i● is and t●● plea in suspence to be renewed p●●summons as occasion shall serue Britton fo 25. SECT XVII Iudgement IVdgement in a Writ of Dower is framed according to the substance of the title and circumstance of the pleading It is touched aboue when or how a woman shall recouer dammages by s●r●ise that the husband dyed
substance of the entrie is no more but con●ider●tum est vt re●up●●●● 〈◊〉 de 〈◊〉 p●rte and then either presently or after ward ●● the 〈◊〉 of the demandant there is awarded a writ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de tertia parte to the Sheriffe who must make returne how he hath executed the Kings commandement But I finde by Dyer 11. Eliz. fol. 278. that an Alias habere fac shall not be awarded after the Sheriffe hath executed the Formedon the case was that the Sheriffe vpon the Habere fac ' c. profer seism by meanes of a third part and the Demandant refuse yet by Harpur and Dyer her entrie was afterwards lawfull for the certaintie appeared and they that an Alias habere fac ' by no president shal be granted and as images of this course must be the procéedings in all bas● Courts which hold of Dower So that it is now more than sufficiently perceiued that the third part of euerie mans inheritance is assignable for Dower by the husbands heire or the heires Gardian or by the Feoffée or Feoffées of the husband or heire or by some other tenant or tenants or by the Chancellor Escheator or Viscount But it ought to appeare yet m●re fully how these thrée parts shall be assigned and wherein Sée Dyer 2. Eliz. 187. In Dower against eight two confesse the action and the rest plead in ●arre sir had iudgement for a third part of two in eight diuided and afterward vpon verdict against the sir iudgement was of sir part● in eight diuided Parcell of any thing whereof a woman may rightly claime Dower is assignable c. But other lands than those whereof she is by title dowable or not assignable Acceptance of a greater or lesse part than the third in name of Dower of all the franktenement which the Baron had bindeth a woman But assignment of all the land which the Baron had is not good But I referre you to Sir Edw. Cokes Commentarie vpon Little●on fol. 346. how Assignment is to be made and what Assignment is good where it is said eight things are obseruable to a perfect Assignment of Dower The heire is not bound to assigne any widdow Dower in his capitall Messuage or in any part thereof But Assignment of such house in allowance of all other lands or of other lands whereof she is dowable for the house is good when it is accepted And Assignment of a chamber in the husbands dwelling house when other lands are not whereof to make assignation is good being accepted But a woman is not bound to accept this kinde of Dower except she list Arent may be assigned her out of the house and this shall be good sans fait Like wise it is of Common of Estouers of Pasture assigned in allowance of lands or other things whereof a woman is dowable And lands in Wales may be assigned for a whole Dower and thereby ● woman may be excluded from her Dower in England If vpon Iudgement of Dower and before execution the tenant assigne a rent per paroll issuing out of the land whereof the Iudgement was giuen and the woman accepts it in stead of Dower th●● i● a good barre in a Scire facias and it is distrainable of common right but if the Assignment had béene by p●roll of other lan●s than of such as wherein the woman might haue claimed Dower it would not haue barred execution because it was not pursuant to the first Iudgement Dyer 1. Mar. fol. 91. It is said in Sir Edw. Cok●● 4. Rep. fol. 1. in V●rnons case that at the Common Law no collaterall satisfaction or recompence made to a woman in satisfaction of her Dower was any barre of her Dower for no title of Fran●kte●●ment or inheritance may be barred by any collaterall satisfaction When the Writ of 〈◊〉 comes to the Sheriffe he shal● deli●●r 〈◊〉 ●●●●●● and bounds but this rule cannot stretch to things not boundable Therefore if Dower be demanded or recouered of thrée shillings rent assignation of one shilling is sufficient And when dower of a 〈◊〉 or will is demanded a third part of the pro●●t c shall ●● assigned and it ●●● good Indowment without certainti● Et ●l 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 free serra contrib●●●●i● And so dower of a villein● either the third dayes worke or euerie third wéek● or moneth And so of the profit of th● thir● part of Stallage of the third part of the profits of a Faire and so of the third pa●t of the pro●●t of a Parke and of a Doue house and so of the third part of a Piscarie viz. Pertertium pisc●m veliactum ●er●iu●●e●is c. SECT XX. New Indowment IF that which a wom●● holdeth i● dower 〈◊〉 lawfully against her will and without her fault 〈◊〉 and e●icted c. she shall be new indowed of the other lands whereof the ●●ate which her husband had remaines still ●ndefeated for example The Baron seised of thr●● Acres dies the wi●dow is indowed of one Acre which he gained by 〈◊〉 if she be ●●sted she shall be ●●dowed of the other two Acres Tenant in taile of thr●● Acre● discontinueth in fée the Discontinuée marrieth and dieth his wife recouereth dower against his heire the issue in taile brings a Formedon against the widdow sh●● voucheth the heire he enters into Warrantie loseth and the demandant hath execution though the ●state which th● heire hath in the other two Acres remaining be defeas●ble yet the woman shall be newly indowed of them till they be defeated yea though the Discontinu●● his heire haue aliened the widdow shall bée newly indowed notwithstanding Againe a man seised of two Acres in fée within one Countie takes a wife enfeoffeth a stranger of one Acre with Warrantie and dying hauing issue a sonn● which entreth into th● other Acre the wife brings a writ of Dower against the Feoff●● which ●oucheth the heire and the heire lo●●●h ●● default so that the Demandant hath Iudgement conditionall and execution against him to recouer of the land which he hath by discent within the same Countie where the Writ was broug●t If now the Vouch●●●● restored by a Writ of deceipt to the lan● which the woman recouered shée shall haue Sci●● facias against the Feoff●● that was tenant in her first Writ to be newly endowed of the other Acre And if he haue therof in●eoff●d a stranger yet this stranger shall be bound by the first Iudgement in dower that was conditionall If a woman that is dowable take a second husband and be endowed by his assent per metes bounds if now the Baron discontinue in fée and die the wife may haue a C●● in vit● and Perkins leaues it not cleane out of doubt whether she may not be new endowed of such other possessi●ns as were her husbands during couerture because the endowment was not by Writ This new endowment is when the euiction is loyall m●●g●●●● t●st del feme for when it i● otherwise she must recouer the land againe
acsi esset tenens Neither is nul tiel recouery a good plea prima facie saue only for the Demandant when the Tenant pleads a recouery by default 2. Edw. 4. fol. 11. Littleton stands to his old opinion that there was a quod ei deforciat at the Common law and hee would haue it maintainable still by one that hath cause to bring a formedone or an assize or writ of entry sur disseism But the Court séemes to wonder at his sayings and also at the first when Billing comes and demands oier del record for the Tenant in a quod ei deforceat the Court askes him quae intendes per ceo so that with question● of ad●iration they séeme plainly to reiect both opinions that there is any quod ei deforciat at the Common law giuen otherwise than vpon recouery by default and then the Tenant may plead ●ul tiel record for neither the writ nor the d●claration makes any mention of the recouery But Li●●leton comes once more 10. Edw. 4. fol. 2. and 〈◊〉 that once he brought a quod ei deforciat for his mother of lands which shee claimed to hold in Dower the Tenant said there was no record to 〈◊〉 that the 〈◊〉 were lost by default And Littleton challenged the plea because it might be the 〈◊〉 was in a 〈◊〉 Baron by default in a Writ of right in which ●●●● quod ●● deforc●at lyeth and therein i● no record 〈◊〉 is a record by default ●he Tenant said there wa● neither record nor recouery where any 〈◊〉 by default appeared and this was holden a good plea per le● 〈…〉 And Littleton relinquished his suit 44. Edw. 3. fol. 42. A quod ei deforciat was brought against the heire of one which recouered in an assize hee prayed the plea might stay for his non age and vouched to warranty W. N. c. the voucher was allowed but not his age because he might not haue had it in his first Action So that it appeares this writ lyes vpon recouery in assize and the Tenant may vouch But by Thorpe if it had béene the party himselfe which recouered he could not haue vouched Et mirum saith Brooke that vpon a recouery in assize which is by iury and not by default this writ should be And if yée looke this booke at large yée shall finde againe that this writ and the procéeding in it is méerly by the Statute vpon a recouery by default therefore a quod ei deforciat lieth and that vpon a recouery by default in a quod ei deforciat As 13. Edw. 1. a woman recouered in a Writ of Dower by default against Tenant for life of rent and afterward the Tenant which lost by default brought a quod ei deforciat against the woman and she lost by default and then sued a quod ei deforciat c. This is the highest Writ which these particular tenants can haue of their owne possession as it were their writ of right and it lieth against him which is Tenant though he be not party to the recouery as against the feofée of him which recouered But it lyeth seldome or neuer for a stranger to the recouery Yet 41. Edw. 3. fol. 30. the Baron and Feme ioyned in a quod ei deforciat of lands lost by the Feme before marriage bene And by Belknap it lyeth vpon a recouery in a sciri facias and it lyeth without shewing the record The Tenant in this Writ whether it be he which recouered or his alienée shall not haue view 41. Ed. 3. 8. If a man lose by default in a writ of right brought in a Court Baron he may remoue the record and haue a quod ei deforciat in the Common place and quaere saith Fitzherbert if he neuer remoue the record if he then may not sue his quod ei deforciat in which Court hée will either the common place or the Court Baron He agréeth if a woman lose by default and then marrie she and her husband may haue this Writ but if Tenant in tail● lose by default and dye his heire must sue a Formedon for that is his Writ of right If lands be giuen to Baron and Feme in especiall taile the remainder to the Baron in generall taile and the wife die sans issue now if the Baron lose by default in a Praecipe quod reddat his writ of Quod ei deforceat must be Quod clamat tenere sibi haeredibus de corpore suo for so soone as the wife died the state apres possibility drowned in the remainder 50. Ed. 3. fol. 4. If in a Scire facias brought in Chancerie by an heire of full age to auoyd indowment assigned in Chancerie whilest he was ward he recouer by default the woman may haue a Quod ei deforceat in Commune Banco So likewise if a man recouer land by default in Scire facias out of some record in the Kings Bench the Tenant which lost by default may sue a Quod ei deforceat in the Common Place If two coparceners tenants in taile lose by default they may ioyne in a Quod ei deforceat yet the default of one is not the default of the other 46. Ed. 3. in Fitzherbert Nat. Breu. Brooke hath it also A Quod ei deforceat brought by two men heires in taile of Gauill kinde Quam clama● sibi tenere haeredibus de corporibus exeuntibus was awarded good though they could haue none issue of their two bodies 46. Ed. 3. 21. If tenant for life or in taile appeare in a Praecipe quod reddat and afterward depart in despite of the Court he shall lose the land but yet he may recouer by Quod ei deforceat for the recouerie is by default for that he doth not appeare when he is demanded But if tenant for life or in taile after the mise ioyned in writ of right depart in despite of the Court they shall lose the land and not haue a Quod ei deforceat for the Iudgement is finall If Baron and Feme seised in droit le feme for her life lose by default in a Praecipe quod reddat they may haue a Quod ei deforceat by Fitzherbert which is denied in the old Nat. Breu. 155. If tenant for life lose by a default in a C●ssauit he shall haue a Quod ei deforceat by this Statute of West 2. If ●e in reuersion vpon default of tenant for life pray to bée receiued plead and lose by action tried yet the tenant for life may haue a Quod ei deforceat for the Iudgement must be against him by his default If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant vouch and the ●ouchee will not appeare so that the Tenant loseth by default of the Vouchée Fitzherbert makes it a question whether hee may haue a Quod ei deforceat or no because the Iudgement is not giuen vpon the tenants owne default But cléere it is if the Vouchée appeare enter into Warrantie and lose
by default that now the Tenant shall not haue a Quod ei deforceat but Iudgement to recouer in value against the Vouchée If Baron and Feme t●nants for life in the wiues right lose by default and the Baron dye a Quod ei deforceat lieth not but a Cui in vita as vpon a Demise made by the baron In a Quod ei deforceat the Demandant must count that he was seised c. in his Demesne as of Francktenement or in his Demesne as of Fée tail● laying the Esplees in himselfe but he néeds not shew of whose gift lease or demise though he claime for life or she claimes in Dower or sibi haeredibus de corpore And the Defendant must deny the Demandants right c. and shew how he recouered in a Formedon or in some other Action concluding that he is ready to maintaine his right a●d title aforesaid c. vnde petit iudici●m Then the Demandant must either trauerse it or shew matter in barre but he shall not make defence and then plead inbarre as he shall doe in a Formedon Fi●zh 10. Ed. 4. fol. 2. Dictum f●●t and the tenant may plead a release of all the Demandants right in a Quod ei deforceat But the old Nat. Breu. obserueth that if the Demandant vouch●one that entreth into Warrantie hee which recouered shall not plead the Vouchées release made after recouerie In a Quod ei deforceat the Tenant may vouch and so may the Demandant 50. Ed. 3. 25. But if the Demandant vouch his Vouchée cannot vouch ouer 10. H. 7. 39. The old N●t B●eu acknowledgeth that in a Scire f●cias there lies no oucher yet if a man recouer by default in a ●c●re facias out of a sine against Tenant in taile which bringeth a Q●od ei de●orceat if the Recouerer maintaine the title of his first Writ the Tenant in taile may vouch The Law séemes to be otherwise sée Plow 11● 206. 14. H. 7. 18. The questions arose vpon the Demandants vouching 10. H. 7. fol. 10. The first whether he must shew cause of the Warrantie or no. The second whether hée may vouch one that hath nothing in the reuersion The third whether he shall recouer in value Frowicke answered The Voucher is by Statute and hee néeds not shew any cause for the Statute of W. 2. cap. 3. saith Concedatur ei quod vocet ad warrant ac si esset tenens in priori breue in which case he should shew no Déed Second hée shall not vouch any stranger for the Statute is Ideo concedatur eis quod vocen●ur ad warrantum quia non possunt sine his ad quos spectat reuersio respondere Third the Statute giuing voucher meanes that he shall haue the effect of his vouching id est to recouer in value And if a Statute giue action for a thing whereof the action did not lye at Common Law the partie shall haue iudgement processe and execution incident or belonging to that action and a reuersion is a cause of voucher and of recouerie in value Frowicke said fu●ther That though he which leased cannot disclaime yet his Grantee may and award his charge and if voucher here should be no more but an aid prayer the Grantée might not disclaime for if Tenant for life pray in aid of him in reuersion hée shall not disclaime And Tenant by the courtesie cannot vouch for he shall neuer recouer in value SECT XXVII Admonition for women to take heed of him in the reuersion THe rest of this fourth booke shall consist most in warnings to widdowes and women tenants in ●articular estates that they doe nothing preiudiciall to their warrant It is true for the most part Ex quibus rebus maxima vtilitas ex ii●dem summa pernicies Water washeth and drowneth fire reasteth and it burneth the Sunne ripeneth and it scortcheth and seareth They that can help can hurt The reuersioner of a widdowes estate of whom she shall haue aid to defend her shall take her estate from her in many cases if she offend him in his reuersion SECT XXVIII Of Waste EVen by the antique Law of England if Bracton say truth fol. 316. The Gardian in Chiualrie committing waste did lose the wardship was auerred Et damna restaurabat But if Tenant in Dower committed waste there was no forfeiture of her land or parcell of it but he in reuersion might stop and let her from doing waste and such hinderance was no Disseisen Also he might haue if néed required a Non permittas to the Sheriffe commanding him not to suffer waste vendiction or exile in lands tenements houses woods garden c. and he might haue attachment against the widdowes or a Pone per vadios saluos plegios to make her come c. shew why shée committed waste If the waste in a wood were found by Inquisition the paine was no more but that from thenceforth shée should take no manner of Estouers either to build burne or inclose but it must be per visum forestarior●m haeredis And Bracton sets forth the W●●● for placing and appointing of the F●r●e●cor or by the heire ad praedict ' 〈…〉 custodiendum But now by the Stat. of Gloc. cap. 5. A writ of waste lyeth against Tenant in the courtesie or for life or for yeares or in Dower and the partie attainted in waste shall lose the thing wasted and make grée to trebble value of so much as the value shall be taxed at This Statute made 6. Ed. 1. ordaineth also that the Gardian which loseth his wardship for committing waste shall render dammages if losse of wardship be not equiualent to the harme Peraduenture Bracton wrote after the Statute for in one part of his Booke Ed. 1. is named ● 3. But it is said Sir Edw. C●kes 3. Rep. fol. 40. a. that Glanuile wrote temps H. a. Bracton temps H. 3. Britton temps Ed. 1. and in Sir Edw. Cokes 8. Rep. in Iohn Webs case fol. 46. b. he saith that Bracton wrote in fine del Roy H. 3. and Fleta wrote in temps E. 1. But note a woman shall not answer for waste done before her time yea if land bée leased to Baron and Feme for terme of their liues and they commit waste if the Baron die now the widdow is not punishable for this waste For that which the Baron did during couerture was only his act and offence dead and determined with his person Concessum per curiam 2. H. 4. and Br. 59. in his Writ of waste Yet if the lease had beene made to a Feme sole who takes a husband which commits waste otherwise it is by 9. H. 6. 52. women need no further warning to take héed of waste they are of themselues so hauing SECT XXIX The Writ of Entrie in casu prouiso BVtlet e●●●rie good woman take héed how she maketh any gift or alienation of such lands as she holdeth in Dower For Glocest cap. 3. is if a woman sell or
giue away in fée or for life the tenement which shée holdeth in Dower the heire or he which is in reuersion may maintenant haue his recouerie by Writ of Entrie and this is termed a writ of Entrie in Casu prouiso There is no doubt but Fée in this Statute signifieth both Fée simple and Fée taile And he which hath Fée simple Fée taile or Estate for life in the reuersion may haue this Writ against the Alienée or against him which is tenant of the Francktenement And this during the life of the tenant in Dower which aliened for when she is dead it lieth not per●el N●t Breu. The Statute expresseth not the writ but the forme is Praecipe A. quod reddat B. vnum tonemen um quod clamat in quod non habet ingressum nisi per C. quae suit vxo D. qui illud ei demis●● illud tenuit in dotem de dono praedicti D. quondum viri sunt cuius haeres c. quod post eemisionem per istud C. praefat ' A. contra formam Statuti Glocest c. ad praefatum ● reuerti debet performameiusdem Statuti And it may be in the Per Cui or Post If a woman recouer Dower against the heire and then alien in Fée the recouerie must be mentioned by the heire in his writ of Entrie in Casu prouiso In like manner as it must be in a writ of Entrie●d Communem Legem vpon an alienation by tenant in Dower and though this alienation be but in taile or for life yet the forme of the writ varieth not If he which hath the reuersion in Fée grant it to another and the Tenant in Dower after Atturnment alieneth in Fee the Grantée of the reuersion shall haue Writ specifying the grant Likewise if the heire grant his reuersion with Atturnment and the Grantée grants it ouer with Atturnment the third Grantée may haue a writ specifying that the woman held of the first second and third ex assignatione c. The Aunt and Néece hauing the reuersion by discent may ioyne in this writ and the processe is summons grand and petit cape SECT XXX The Writ if Enirie in Casa coasimili THis Writ is in nature like the other and it lyeth when Tenant by the courtesie or Tenant for his owne life or another mans alieneth in fée or in taile or for terme of life he in the reuersion which hath it for life or in taile or in fée may haue this Writ of Entrie in Casu consimili during the life of him which aliened and this is formed and granted vpon West 2. cap. 24. which willeth That as often as there is a Writ found in Chancerie for one case and another case falling sub eodem●●●e and requiring like remedy there is none in the registrie of the Chancerie for that the Clerks of the Chancerie shall concord in framing a writ Vel atterminent quaer●ntes in proximo Parliamento scribantur vsus in quibus concordare non possunt c. referant eos ad proximum Parliamentum fiat breue de consensu Iurisperitor●m ne conting●td● caetero quod curia Domini Regis deficiat conquerentibus in Iustitia perquirenda The Writ is Reuerti debet performam statuti in consimili casu prouisi And it supposeth alwayes altenation in feodo although the Tenant leased or dem sed it but for terme of another mans life or in taile And so the writ of in Casu prouiso And that of Entrie ad Communem Legem This writ may be in the per cui and post And without title made in the writ if if so be that the Demandant himselfe made the particular estate of him which aliened But if the father or other Ancestor make a lease for terme of life and die and then the Tenant for life alieneth in fée now the heire in reuersion shall haue a writ comprising his title in it selfe And if this writ be brought vpon alienation made by Baron and Feme the writ supposeth that the wife aliened with her husband but yet shée may haue a Cui in vita after her husbands death the alienation not letting it If Tenant for life grant his estate to another and the grantee alieneth in fée the Writ shall be in quod non habet ingressum nisi per C. cu● D. qui illud tenuit ad vitam ex demissione B. de●●sit ad eusdem te●m●num c. If a man make a lease for life and dye and his heire grant the reuersion to B. and the Tenant att●●nes If now the lessée grant his estate to another which alieneth in fee to A. B. shall haue a Writ comprehending the assignation and grant of all the estates If lands bee giuen to two men and to the heires of one of them and he which hath the fée simple dies and then the Tenant for life alieneth in fée now the heire of him in remainder may haue this Writ for it lyeth as well for him as for Tenant in reuersion If any Abbot or Prior make a lease for life the lessée alien the Prior dye c the successor may haue this Writ Also tenant in taile may haue it if hee make a lease for life and his lessee alien in fée And it séemes if Tenant in taile make a lease for life of the lessee and dye the issue in taile may choose to bring a Formdon or Writ of Entrie in Consimili casu against the alienée whilst the lessée for life is yet liuing for the alienée which is Tenant in the Action cannot plead in Abatement of the Writ that the Demandant hath title to a Formedone But if Tenant in taile make a lease for terme of his owne life which is no discontinuance if now the lessee alien in fee and the lessor dye his heire cannot haue a Writ de consimili casu but he is driuen to his Formedone for in this case he hath no title to other Actions by colour of any demise But in the former case he had title by reason of the discontinuance made for life to claime by right of the new reuersion discended so that hee had a double title the reuersion reserued sur le seas and the title in taile consequently election of Action Quaere P. 17. Ed. 3. A lease made for life the remainder to another in fée the lesses aliened in fée and a writ de consimili casu brought by him in the remainder and it abated for the Court said that hee in remainder was not possessed in fait till the remainder did fall after the death of the ●essée Saith Fi●zherbert the Law is not so taken at this day but that hee in remainder hath the remainder vested in him as well as hath hee in the reuersion for hee may haue an action of waste and enter for alienation of his tenement as well as hee in the reuersion may Ergo hee hath his remainder in fa●t and mee séemeth this Iudgement was not well giuen saith Fitzherbert And
Hill 18 E. 2. it was held by Herle Iustice that the Writ lieth well enough for him in remainder And Tri. 31. E 1. the heire in taile maintained a writ of entry in Consimili casu vpon alienation made by tenant le curtesie SECT XXXI The Writ of Entrie ad communem legem THe Writ of Entry at Common law is giuen in Case where Tenant in Dower or per curtesie or for life doth alien in fée or in taile or for life c. now if the Tenant which aliened doe dye hec in the reuersion must take this Writ of Entry ad communem legem which is very like the former Writs and may be in the per cui post If a woman recouer Dower alien and dye the Writ of Entry ad communem legem must make mention of the recouery And if Tenant by the curtesie ali●● in fée and dye he in the reuersion if he be heire in fée simple may sue this Writ or his Assise of Mo●● dancester giuen by the Statute of Glocester ca. 3. If Tenant for life alien in fée and dye the Writs for him in reuersion are in diuers formes for if hee haue the reuersion by discent the Writ is in quod idem A. non habet ingressum nisi per C. c●i D. pator vel antecessor of the Demandant cuius haeres c. demised c. But when the Demandant himselfe made the lease to him which aliened then the Writ is or may be P●aecipe quod recidat c. omitting these words quod clomat vt ius haereditatem and note if Tenant for life alien in fee and dye hee in reuersion may chuse whether he will haue this writ or an ad terminum qui praeteriit If Tenant for life grant his estate and hee in reuersion grant his reuersion with Atturnement if now the Tenant which atturned alien in fée the grantée of the reuersion shall haue a Writ mentioning the grant and assignation c. SECT XXXII More of forfeitures and how a particular Tenant may forfeit his estate without alienation NOte If Tenant for life lease the land to I. S. for terme of life of I. S. which dyeth the first leas●e still liuing hee shall not haue the land againe because hee leased more than was in him and therefore hee in the reuersion shall haue it But if two be seised for life the inheritance in fée to one of them and ioyne in a lease for life and the leasee dyeth they shall bee ioynt tenants againe ꝑ Littleton 13. E. 4. fol. 4. Because hée which had the fée was priuy to the lease and so the other gained no new reuersion It is yet further to be vnderstood both that he in reuersion may enter vpon alienations made by particular Tenants vt supia to his disinheritance without suing the aboue mentioned Writs And also that there are sundry other forfeitures to the Reuersioner besides expresse alienations which I would haue widdowes to take héed of 6. Edw. 3. fol. 17. In Action of waste by an Infant against Tenant by his fathers demise he pleades that the father confirmed his estate to haue and to hold to him and his heires in fee by his déed shewed to the Court Iudgement si c. It was said for verity that if the claime were found false the heire might enter Page 64. in Fitzh And if a reuersion bee granted by fine and the conuse brings a quid iuris clamat against the Tenant for life which pleadeth that shee hath estate in taile by deuise in Testament from the Commissors if it bee found by verdict that shee hath but estate for life that estate is forfeited Quod vide Plowd fol. 212. in Saunders in Fremans Case where the entry for the conusée is consideratum est pro seisina redd●t praed cum partium versus c. occasionae clam ' placit praedict ' forisfact ' habend ' si voluerit persequatur ac etiam quod finis praed si voluerit ingrossetur Plesingtons Case 6. R. 2. was this A man made a lease for yéeres and granted further by Indenture if he aliened the reuersion or dyed within the te●me that the leassée should haue francketenement and liuery was made the fée simple was granted by fine c. and in a quid iuris clamat the leassee claimed francket●nement iudgement was giuen that the cognisée might enter for a forfeiture and that the fine should be engrossed si voluerit Sée 3. 4. Eliz. Dier 209. in a like case the iudgement was not quod quaerens recuperet seisinam but quod prosequatur pro seisina si voluerit finis ingrossetur c. SECT XXXIII The Statute of 11. H. 7. cap 20. THe Common Law restrictiue of it selfe and helped something by the Statute of Glocester was sufficient a great while to bridle women from making alienations for any land that they held in Dower or Ioynture as arguments of their owne good deserts and testimonies of their husbands loue But time which made the art of fencing more fine than it was at the first when Combattants fought all at head and shoulders and it was greater shame to strike vnder the girdle than it is now made law also more subtile than in the beginning it was when lands went altogether or for the most part by liuery of seisin And women witty of themselues instructed by crafty men grew cunning at the last that they could alien lands holden for life or in taile to whom they listed in fée And hee which suffereth disinheritance should not easily helpe himselfe by Writ of Entry either ad communem legem or in casu prouiso for remedy whereof was made this seuere statute in effect as followeth 11. H. 7. If any woman which hath had or hereafter shall haue any estate in Dower or for life or in taile ioyntly with her husband or only to her selfe or to her vse in any Manors Lands Tenements or other Hereditaments of the inheritance or purchase of her husband or giuen to the husband and wife in taile or for terme of life by any Ancestors of the husband or by any other person seised to the vse of the husband or of his Ancestors and haue or shall hereafter being sole or with any other after taken to husband discontinued or discontinue aliened released or confirmed alien release or confirme with warranty or by couin suffered or suffer any recouery of the same against them or any of them or any other seised to their vse or to the vse of either of them after the forme aforesaid that all such recoueries discontinuances alienations releases confirmations and warranties so had and made and from henceforth to be had and made be vtterly void c. And that it shall be lawfull to euery person and persons to whom the interest title or inheritance after the decease of the said woman of the said manors lands or tenements or other hereditaments being discontinued aliened or suffored
the Action may bee pleaded that the woman which bringeth the Appeale c. hath taken another husband or that shee was neuer accoupled in loyall matrimony to him of whose death shee brings the Appeale And if it bee brought by the heire it is a good plea in Barre to say the wife of him which is dead is yet aliue and the Action giuen to her In the booke of Entries fol. 50. Praedicta Alicia dicit quod ●●mpore mortis praedicti Thomae ●adem Alicia fuit v●o● praedicti Thomae in quo casu ●idem Aliciae non praedicto Nicholao de ●ure pertinet h●bere prosequi appellum c. Et v●terius ●adem defendens dicit quod praedictus Nichola●s appellum praedictum versus ●andem Aliciam inter Alios per couinam ea intentione ad eam de prosecutione appellinus de morte praedicti Thomae excludendam impetrauit que oia singula c. petit inde allocationem c. quoad felonia non culpabilis Et inde de bono malo ponit se super patriam 30. H. 6. Also it is a good plea in Barre to say that the Plaintiffe hath succeased her time in that shee hath not brought her Appeale within the yeere and day after his death which is supposed slaine or to say that he of whose death the Appeale is brought is yet aliue at such a place and to bring him in the Court that hee may bee viewed and knowne sée thereof 43. Assis pa. 26. in Appeale de morte viri the Defendant pleaded le Baron in vi● c. and the Plaintiffe contra● day was giuen to bring in their proofes which when they came were found one both sides defectiue The Defendant therefore for his safest way pleaded ●on culpabilis vide●ur ergo that the first issue if it had béene found against him should haue béene peremptacy and that hee may waiue it before triall in fauorem vitae And note that if a man plead not guilty and pute himselfe vpon the Iury in an Inditement of felony and hée may confesse the fact before verdict and pray a coroner otherwise in an Appeale as it was holden 11. Hen. 7. 5. 8. Hen. 4. fol. 18. In Appeale de morte viri and at the day the Baron was brought into Court examined 〈◊〉 knowne and the woman for her false Appeale was committed to prison till she payd a fine The generall barres against all Appeales of which some may bee obiected against the Plaintiffe here are those That the Plaintiffe is attainted of felony or treason or a Monke or a Priest a mayhemed body by some other than by the Plaintiffe or of non sane memorie or deafe and dumb or a lay●r or a naturall foole Attainder by outlawry if it be erronious is a barre no longer than vntill it bee reuersed It is a good plea in barre also that heretofore the Plaintiffe brought an Appeale of the same felony in which shée was at non suit after Declaration or withdrew her selfe from her Action Or that heretofore shée sued Appeale of the same fellony against another person which was acquited or condemned at her suit Or the Plaintiffes release may bee pleaded in barre if it were made to the Defendant himselfe for release made to another will not serue though it were made to one ioyned with the Defendant in the Appeale Corone in Fitzherbert 9. and 2. Rich. 3. 9. agrées And so if the Plaintiffe withdraw her selfe as against one of the Defendants her Appeale shall stand good against the other And note where the Defendant pleads in barre any of these pleas yet in fauour of 〈◊〉 the Law permits him to plead ouer to the fellony and his pleading shall not therefore be counted double exceptin the case of release in which indéed he may not plead to the felony for not guilty in contrary to accepting of rel●●●● which ●●t●li●th guilt So also of a woman bring Appeale of robery and the Defendant pleads villenage in the Plaintiffe hee shall not conclude ouer to the felony 〈◊〉 culpable for that were an i●franchisment But perchance when the villenage is found against the Defendant hee may then take his plea of rien culpable as well as hee shall haue when hée plead any other pleas for if he plead them without concluding to the fellony hée may after his barre is found against him plead rien culpable notwithstanding quod vide 28. E. ● fol. 91. 22. E. 3. fol. 38. 18. E. 3. fol. 32. except only in pleas of release as is said which implieth alwayes a confession of felony 9. Hen. 4. fol. 2. in Appeale de morte viri the Defendants pleaded the wiues release made since the darraine continuance of all accords reall and ●●rsonall and shée demurred the best opinion was t●at reall actions are of things reall and durable as lands rents c. and personall actions are of dammages and such like yet p Hulls personall is as well the punishment of the person as dammages and the punishment here is death which is released le barre is good But Littleton teacheth vs contrary in his booke for hée saith that Appeales of robery rape or death or any Appeale wherein the ●●dgement is of death are more high than personall Actions and therefore they are not barred by release vnlesse it be of all manner of Actions or of all Appeales See Sir Edward Coke in his Commentaries vpon Littleton fol. 287. b. in any Appeale wherein iudgement is of death a release of all Actions reall and personall is no barre for that release extendeth but to common or ciuill actions and not to criminall but if a release of actions personals is good in an Appeale of mayhem for euery Action wherein dammages are onely recouered is in Law taken for personall fol. 288. a. And in Sir Edw. Cokes 4. Rep. in Hudsons Case it is said although the Appeale of mayhem runneth feloniously ●uy mayma yet he shall recouer but dammages and therefore recouery in trespasse is a good barre therein SECT XII Auterfoits acquit ALthough it be now no plea in Appeale of death for the Defendant to lay that he was here to fore acquite of the same felonie yet because Stanfords handling of it containeth good learning and it may still serue in appeal● of rape And likewise in Ind●ctments of death for hée that was acquite in appeale may haue it I will not omit it By Common Law therefore in all Appeales or Inditements of felony for the Defendant to say that hée was A●ter●oirs a●raigne de mesme le felonie before ●uth Iustices and acquited vouching the record is a good plea and he néeds not to haue the record in Court because this plea is not delatorie but in barre Coron in Fitzherbert 2 ● This plea the Common Law disalloweth not because it alloweth that a man should not put his life in ieopardy twice for one and the same offence The acquitall then must be of the verie same offence or
to be remedied by the Statute in Appeales which are of death but other Appeales are left as they were before The Common Law therefore vnchanged is that if a man be indicted of robberie whereof there is an Appeale hanging and the ●ppeale is proceeded so farre that the Iustices may percei●●● the felome is all one they ought to surcease triall vpon the Indictment as it is 1. 31. H. 6. fol. 3. For note that in Appeale of robberie when it is by Writ the robberie cannot be certainly knowen before Declaration Otherwise it is if it be commenced by bill or that the Appeale be of death of a man any SECT XIII Auterfoits attainted THis is a sore saying which some men haue to plead for themselues viz. that they are already condemned to be hanged and aske Iudgement whether during the Attainder they should answer to the felony whereof they are condemned or to any other And this plea serueth where the partie condemned hath already forfeited as much as he can forfeit so that it is to no purpose to tra●●●● him any further But in some speciall cases when there is some end of it a man already condemned may bée arr●igned againe As if a man attaint of felony were guiltie of treason also at the time of the felony committed hée may now bee put to answer the treason because thereby the King shall haue the ●scheat of his land of whomsoeuer it were holden 1. H. 6. 5. Otherwise it is if the treason were committed after the felony or at the least if it were after the attainder had of felony for then the title vested in the Seigniors before the Kings title might not be deuested by matter accruing ex post facto And if diuers men haue diuers Appeales of robberie against one to the end that euerie man may haue againe his goods whereof he was robbed by making fresh suit he shall bee attaint at euerie one of their suits But note saith Stamford in cases where the Defendant will discharge himselfe of answering by attainder of any other felony than that whereof he is arraigned it may be replyed either for the King or the partie that since the Attainder the King hath pard●ned him the said Felonie and Attainder whereby he is now restored to the Law and ought to answer to all other felonies though they were perpetrated before the felony whereof he saith he was attainted Titulo Coronae in Fitzherbert 227. 10. H. 4. c. But to the felonie whereof a man is attainted hée shall answer no more after he hath his pardon of it Thus far Stamford Sée Brooke Titulo Coronae 11. Quaere Whether a man attainted of felony and pardoned shall answer at the Kings suit to other felonies before committed and whereof he was not indicted at the tune of the Attainder per aliquos videtur quod ita as well as at the suit of the partie in Appeale yet some held otherwise 10. H. 4. That a man can die but once at the suit of the King and he that is pardoned is as a new man all former Iudgements as against the King being determined Quaere de Appeales Cor il est●foredure de maintainer Appeale in le case For all Appeales were determined once by the Iudgement vpon Indictment Note that it was resolued in Wrote case Sir Edw. Cokes 4. Rep. fol. 45. That Auterfoits conuict of manslaughter vpon an Inditement of murder and Clergie allowed is a good plea in an Appeale of murder and that although the conuiction was had hanging the Appeale But it was also there resolued that if the Inditement vpon which the conuiction was had were insufficient the offender may notwithstanding that conuiction bée indited or appealed againe for that his life in iudgement of Law was neuer in ieopardie and so it was resolued also in Vauxes case in the same Report SECT XIV Clergie IF the Defendant in Appeale craue his Clergie and the Plaintiffe say that he is Bigamus if he be so certified it is peremptorie and he shall be hanged without pleading Ouster to the felony Sée 11. H. 4. fol. 10. That Clergie is allowed in Appeale de morte viri In the Booke of Entries wherein scil fol. 5. is the Kings writ to certifie whether the partie appealed were Bigamus as E. which appealed him of the death of A. her husband alleaged But at this day Bigamus shall haue his Clergie by the Statute of 1. Edw. 6. SECT XV. The Kings pardon IF a woman which bringeth an Appeale de morte viri let fall her suit the Kings suit is not preiudiced thereby and if the wife release all Appeales and afterward by verdict in Appeale brought by her the release is found the entrie is De appello praedict ' quoad sectam praedictae Aliciae sit quietus quod ipse eat inde sine die c. Sed quoad sectā Dom. Regis in hac parte instante allocutus est qualiter se velit acquietare dicit quod in nullo estinde culpabilis c. Sée the Booke of Entries fol. 47. b. So likewise in Appeale Dè morte patris or De morte viri the Kings pardon cannot take away execution 13. H. 4. But it is a good plead against the King when an Appeale is once determined And if the Appeale be determined not by act of the Appellant but by act of Law the Kings pardon shall not be allowed without the Appellants priuitie As if the Plaintiffe pursue her appeale till the Defendant be outlawed by this Outlawrie the appeale is ended and now if the King pardon the felonie c. this pardon shall not bée allowed without Scire facias against the partie at whose suit the Felon was outlawed And at the day of Scire facias returned the partie may appeare and pray execution which is grantable the pardon notwithstanding But if the Sheriffe returne that hée warned her to appeare and she make default the pardon shall be allowed without more adoe And this Scire facias vpon pardon granted may be required against the Appellant though the Appellée neuer desire it and though hee shew no release or other matter in discharge of the Appeale For he shall come timely enough with that when the other appeares vpon the Scire facias Also the Scire facias is grantable though the Charter of pardon haue not the clause Ita quod stet rectus in curia Vide Fitzherbert p. 17. titulo Charter 11. R. 2. In appeale against Principall and Accessarie the Principall was pursued till Outlawry and Exigent went out against the Accessarie and at the day of the returne the Plaintiffe was at non suit in his Appeale and then came the Principall with his Charter of pardon and prayed it might be allowed because the Plaintiffe was at non suit Gascoyne made answer That the non suit could not help him for the Appeale had run his full course and was determined as towards him by the Outlawrie SECT XVI Dammages in Appeale NOw to
second branch of the Statute shall bee expounded father or mother after the death of the father And it was resolued in that Case that there bee two manners of custodies or wardships the one by the Common Law the other by the Statute And that also at the Common Law there are foure manners of Gardians namely Gardian in Chiualry Gardian in So●age Gardian in nature and Gardina for nurture and now the Statute makes a new Gardian namely by assignation but the mother in that case cannot be Gardian for nurture because her daughter was past 14. yéeres of age But she had the custody of her within the prouis●on of the Act ●ure naturae and the assent of Raph Ratcliffe the mothers husband was not materiall for the custody of a child is an inseparable incident to the parent and marriage may not transferre that to a husband And that was resolued that although the issue was whether Elizabeth had the custody of Martha at the time of the contract and that did appeare that shee departed from her mothers house six houres before the contract yet in iudgement of Law her mother had the custody of her at the time of the contract And that was resolued that in that Case Edward Ratcliffe and Martha his wife had good title to the land against Andrewes and his wife for the one daughter as that Case is shall not take benefit of forfeiture of the other for the statute giues the forfeiture to the next of kin to whom the inheritance should descend or come after her decease during the life of such person that so shall contract matrimony so that first hee ought to be of the bloud and secondly to whom the inheritance should descend or come c. and although the wife of Andrewes bee of the bloud yet in that Case by the death of Martha the land if shee hath issue shall deseend to her issue and if shee hath not issue that shall reuert to her mother c. but iudgement was against the Plaintiffe for that the issue was found against him These are the Lawes whereby rapes and rauishments of women are repressed which if they bee well looked vnto will proue that there is now no cause why lying L●onicus Chalcondilus should be beleeued who writing of Englishmen affirmeth that we haue no care what becomes of our wiues and children That in our peregrinations and trauels wee interchange and vse one the others wiues mutually That we count it no reproch by whom soeuer our wiues or daughters bee got with ●hild That with vs if a man come to his friends house hee must lye with his wife the first thing that he doth vt deinde benigue hospitio accip●arur And though some of the last recited Lawes were vnmade when Chalcondilus did write aboue one hundred yéeres since yet there were then Lawes enough to proue him a déepe lyer and had hée ●éene in England to haue trussed him vp too perhaps for lechery had his learning steaded him no better than his honesty this is no lesse cause why I should be thus bitter against Chalcondilus a dead man for that it may séeme he wrote by hearesay nullo odio gentis and in other matters hee reporteth honourably of vs. But it is strange that a man writing not a great while since but euen the other day not at Athens neither at Rome or Reams where they vse to belie vs head and foot but here at London should be bold to wr●te and put in print matter to this effect That beggers and the poorest sort of our women we doe vse to punish and to whip them when they are taken for leachers and dishonest liuers But Gentlewomen and Ladies of honour and worship they are neuer p●nished for incontinency but rather for their amorous wantonnesse and lubricity the more estéemed and magnified This follow deserueth plainly better to bee hanged than to bee beléeued For neither is it true that any wom●n with vs can better her reputation by dissolute life and manners Neither can any woman learne a more deuillish lesson than so to be perswaded And seeing the Lawrs themselues declare what detestation they haue of bruitish concupiscence by punishing consent with l●sse of inher●tance I would I could perswad all women to eschew not only these gulfes but also the ecclesiasticall Censures which I meddle not with together with the ●●●●my which they purchase sometime with outward la●●●●iousnesse from the report of them which iudge a care●●ss● liberty in behauiour an infallible argument of sensuality whereby some men haue béene imboldened to offer ●or●● because they thought it was expected SECT XXIX Appeal● of rape NOw let vs consider a little how these Lawes 〈◊〉 to bee put in practice if any virgin widdow or ●●gle woman be rauished shee her selfe may sue an Appeale of rape prosecute the fe●on to death and the King●●●●don as it séemeth cannot helpe him If a Feme co●●●● be rauished shee cannot haue an Appeale without her husband as appeares 8 Hen. 4. fol. 21. But if a Feme ●ouert be rauished and confent to the rauisher the husband alone may haue an Appeale and this by the Statute 6. Rich. 2. cap. 6. The husband that this Statute speaketh of which may sue the Appeale must be a lawfull husband in right and possession for ne vnques accouple in loyall matrimony is a good plea against ●im 11. Hen. 4. fol. 13. So doth Iustice Stanford affirme the booke to proue without question and that the Law is so too where Appeale is brought by Baron and Feme Brooke abridging the case 11. Hen. 4. séemeth to incline to the contrary opinion The case at length is thus Thomas Hausegle s●●th Appeale de rauishment sa feme against Thomas V. and others according to the Statute 6. Rich. 2. rehea●●●●● in his Declaration the order of the Statute and that they had rauished her against the forme of the said 〈◊〉 The Appell●●● said the Plaintiffe had another Writ hanging returnable the same tearme of the same rape and because the Writ was not serued he had obtained a sicut alias Ergo this Writ of the same nature should abate Ha●●said he might pursue which Writ ●e would And by their writ a Praecipe quod reddat or an Assise for the like cause shall abate for of one land a man cannot haue two recoueries But in this case it may bee there were two rapes at seuerall times c. and also the first Writ was not entred in the roll nor the ●●cut alias in the Record then the Declaration was challenged as insufficient because it was ●elonice rapuit and not carnaliter cognouit but to that it was answered that felonious rape implied carnall knowledge for rape without such knowledge is buttrespasse Another exception to the Declaration was that two had rauished as principall c. which Rolfe said could not be therefore the Plaintiffe ought to haue declared against one as principall and against the other as accessary or
Writ because it was not felonice rapuit but the Defendant durst not stand vpon it but pleaded ouer rien culpable for rapu●t imply●th felony But in euerie Appeale of rape if the Writ want the word rapuit it shall abate though it haue words amounting to as much as car●●●●ter cognovit or any such ●t●●e 9. E. 4. ●ol 26. SECT XXXIV Pleas to the Action THough it bee true that where ●●● shall bee charged with rape in Appeals or otherwise it ●ust be by the Word rap●it and ●●t carnaliter cognouit onely y●t by Bracton it is a g●●d plea in App●ale of rape to say Non abstullt e●●ucellagium● suum qu●a a●●u●h v●●go est ve●i●●● probab●●u● p●● asp●c●●●●o●po●i● pe● quatuo● legales fem●nas iurat●s de ve●itate dicenda quaere Stamford saith it is a good plea for the Defendant though h●e lay with the woman yet hée did not carnally know her for the force of the Declaration resteth in that And by ●●i●ton fol. 45. If at the time of rape supposed the wom●n conceiue childe there is no rape for none can conc●●●e without consent Also by Bracton it is a good plea to say that before the rape supposed he kept the Plaintiffe and vsed her as his Concubine But by the same Bracton it was no plea to say she was another mans Concubine or Harlot Quia licet meret●●x fuerit a●ea cer●●●●●c ●emporis non fuit cu● nequi●iae eius reclamando consenti●e noluit And note if she which is rauished assen● for feare of death at the time of the rauis●●ent ●t ●s a rape against her will notwithstanding such consent for assent must ●e voluntarie per curiam 5 E. 4. Crompton 44. SECT XXXV A question what is meant by rauishment with force in W●st 2. cap. 34. STamford leaueth it doubtfull and to be learned what the difference is betwixt rauishment with force and without force M. Lambard thinketh the word to be but declaratorie signifying all rauishment to bée forcible And it is true that no woman is rauished in this sort only by parroll or influence of Rhetoricke But in mine opinion the Statute must néeds intend two kinde of rauishments because it maketh one more odious than the other and propoundeth death ineuitable to him which rauisheth with force though the woman forgiue h●● and cons●●● to him A more detestable villany I thinke therefore was meant in this parase of him which being himselfe ouercome with concupis●●nce ouercommeth a woman hand to hand by length of breath and strength of his owne sinewes You shall vnderstand th●refore that about those dayes there was an Appeale of ●or●e in vse as it were against the rauishers yeomen of the stirr●p vi● against him or them which were holders and assisters to the principall carnall oppressour as appeareth about the end of the 28. Chapter of Bracton Lib. 3. Eadem A. appellat C. quod eadem die eodem anno c. quo praedict B. eadem hora dum idem B. abstulit pucellagium suum fuit idem C. in fortia ita quod tenuit eandem A. dum idem B. abs●ulit pucellagium suum vel concubuit cum ea postquam c. Such fellowes were termed appellati de fortia and they which take such Coadiutors might verie well be called rauishers with force and aid of all other most hatefull in iudgement of all indifferent honest women SECT XXXVI De muliere abducta cum bonis c. THis Statute toucheth also the most couetous rauishment that is when a mans wife and his goods are rauished together so much against womans minde that she is loth to leaue either money or plate behinde her and because some men vsed in those dayes to let their goods goe lest otherwise they might perhaps call their wiues home againe the suit is giuen to the King if the husband neglect it 44. Assi p. 12. A man brought a Writ of trespasse against a Knight and his Lady and two others in Banke le Roy for taking away the Plainti●●es wife and his goods and they all came by Capias in custodie of the Viscount and the Plaintiffe counted of rauishment of his wife and his goods carried away c. a protection was shewed forth for the Knight and his wife and allowed and Iudgement was demanded of the Writ because the Plaintiffe and his wife were diuorced Iustice Kniuct said that though the woman were dead the husband might haue the Action of rauishment notwithstanding a●d so is it if they were diuorced For he was not to recouer his wife by the Action nor any thing else saue dammages for the trespasse Then it was said the di●orce was causa frigiditatis Kniuet said the weather might wax warmer with him Il poet recouerer son nature ouerer come home reauer sa feme and therefore answered to the Writ Then Iudgement was asked againe of the Writ because it was against a man and his wife and one woman cannot rauish another sed non allocatur for a woman may be assenting or aiding to any rauishment therefore the Defendants pleaded non culpable The verie same or verie like case is againe 23. E. 3. 23. Sée 21. H. 7. fol. 13. The opinion of Fin●ux that it is lawfull for a man to trauell with another mans wife to London at her request and to carrie her behinde him when shee will ride to sue a diuorce or a reuersment of Outlawrie or for a warrant of the peace against her goodman Yaxley was of contrarie opinion And where the partie which taketh another mans wife cum bonis c. is indited at the Kings suit of trespasse onely the Indictment is Quod vi armis Mariam vxorem cuiusdam A. B. apud S. rapuit ●am cum bonis cattallis viz. c. ipsius A. B. cepit abduxit ●a ●idem A. B. adhuc iniuste detinet contra p●cem c. contra formam statuti c. So likewise at the husbands ●●it the Writ is Attachias B. quod sit coram nobis c. ad respondendum prefato A. quare vi armis vxorem prefati A. apud N. rapuit ●am cum bonis cattallis c. ad graue d●mnum contra formam statuti c. as appeares by Fitzherbert So that you see the differ●nce betwixt rapuit in Trespasse and in Appeale or Indictment of felony Presidents whereof are in M. La●●bards Booke and M. Crompton● SECT XXXVII The case of Elizabeth Venor NOw that women may learne to stand vpon their owne guard partly and not trust altogether to defence or courtesie of Lawes which are not more rigorously penned than sometime put in execution against them let them mark● this ca●e Lands were giuen in ●a●le to William Ve●or and to Elizabeth his wife and to the heires of their two bodi●s the remainder to the said Elizabeth and the heires of her body the remainder to Robert Babbington in taile the remainder to the right heire of T. S.
impedit the Plaintiffe may haue one writ to the Bishop and another to the Sheriffe to enquire of dammages Likewise 14. H. 8. fol. 25. in a plea of dower vpon confession the demandant recouered Iudgement and after Iudgement auerring that her husband died seised shee prayed a writ to enquire of dammages habuit for if the demandant in dower will recouer dammages shee must euer surmize that her husband died seised though the Tenant confesse the Action or plead but onely to the Writ and in the end of her Demise shee may maintaine the Writ for sur plee briefe the dying seised appeares not without surmise c. 22. H. 6. fol. 44. SECT X. Deteiner of Euidence BY Perkins none may deteine Dower for deteining of euidence but only the heire to whom the euidence belongeth and the heire when he pleads must shew what the euidence is c. And they must concerne the lands discended vnto him whereof Dower is demanded for hée may not deteine Dower of land which the Charters concerne not or for Charters concerning his purchased lands or those whereof he hath no seisin Aliter if they concerne some reuersion descended But if the heire come in vouched to warranty by the Barons feofée hée cannot plead this Deteiner of Euidence because in verity the land is another mans to whom most rightly the Charters belong But one copercener may haue this plea after partition against her mother or other Demandant in Dower though the euidence concerne the other parceners and her all alike see 41. Titulo Dower in Brooke If a widdow that is with child deteine euidence against her husbands daughter and heire or other heire collaterall it shall bée no sufficient plea to delay Dower 1. Perkins 70. 71. 18. Hen. 8. fol. 1. The heire said the Demandant deteined a bagge ensealed with the euidence concerning the land which if hée would deliuer hee was ready to render Dower bone plee per Curiam 33. Hen. 6. fol. 51. The Tenant pleaded for part of the land whereof Dower was demanded non tenure for another part detinue of Charters for another part Ioyntenancie which his father for a fourth part demanded view but it might not be granted because he tooke notice to himselfe of that part by pleading to the rest And the Plaintiffe to his plea of suruiuor pleaded his release made to the father her husband in his life time Issi●● seisi que Dowre c. The plea of Euidence detained as Littleton said went to the whole action quod fuit negatum v●de Brooke ●y Dower 4 but he was forced to shew what euidence he deteineth viz. a speciall Charter 4● Ed. 3. The Tenant pleaded a withholding of Euidence certaine conce●ning his inheritance and shewes what Et q●e il a● estre toures temps prist si c. the woman made title to two deeds by gift to her husband and her selfe and for the other Euidence shee said whereas the Defendant claimed as brother and heire to her husband shee kept it to the vse of her child si ou●sq̄ soit inseint q̄ serra ●eure si dien luy done nostre and issue was taken whether she were ins●int die obitus mariti not whether shee were inseint per son baron die obit●s And that booke of 41. Edw. ● is cited for law in Sir Edw. Cokes 7. Rep. fol. 9 that a woman may deteine Charters for the heire in ventre ●a mere And 22. Hen. 6. fol. 16. It was agréed that deteiner of Euidence is no plea in an Action of Dower vnlesse it concerne Inheritance discended Et si● videtur ibidem saith Brooke that if it concerne inheritance though it be not the very land whereof Dower is demanded the plea is good 9. Edw. 4. to plea of Charters deteined the Demandant answered veies cy●le fait pr●● dower the Court reading and perceiuing it to bee the déed c. gaue iudgement for Dower 14. Hen. 6. fol. 4 The Tenant pleaded detinue of a chest with two fines and other Charters ꝑ Martin Iustice if the Chest were open he ought to declare euery déed specially by it selfe and so it is likewise in action of detinue for a Chest open with euidence quod curia concessit 2. Hen. 7. fol. 6. Is set downe the reason why the certainty of euidence deteined must bee showne viz. That the Iury may be more able to make their verdict and the Court to iugde to whom they appertaine for if they belong to the Defendants purchase he is put to a Writ of detinue And 6. Eliz. Dyer 230. sée a man seised of foure acres soccage land and of one déed or Charter concerning those lands by his last will in writing deuised thrée of his acres to his youngest sonne in fée the fourth acre to his wife for life the remainder to a stranger in fee h● died his wife got the déed entred into her acre and the sonne into the three acres deuised to him the woman brings a Writ of Dower for a third of these thrée acres The sonne pleads detinue of the Charter which if she would de●●uer he is and alwayes had beene ready to render Dower shee shewed the whole cause by way of replication vpon that the other side demurred It seemeth saith Dyer that this plea serueth for none saue only the Barons heire and for no land but that which is descended And not for the heire himselfe if he come in by voucher or ●s Tenant by receipt in default of Tenant for life Where hee is no more but tenant per admittance for such a one cannot say that he hath béene toutes temps prist a render Dower si c. Neither can gardian in chiualry haue this plea for he cannot haue a writ of detinue of the heires euidence And this plea is a bar for no lands but those which the Charters deteined do concerne 22. H. 6. Where Newton saith the reason of this barre is because the euidence being séene and looked into may yéeld matter to barre the Demandant of her Dower for such lands therefore as the Charters doe not touch Dower shall be granted of them this plea notwithstanding Also certainty must euer bee alleaged in this case if the euidence bee not in some bag bo● or chest sealed or locked vp And note the Defendant supra was not named heire by the demandant neither had he inabled himselfe to this plea as heire therefore the Court might take it indifferently As in a quare impedit if the incumbent bee named Clericus the Court takes him for a Disturber if hee inable not himselfe as incumbent or person impersonée Another fault was found in this Tenants conclusion of his plea because hee said vnco●e prist a render Dower but in very déed hee relied not againe on the condition if the Demandant would deliuer the Charter according to the ancient booke of entries And at the last iudgement was giuen pro dote Sée Sir Edw. Cokes 9. Rep. in Anna Beddingfelds case 1.