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A86112 The grounds of the lawes of England; extracted from the fountaines of all other learning: and digested methodically into cases, for the use and benefit of all practicers, and students. With a commixtion of divers scattered grounds concerning the reasonable construction of the law. / By M.H. of the Middle-Temple. Hawke, Michael. 1657 (1657) Wing H1169; Thomason E1569_1; ESTC R209197; ESTC R209200 362,003 535

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Laborne in his house being one of the Seriants of the City of London Frost cometh to Laborne with a Warrant from the Sheriffs to arrest the said ● upon the Capias Utlegatum which he utterly refuseth but suffereth him to goe at large upon an action of the case brought against the Sheriffs supposing that the Sheriffs arrested him and suffered him to goe at large the Defendants pleaded that they did not suffer him to goe at large and judgment was given for the Plaintiff and the verdict warranted well the count for in judgement of Law the Sheriff and his Serjeants are words equipollent amount to so much and is all one as if the Sheriffs had arrested the said B. vide ibidem plura A Writ is to the Sheriff and he returneth virtute praecepti he hath done well for it is equipollent virtute brevis 11. H 6. 16. In a Writ it is said quam clamat esse jus this equipolleth with a Fee-simple and therefore in the subsequent part of the Writ if he instanceth in a lesser estate as ex dono for life the Writ shall abare 39. H. 5. 38. Upon an Enditement for celebrating Masse contra formam Statuti 1. El I was holden that under this terme Minister a Preist was included because a Preist is bound to celebrate and minister the holy communion c. and also it was holden by all that the terme Clerk is sufficient to prove him a Preist or a Minister Dyer f. 203. b. Coke l. 5. f. 4. b. Verus antiquus redituus the true and antient rent is not to be understood of the quality incident to it but of the quantity of the rent for that is the effect and substance of the thing reserved as if the antient reservation was of rent to be paid in Gold and the novell reservation was to be paid in Silver or if a quarter of Corne was antiently reserved and now the lease is made rendring eight bushells of Corne it is all one for the Law respecteth not the formes of words or their quality but the substance and effect of the matter parum differunt qui re concordant and they differ little which agree and equipoll in substance If one maketh his Will and committeth the Administration to one by it he shall be Executor because it is all one in substance 3. H. 6. so by the grant of a Church the advowson shal passe 7. E. 3. 15. One granteth the nomination of an Advowson Habendum the advowson the Habendum is good for it is the same thing so one granteth the remainder whereas he had a reversion it is good enough to make the thing passe 6. E. 6. Ante 134. vide Ployd 157. b. If a man lease to one an acre of Land for life reserving to himselfe the herbage the reservation is void because he hath leased the same thing in substance and the profits of the Land and the Land it selfe are all one 38. H 6. 34. Words of substance and not usuall are equivalent to words of substance and usuall Ployd 140. b. As if tenant for life and his Lessor make a Feoffment in fee it is the Feoffment of the Lessee for life and the confirmation of the Lessor though there be not a word of a confirmation in it and if tenant for yeares and the Lessor make a Feoffment in fee it shall be the livery and Feoffment of the Lessor and the surrender of the Lessee and yet there was not one word of surrender And if a commoner maketh a deed to the tenant of the Land by which he renounceth the common unto him it shall enure as a release because the words are equivalent to a release So if Land be leased by Indenture for yeares and Covenants made to render and pay for the tenements such a summ it is all one as a reservation of a rent and if the Lessor say I wil have twenty pound rent and the Lessee agree or if the Lessee say I will give twenty shillings rent and the Lessor agree it is a good reservation of a rent so if a man be bound by Obligation to en feoffe I. S. and he maketh a lease for years and a release in fee he hath performed the condition because they are all one vide ibidem Yet words of art may not be supplyed by equivalent and equipollent words though they beare the same sense and substance as in an Enditement of murder voluntarie ex mulitia praecogitata interfecit is not sufficient but the word murder avit must be so in an Enditement quod quoddam tormentum in H. L. exoneravit dans eidem H.L. cum pelletto plumbeo predicto vulnus mortale Dans ei vulnus mortale c. is not sufficient but it should have been percussit which is the word of art Coke l. 5. f. 222. b. Longes case And the reason of this is given by Coke in his Preface to Littleton that words of art are so apt and significant to expresse the true sense of the Laws and so woven into the Laws themselves as it is in a manner impossible to change them neither ought legall termes to be changed SECT 4. From naturall Philosophy NExt to Logick by whose principles as by many hands we are conducted to the knowledge of the Lawes and other Sciences naturall philosophy is to be placed which is the prime and principall part of other Sciences for by the knowledge of naturall things we are instructed to observe the diversity of the actions and manners of men according to the difference of climats and various conditions of them of which any one ignorant wil be altogether unable to judge of civill and aeconomicall affaires and therefore as Mr Ployden Have the Philosophers searched so deeply into the law of nature in their lawes and writings and for the government of the people by them given precepts to follow the rule of nature and have taken nature to be as it were a foundation to all lawes Neither have the Founders of our lawes been remisse in searching out the law of nature neither were they void of the understanding of it for their lawes argue the contrary and shew that those who made them were of more great and profound judgement and as well learned in the law of nature as in all reason and in the Law of God also for nothing in our Law is ordeined contrary to nature or contrary to reason or contrary to the Law of God but according to them all Ployd 304. a. and b. And according to it hath the law established diverse grounds and maxims 1. Quae rerum natura prohibentur nulla lege confirmata sunt Reg. I. C. Marcellus Lawes which are contrary to the Law of nature lose their force and are no lawes at all Finch Nom. f. 75. Such was that of the Egyptians to turne women to Merchandise and Common wealth affaires and men to keep within doores and of the Thracians who counted idlenesse an honest thing and stealing
disseisin the law is removed from land to land beyond these degrees which writ is given by the statute of Marlebridge c. 18. though before at the common law in respect of such long possession the demandant was driven to his writ of right vide ibidem plura Vis unita fortior Ployd f. 307. a. united force is more strong as in Sharingtons case There are three causes premised to make and raise uses in lands the first is his affection for the provision of his males the second is his affection that the lands he had should remaine in his blood the third is his Brotherly love he bore to his brother whereas every one of them had beene sufficient to raise uses yet when all are put together they are of the greater force for forces united are more strong Conjunctio maris feminae est de jure naturae Coke l. 7. f. 13. Arist 1. Polit. Nuptias non concubitus sed consensus facit Vlpian consensus non concubitus facit matrimonium Coke com f. 33. a. In matrimony there is a conjunction both of the bodies and the mindes and in contracting matrimony the consent of the mind obtaineth the chiefe and substantiall parts and corporall copulation the second and therefore is it said that the consent and not the copulation maketh the marriage for every denomination is from the greater and a woman by the common law cannot consent before she is of the age of twelve yeares nor a Man untill the age of fourteen yeares and these are called annos nubiles because at that age either of them may disagree from a former marriage Coke ibidem for a marriage infra annos nubiles underneath the marriageable yeares is inchoate and imperfect to all purposes except her dower and accordingly was it resolved in Ambrosa Gorges case Coke l. 6. f. 40. a. Who being married and her husband dying before she was of the age of ten yeares was notwithstanding the former marriage adjudged to be in ward to the Queen because the former marriage was no marriage before consent and they could not consent ante annos nubiles for the consent and not the copulation maketh the marriage And therefore is matrimony defined by Britton to be assemblee del home feme alieur deux volunts a conjunction of a man and woman according to both their wils f. 246. And which as Bracton saith l. 1. c. 5. fit per mutuam voluntatem for their mutuall consent is the efficient and necessary cause of marriage and therefore a marriage enforced contrary to the will of either party is unnaturall and illegall as Kelway 19. H. 7. 52. b. Where the case is that Margaret the now wife of Keble brought an action of trespasse against Vernon to which the defendant said that he heretofore at the Church of S. in the said county tooke the Plaintiff to wife and there were married according to the lawes of the Church and demanded judgement if action to which the Plaintiff said that those espousalls were made by menaces and duresse of imprisonment and against the will of the said Plaintiff in another county and prayed her damages and after great debate whether the espousalls were avoidable by duresse or no Frowick said that he had seen the bookes and that it seemed cleerely that the espousals were well avoided by duresse and the replication vide ibidem plura And which also seemeth to be the resolve and determination of all nations for for it Romulus himselfe was upbraided to wit for forcing the Sabine Virgins against their wils to marry the Romans and was declared by his successors the Roman Authors to be a barbarous act and a crime equivalent to a rape as Propertius l. 2. El. 6. Tu criminis author Nutritus duro Romule lacte lupae Tu rapere intactas docuisti impune Sabinas Thou hardy Romulus nurs'd by brutish care And Wolvish milk was so fierce to dare To snatch the Sabine Virgins from their Sires And force them to the nuptiall of their friendes desires A Savage crime unpunisht And by Virgill more fully Raptas sine more Sabinas That is ravished contrary to the custome of all nations for in that age when Rome most flourished the customes of the Romans were the lawes of all nations as Claudian l. 4. Stil Armorum legumque parens quae fundit in omnes Imperium primique dedit cunabula juris Rome by the power of Armes and lawes doth sway The spacious universe and did wisely lay The Plat-forme and the grounds of law and right And therefore not long after by the Romane civill law the consent of the espoused parties was ratified by an oath which being but a contract was called sponsalia de futuro which also in our law at this day is of great force for by it a precontract is a sufficient cause of divorce a vinculo matrimonii Coke com f. 285. a. Vir uxor sunt quasi unica persona quia caro una sanguis unus Cok com f. 187. b. The husband and wire are but one person in law Littleton because they are one flesh and one blood as the Scripture saith and as the Philosopher are by nature conjoyned As if a joynt estate be made to the husband and wife and to a third person the husband and wife shall have one moiety and the third person the other moiety because the husband and wife are but one person in law so if an estate be made to the husband and wife and to two others the husband and wife shall have but the third part Lit. If an estate be made to a villaine and his wife being free and to their heires they have severall capacities the villaine to purchase for the benefit of the Lord and the wife for her owne yet if the Lord of the Villaine enter and the wife survive she shall have the whole land because there was no moieties between them 40. Ass Pl. 7. If a woman marry with her obligor the debt is extinct and she shall never have action against the Obligor because the suit against her husband by inter marriage was suspended and therefore being a personall action and suspended against one it is discharged against both 21. H. 7. 29. h. So is it If a feme sole baile goods to one and marry with the bailee they are the bailees good so it is if the wife buy goods of one 33. E. 3. If husband and wife purchase lands to them and their heires and the hsband alien the land c. she shall recover the whole in a cui in vita after his death and the warranty of one of them or his Ancestors is a bar of the whole against them both 39. H. 6. 45. 21. R. 2. Judg. 63. And for the same reason the husband cannnot enfeoff the wife but upon a feoffment made unto her by a stranger he may deliver seisin unto her by a letter of attorney for thereby he giveth nothing himselfe Perk. 40. If a
Court of Record for albeit the Grantee bringeth a Writ of Annuity he may distrain and discharge the person but if he bring a Writ of Annuity and therupon appeare and Court this is a determination of his election in Court of Records albeit he never proceed any further as if the Wife be endowed ex assensu patris if she after her Husbands death bringeth a Writ of Dower at the Common Law and Count albeit she recover not she shall never claim her Dower ex assensu patris because she hath determined her election So if the Grantee bring an assise for rent and make his Plaint he shall never after bring a Writ of Annuity and if he distrain and avow the prisall of the Distresse in a Court of Record it is a determination of his election before any judgment g●ven according to the rule Electio semel facta placitum testatum non patiter regressum Co. Com. 220. a. But otherwise it is where a man hath election to have severall remedies for a thing is meerly personall or meerly reall from the beginning as if a man may have an action of debt or an action of account at his pleasure and appear to it and after is non-suit yet may he have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person the like Law is an assise and a Writ of Entry in the nature of assise ibidem W. brought an action of the case against F. and declared that the Defendant had sued out a Fieri facias upon a judgment given against him for the Defendant and by virtue thereof took Goods of the Plaintiff to the value of the Damage and so made his return pro def●ctu emptoris and that the Defendant well knowing this to the intent to trouble vex and charge him did afterwards sue out another Fieri facias to the same Sheriff and delivered it to be exexecuted who did thereupon levie the money of other Goods of the Plaintiff and paid it over to the Defendant whereby the now Plaintiff was double charged whereupon the Defendant pleaded not guilty and it was found against him and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff because he was twice vexed and disturbed and that wilfully by the Defendant who had first one execution inchoate which he ought to have followed we all knowing it and not to have taken another but if he had been ignorant and had not known of the Goods first taken he had not been lyable to the other action Hob. 37.3 Waterers case Euilibet in sua arte perito est credendum omnes prudentes eos admittere solent qui probantur ab iis qui in sua arte bene versati sunt Arist 1. Topic. c. 6. Co. l. 7. f. 19. a. The reason of the wisest man which professeth not the Lawes of England in cases which concern the Lawes of England is not to be beleived but the legall and profound reason of such who by diligence study and long experience and observation are so learned in the Lawes of this Realm as out of the reason of the same they can rule the case in question in this sense this rule is to be taken that we are to beleive every one in his art and all wise men are wont to admit those things which are approved by them are well versed in their own Art Coke l. 4. f. 29. a. Agnes was contracted to Bunting and after married Twede Bunting libelleth against Agnes in the Court of Audience upon the said Contract and upon the proceedings of which Libell it was decreed that the said Agnes should undergo marriage with the said Bunting and thereupon it was pronounced decreed and declared the said marriage with Twede to be null And though that Twede being de facto husband of the said Agnes was neither party to the said Suit nor to the sentence in the Spirituall Court which dissolved the marriage between him and the said Agnes but rhe said Agnes only yet the sentence against the Feme onely being onely declaratory was good and shall bind the Baron de facto and in regard that the Cognisance of marriages appertain to the Ecclesiasticall Court and the same Court had given sentence in this case the Judges of our Law ought to give faith and credit to their proceedings and sentence although it be contrary to the reason of our Law and to think that their proceedings are consonant to the Law of the holy Church for we are to beleive every one is skilfull in his art vide ibidem plura Coke l. 5. f. 7. in Caudries case Quod quisque norit in hoc se exerceat Co. l. 9. f. 13. a. Let every one exercise himself in that which he hath knowledge and skill It is the wisdome of the Law to refer things to persons in which they have knowledge and shall be expert and therefore the Law will not constrain the Jurors which have no knowledge in the Law to take upon them Cognisance of the points in Law or in cases which concern Life Member or Inheritance Frank tenements Goods and Chattels but to leave them to the consideration of the Judges nor the Judges to give their opinion of questions and doubts in Law upon a suddain but in all cases to have the truth of the case and upon conference and consideration to adjudge according to the Law Coke l. 8. f. 130. a. The intent of the act of 5 Eliz. c. 4. was that no man should take upon him any Art Mystery or any Occupation but such in whom is science and knowledge and therefore the statute intended that he that used any Art Mystery or any occupation at the time of the act might use the same art or mystery for every one is to exercise himself in that art which he knoweth And it was said that the Brewers should have science and skill in brewing good and wholesome Beer for it greatly conduceth to the health of men Ployd f. 128. b. Alwaies our Predeceossors for the sense of latine words have consulted with the Grammarians and others who have knowledge therein and that sense which the Grammar warranted they have allowed as 9 H. 7. 14. One was bound in an Obligation upon the condition that he should pay five pounds in fine Gold and the Obligation was puri auri and there it appeareth that the Masters of Grammar were sent for to give their counsell what was latine for fine Gold vide ibidem plura Coke l. 11. f. 10. b. Matters in Law shall be put in issue to be tryed by the Country for sicut ad quaestionem facti non respondent judices ita ad quaestion●m Juris non respondent juratores As the Judges do not answer to the question of fact no more do the Jurors answer to the question in Law and if the Jurors take upon them the Cognisance of the Law and find the speciall matter mistake the Law the Judges of the Law shall give judgment upon the speciall matter according to
of false imprisonment because that he is Iudge of the Cause 14 H. 8. 16. Factum a Judice quod ad ejus officium non pertinet ratum non est Reg. I. C. Coke l. 10. f. 76. b. Judicium a non suo Judice datum nullius est momenti An act done by a Iudge which doth not appertain to his Office is not allowed and a Judgment given by him is not his proper Iudge is of no weight nor moment As if the Sheriff who is prescribed by the Law to hold his Turn within a month after Michaelmas holdeth his Turn after the moneth and taketh an Indictment of robbery at the same Turn and the Indictment is by a Certiorari removed into the Kings Bench by advice of all the Iustices the party so indicted was discharged because the Indictment was utterly void coram non judice because at that time the Sheriff had no authority to hold it And if a man have a Leet which is holden at a day certain if he hold it another day such Court so holden is void and without Warrant but it is otherwise of a Court Baron Coke ibidem but if the Court of Common Bench holdeth plea without an Originall it is not void for they are Iudges of those pleas and it cannot be said that the proceeding is coram non judice 19 E. 4. 8. Iudgment in the Marshalsey when none of the parties be of the houshold of the King may be avoided by plea without any Writ of Error which proveth that it is void 6 N. 2. So in Trespass before the Marshall if none of the parties be of the houshold of the King it is coram non judice because they passe their power 29 E. 4. 16. If one of the Queens houshold sue another of the same houshold and the Plaintiff is put out of service the plea depending the other may shew this and abate the Writ but otherwise it is if the Defendant be put out of service Lib. de divers des Courts f. 102. b. And if a man be impleaded in the common place for lands within the Cinque-ports the Tenant may shew to the Court that the land is within the Cinque-ports and by this plea the Court shall be outed of iurisdiction but if the Tenant doth plead in bar which is found against him and the Demandant haue judgment to recover the land t● is judgment shall bind the Tenant for ever Ib. 107. b And so it is of land in ancient Demesne if a Writ be brought for them in the common place if the Tenant appear and plead the bar and taketh no exception to the jurisdiction and the plea is found against him so that the Demandant recovereth he shall not reverse this by a Writ of Error because he might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and that should have been allowed ibidem But the Lord may reverse this judgment by a Writ of Deceit and make the land ancient Demesne as it was before If a man devise to one lands devisable the Devisee cannot sue for these lands in the Ecclesiasticall Court but if he make a devise of goods and chattles reall as a terme of years or of a ward he may for such sue in that Court F. N. B. f. 43. b. Jurisdictio est potestas de publico introducta cum necessitate juris dicendi Coke l. 10 f. 73. Iurisdiction is a power introduced by the publick for the necessity of decreeing and doing right The Iurisdiction of the Court of the Marshally was first instituted for the necessity of the rule and governance of the Servants of the Kings house-hold and therefore was it anciently stiled placita corona aulae hospiti● domini regis the Pleas of the Court of the house-hold of the Lord the King by which words it is proved that the one or the other party ought at the least to be of the house-hold of the King for how can these words stand when neither of the parties be of the house-hold of the King and that is the reason that it is not necessary in suites before the Steward and Marshall to alledge that the Plaintiff or Defendant were of the house-hold of of the King for the stile of the Court doth the same imply ibidem So the jurisdiction of the Court of Py-powders was introduced for the necessity of doing right in suits and matters concerning Markets and as that Court hath not jurisdiction but for things concerning the Market so hath it not Iurisdiction for matters concerning the Market unlesse they be done in the same Market M. 42. 42. Eliz in B. R. Hall brought a Writ of Error against Jones of a judgement given in the Court of Py-powders of the Market c. for Jones one of the Registers of the Bishop of Gloucester because Hall had published slanderous words of him c. and the judgement was reversed for two errors because those words did not concerne any matter concerning the Market and therefore the Court had no jurisdiction of it but if one slander any that shall come into the Market in any thing which concerneth his trade an Action well lyeth against hims and 2. it appeareth in the count that the words were spoken before the Market and not in it for the Court hath onely jurisdiction of those things which are done and said in the Market ibidem a. b. Where there is no colour to hold Plea as in a Court Baron of Land not holden of a mannor all is void but where there is colour to hold Plea though it be by plaint where it should be by originall yet the Iudgement rendred is onely voidable by a Writ of Error ibidem Non pertinet ad judicem secularem cognoscere de ijs quae sunt spiritualibus annexa Bract. l. 5. c. 2. It doth not appertaine to the secular Iudge to take cognizance of those things which are annexed to spirituall things And therefore the branches of Trees which are priviledged from Tithes shall be also priviledged but the suite for the Tithe branches of Trees which are not priviledged shall be in the spirituall Court as well as the suite for the Tithe of Trees themselves Res judicata pro veritate accipitur Coke com 103. a. The thing adjudged is taken for truth As in an Action of debt upon an Obligation against an Abbot the Abbot acknowledgeth the Action and dyeth the successor shall not avoid execution though the Obligation was made without the assent of the Covent for he cannot falsify the recovery in an higher Action and the thing judged is taken for truth and this is but a Chattle and so is it of a Statute or Recognizance acknowledged by an Abbot and Prior ibidem And therefore doth the Law so much respect the certainty of Iudgement and the credit and authority of Iudges as it will not permit any error to be assigned that impeacheth them in their trust and office and in wilfull abuse of the same but onely
election may be by voyces or hands or in oth●● sort and it is hard to discerne the certaine number and yet easy to see who had the greatest number 2. M. 128. vide Ployd f. 121. b. Coke Com. f. 303. c. Every Plea must be direct and not by way of argument or rehersall and an argumentative Plea is not good Ployd f. 122. a. b. for there is a ground in the Law that in declarations certainty ought to be alledged by apt words of affirmation otherwise the declaration is not good As in debt upon an obligation I declare that it appears by the obligation that the Defendant is bound to me in twenty pound the declaration is not good because it was alledged in matter of fact quod tenebatur mihi in twenty pound for bond is alledged for recitall onely So 11. H. 6. In an action of debt against a goaler who had let one at large who was in execution under guarde for the sum in demand and declareth that he let him at large by which the Plaintiff exclusus fuit de debito suo and the declaration not good because he did not say that he was not satisfied when he let him at large which is the cause of the action which he hath not alledged but by implication for by implication it is alledged for if he let him go at large by which he is barred of his debt against the prisoner by it is implyed that the debt was not then paid but the count was not good because it was not affirmed by precise words and 38. H. 6. f. 14. The Plaintiff in an action of debt counts that the Defendant retained him in his service for eight years to serve him in all occupations taking for every yeare 20 s. and the Defendant gageth his Law and though the Plaintiff was retained in husbandry and the service of husbandry was implyed in the words all occupations yet the Defendant was received to his Law because it was not fully expressed that he was retained in husbandry but onely by implication which would not suffice So Ployd f. 143. b. The Covenant in the Indenture was if one moyety of the Rent was behinde and unpaid after two moneths since the Feast c. that then c. and in the rejoynder it was alledged that one moyety was behinde per duos menses by the space of two moneths which was no answer because the Indenture is if it be behinde after two moneths post duos menses and he said it was behinde per duos menses which is no affirmation that it was behinde after two moneths but by implication and argumentation and not otherwise and therefore not good Every Recovery had in our Law must be pleaded certainly to every intent Ployd 65. a. as in 22. E. 4. f. 8. in a Scire facias to have execution of two hundred Acres of Land the Tenant pleaded that since the Scire facias sued that I. B. brought a Formedon of one hundred Acres inter alia and recovered and had execution judgement of the breif for parcell and there the opinion was the Plea was not good for every Recovery ought to be pleaded certianly to every intent and those words inter alia are certaine to no intent and it is good reason for every Recovery is entire and there is one originall and one judgment upon it and so the judgement is one and entire and therefore to say that inter alia he did recover is not good but ought to plead certainly If a Bar hath matter of substance and is good to a common intent it shall suffice although it be not good to every speciall intent Ployd Colthersts Case f. 26. a. and as Coke Com. 303. There are three sorts of certainties first to a certaine intent in generall as in counts replications and other pleadings of the Plaintiff 2. A certaine intent to every particular as in Estopples 3. A certainty to a common intent and this is sufficient in a Barr which is to defend the party and to excuse him and of this certainty it is said the Bar shall be good if it be good to a common intent Ployd f. 31. a. but this common intent is not such an intent which may be indifferent but such an intent that hath more vehement presumption in intendement then any other intent hath as fully to administer all the goods which were to the testator the day of his death is a good Bar yet it may be he had other goods which were never in the hands of the Testator which are Assets as debts paid after or goods which come in liew c. but that is not the most common intent but the more common intendement is that he had not any other goods but those which were the Testators So in a Formedon in descender ne donna pass is a good Barr yet it may be he hath recovered in value in which case other Lands were given and yet the Formedon lyes but that shall not be intended but the common intendement is to expresse the plaine guift by livery but if I pleade in Bar a lease for anothers life there the Bar is not good without averring the life of cefis que vie for it was indifferent whether he was in life or no and hath no more stronge intendement the one way then the other therefore his life must be averred by expresse words so in debt upon an obligation if the Defendant pleade in Barr a release bearing date since the obligation made that Bar is not good if he doth not shew by expresse words that it was delivered since the obligation made for prima facie one will presume that it was delivered when it bore date but of the other part it shall be presumed also that the other would not bring an action of debt if the release was delivered since and so one way it hath as vehement presumption as another and for that the intendement is indifferent it is not good unlesse it be shewen by the Plea that it was delivered since the obligation made Ployd ibidem vide plura f. 26. Grounds and Maximes proceeding from the Predicaments From the Predicament of substance SVbstantia prior dignor est accidente Arist 2. de anima the substance is more worthy and before the accident and therefore doth the Law prefer matters of substance before forme and circumstance as 21. H. 7. 24. b. Pleas in Barr and replications though the Plaintiff be afterwards non-suit make an Estopple for they are expresse allegations and substantiall as in debt upon an obligation if the Defendant pleade in Barr an acquittance made at D. or if the Defendant pleade an acquittance and the Plaintiff replyeth that it was made by duress of imprisonment at D. now in another action neither the Defendant shall pleade that the acquittance nor the Plaintiff that the duress was at another place because they were materiall But the matter in the writ and the count maketh no Estopple for they are
but supposalls As in a Pormedon one claimeth by descent from I. S. or a Mortdancester as sonne and Heir of I. S. yet in another Formedon he may claime from I. D. and shall not be estopped No more shall a recitall make an Estopple for they are not materiall as 33. H. 6. 10. b. where A. reciting that he is seised in fee of the Manner of D. granteth a rent out of it to B. this shall not estoppe A. to say that he had nothing in that Mannor Finch nomotec f. 32. Neither shall counts and declarations abate so long as the matter of Action is fully shewed in the Declaration and the writ as by the Statute of 36. E. 3. c. 15. it is provided And therfore in Demurrers it is alledged that the matter contained in the count is insufficient in Law and so of a plea and accordingly in the raigne of Queen Eliz. provision is made that after demurrers the Judges shall give Judgement according to the right of the cause and matter in Law without regarding any imperfection defect or want of forme in any Writ Retorne Plaint Declaration or other pleadings or course of proceedings whatsoever which Sir Edward Coke stiles an excellent and profitable Law Coke Com. 304. b. All which are more fully contained in the late Act of 11. Mar. 1649. by which it is enacted that no judgement shall at any time or times be arrested or stayed in any Court of Record for want of any matter of forme or defect whatsoever except only for matter of substance which shall be found or shewed pulickly to the Jude or Judges sitting in the said Courts of Record to be in the declaration Plea replication or other proceedings after apparance And besides in common recoveries no formall errors shall be allowed to reverse them unlesse they be substantiall and materiall as by the statute of 23. Eliz c. 4. it is provided that for the avoiding of the danger of assurance of Land and for the advancement of common recoveryes that not any common recovery shall be avoided for any want of forme in wordes and not in matter of substance so much doth the Law respect matter of substance before matter of form circumstance Coke c. f. 40.2 From the predicaments of action and passion Idem non potest esse agens paciens 14 H. 8. 31. b. nihil agit in seipsum Arist 1. de gener no man can do an act to himselfe No man can sue himself and therfore when a man having right to Land hath the freehold cast upon him by a latter title he shal be said to be in of his ancient title because there is no body against whom he may sue but himselfe and he cannot sue himself Lit. A man cannot present himselfe to a benefice or make himselfe an Officer 13. H. 8. 32. No man can summon himsele 8 H. 6.29 And therefore if a Sheriff suffer a common recovery it is error because he cannot summon himselfe Dier 188. But when two Sheriffs are the one may summon the other with speciall direction in the Writ that the other shall summon him 14 and 15. Eliz. If a Sheriff be Conusee of a Statute he cannot execute a liberate himselfe 9 E. 4. 33. Plaintiffe and Defendant Exception and Actor and Reus are relative opposites and cannot be properly in one and the selfe same action except in some speciall cases as in a writ of detinue where garnishment is required there the Defendant is to become actor against the garnishee 3 H. 6. 18. so in a quare im●edit where the Defendant maketh title to have a Writ to the Bishop the defendant is become actor 20 H. 6. 29. In a Replevin upon an avowry made the avowant is become actor 3 H. 6. 19. a. 23. H. 6. 45. a. 12. E. 4. 10. a. So in a Quod deforceat the demandant or Plaintiff shall defend his estate against such recovery as shall be pleaded against him and become defendant and may vouch ac si tenens esset in priori brevi by the statute of W. 1. A Sheriff who is demandant may execute all processe till it come to the Venire facias otherwise if he be Tenant 20. E. 4. 7. A Sheriff is Plaintiffe for he may take pledges himselfe and execute a Replevin against himselfe 5. H. 7. 2. The Sheriff is in seisin of a Baly-wick of a liberty he shall command himselfe as Bayliff of that liberty to execute that processe 8 E. 3. 21. F. B. N. f. 4. E. There is a Writ of prohibition in the Register directed to the Sheriff to inhibit himselfe that he hold not plea in the county upon a sorreine Plea pleaded or the Mise joyned to be tried by grand assise Actori incumbit onus probandi stabilitur praesumptio donec probetur in contrarium the burden of proving lieth on the Plaintiff and the presumption is confirmed untill it be proved to the contrary Cok. l. 4. f. 70. There is a bargainor and a bargaince if this bargainor contend to avoid the bargaine by reason of the non enrolement within six months he must make manifest proofe thereof or else it will be presumed that it was inroled within the six months omnia praesumantur legitime facta donec probentur in contrarium Coke com f. 233. b. As whereas the feoffee giveth or granteth to the feoffor the deed pol such grant is good and the property of the deed shall appertaine to the Feoffor and when the feoffor hath the deed in his hands and pleadeth it in Court it shall be rather intended that the feoffor commeth unto it by lawfull meanes then by a tortious meane For all things are presumed to be lawfully done untill they may be proved to the contrary A. and B. Tenents in common of a Mannor A. purchaseth a frank tenement mixt with the demesne Lands which were not certainly knowne B. brings a writ de partitione facienda of the Mannor onely and judgement given that partitio fieret and a Writ to the Sheriff accordingly It is held by the Justices that A. must shew the bounds of the franktenement purchased for the Jury shall be discharged if in conscience they make partition de tanto quanto praesumitur dignoscitur per praesumptiones verisimilia of so much as shall be presumed and knowne by presumptions and likelihoods Dier f. 266. Pendente lite nihil innovetur Let nothing be innovated hanging the suit Coke com 344. b. if hanging the quare impedit against the Ordinary for refusing his Clark and before the Church was full the Plaintiff brought a quare impedit against the Bishop and hanging the suit the Bishop admitted and instituted a Clark at the presentation of another if judgement be given for the patron against the Bishop the patron shall have a writ to the Bishop and remove the incumbent that came in pendente lite by usurpation for hanging the sute nothing is to be innovated Qui semel actionem
it shall be apportioned vide ibidem plura If a man be bound to appeare at a day before Justices at which day the obligor casteth him into Prison so as he cannot come the bond is saved otherwise if he were in Prison for Felony or any other misdemeanor for that is his own act and fault 32. H. 6. Bar 60. Or if he cast himselfe into Prison N●y Max. f. 13. An infants appeale shall not stay for his full age for he shall not take advantage of his own wrong 27. H. 8. 11. One in Execution escapeth and the Goaler taketh him againe the party if he will may have him to remaine in Prison in execution for him still for the escape is his own wrong 13. H. 7. 1. So Coke l. 3. in Britons case If one in Prison upon execution escape if he be taken he shall not bring an Audita querela to discharge himselfe of his imprisonment for he shall not take advantage of his own wrong He that is party to a wrong shall not take advantage by the same wrong Perk. 41. b. As if Lessor and Lessee for yeares joyne in the cutting downe of twenty Oakes the Lessor shall not punish him in a Writ of Wast and take advantage of his own wrong The heire which is party to the death of his Father shall not have an appeale of it And if issue in taile disseise the Discontinuee of his Father and then enfeoff his Father and his Father then dyeth seised and the issue in tail enter he shall not be remitted If Lessee for life of one Acre of Land leaseth the same Acre to his Lessor for yeares the remainder to a stranger in fee and maketh livery and seisin to the Lessor accordingly it is no forfeiture Perkins ib. If tenant for terme of life enfeoff the feme of the Lessor of the same Land leased and maketh a Letter of Attorny to the Lessor to make livery and seisin and he doth so accordingly it is no forfeiture Perk. ibidem f. 42. a. If an house fall down by tempest the Lessee for life or yeares hath a speciall interest to take Timber to reedify the same if he will for his habitation but if the Lessee pull down the house the lessor may take the Timber as parcell of his inheritance and besides have an action of Wast and recover treble damages Coke l. 4 f. 63. a. in Harlackendems case A deviseth lands to B. untill eight hundred pounds be levied for the marriage of his daughters his Son and Heire entreth and concealeth the will receiveth the profits before the will is discovered then the devisee entreth receiveth the profits until they amount to six hundred and forty pounds the heir is to supply the rent for the heire shall not take advantage of his own wrong Coke l. 4. Dormit Lex aliquando jus moritur nunquam Coke com 279. b. For as Littleton there hath it it is commonly said that a right cannot dye For of such an high estimation is right in the eye of the Law as that the Law preserveth it from death and destruction trodden it may be but not trodden out for where it hath been said that a release of right doth in some cases enure by way of extinguishment it is so to be understood as here Littleton saith in respect of him that maketh the release or else in respect by construction of Law it enureth not alone to him to whom it is made but to others also who be strangers to the release which as hath been sayd is a quality of an inheritance extinguished As if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant maketh a Lease for life the remainder in fee If the Lord release to the Tenant for life the rent is wholly extinguished and he in the remainder shall take benefit thereof and even so when the heire of a disseisor is disseised and the disseisor maketh a release for life the remainder in fee if the first disseisee release to the Tenant for life this shall enure by way of extinguishment because it shall enure to him in the remainder who is a stranger to the release and yet in truth the right is nor extinguished but followeth the possession to wit the tenant for life hath it during his time and he in the remainder to him and his heirs and the right of the Inheritance is in him in the remainder for a right to Land cannot dye or be extinct in deed and therefore if after the death of tenant for life the heire of the disseisor bring a Writ of right against him in the remainder and he joyne the Mise upon the meere right it shall be found for him because in Judgement of Law he hath by the said release the right of the Disseisee for it is commonly and truly said that right never dyeth but is transferred and conveyed by Feoffments Grants Confirmations Prescriptions or Fines c. releases from one man to another so as the Species of it continually remaineth Res inter alios acta alteri nocere non debet factum unius alteri nocere non debet Coke com f. 152. b Things acted among others ought not to hurt either and one mans deed ought not to hurt another and Coke l 9 f. 59. It is the rule of Law and reason prohibetur ne quis faciat in suo quod nocere possit in alieno sic utre tuo ut alienum non laedas it is forbidden least any one should doe that in his own that may hurt another and so use your own that you injure not another If a man hath a Water-course running in a channell of a River up to his house for his necessary ules and a Glover levy a Lime pit for Calve-skins and Sheep-skins so neer his Water-course that the corruption of the Lime pit hath corrupted it by which his tenants goe out of his house for it an action of the case lyeth as is adjudged in 13. H. 6. 26. b. So he who hath severall Piscaries in his own Water shall have an action of the case against him who erecteth a Dye-house by which he maketh slime filth and other dirty things to run out of the said house into the said Piscaries by which he hath totally lost the profit of the said Piscaries vide in the Book of Entries Nusance f 406. b. vide the same in Aldreds case for erecting of a Swine-house plura alia ibidem And so also in Penruddocks case Coke l. 5. and in Batius case l. 11. 54. Where you shall find diverse notable cases to the same purpose Lessee for yeares shall so take his hedge-boote that he doth not destroy common of Estovers which another man hath there 46. E. 3. 17. He which hath common in Land not inclosed shall keep his Cattle out of a stranges Land 20 E. 4. 11. If Beasts be driven by the high way he ought at his perill to keep them out of the Lands adjacent to the high way
specie virtatis umbra Vice fairely enbellished with virtues shape And shadow doth often men delude H. 7. f. 2. As Richard the third did many whose virtues as Sir Francis Bacon histerizeth it were feined and affected things to seek his ambition and not true qualities engendred in his judgement and nature But though as Matchevill saith such vertuous shews and shadowes are sufficient to please and delude the people yet the Law Divine and the Law Humane which dimaneth from the Divine is able and doth distinguish between good and evill and as the great Legist of Rome imperat honesta prohibet contraria commandeth that which is good and honest and inhibiteth that which is evill and impious and so doe the Justices and Judges of the Law for as Bodin saith Eodin M. hist f. 50. Qui in litibus versantur Judiciorum communione omnia mala norunt nec mala duntaxat siditiam bona sinc quibus illa constare percipi nullo modo possunt bonorum autem malornm finibus omnis humana prudentia continetur Those who are versed in suits of Law by the participation of Judgements know all evill things and not onely evill but also good things without which they can no way consist or be perceived but in the limits and bounds of good and evill all humane prudence doth consist and therefore by the Law as the same Legist saith are proposed and appointed praemia virtutibus supplicia vitiis rewards to virtues and punishments to vices and is so severe in the censure of vice and evill that it will not permit any one to doe evill that good may come thereof As the Law will not permit a Creditor who is not Executor to take and retaine the goods of the Testator to pay and satisfy himselfe though the payment of his debt be a good and honest thing for by that meanes if the goods of the Testator be not sufficient to satisfy all the Creditors the rest shall be barred and if the Law should give him that power it should be the cause and occasion of wrong and the Law of God saith you shall not do evill that good may come thereof Coke l. 5. f. 30 b. And therefore doth our Law terme such an one an Executor of his own wrong and so in 17. E. 3. 59. The Friers Carmelites who had then no habitation obtained of one I. M. who was seised of ten Acres of Land of the Bishop of Winchester to have those acres of Land for their habitation and because the said I. M. could not grant to them those ten acres by reason of the Statute of Mortmaine the said I. M. and the Carmelites by covin between them to make an evasion out of the Statute of Mortmaine granted the said ten Acres to the King his Heirs and Successoers by which the Signiory of the Bishop should be extinct to the intent that the King shal grant it over to the Friers Carmlites which was done accordingly and for that it was by covin contrived before to take the Bishop from his Signiory which was an evill act it was adjudged that the Charter shall be repealed and the Friers Carmelites should be constrained to render their Charter to be cancelled for though the Friers Carmelites were of the profession of religion and had no habitation before so as it seemed a work of piety and charity to provide an habitation for them yet you shall not doe evill that good may come thereof Coke l. 11. f. 74. a. Contra jus na urale est malum pro bono reddere Ployd f. 405. b. It is against the Law of nature to render evill for good As it was a Law in a City that strangers who did goe or clime up to the Walls of the City should be punished with death but it happened that strangers innocently passing by the City heard a noise that the Enemy would suddenly assault and sack the City whereupon the strangers more reddily then the Citizens got upon the Walls and defending the City now the debate whether they should dye as the Law commanded and it was answered not because it is against the Law of nature to render evill for good vide ibidem plura Beneficium nul●i obtrudi●ur Pap. f. 212. The Law doth not obtrude or doe good turnes to one whether he will or no and therefore an alien borne shal not have medietatem linguae unlesse he request it So Damages ex incremento are allwayes to be assessed ex petitio ne quaerentis and so are costs ex incremento and upon a Writ of Error because in the beginning of the judgement it was said ideo ad petitionem quaerentis consideratum est and not ideo consideratum est ad petitionem quaerentis and the words were displaced the Judgement was reversed for the words misplaced will not supply this defect for if the usuall forme should not be observed all would fall into a confusion and in as much as the words are misplaced it is as if they had not been put in at all and therefore void like unto the case put in Walsinghams case in Ploydon where an averrment misplaced is as if it were none vide ibidem plura in Goods case Malum quo communius eo pejus an evill thing the more common it is the worser it is Coke l. 4. 109. b. For as the more common a good thing is the better it is so the more common an evill thing is the worser it is for contrariorum contra●ia est ratio for as the true service of God which is in publick Churches is better then that which is in private Churches for the generall good that by it may accrew so all superstitious uses which are in publick Churches are worse then those which are in secret Chambers for the generall prejudice which may accrew by them v●de ibidem plura Theft in the beginning in most Nations was not punished with death but with satisfaction or some lessor punishment the Pretors of Rome did punish a theef paena quad●upli with a foure fold satisfaction and the Jewes with seven fold or if his goods would not amount to so much with all the goods in his house Pro 6. 31. The Misians did punish petit Larceners with whips but if a thing of good value be taken away they must render the nine fold or else be put to death Fulb. Pard f. 80. But when the malice of men did increase an iniquity did abound that as the Poet in facinus jurasse putes and that many turned the crime of stealing into a trade of living and did not gaine their lively-hood with their hands by working but with their fists by fighting and stealing as the Comedian facitely ventri pugnae dant ventri suo the detriment to the republick and community of the offence made it capitall so as though the offence and the punishment being compared that Law may seeme unjust yet as Metsner faith Cum nullam aliud supersurit remedium
in ignorance or mistaking either of the Law or of the Case and matter of fact according to the rule de fide officio judicis non recipitur quaestio Bac. Max. f. 62. sed de scientia sive error sit juris sive facti there is no question to be made of the office and faith of a Iudge but of his knowledge whether it be error in Law or fact as if I will assigne for error that whereas the verdict passed for me the Court received it contrary and so gave Iudgement against me this shall not be received F. N. B. f. 21. So if I will alledge that whereas I. S. offered to pleade a sufficient bar the Court refused it and drave me from it this error shall not be allowed 3. H. 6. 3. If an appeale of maihme be brought and the Court by the assistance of the Chyrurgions adjudge it to be a maihme the party cannot bring a Writ of Error 1. Mar. 5. If a woman bring a Writ of Dower and the tenant pleadeth her husband was alive this shall be tryed by proofes and not by Iury and upon Iudgement given on either side no Error lyeth 8. H. 6. 23. If nul til Record be pleaded which is to be tryed by inspection of the Record upon Iudgement no Error lyeth 5 E. 4. 3. So if upon Iudgement given upon confession for default and the Court doe assesse damages the Defendant shall never bring a Writ though the damages be outragious F. N. B. 23. And the reasons of these cales are that the Law will not have the Iudges called in quostion in the point of their office when they undertake to discusse the issue and to examine againe what the Court had tryed were to attaint the Court yet there may be question of the Error in Law or the Error in Fact and Errors in Law and Errors in Fact or ever of such matters as were not crossed by the Record as to alledge the death of the tenant at the time of the Iudgement given and nothing appeareth on Record to the contrary so when an infant levieth a fine and it appeareth not upon Record that he is an infant then it is error in fact and shall be tryed by inspection during nonage F. N. B. 21. And you shall never alledge an error in fact contrary to the Record as if a man will assigne for error that whereas the Iudges gave judgement for him the Clerks entred it in the Roll against him this error shall not be allowed and yet it doth not touch the Iudges but the Clerks but the reason is if it be an error it is an error in fact vide Ba. Max. f. 65. Novum judicium non dat jus novum sed declarat antiqum quia judicium est quasi jurisdictum per judicium jus est noviter revelatum quod diu fuit velatum Coke l. 10. f. 42. a. A new judgement doth not give or make a new Law for judgement is the voice of the Law and by judgement the Law is newly revealed that hath long been covered as that though it seemed to be a new opinion that tenant in taile cannot be restrained from suffering a common recovery yet it appeareth by the ancient Books and Litt. also that it is not of late invention and it is true the Law sometime sleepeth but judgement it awaketh and certainely these perpetuities were born under an unfortunate constellation for in so greate a number of suits concerning them in all the Courts of Westminster they never had any one Iudgement given for them but many judgements given against them by which those fettered inheritances of the Frank-tenements of the Subjects be set at liberty according to their originall freedome vide ibidem plura Mandatum ita regulatur in superioribus sicut in privatis a voluntate mandantis Reg. I. C. a commandement is regulated from the will of the Commander as well in higher as in private things so as in every command the will of the Commander is to be considered and observed and therefore Coke com 258. a. Regularly it is true that where a man doth lesse then the commandement and authority committed to him there the commandement and authority being not pursued the act is void The King licenseth an Abbot and Covent to alien and the Abbot sole alieneth it is void 11. H. 7. 8. And the rule is given by Frowick when the King maketh any grant or licence it ought to be executed accordingly and strictly as if the King granteth to me a licence to make a Feoffment by Deed I cannot make a Feoffment without Deed nor e contra so that the licence must ever be pursued or otherwise the act done is not warranted by the licence 18. Ass Pl. ult The licence was to levy a fine of the Mannor of Dale to finde two Chaplaines and he would have levied the fine leaving out the Chaplaines and could not be suffered 3. E. 3. 5. Davis in his case of tenures f. 19. The Statute of Merton c. 3. ordaineth that in a re-disseisin the Sheriff assumptis secum custodibus placitorum coronae doe go to that tenement of which the complaint is made if the Sheriff take but one Coroner it is not good for the Act appointeth a number two at the least which number ought to be satisfied or else the authority given by them is not pursued 23 Ass 7 Ployd f. 393. So as it is manifest a nude authority must be pursued strictly both for matter or manner or the act down by colour of the authority i● void Dyer ibidem f. 20. Coke com f 52. a. b. If a man be disseised of black acres and white acres and a VVarrant of Attorney is made to enter into both and to make livery here if the Attorney enter into black acre onely and maketh a livery and seisin secundum formam chartae there the livery of seisin is void for the estate of the disseisor cannot be devested in white acre without an entry In a praecipe quod reddat there must be two Summoners there for Summons by one summoner is not good because he doth not pursue the authority of the Writ and if there be but one and the tenant make default and loose by default he shall have a Writ of deceite Ployd 393. 50. E. 3. 16. When a man assigneth Auditors to Accomptants and they be found in arrearages by the Statute of W. 2. c. 12. they may be arrested and by the warrant of the Auditors sent to Goale there if there be but one Auditor assigned he cannot commit the Accomptant to the Goale for the Statute limiteth such power to two at the least vide ibidem plura in the Earle of Leicesters case quod vide A Letter of Attorney to foure or three joyntly to make seisin two of them cannot make livery ibidem f. 181. b. But there is a diversity between an authority coupled with an interest and a bare authority as for example a custome
re-entry is good if the other party confesse the condition If twelve be sworn and one depart another of the pannell by consent may be sworn and with the eleven give verdict The Court in a Quare impedit by consent may give longer day then is limited by the Statute of Marlebridge The Statute of 2. E. 3. 20. E. 3. provide that neither for the great Seale or the petty Seale Justice shall be delayed yet when the matter concerneth the King onely if he command it it may be stayed F. N. B. 21. b. Tenure at this day may be created by consent of all notwithstanding the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum 27. H. 8. By speciall consent of parties re-entry may be made for default of payment of the rent without demande of it Dyer 78. vide by all which cases it appeareth that consent of parties altereth the forme and course of Law ibidem Coke l. 5. f. 40. Electio semel facta placitum testatum non patitur regressum 20. H. 6. 24. Coke com f. 146. a. An election once made and testified by pleading suffereth no returne As if a Rent-charge be granted to A. and B. and their heires and A distraineth the Beasts of the Grantor and he sueth a Replevin A. avoweth for himselfe and maketh conusance for B A. dyeth B. surviveth B. shall not have a Writ of Annuity for in that case the election and the avowry for the rent of A. barreth B. of any election to make it an Annuity ibidem Coke l. 4 f. 5. b. in Vernoms case If the Baron discontinue the Land of his wife and dyeth and the wife bringeth a Writ of dower against the discontinuee and recover the third part shee is by it estopped to bring a cui invita for by the Writ of Dower shee claimeth Title of Dow●r onely and therefore shall be estopped to claime any other right by a cui invita 10. E. 3. double Plea 8. 10. E. 3. Scire facias 13. F. N. B. 194 17 Ass Pl. 3. For when shee bringeth her Writ of Dower and hath judgement to have the third part of all by it shee affirmeth that shee hath but title of Dower and by consequence no estate and therefore shee shall be estopped to claime any part of it of which shee hath demanded by her Writ to be endowed and an acceptance of rent by her Deed indented concludeth the feme of her right 11. H 7. 10 vide ibidem plura in Christians case But here a diversity is to be observed that a man may have several remedies for a thing that is meerly personal or meerly reall As if a man may have an action of account or an action of debt at his pleasure he bringeth an action of account appeareth to it and after is non-suite yet he may have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person the like case is of an assize of a writ of entry in the nature of assize and the like Coke com f. 146 a. Multa conceduntur per obliquum quae non conc●duntur de directo Coke l. 6. f. 47. a. Many things are granted by the by which are not directly granted As when a Bar is pleaded in a reall or personall Action as a release c. in a forrain County there the Jurors which try it shall assesse damages according to the profits of the Land in another County so by that meanes enquire of things locall in another County for many things are granted by the by c. And when they try the matter of the Bar upon good and pregnant evidence they ought to finde all dependants upon it as damages c. vide ibidem plura Dispositio ●e interesse facturo lest inutilis Bacon f. 56. The grant of a future interest is vaine and void for the Law doth not allow of grants unlesse there be a foundation of an interest for the Law will not accept of Grants of Titles or of things in Action which are imperfect interests much lesse will it allow a man to grant or incumber that which is no interest at all but meerly future As a Writ of Annuity was granted by a prebend after collations admissions and institutions but before installation or induction which though it was confirmed by the ordinary who was the Patron also was adjudged void because he had but jus ad rem and a future interest but not in re for he shall not be said a prebendary to all intents nor at the Common Law without the reall possession which is by induction Dyer 221. Pl. 18. A. maketh a Lease of Land for years to B without reservation of the Woods and Trees the Lessor cannot sell all the Woods and Trees for the Woods and Trees are parcell of the Lease and passe to the Lessee as well as the Land if they be not excepted upon the Lease for all the fruites and profits coming from the fruitfull Trees belong to the Lessee and the shadow and also the branches and loppings for fire or enclosure of fences Dyer 90. Pl. 8. If I grant unto you that if you enter into an obligation to me of one hundred pounds and after procure me such a Lease that then the same obligation shall be void and you enter into such an obligation unto me and afterwards doe procure such a lease yet the obligation is simple because the defeasance was made of that which was not 20 Eliz. 19. H. 6.62 So if I grant unto you a rent-charge out of white-acre and that it shall be lawfull for you to distraine in all my other Lands whereof I am now seised and which I shall hereafter purchase although this be but a liberty of distresse and no rent save onely out of white-acre yet as to the Lands after to be purchased the clause is void 27 E. 3. If I covenant with my Son in consideration of naturall Love to stand seised to his use of the Lands I shall hereafter purchase the use is void 25. 27. Eliz. So if I devise the Mannor of D. by speciall name of which at that time I am not seised and after I purchase it except I make some new publication of my will my devise is void Ployd Rigdens case vide Bacon ibidem plura f. 57.58 Non refert an quis assensum praebat verbis an rebus factis Coke l. 10 f. 52. b. It mattereth not whether a man giveth his assent by words or by things themselves and Deeds Whereas the assent of an Executor is necessary before any legancy can be had for that debts are first to be paid and that the Executor must look to it at-his perill Offi. of Exec. 234. the assent consent and agreement of John Morris the Executor to the Legacy of William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did appeare in that at the speciall instance and request of the said Morris the said William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did release the said Legacy to the said Morris
overcometh the common Law 432 Nemo nascitur artifex No man is born an Artist 418 Neminem oportet esse sapientiorem legibus No man ought to be wiser then the Lawes 418 Nil agit exemplum litem quod lite resolvat An example is of no validity to decide a controversie 133 Nihil dat quod non habet He giveth nothing that hath nothing 24 Nimia subtilitas in jure reprobatur Too much subtlety is rejected in the Law 458 Nihil est magis justum quam quod necessarium There is nothing more just then that is necessary 432 Nihil agit in seipsum nothing acts upon its self 43 Nihil in lege intolerabilius est quam eandem rem diverso Jure teneri There is nothing more intollerable in Law then the latter Judgment to contradict the former 127 Nihil magis consentaneum est ut iisdem modis res dissolvatur quibus constituitur nihil tam conveniens est naturali aequitati unum quodque dissolvi eo ligamine quo ligatum est There is nothing more meet and convenient to naturall equity then that every thing shall be dissolved by the same means or bonds it was first bound or constituted 80 Nihil est tam conveniens naturali aequitati quam voluntatem domini volentis suam rem in alium conferre ratum habere Nothing is more convenient to naturall equity then to confirm the will of the Lord willing to transfer his estate to another Non debet cui plus licet quod minus est non licere It ought not that to whom it is lawfull to do more that it shall not be lawfull to do the lesse 120 Non debet mulieribus assignari castra in dotem quae fueraut virorum suorum quae de bello existunt Castles ought not to be assigned to women for their Dower which did appertain to their Husbands and were fortresses of war 150 Noxa caput sequitur The offence followeth the head Non est regula quin fallit There is no rule but faileth 315 Non licet quod dispendio licet That is not lawfull which is lawfull to my losse 466 Non valet impedimentum quod de jure non sertitur effectum The impediment availeth not which taketh not effect from the Law 247 Nomen non sufficit si res non sit de jure aut de facto The name of the thing is not sufficient unlesse the matter be of right or fact 259 Non valet pactum de re mea non alienanda A Contract that I shall not alien what is my own is of no force 29 Non refert quid ex aequipollentibus fiat It mattereth not what is done by equipollency 138 Notationes sunt quasi rerum verae notae Notations are are as it were true signes of things Nobiliores benigniores praesumptiones in dubiis sunt praeferendae The most noble and favourable presumptions in doubts are to be preferred 26 Non impedit clausula derogatoria sive clausula de non obstante quo minus ab eadem potestate res dissolvantur a quibus constituuntur Acts which are in their nature revocable cannot with a non obstante be fixed and perpetuated 63 Non pertinet ad Judicem secularem cognoscere de iis quae sunt spiritualibus annexa It doth nor appertain to a secular Judge to take cognizance of those things which are annexed to spirituall things 378 Novum judicium non dat jus novum sed declarat antiquum A new Judgment doth not make a new Law but declareth the old Law 380 Non refert an quis assensum praebeat verbis an rebus factis It mattereth not whether a man giveth his assent by words or by things themselves and Deeds 471 Nullum simile currit quatuor pedibus Nothing that is like runneth upon foure feet and is altogether the same 116 Nullum exemplum est idem omnibus There is no example the same to all 126 Nullus commodum capere potest de injuria propria No man can take advantage of his own wrong 270 Nullus liber homo amercietur nisi secundum quantitatem delicti No man ought to be amerced but according to the quantity of his offence 301 Nunquam prospere succedunt res humanae ubi negliguntur divinae Humane affaires never succeed prosperously where Divine Rights are neglected 7 Nullum tempus occurrit regi No prescription of time prevaileth against the King 350 Nullum iniquum in jure est praesumendum No unjust thing is to be presumed by Law 248 O. OFficia magistratus non debent esse vaenalia Magistraticall Offices ought not to be exposed to sale 367 Officia Judicialia non conceduntur antequam vacent Judiciall Offices ought not to be granted before they are void 370 Omne mandatum est temporaneum All commands are temporary 385 Omnia quae movent ad mortem sunt deodanda All things which move to death or whereby death ensueth are Deodands Omnia tempus habent habent sua tempora tempus All things are subject to time and time its self hath also its time 105 Omne majus continet in se minus Every greater containeth in it the lesse 118 Omne majus dignum trahit ad se minus dignum Every greater worthy draweth unto it the lesse worthy 121 Omnis privatio praesupponit habitum Every privation presupposeth an habit 125 Omnis propositio est aut vera aut falsa Every proposition is either true or false 136 Omne actum ab agentis intentione est judicandum Every act is to be adjudged by the intention of the agent 197 Omnis ratificatio retro trahitur mandato aequiparatur Every ratification or approving of any thing looketh back and is all one as if a man had given commandment at the first 42 Oportet quod certae personae certae terrae certi status compredentur in declaratione usuum It behooveth that certain persons certain lands and certain estates be comprehended in the Declaration of uses 37 Oportet ut res certa ducatur in judicium It behoveth that a thing certain shall be brought into judgment 38 Optimi ducis est scire vincere cedere prudentur tempore It is the part of an excellent Captain to know and to overcome and wisely to yeild unto the time 415 Optima statuti interpretatio omnibus particulis ejusdem inspectis est ipsum statutum injust m est nisi tota lege inspecta una aliqua parte proposita Judicare vel respondere The best Expositers of Acts of Parliament are Acts of Parliament themselves by construction and conference of all the parts together 424 Oportet patrem familias vendacem esse non emacem A Father or a Family ought to be a Buyer nor a seller 400 Optimum est militem deligare non eme●e It is best to choose a Souldier and not to buy him 409 Origo rei inspici d●bet The beginning of a thing is to be looked into 89 P. PArte quacunque