Selected quad for the lemma: judgement_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
judgement_n assign_v error_n writ_n 4,504 5 9.8539 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Lord shall have one Action and the Copy-holder another and each one shall recover Damages according to his Interest Vide Leon. 1. 272. Copy-holder dyes Lord admits a Stranger the Heir may enter and upon a re-entry maintain Trespass without Admittance Noy p. 172. Simpson and Gillion Vide Admittance For non-Admittance no Action by Surrendree Action on the Case against the Lord lyes not for non-Admittance A Copy-holder in the Eye of the Law is but Tenant at the Lords Will and if the Lord will not hold Court he hath no remedy to compel him but by order in Chancery Cro. Jac. p. 368. Ford and Hoskins No Action on the Case by a named Successor By Surrendror Surrendror may have an Action on the Case for not admitting but not the Surrendree 2 Keb. 357. Quaere Remedy in faux Judgment The Demandant in a Pleint in nature of a real Action recovereth the Land erroneously with remedy for the party grieved for he cannot have the Kings Writ of faux Judgment in respect of the baseness of the Estate and Tenure being in the Eye of the Law but a Tenant at Will and the Freehold being in another yet he shall have Petition to the Lord in nature of a Writ of faux Judgment and therein assign Errors and have remedy according to Law Co. Lit. 60. And if there be cause the Judgment may be reversed Assise Tenant by Copy shall not have Assise against his Lord as Tenant in ancient Demesn shall have because he hath no Frank-Tenement 4 Rep. 21. but he shall be relieved in Equity Tothil p. 108. The Copy-holders Actions and Remedies against Strangers and where A man grants all the Coals and Coal-Mines within a Manor and parcel was Copy-hold for Life to J. S. Where Copy-holder shall have Trover for Coals digged out of his Copy-hold Land Lessee enters into the Copy-hold and digs a new Pit in the Copy-hold Land during the Life of the Copy-holder and takes the Coals and converts them c. And Lessee of the Coal-Mine brought Trover against the Lessor Per Curiam he may do it for when the Lessor or Lessee of the Coals or a Stranger enters and digs the Coals out of the Pits these belong to the Lessee and if any one else take the Coals he shall have Trover Jones Rep. 243. Player and Roberts Lessee of a Copy-holder for a year Ejectment shall maintain an Ejectione Firmae for in as much as his Term is warranted by Law by force of the general Custom of the Realm it is but reason if he be ejected that he shall have Ejectione Firmae and it is a speedy course for a Copy-holder to have the possession of the Land against a Stranger 4 Rep. 26. As to the Declaration in Ejectment Vide Tit. Declaration In Cro. El. p. 224. It is said to be adjudged Ejectment Per tot Cur. That an Ejectione Firmae doth not lye of a Copy-hold Estate But it was agreed That an Ejectione Firmae doth lye of a Lease made by a Copy-holder but not of a Demise made by the Lord of a Copy-hold by Copy of Court Roll Cole and Wall 's Case A Copy-holder had Licence from his Lord to let his Land for 21 years he lets it to the Plaintiff for three years who entred and being Ejected brought Ejectione Firmae Ejectment by Lessee upon a Lease not warranted good against a Stranger Per Cur. he may maintain this Action at Common Law for it is a good Lease between the Pa●●●s and against all others but the Lord and as this Case is it is good against him because it is done by his Licence and it is a good Lease and well warranted by the Licence Cro. El. 535. Goodwin and Longhurst A Copy-holder made a Lease for one year excepting one day which was warranted by the Custom Lessee being ousted by a Stranger brings Ejectione Firmae it well lyes and if there were not any Custom yet it shall be good against all but him who had the Inheritance and Freehold So if a Lessee for Will at the Common Law had made a Lease for years for the Tenant at Will is only a Disseisor and the Lease is good against him Cro. Trin. 41 El. p. 676. Spark's Case So 717. Erish's Case Moor n. 709. Stoner and Gibson Ejectment by the Heir without Admittance to presentment If customary Lands do descend to the younger Son by Custom and he enters and leaseth to another who takes the Profits and after is Ejected he shall have an Ejectione Firmae without any Admittance of his Lessor or Presentment that he is Heir 1 Leon. p. 100. Rumny and Eves n. 128. If a Copy-holder had Common by Prescription in the Waste of the Lord and the Lord stores the Waste with Conies every Copy-holder may have Action on the Case against the Lord averring That by this the Common is impaired 1 Rolls Abr. 106. Clayton and Sir Jerom Horsey Trespass for Beasts depasturing his Common by every Commoner Copy-holder prescribes to have Common in the Waste of the Lord and brings Trespass on the Case against a Stranger for his Beasts depasturing on the Common there The Question was whether this Action lyes for 15 H. 7.12 it s agreed a Commoner cannot maintain an Action of Trespass nor no other but the Owner of the Soyl 12 H. 8.2 And the Commoner hath no right till he hath taken it by the mouth of his Beasts and the Damage is to the Tenant of the Land and then every other Commoner may have Action of Trespass and so the Stranger shall be infinitely punishable Per Coke If a Commoner may distrain Damage feasant doing Damage which proves lie hath wrong then by the same reason if the Beasts are gone before his coming he may have Action on the Case otherwise one that hath many Beasts may destroy the Common in a night And it s not like a Nusance for that is Publick and may be punished in a Leet But the other is private to the Commoners and cannot be punished in another course he cited one Whitehand's Case Many Copy-holders prescribe to have the Loppings and Toppings of Pollards the Lord cuts them every Copy-holder may have his Action and also Hill 5. Jac. Rot. 1427. Geo. England's Case and Warburton of the same Opinion 2 Brownl p. 146. Crogate and Morris If a Copy-holder by the Custom of a Manor had used to have Common for all his Beasts Action on the Case for digging Turffs on the Common Levant and Couchant upon his customary Tenements in a certain parcel of the Manor and a Stranger digs Turffs there and takes them away by which his Common is impaired Action on the Case lyes declaring That the Defendant digged so many Turffs there and then with his Horses and Carts Herbam tunc ibid crescen ' predict ambulando conculcando Declaration from the place aforesaid minus rite ceperit abcarriavit
Tnant at Will and the Freehold being in another But he may have a Petition to the Lord in the nature of a Faux Judgment and therein assign Errors and have Remedy according to Law 4 Rep. 21. Brown's Case Fenner said he had seen a Record 36 H. 8. where the Lord by Petition to him had for certain Errors in the Proceedings reversed such Judgment given in his own Court Now real Pleints are in the Lords Court are in this Form A. de B. queritur versus C. de D. de placito terrae videlicet de uno Messuagio quadraginta Acris terrae c. cum pertin fecit protestationem sequi querelam istam in natura Brevis Domini Regis Assisae mortis Antecessoris ad communem Legem vel Brevis Domini Regis Assisae novae disseisinae ad communem Legem aut in natura Brevis de forma donationis in discendere ad communem Legem and so in the nature of any other Writ c. plegii de prosequendo F. G. c. CAP. XXXI Declaration of for and concerning Copy-hold Lands and Presidents IN Ejectione Firmae it was doubted by the Court whether the Plaintiff in his Declaration ought to set forth the Custom of the Manor That the Copy-holder may Lease c. and then to shew that the Lease is warranted by the Custom Whether in Ejectment the Plaintiff need to shew that the Lease was warranted by the Custom in 1 Anderson Rep. Ewer and Astwick But it is fully resolved and agreed in Rumney and Eves's Case 1 Leon p. 100. That the Plaintiff ought not to shew that the Lease is warranted by the Custom but that shall come of the other side This was Pasch 30 El. B. R. But in Hill 38 El. Cro. p. 469. Wells and Partridge it was doubted because otherwise being a general Court it shall be intended of a Lease at Common Law which a Copy-holder cannot make as if the Heir in Burrough English brings a Mordancestor he ought to shew the Custom in his Count and declare according thereunto This was the Opinion of Anderson in the Case and in Moor n. 927. Gregory and Harrison It is said to be resolved an Ejectione Firmae doth not lye of a Copy-hold if the Plaintiff doth not declare the Custom Lease and Ejectment but the Practice now is otherwise Upon Agreement Whereas W. was seized of Copy-hold Lands That he should surrender the same to the Use of Elkin and that he was to give him for the same 560 l. and if he sold the same over the Plaintiff to have the moiety of what he sold over and above It is said in the Declaration Declaration must be That he is seized in Dom. suam ut de feodo secundum c. and also may shew that they are customary Lands he was seized in Dominico ut de feodo secundum consuetudinem manerij and he doth not shew the same was customary Land Per Cur. he ought to shew it but he need not shew that he was admitted 3 Bulstr 230. Elkins and Wastel Declaration sur Assumpsit to make a Surrender of Copy-hold Land Placita gen spec p. 16. Declaration in Case for a Copy-holder for cutting down Trees upon his customary Tenements Brownl 252. Def. seisitus de terris custumar vendidit querentur statum suum inde ac omnia bona as●umpsit causare statum fieri quer in terris deliberare bona Rast Ent. 7. Nar pro tenen customar versus Dom Maner qui succidit arbores suꝑ Tenementa custumar per quod quer non habet suffeciens forale sepimentur maremium ꝑro reparatione secundum consuetud Manerij Hern 216 or 226. 1 Brown 252. Pro ten custumar versus un Tanner de Tanpi●s erect propre rivulum decurren ad Messuagium querentis per quod aqua corrumpitur Hern 254. Ad exheredand quer de Tenementis custumar impediend ipsum de Administratione bonor ei committend Co. Entr. 29. Pro ten custumar molendini versus occupationem tenementorum qu● per consuetur debe● molare grana ad dict' molend Hern 83. Narrat in Action sur Case per Copyhold que fuit le Tenant pur 3 vies successive des terres d'un Manor deins quel fuit un Custome habere successive c. un auter Custome que prima persona in copiis rotulorum ejusdem Manerij nominata poet surrender in manus Dom al son proper use al use des deux auters nominand Le Def. in consideratione quod le Plaintiff pro 12 d. in manibus 50 quarter de brasis illi deliberand assumpsit sursum reddere ad usu ipsius duor alior ex nominatione Def. procurare cur assumpsit promisit apparere apud Curiam accipere statum ad usum ipsius 2 aliorum deliberare les 50 quartur brasii pred Winch. Ent. 65. Narratur per Copyhold qui fuit Tenant pur 3 vies successive des terres tenus d'un Manor deins quel fuit un Custome habere successive c. un auter Custome que prima persona in Copiis rotulorum ejudem manerij nominat poec surrender in manus Dom al son proper use al use deux auters per ipsum nominand Le Def. in consideratione que pro 12 d. in manibus 50 quarters de Malt a luy deliberand ad assume a Surrender al use de luy mesme 2 auters nominatione Def. procurare curiam assumpsit promisit d'appearer al Court d'accepter del Estate a luy les deux auters pur deliver les 50 quarters de Melt venditur Winch Entr. p. 65. Chambers and Turner Cond del obliḡ a Surrender un Copyhold Estate al use del●quer al proche in Court Bar quod Def. al Court tenus tiel jour surrendroit accordant al effect del condicon Winch. Entr. 241 222. demur general al bar Eldre Ll'uelling CAP. XXXII Of Pleadings The general Rules of Pleading as to Copy-hold Estates Of Pleading Customs and Prescriptions and the different Forms Pleading in reference to Common and when to be pleaded by way of Custom or by way of Prescription The manner of Pleading when a Lease is to be answered which is set forth in the Avowry Where in Pleading the Commencement of the Estate must be shewn and by whom granted or not How a Licence must be pleaded by the Lessee Prescription for Copy-holders to be discharged of Tythes How to be pleaded Of Traverses when and where to be taken Forms of Pleading of Surrenders Admittances Forms of Pleading Estates in Fee Tayl for Lives or Years Pleading of Presentments Grants Pleadings in respect of Commons Trees Ways Inclosures Forfeiture and all other Pleadings necessary for the Copy-holder to set forth his Title or to defend it Pleadings General Rules of Pleading as to Copy-hold Estates EVery Admittance of an Heir upon a Descent amounts in Law to a Grant and after Admittance the Heir may in Pleading
Copy-holder It hath been a Question when a Copy-holder bargains and sells his Copy-hold to the Lord of a Manor in Lease for years whether the Copyhold Estate was extinguished But in Hutton p. 81. it is agreed that this Copy-hold is not extinguished but that the Lord who is Lessee for years is Dominus pro tempore and may grant it by Copy de novo The Lord of a Manor demised Copy-hold Lands to three Sisters Habend to them for their Lives successive the eldest Sister married one C. after which the Lord by Indenture leased the same Land to the eldest Sister the Remainder to the Husband Remainder to the second Sister and no Agreement was made thereunto by the second Sister by Deed before or after making the said Indenture but four days after the Lease made she agreed to it in pais and then married a Husband Agreement to an Indenture by one in Remainder for Life and they claim the Land The point is if by Agreement of the second Sister her Right to the Copy-hold were extinct The Interest of the eldest Sister is gone by her acceptance of the Estate by Indenture now if the second Sister may come and claim her customary Interest Per Cur. it s no extinguishment in the second Sister and yet Judgment was against her for Per Gaudy none can take advantage of the eldest Sister's Estate being determined the Lord against his Lease cannot enter or claim and the second Sister cannot enter during the Life of the eldest Sister for her Remainder takes effect in possession after the death of her said Sister 1 Leon. p. 73. Curtis and Cottell's Case 28 Eliz. Trin. B. R. By acceptance of a new Estate of Free-hold Baron and Feme Copy-holders to them and their Heirs the Baron in consideration of mony paid by him to the Lord obtaineth an Estate of the Freehold to him and his Wife and to the Heirs of their Bodies Baron dieth having Issue the Feme enters and suffers a Recovery and his Heir enters Per Statute 11 H. 7. Per Cur. the Entry is lawful for the Copy-hold by the Acceptance of the new Estate was extinguished Cro. El. 24. Stockbridge's Case Where and how Right to a Copy-hold shall be Extinguished by Release A man makes a Surrender of his Copy-hold Land to J. S. which is not good and after J. S. is admitted he which made the Surrender releaseth to him being in possession and after enters upon him The Question was if his Entry be congeable and if by the Release by Deed the customary Right of the Copy-holder was extinct And Per Cur. it is extinct by the Release for he to whom the Release was made was Copy-holder in possession and admitted to the Tenements and therefore the Release of a customary right may enure to him and the Lord hath no prejudice for he hath received his Fine for Admittance and he to whom the Release is made is in by Title viz. by Admittance of the Lord and so this Release enures by way of extinguishment And there is great difference between transferring of an Estate and an extinguishment of a Right Diversity between the transferring of an Estate and the extinguishment of a Right But if a Copy-holder be ousted per Tort there his Release to the disseisor or other wrong doer does not transfer his Right or Bar him 1. Because there is no customary Estate upon which a Release of any customary Right may enure and then 2. It would be a prejudice to the Lord who would lose his Fines and Services Co. 4 Rep. 25. b. Kite and Queinton In Replevin bar to the Conisance That K.D. was seized of the Manor of R. in Fee and that the Tenements in which c. were customary held of the said Manor and that at such a Court a Copy was granted to the Plaintiff whereby he entred and put in his Beasts The Defendant protesting the Premisses were not customary for Plea saith That before the Plaintiffs Title J. Abbot of the Monastery of B. was seized of the Manor of R. c. and one R. T. being seized of the customary Lands in which c. in Fee at the will of the Lord the said R. surrendred to the Abbot who was possessed and occupied the said Premisses for divers years and afterwards demised the said Manor for 40 years to W. M. and then surrendred the entire Manor and Abbathy to H. 8. who granted the entire Manor to the Duke of Norfolk in Fee and he with the assent of the Termor made a Feoffment to Drury of the Manor to whom the Termor surrendred his Lease Drury dyes and it descends to his Heir who granted the Land in which c. again by Copy to Tillot for his Life who entred and put in his Beasts Demurrer The Question was if the Custom is destroyed or if Drury the Defendant may avoid his Grant by Copy Note The custumary Land was never severed from the Manor but granted with the Manor as part of it and was demisable by Copy by all the Lords of the Manor and so it remained till the 15th of Eliz. when the Defendant granted the Copy to the Plaintiff Winch Ent. 991 992. Where a Copy-hold shall be perpetually extinct or where it shall after become a Copy-hold by regrant Forfeit Escheat If a Copy-hold Estate be forfeit or escheat to the Lord or otherwise come into the Hands of the Lord if the Lord make a Lease for years or for Life or other Estate by Deed or without Deed this Land shall never after be granted again by Copy for the Custom is destroyed for that during such Estates the Land was not demised nor demisable by Copy of Court Roll So if the Lord make a Feoffment and enter for the Condition broken it shall never be granted again by Copy But if the Lord keep it in his Hands a long time or let this at will then he may re-grant it Lach p. 213. 1 Rolls Abr. 498. Downcliff and Minors So if the interruption be tortious as if the Lord be disseised and the disseisor dye seized or the Land be recovered against the Lord by false Verdict or erroneous Judgment yet after the Land recovered or the judgment reversed this is grantable again by Copy Legal Interruptions But if the Land so Forfeited or Escheated before any new Grant be extended upon a Statute or Recognizance acknowledged by the Lord or the Lords Wife hath this assigned to her in a Writ of Dower though these are impediments by acts in Law yet the interruptions are lawful and the Lands may never again be granted by Copy 4 Rep. 31. Frenches Case If Copy-holder takes a Lease for years of the Manor by this his Copy-hold is destroyed but such Lessee may re-grant the Copy-hold again to whom he will for the Land was always demised or demisable If a Copy-hold be surrendred to the Lessor of a Manor or be Forfeited to him he his Executors or Assigns may well
else non-payment is not a Forfeiture 198 Surrender by a Copy-holder for Life to one in Fee is no Forfeiture What is a present Forfeiture without presentment 199 Heir beyond Sea shall not forfeit for not coming in upon Proclamation in Court 202 Wilful Forfeitures not relieved in Chancery 320 Where the Wife shall suffer for the Forfeiture of her Husband or not 211 Forfeiture as to cutting of Trees by Tenant for Life 207 208 Where Admittance is a Dispensation of a Forfeiture 217 Where Amerciament is a Dispensation of a Forfeiture ibid. Forfeiture purged by Release ibid. Where and what Acceptance is a Dispensation of a Forfeiture and where and what not 218 Where the Heir shall not take advantage of a Forfeiture in the Life of the Ancestor 219 The Lords Remedy for a Forfeiture 220 Bill in Chancery to reverse a Faux Judgment given in the Lords Court 326 What alienations shall be a Forfeiture 206 Forfeiture in Waste 207 By Rescous 216 By Inclosure 210 After a Copy-hold is dismembred from the Manor of what Forfeitures the Feoffee or Grantee shall take advantage 212 Where the Forfeiture of one Copyholder is the Forfeiture of another where Forfeiture of part shall be of the whole 214 215 G. By the Kings Grant of all his Demesn Lands Copy-hold shall not pass aliter in the case of another What things may be granted by Copy 78 Of voluntary Grants by the Lord 79 80 Disability of the Lords person no hindrance of the Grant 80 What Estate the Lord must have to enable him to make Grants 81 82 Voluntary Estates granted during the time of the Lords Interest shall be good though the Lords Estate be avoided ab initio 84 Grants by Tenant at sufferance or one that has a tortious Title not good 86 87 Copy-hold not to be granted by parcels 89 What amounts to a Grant 90 How Grants of a Copy-hold to be expounded 90 91 92 What shall pass in a Grant by the words cum pertinentiis 92 94 By what words in Grants Copy-holds shall pass or not 92 93 H. Honour what 311 Where the Heir shall be in by discent or Purchase 123 Heir before Admittance is not a compleat Tenant to all purposes Hariot Service and Hariot Custom the difference 237 238 What Custom for Hariots shall be good or not 239 Where and how Hariots shall be apportioned or not 240 Who shall pay an Hariot and when and when not Who shall have an Hariot 241 Pleading as to Hariot vide Tit. Pleading What shall be a good Avowry in conuzance for an Harriot in Replevin or a good justification in Trespass or not and how to be pleaded 244 I. Infant not bound by many Customs 21 If Infant Surrender he may enter at full Age 21 Infant may make a Lease without Licence and not forfeit 21 Surrender by Infant at five years old Custom to assign one to take the profits of a Copy-hold Infant Interruption in the Possession and in the Right 32 42 Faux Jugdment given in the Lords Court where relievable Copy-hold Lands are not within the Statute 11 H. 7. cap. 20. Of Joyntresses 254 The Lord to have the custody of an Ideot 17 K. Kings Grants favourably construed 32 King need not recite in his Grant that it is Copy-hold 23 Surrender to the King without other matter of Record where good 24 L. Lease 108 181 Custom to Lease without Licence may be good 51 52 Lease made before Admittance in what case good 54 What Leases made by a Copy-holder for years are a Forfeiture or not 203 When a Lease shall begin in point of eomputation and not in point of Interest 184 Lease of Copy-holds made by Tenant in Tayl ibid. Lease of Copy-holds made by Ecclesiastical Persons 186 Lease affirmed by acceptance 187 Lease of Free-hold and Copy-hold the Rent issues out of beth 187 In what respect a Lease not warranted by Licence or Custom is yet good in Law 189 Lease void in Interest and good by way of Estoppel 192 What shall be said a Covenant and no Lease and so shall not be a Forfeiture 206 Lease for years not warranted is no disseisin to the Lord 182 Licence Once a Licence to make a Lease and always a Licence What Licence and by whom granted shall be good or not 191 Licence taken as a confirmation 193 Licence pleaded vide Pleadings Copy-hold not within the Statute of Limitations 251 M. Manor the Original and Nature of it 6 Customary Manor what 7 What shall be said parcel of a Manor and what shall be said a severance 2 Manor not to be created at this day 4 A Manor in reputation 5 A Manor in gross 7 How the Lord may create a customary Manor 8 Severance of Copy-hold from the Manor what it operates What shall be said time out of memory 30 Copy-hold is within the Statute 32 H. 2. cap. 9. of Maintenance Manor by reputation how it will pass 7 How Copy-hold may be severed from the Manor and how not 11 N. Notice There must be notice of the Alteration of the Use and Estate or else there can be no Forfeiture for denial of Rent 197 No notice need where a Fine is certain aliter where it is uncertain 191 P. Priviledges of the Lord 17 Priviledges of the Copy-holder 17 18 Difference between Priviledges annexed to the Seigniory and Priviledges annexed to the Tenancy 19 Pleading vide Traverse Uncertainy in Pleading vide sparsim Pleading by an usitatum fuit where good or not 64 How a Copy-holder shall plead in making Title to a Copy-hold 271 272 Whether in Pleading the reasonableness of the Fine must be avered When and where a Licence is to be pleaded specially and when and where not 193 Grant of Copy-hold Land in Reversion must be pleaded as a Grant in Reversion and not as a Grant in possession nor by a per nomen 271 The Manor of a Copy-holders pleading Custom or Prescription 275 How a Prescription must be made by a particular Tenant at will ibid. The manner of a Copy-holders pleading Custom or Prescription for Common 32 Special Prescription to be pleaded in case of severance of the Copy-hold Tenement from the Lord 278 The manner of pleading when a Lease is to be answered which is set forth in the Avowry 280 Where the Action is brought as of a Lease at Common Law and one pleads a Lease of Copy-hold Land 281 Custom or Licence must be shewed specially ibid. How Lessee is to plead a Licence ib. How a Surrender is to be pleaded Pleading of Prescription by a Copy-holder to be discharged of Tythes 282 The Forms of pleading a Surrender vide Surrender 290 Grant 291 Common 292 Trees ibid. Way 296 Forfeiture 297 Pleading Custom or Prescription 273 Bar that the Lands are customary Lands 299 Pleading as to Harriots 242 Presentment 136 When to be made 137 If Surrendror or Cesty que use or customary Tenants dye before Presentment yet Presentment and Admittance may be afterward 138