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A33621 An abridgement of the Lord Coke's commentary on Littleton collected by an unknown author; yet by a late edition pretended to be Sir Humphrey Davenport, Kt. And in this second impression purged from very many gross errors committed in the said former edition. With a table of the most remarkable things therein.; Institutes of the laws of England. Abridgments. Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; Littleton, Thomas, Sir, d. 1481. aut; Davenport, Humphrey, Sir, 1566-1645, attributed name. 1651 (1651) Wing C4906; ESTC R217258 305,227 456

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he hath a Deed or if it be by parol then an action upon his Case or an action of deceipt c. The proces whereby the vouchee is called is a Summon ad Warr. whereupon if the Sheriff return that the vouchee is summoned and he maketh default Mag. Cape ad valentiam is awarded when if he make default again then judgement is given against the Tenant and he over to have in value against the vouchee But if the Sheriff return that he hath nothing then after Writs of Alias and pluries a Writ of sequatur sub suo periculo shall be awarded c. and the demandant shall not have judgement to recover in value because the vouchee was never warned Vide Libr. Fo. 101. b. When the tenant being impleaded within a particular jurisdiction as in London c. Voucheth one to warr and prayes that he may be summoned in some other County out of the jurisdiction of that Court this is called a forrain voucher By the Civil Law every man is bound to warrant the thing that he selleth or conveyeth albeit there be no expresse warrant but the Common Law bindeth him not unlesse there be a warranty either in Deed or in Law for Caveat emptor c. There be three kindes of disclaimer i. e. in the Tenancy in the bloud and in the Seigniory F.N.B. 197. 151. b. In the case of Homage Auncestrel which is a special warranty in Law by the authority of Littleton the Lands generally that the Lord hath at the time of the voucher shall be liable to execution in value whether he hath them by discent or purchase But in the case of an expresse warranty the heir shall be charged but only for such Lands as he hath discent from the Auncestrel which created the warranty F.N.B. 152. And note the Lands of the vouchee shall be liable to the warranty that the vouchee hath at the time of the voucher for that the voucher is in lieu of an action and in a Warr. Cartae the Land which the defendant hath at the time of the Writ brought shall be liable to the warranty Fo. 102. a. Upon a judgement in debt the Plaintiff shall not have execution but only of that Land which the Defendant had at the time of the judgement for that the action was brought in respect of the person and not in respect of the Land Vide Lib. c. If a man give Lands in Fee with warranty and binde certain Lands specially to warranty the person of the Feoffor is hereby bound and not the land unlesse he hath it at the time of the voucher 32. E. 1. voucher 292. Sect. 146. En Chesc ' case lou le Seignior poit disclaymer c. Et de ceo poit disclaimer en Court de Record son Seigniory ē extinct le rerant tiendra del Seignior procheine Paramount c. Meliorem conditionem Ecclesiae suae facere potem praelatus deteriorem nequaquam and again Ecclesiae suae condici melior facere possunt sine consensu deteriorem non possunt sine consensu Expedit reipublicae ut sit finis litium vide fol. 103. a. If an action of Debt upon an Obligation against an Abbot the Abbot acknowledgeth the action and dieth the successor shall not avoid Execution though the Obligation was made without the assent of the Covent for he cannot falsifie the Recovery in an higher action Et res judicata pro veritate accipitur and this is but a Chattel 7 Reg. 2. tit Abbot 7. Sect. 147 and 148. If the tenant make a feoffment in fee upon condition and dieth his heir performeth the condition and re-entreth the Homage ancestrel is destroyed in respect of the interruption of the continuance of the privity and estate 1. Mich. 14 15 El. Tenant que fist homage al pere ne ferre homage al fits fo 103. b. vide le except a ce rule Sect. 149 150 c. Fealty est incident a chesc ' atturnment del tenant grant le seigniory est grant None shall do homage but the tenant of the Land to the Lords of whom it is holden fol. 104. a. 8 Ed. 4. 27. b. * The recovery of the seigniory differeth from the alienation of the Lord which is his own act or the descent of the seigniory to the heir which is an act in law for that by the Recovery the state of him that received the homage is defeated for it shall not lie in the mouth of the tenant to falsifie the recovery which was against his Lord c. for that the tenant had nothing therein c. If a man had made a Lease for years to begin at Michaelmas reserved a rent and he had suffered a Common Recovery before Michaelmas the Recoverer should distrain for rent which the lessor before the recovery could not 28 H. 8. Dyer 41. fol. 104. b. The tenant ought to seek the Lord to do him homage c. for this service is personal c. but rent may be paid and received by other and therefore a tender of the rent upon the land is sufficient fo 105. a. CHAP. VIII Grand Sergeanty Sect. 153. GRand Sergeanty est lou home tient ses terres del Roy per les services que il doit faire en son proper person com de port le banner del Roy out sa lance c. Ceo tenure en ten per service de Chivalry mes le livery paiam al Roy pur reliese le value ouster les charges reprises des terres pur an S. 154 158. Magna Sergeanty i. e. Magna Servitium because it is greater and more worthy than Knight service for this is Revera servitium Regale and not Militare onely This Tenure hath seven special properties 1. To be holden of the King onely 2. It must be done when the tenant is able in proper person 3. This service is certain and particular 4. The Relief due c. differeth from Knights service 5. It is to be done within the Realm 6. It is subject to neither Aid pur faire fits Chivaler or file mariage And 7. it payeth no Escuage fo 105. b. 11 H. 4. 34. F.N. B. 83. There were divers Lords Marshals of England before the reign of R. 2. yet King R. 2. created Tho. Moubrey Duke of Norfolk and first Earl Marshal of England per nomen Comitis Marischalli Angliae in Rot. pat 20. R. 2. Thesaurus Regis rospicit Regem Regnum And Census Regis est anima reipub fol. 106. a. Dyer 4 El. 213. Where the Grand Sergeanty is to be done to the Royal person of the King or to execute one of those high and great Offices there his tenant cannot make a Deputy without the Kings license c. But he that holdeth to serve him in his War within the Realm or by Cornage may make a Deputy fol. 107. a. vide libr. c. qu. CHAP. IX Petit Sergeanty Sect. 159. PEtit Serjeanty est lou home tient c. del
a good bar in a Qu. imp because it is a mixt action 22. H. 6. 27. b. A disseisor that hath nothing in the land may plead a release of actions personalls because damages are to be recovered against him 11. Ass 9. 18. E. 3. 2. 23 24. And the Tenant in an Assize shall plead a release of actions personalls to the disseisor for that plea proveth that the Plaintiff hath no cause of action against him 13. H. 4. 2. a. If the disseisee release to the disseisor all actions realls and the disseisor maketh a Feoffment in fee and an Assize is brought against them the Feoffee shall not plead the release to the disseisor for that he is not privy to the Release for a release of actions shall only extend to privies If the disseisee release all actions to the disseisor and dye this doth bar him but for his life So note a diversity between a release of right and a release of actions 19. H. 6. 23. a. Sect. 496. Fol. 286. a. If the disseisee release all actions to the heir of the disseisor which is in by discent he hath no remedy to recover the land but yet the disseisee hath a right for that he hath released his actions and not his right If the heir of the disseisor make a Feoffment in fee to two and the disseisee release to one of the Feoffees all actions the survivor shal not plead this Release Note when a man hath severall remedies for one and the self-same thing be it reall personall or mixt albeit he release one of his remedies he may use the other 19. Ass 3. 30. E. 3. 19. 6. 21. H. 7. 23. Sect. 498. Fol. 286. b. If the Plaintiff in an action of Detinue of Charters which concern the inheritance of his land can declare of one Charter in especiall the Defendant shall not wage his Law 41. E. 3. 2. 8. H. 6. 18. 28 29. 10. H. 6. 20. 21. H. 6. 1. 14. H. 6. 4. 14. H. 4. 23 24 27. An action of Detinue for Charters doth sound in the realty for therein Summons and severance lieth and in Detinue of goods a Capias doth lye but for Charters in speciall a Capias lieth not and yet a release of actions personalls in a Writ of Detinue of Charters is a good barre 20. H. 6. 45. 19. E. 3. Severance 14. Sect. 499. Fol. 287. a. In a Writ of Dower the Tenant pleaded that before the Writ purchased A. was seised of the Land c. untill by the Tenant himself he was disseised and that hanging the Writ A. recovered against him c. Judgement of the Writ and adjudged a good plea in which plea the Tenant confessed a disseisin in himself 15. E. 4. 4. b. Sect. 500. Fol. 287. b. Placitorum criminalium alia majora alia minora alia maxima secundum criminum quantitatem sunt enim crimina majora dicuntur capitalia eò quod ultimum inducunt supplicium c. Minora verò quae fustigationem inducunt vel poenam pilloralem vel tumboralem vel carceris inclusionem c. Bract. lib. 3. 101. b. Criminalium quaedam sententialiter mortem inducunt quaedam verò minime Fleta lib. 1. c. 15. Appellum signifieth Accusatio and the Appellant Accusator is peculiarly in legall signification applied to Appeals of three sorts 1. Of wrong to his Ancestor whose heir male he is and that is only of death whereof our Author here speaketh The 2. is of wrong to the husband and is by the wife only of the death of her husband to be prosecuted The 3. is of wrongs done to the Appellants themselves as Robbery Rape and Mayheme The word Apellum is derived of Appeller to call because Appellans vocat reum in judicium Glanv l. 7. c. 9. aestimatio capitis i.e. so much as one paid for the killing of a man Fleta lib. 1. cap. 42. Hoved. fol. 344. You shall not read of any Insurrection or Rebellion before the Conquest when the view of Frankpledge and other ancient Laws of this Realm were in their right use A release of all actions reall and personall cannot barr an Appeal of Death because that release extendeth to common or civill actions and not to actions criminall 21. H. 6 16. Roberia is a felonious taking away of goods de la Robe that is from the person 22. Ass 39. W. 1. c. 20. Sect. 502. Fol. 288. a. En appeale de Mayhem un release de touts maners actions personalls est bone plea c. for that every action wherein damages only are recovered by the Plaintiff is in Law taken for an action personall 21. H. 6. 16. Sect. 503. Fol. 288. b. Before that time that the Outlary appear of Record the Defendant doth not forfeit his goods nor the Plaintiff can be disabled nor any Writ of Error doth lie in that case 28. Ass 49. 12. E. 3. Vtlage 3. M. 4. 5. Eliz. Dyer 222. S. 197. If a man by process upon the Originall be Outlawed there he shall be restored to nothing in the personalty against the Plaintiff But whereby the Outlawry he forfeited all his goods and chattells to the King he shall be restored to them also thereby he shall be restored to the Law and to be of ability to sue c. but if the Plaintiff in a personall action recover any debt c. or damages and the Defendant be Outlawed after Judgment there in a Writ of Error brought by the Defendant upon the principall Judgment a release of all actions personalls is a good plea. And so it is where a Judgment is given in a reall action a release of all actions realls is a good bar in a Writ of Error thereupon And in this speciall case here put by Littleton wherein the Plaintiff is to recover or to be restored to nothing against the party yet for that the Plaintiff in the former action is privy to the Record a release of a Writ of Error to him is sufficient to bar the Plaintiff in the Writ of Error of the Suit and vexation by the Writ of Error And so note that an action reall or personall doth imply a recovery of something in the realty or personalty or a restitution to the same but a Writ implyeth neither of them 1. H. 4. 6. 13. E. 4. 1 2. 26. H. 8. 3. b. 29. Ass 35. 47. E. 3. 6. 35 H. 6. 19. Sect. 504. fol. 289. a. b. A release of all actions reg is no bar of execution for the execution doth begin when the action doth end And therefore the foundation of the first is an Originall Writ and doth determin by the Judgment and Writs of execution are called Judiciall because they are grounded upon the Judgement 13. H. 4. Rel. 53. 19. H. 6. 3. Where a Capias ad Sat. lieth at the Common Law and where it is given by Statute vide Sir William Herberts case lib. 3. fo 11 12. Maximes in the Law concerning Executions Ea quae
person attainted of misprision of Treason Murther or Felony is dowable since our Author wrote by the Statute of 1 E. 6. cap. 13. 5 E. 6. cap. 11. 5 El. ca. 1. 11. 18 El. cap. 1. 12 H. 4. 3. Vide Sect. 55. So if a Seigniory be granted with warranty and the Tenancy escheat the Seigniory whereunto the warranty was annexed is extinct and consequently the warranty defeated and it shall not extend to the land sic in similibus 6 H. 4. 8. 45 E. 3. vouch 72. Pl. Com. 292. 16 E. 3. Age 46. 28 H. 3. vouch 281. 23 E. 3. garr 77. Vide Sect. 200. If a collaterall Auncestrel release with warranty and enter into Religion now the warranty doth binde but if after hee be deraigned now it is defeated Sect. 748. Fol. 393. Per release de touts manners de garr ou de touts covenants reall ou de touts demandes le garr est extinct Et mults auters cases matters y sont per queux home poit defeate garr c. As by a defeasance as other things executory may Also a warranty may lose his force by taking benefit of the same 43 E. 3. 17. Pl. Com. Brownings case In a Precipe the tenant voucheth and at the sequatur sub suo periculo the tenant and the vouchee make default whereupon the demandant hath judgement against the tenant and afterwards the demandant brings a Scire facias against the tenant to have execution In this case the Tenant may have a War Cartae And if in that case a stranger had brought a praecipe against the Tenant hee might have vouched again for by the judgement given against the Tenant the warranty lost not his force but if the Tenant had judgement to recover in value against the vouchee he should never vouch again by reason of that warranty because he had taken advantage of the warranty and it is to be observed that upon the processe of Summon ad warr if the Sheriffe return the vouchee summoned and he make default the Tenant shall have a Capias ad val but if he return that the vouchee had nothing then after the Sicut alias plures a seq sub suo periculo shall issue and there if the vouchee make default the Tenant shall not have judgement to recover in value for he was never summoned and it appeareth of Record that he hath nothing but in the Cap. ad Val. it appeareth that he had Assets and he had been summoned before But in some speciall cases there shall be two recoveries in value upon one warranty As if a disseisor give lands to the husband and wife and to the heirs of the husband the husband alieneth in fee with warranty and dieth the wife bringeth a Cui in vita the Tenant vouch and recover in value if after the death of the wife the disseisee bring a praecipe against the Alienee he shall vouch and recover in value again So it is where the wife bringing a Writ of Dower against the Alienee he shall recover in value and after her death hee shall recover in value again upon the same warranty 45 E. 3. vouch 72. In the same manner it is if a man be seised of a rent by a defeasible title and release to the Tenant of the Land all his right in the Land and warrant the Land to him and his heirs if he be impleaded for the rent he shall vouch and recover in value for the rent and if after he be impleaded for the Land he shall vouch c. again for the Land But in these and the like cases the reason is in respect of the severall Estates recovered but for one and the same estate he shall never recover but once in value and though the Land recovered in value be evicted yet he shall never take benefit of that warranty after and as warranty may be defeated in the whole so they may be defeated as to the party of the benefit that may be taken of the same As he that maketh a warranty may make a defeasance not to take any benefit by way of voucher In the like manner that he shall take no advantage by way of Warrantia Cartae or by way of Rebutter 7 H. 6. 43. 13 Ass 8. 13 E. 3. gar 24 25. 3. 7. 22 H. 6. 51. 8 H. 7. 6. Sect. 749. If Tenant in Tail alien with warranty and leave Assets to discend if the issue in Tail doth alien the Assets and die the issue of that issue shall recover the Land because the lineall warranty descends onely to him without Assets for neither the pleading of the warranty without Assets nor Assets without warranty is any barre in the Formedon in the descender But if the issue to whom the warranty and Assets descended had brought a Formedon and by judgement had been barred by reason of the warranty and Assets In that case albeit he alieneth the Assets yet the estate Tail is barred for ever for a barre in a Formedon in the descender which is a Writ of the highest nature that an issue in Tail can have is a good barre in any other Formedon in the descender brought afterwards upon the same gift Temps E. 1. gar 89. 34 E. 1. ib. 88. 11 E. 2. ib. 3. 4 E. 3. 24. 5 E. 3. 14. 40 E. 3. 9. 14 H. 4. 39. 24 H. 8. a. Br. 33. 4. M. Dy. 139. l. 10 37 38. Mary Portingtons case Epilogus Nulla virtus nulla scientia locum suum dignitatem conservare potest sine modestia Ratio est anima legis If by study and industry we make not the reason of the Law our own it is not possible for us to retain it in our memories And we must couple arguments and reasons together Quia Argumenta ignota obscura ad lucem rationis proferia●● reddunt splendida Sir Richard Hankford 11 H. 4. 37. Home ne scavera de quel mettal un campane est sine soit bien bate ne le ley bien conus sans disputation Jeo aye disputir cest matter pur la apprender la ley 41 E. 3. 22. Kirton Vide Sect. 377. Lex plus laudatur quando ratione probatur Lex est sanctio sancta jubens honesta prohibens contraria Vide cest definitio Lib. 1. fo 131. Chudleighs Case Al unique Dieu gloire FINIS An Alphabetical Table A ALien may purchase what and how p. 2 Attainder how it corrupteth the blood 7 Arguments legal 11 Arguments from Statutes ib. Advocatio what 15 123 Advocatio medietatis ib. Armories how descendable 20 Authority with interest or without the difference 63 Attorney to deliver seisin ib. Accessaries where 67 Ages their several purposes in the Law 95 Agreement and Disagreement the time for the confirming Matrimony the equal Obligation 96 Agriculture its commendation 98 Actus Legis 100 Aetas Legitima 101 Alienatio restricta 106 Acquittal quotuplex 107 Appendant and Appurtenant their differences 125 126 Alienee plead where
solemnized for that before marriage the woman is not intituled to have dower certainty is the mother of quiet and repose Fol. 34. b. The Law hath provided quod vidua post mortem mariti sui non det aliquid pro dote sua maneat in Capitali messuagio mariti sui per 40. dies post obitum mariti sui infra quos dies assignetur ei dos sua nisi prius ei assignata fuerit c. habeat rationabile estoverium suum interim in Communi yet because there was no penalty c. inflicted the Tenant of the land may drive her to sue for her Dower Mag. Chart. ca. 7. If the heir c. put her out within the 40 days c. She may have her Writ de quarentina habenda A jointure made in satisfaction of Dower is now the furest way c. fol. 34. b. Wheresoever the Writ demands Land Rent c. In certain the demandant after judgement may enter or distrein before any seisin delivered to him by the Sheriff upon a Writ of habere facias seisinam But in Dower c. the demandant cannot enter c. until execution sued for the Writ demandeth nothing in certain Assignment of Dower must either must be by the Sheriff by the Kings writ or else by the heir or other Tenant of Land by consent and agreement between them If the husband make several feoffments of several parcels and dieth and one Feoffee assign Dower to the wife of parcel of Land in satisfaction c. The other Feoffees shall take no benefit of this assignment because they are strangers thereunto and cannot plead the same But in that case if the husband dieth seised of other lands in see simple c. And his heir endoweth the wife of certain of those lands in full satisfaction c. This assignment is good and the several Feoffees shall take advantage of it And therefore if the wife bring a writ of dower against any of them they may vouch the heir c. So as there is a privity in this respect between the heir and the feoffees and by this means the same assignment may be pleaded by the heir that made it 33 Ed. 3. tit Judgm 254 c. The assignment must be certain and absolute and by such as have a freehold or against whom a writ of dower doth lie c. fol. 35. a. Vide lib. There needeth neither livery of seisin nor writing to any assignment of dower becaus it is due of common right Assignment must be of some part of the land or of a rent c. issuing out of the same Dier 91. Sect. 40. Tenant for life of a carue of land the reversion to the father in fee the son and heir apparent endoweth his wife c. Ex assensu patris Tenant for life dieth the husband dieth this is no good endowment c. because the father at the time of the assent had but a reversion expectant upon a freehold whereof he could not have endowed his own wife and albeit the Tenant for life died living the husband yet quod initio non valet tractu temporis non convalescet Fo. 35. a. If the heir apparent be within age yet the endowment ex assensu patris is good but otherwise it is of dower ad ostiū ecclesiae 2 H. 3. Dower 199. Fo. 35. b. Ten things are necessarily incident to a deed viz. First Writing 2. In Parchment or Paper 3. A person able to contract 4. By a sufficient name 5. A person able to be contracted with 6. By a sufficient name 7. A thing to be contracted for 8. Apt words required by Law 9. Sealing 10. Delivery Tradition of a deed only to the party to whom it is made is sufficient and then when words are contrary to the Act which is the delivery the words are of none effect non quod dictum est sed quod factum est inspicitur But it may be delivered to a stranger as an escrow c. Because the bare Act of delivery to him without words worketh nothing fol. 36. a. H. 12. R. in C.B. Dier 95. Cartarum alia regia alia privatorum regiarum alia privata alia communis alia universitatis Privatorum alia de puro Feoffamento simplici alia de Feoff conditionali sive conventionali alia de recognitione pura vel conditionali alia de quiete clamantia alia de confirmatione c. Verba intentioni non è contra debent inservire Carta non est nisi vestimentum donationis sive orationis Fleta l. 6. ca. 28. Nemo tenetur armare ad versarium suum contra se Scriptum est instrumentum ad instruendum quod mens vult Carta est legatus mentis Benignae sunt faciendae interpretationes cartarum propter simplicitatem laicorum ut res magis valeat quam pereat Bract. l. 2. fo 94 c. Nihil tam convenias est naturali aequitati quam voluntatem domini volentis rem suam in alium transferre ratam habere Plow Com. fo 161. b. Re verbis scripto consensu traditione Junctura vestes sumere pacta solent Pl. Co. 161. Verba cartarum fortius accipiuntur contra proferentem Generale dictum generaliter est intelligendum Verba debent intelligi secundum subictam materiam Carta de non ente non valet Sect. 41. A jointure was no bar of Dower at the Common Law For a right or title that one hath to a Freehold cannot be barred by acceptance of collateral satisfaction But now by the statute of 27 H. 8. If a jointure be made to the wife according to the purvieu of that statute it is a bar of her Dower Six things are required to a perfect Jointure 1. It is to take effect for her life in possession or profit presently after the decease of her husband 2. That it be for term of her own life or greater estate 3. It must be made to her self and to no other for her 4. It must be made in satisfaction of her whole dower and not of part c. 5. It must bee either expressed or averred to be in satisfaction c. 6. It may be made either before or after marriage If the jointure be made before marriage the wife cannot wave it and claim her dower at the Common Law but if it be made after marriage she may wave the same c. Fo. 36. b. Vide c. Dier 358. The wife shall not be barred of her jointure albeit her husband commit Treason or Felony as she shall be of her Dower ad ostium Eccle. c. By the Common Law But now at this day by the statute of the 1 Ed. 6. c. 2. and 5 Ed. 6. c. 11. The wife of a man attainted of Felony shall not lose her dower A jointure made to the wife under or above the age of nine years is good and so if Dower ad ostium ecclesiae c. being made by assent c.
Negative pleas that be issues of themselves wherunto the Demandant or Plaintiff cannot reply no more than to a generall Issue which is Et praedictus A similiter As if the tenant do vouch and the Demandant counterp●●ad That the Vouche or any of his Ancestors had any thing c. whereof he might make a feoffment he shall conclude Et hoc petit quod inquir ' per patriā praed ' tenens similiter So in a fine Pleaded by the tenont c. the Demandant may say quod partes finis nihil habuerunt hoc petit c. And so in a Writ of Dower the Tenant plead unques seisie Dower he shall conclude Et de hoc point se c. 22. H. 6. 57. 59. 3. H. 7. 9. 12. E. 4. 13. Filiatio nou potest probari and therefore the issue must be whether the wife was ensenit the day of her husbands death 41. E. 3. 11. b. A protestation availeth not the Party that raketh it if the issue be found against him except in some speciall Case * as if a man enter into warranty and taketh by protestation the value of the Land albeit the plea be found against him yet the protestation shall serve him for the value 10 E. 4. Protest 5. Vid. S. 192. * 30 E. 3. 14. Sect. 194. Si le Seignior Mayhem son villeine il ser de ceo endite a le suit del roy sil soit de ceo attaint il ferr un fine al roy Mes le villein nava c. appeal de Mayhem because that in appeal he shall recover but damages which the Lord after execution might take again and so the judgment inutile illusory and the Law never giveth an action when the end of it can bring no profit or benefit to the pl. 1 H. 4. 6. b. Mahemium i. e. membri mutilatio Endite i. e. an accusation found by an equest of 12. or more upon their oath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to accuse Finis Sumitur tripliciter 1. For a pecuniary punishment for an offence c. against the King 2. For a sum given by the Tenant to the Lord 3. For the highest best assurance of lands If a praecipe be brought against an infant and hanging the Plea he commeth of full age he shall be amerced for the delay after his full age Lib. 5. fo 49 Vaughans Case So if the demandant or plaint be nonfute or judgement given against him he shall be likewise amerced pro falso clamore Vide lib. fo 126. b. c. If a Writ do abate by the act of the demandant or plaintiff or for matter of form the demandant or plaintiff shall be amerced but if it abate by the act of God as by the death of one c. it is otherwise Lib. 8. fo 60. b. Bechers Case Wit wita Bote wera or were old Saxon words signifie amerciament or compensation c. Ransome ne forsque redemption de paine corporel pro fine des deniers Mirror ca. 1 S. 1. and 3. Ransome is ever when the Law inflicteth a corporall punishment by imprisonment and so is also a fine but otherwise it is of an amerciament Alwaies at the common Law when the Defendant should lose life or member the writ said Felonice c. And now albeit the Law be changed for the Plantiff shall recover but damages yet the writ of appeal saith still felonice Vita membra sunt in manu seu protestate regis Bract. Lib. 1. fo 6. This offence of Mayhem is under all felonies deserving death and above all other inferior offences Inter crimina majora minimum inter minora maximum Inutilis labor fine fructu non est effectus legis Non licet quod dispendio licet Sapiens incipit à fine Lex non praecîpit inutilia Therefore the Law forbiddeth such recoveries whose ends are vaine chargeable and unprofitable Sect. 195. Demandant and Tenant in reall actions plantiff and defendant in actions personall and mixt In a personall action brought by A. B. against C.D. the defence is and praed C.D. defendit vim injuriam quando c. Et damna quicquid quod ipse defendere debet Vide libr. c. fo 127. b. The defendant in this and the like action can plead no Plea at all before he make himself party by this part of the defence 1 E. 4. 15. Sect. 196. c. 6. Maners de homes y sont queux sils suont action judgement poit estr demand sils serront respous c. 1. Lou villein suist action euvers son Seignior 2. Lou hom est utlage sur act de debt trns. c. ou enditement 3. Vn alien c. 4. Un home que per judgment done envers luy sur un brē de premunire facias c. ē hors del protection le roy 5. Un home enter c. en Religion 6 Un home que est excommenge per le ley de St. Esglise Sils sorront respondus c. This is the legall conclusion of the plea when the plea is in disability of the person Fo. 128. a. By the common Law the plaintiffe or defendant the demandant or Tenant could not appear by attorney without the Kings speciall Warrant by Writ or Letters Patents Abusion ē a reteiner Attorny sans brē de la Chancery Mirr ca. 5. Attorneys point estr touts ceux aux queux le voile suffer fems ne poient este Attor ne ensans ne serfs ne nul que ē en garde non auterment faut de foy ne nul criminous ne nul essoigne ne nul que nest a le foy le roy nul que ne poit este Counter c. Mir. ca. 2. Sect. 21. If an executor c. Sueth any action utlary in the plaintiffe shall not disable him because the suit is in auter droit 21 E. 4. 49. b. 21 H. 6. 30. b. In a Writ of error to reverse an utlary utlary in that suit or at any strangers suit shall not disable the plaintiffe because if he in that action should be disabled if he were outlawed at severall mens suits he should never reverse any of them 7 H. 4. 40. When any man pleads an outlawry in disability of the person he must shew forth the Record of the Outlawry Maintenant sub pede figilli because the plea is dilatory unless the Record be in the same Court But if he plead an outlawry in bar if it be denyed he shall have a day to bring in 6 Eliz. Dyer 228. F.N.B. 241. Stanf. pl. cor 105. Note there be two kind of appearances before the Quinto exactus to avoid the outlawry viz. an appearance in Deed i.e. to render himself c. and the other is by apparance in Law i. e. by purchasing a supersedeas out of the Court where the Record is c. Tr. 44. El. in Co. banco inter Mere dolburie If the ground or cause of the action be forfeited by
7. fo 8. Calvins Case 5. In some actions Protection shall not be allowed by the Common Law as appeales of Felony and Mayhem so it is where the King is sole party c. And in a Decies tant where the King and the subject are plaintiff But in late acts of Parliament Protections in personoll actions are expressely ousted Bract. Lib. 5. 139. c. In a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet in a qu. imp or ass of Darr presentment in ass of no diss In a qu. non misit c. no protection is allowable Vide. By act of Parliament no protection shall be allowed in attaint nor in action against a Gaoler for an escape nor in pleas of trns. or other contract made c. after the date of the same protection 23. H. 8. ca. 3. Note in judiciall Writs which are in nature of actions where the party hath day to appear there a protection doth lie as in Writs of Scire fac upon Recoveries Fines Iudgements c. So it is in a quid Iuris clamat c. But in Writs of execution as habere fac Scis Elegit execution upon a Statute cap. ad Satisf Fieri fac There no protection can be cast for the defendant causa qua supra 13. E. 3. Prot. 72. 6. No Writ of protection can be allowed unless it be under the great Seal and it is directed generally Libr. 2. fol. 17. Lanes Case lib. 8. fol. 68. Trallops Case 35. Hen. 6 2. 7. The Courts of Justice are to allow or disallow of the Protection c. be they Courts of Record or not and not the Sheriff or any other Officer 43 E. 3. Prat. 96. 8. The protection may be cast by a stranger or by the party himself an Infant seme convert c. may cast a Protection for the tennant or Defendant And the Defendant or tenant casting it he must shew cause wherefore c. but a stranger need not shew any cause but that the tenant or Defendant is here by Protection 21. E. 4. 18. 38. H. 6. 131 9. A protection may be avoided 1. By the casting of it before it be allowed 2. By repeal thereof after it be allowed by disallowing of it mnny waies as for that it lieth not in that action or that he hath no day to cast it or for materiall variance between the Protection and the Record or that it is not under the Great Seal c. 3. After it be allowed by innotescimus as if any tarry in the country without going to the service c. over a convenient time after he had any Protection or repair from the same service upon information thereof to the Lord Chancellor he shall repeal the Protection by Innotescimus 13. R 2. cap. 16. 21. E. 4. 20. vide lib. fo 131. a b As to the third Protection cum clausula volhmus the King by his prerogative is to be preferred in payment of his duty or debt by his Debtor before any Subject Register 281. b. Thesaurus Regis est fundamentum belli firmamentum pacis By the Statute of 25 E. 3. cap. 19. the other creditors may have their actions against the King debtor and proceed to Iudgement but not to Execution unless he will take upon him to pay the Kings debt and then he shall have Execution for both the two debts But in some cases the Subject shall be first satisfied viz. where the King is intitled to any fine or duty by the suit of the party as in a decies tantum And so if in an action of Debt the Defendant deny his Deed and it is found against him he shall pay a fine to the King but the Plantiff shall be first satisfied 41. E. 3. 15. 4. E. 4. 16. 17. E. 3. 73. 29. E. 3. 13. The fourth Protection cum clasula volumus is when a man sent into the Kings service beyond Sea is imprisoned there so as neither Protection Profection or Moration will serve him and this hath no certain time limited in it F. N. B. 28. c. Of Protections cum clausula nolumus that are of Grace vide lib. 7. fo 9. Calvins Case Regist 280. The protection cum clausula nolumus that is of Right is That every Spirituall person may sue a Protection for him and his goods and for the Fermors of their lands c that they shall not be taken by the Kings Purveyor not their carriages or cattells taken by other Ministers of the King Which Writ doth recite the Statute of 14. E. 3. F. N. B 29 30. Albeit Queen Eliz. maintained many wars yet she granted few or no Protections and her reason was That he was no fit Subject to be employed in her service that was subject to other mens actions lest She might be thought to delay Iustice fol 131. b. Sect. 200. Vn home que est enter professe religion est civiliter mortuus or mortuus seculo To three purposes Profession i. e. the civill death hath not the effect of a naturall death 1. This civill death shall never derogate from his own grant nor be any mean to avoid it for if tenant in tail make a Feoffment in fee and enter into Religion his issue shall have no Formedon during his life 2. It shall never give her a vail without whose consent he could not have entred into Religion and therefore his wife shall not be endowed untill his naturall death But if the wife after her husband hath entred into Religion alien the land which is her own right and after her husband is deraigned the husband may enter and avoid the alienation 31 E. 1. Dower 176. 21. E. 4. 14. 3. It shall not work any prejudice to a stranger that hath a former right If a disseisor is professed so as the lands descends to his heir this discent shall not toll the entry of the disseisee A woman cannot be professed a Nun during the life of her husband 5 E. 4. 3. But if a man holdeth lands by Knights service and is professed c. his heir within age he shall be in Ward 31 E. 3. Collusion 29. If one joynt-tenant be professed c. the land shall survive to the other 21 R. 2. Judgement 263. An Abbot c. may sue and be sued c. for any thing that concerns the house of Religion Bract. fo 415. A wife is disabled to sue without her husband as much as a Monk is without his Soveraign 4 H. 3. Br. 766. And yet the wife of Sir Ro. Belknap Justice of the Common Pleas who was exiled beyond Sea did sue a Writ in her own name without her husband he being alive whereof one said Ecce modo mirum quod faemina fert breve Regis non nominando virum conjunctim robore legis 2 H. 4. f. 7. a. And King E. 3. brought a qu. imp against the Lady of Maltravers 10. E. 3. 53. And King H. 4. brought a Writ of Ward against Sibel B. 1. H. 4. 1. b. And Tho.
donques il est le fait d'ambideux c. The feoffee is no way made party to make it being made in the first person but onely by the clause of putting his Seal thereunto Vide Lib. c. Sect. 374. If A. by Deed indented between him and B. let lands to B. for life the remainder to C. in fee reserving a rent Tenant for life dyeth he in remainder entreth into the lands he shall be bound to pay the rent because he agreeth to have the lands by force of the Indenture 50 E. 22. 3 H. 6. 26. b. fo 231. a. An Indenture of lease is ingrossed between A. of the one part and D. and R. of the other part which purport a demise for years by A. to D. and R. A. sealeth and delivereth the Indenture to D. and D. seal the Counterpane to A. but R. did not seal and deliver it And by the same Indenture it is mentioned that D. and R. did grant to be bound to the Plaintiff in 20 l. in case that certain conditions comprised in the Indenture were not performed And for this 20 l. A. brought an action against D. onely and sued forth the Indenture The Defendant pleaded That it is proved by the Indenture that the demise by Indenture was made to D. and R. which R. is in full life and not named in the Writ Judgement of the Writ The Plaintiff replied That R. did never seal and deliver the Indenture and so his Writ was good against D. sole And there the Counsel of the Plaintiff took a diversity between a rent reserved which is parcel of the lease and the land charged therewith and a sum in gross as here the 20 l. is for as to the rent they agreed That by the agreement of R. to the lease he was bound to pay it but for the 20 l. that is a sum in gross and collateral to the lease and not annext to the land and groweth due onely by the Deed and therefore R. said he was not chargeable therewith for that he had not sealed and delivered the Deed. But in as much as he had agreed to the lease which was made by Indenture for the same sum in gross and for that R. was not named in the Writ it was adjudged that the Writ did abate 38 E. 3. 8. a. vide 44 E. 3. 11 12. Qui sentit commodum sentire debet onus transit terra cum enere Sect. 375. Le feoffer poit pledere condition en fait Poll pur ceó que il est privy al fait c. Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas Et ratio melior semper praevalet Fol. 231. b. If the Deed remain in one Court it may be pleaded in another Court without shewing forth Quia lex non cogit ad impossibilia 40 Ass 34. l. 5. 75. b. Wymarks 12 H. 4. 8. F. N. B. 243. Sect. 376. When divers do a Trespass the same is joynt or several at the will of him to whom the wrong is done yet if he release to one of them all are discharged because his own Deed shall be taken most strong against himself but other wise it is in case of Appeal of Death c. As if two women be joyntly and severally bound in an Obligation if the Obligee release to one of them both are discharged and seeing the Trespassers are parties and privies in wrong the one shall not plead a Release to the other without shewing of it forth albeit the Deed appertain to the other 27 E. 3. 83. 13 E. 4. 2. 15 E. 4. 26. 21 E. 4. 72. 22 E. 4. 7. 13 H. 8. 10. 34 H. 8. estrange al fait 21. Sect. 377. Semper quaere de dubiis quia per rationes pervenitur ad legitimam rationem c. Ratio est radius divini luminis If a man hath an Obligation though he cannot grant the thing in action yet he may give or grant the Deed viz. the Parchment and Wax to another who may cancel and use the same at his pleasure Omnia praesumuntur legitimè facta donec probetur in contrarium Injuria non praesumitur fo 232. b. There be three kindes of unhappy men 1. Qui scit non docet Infelix cujus nulli sapientia prodest 2. Qui docet non vivit Infelix qui recta docet cum vivit inique 3. Qui nescit non interrogat Infelix qui pauca sapit spernitque doceri Inter cuncta leges percunctabere doctos Sect. 378. Estates que homes ont sur condition en ley sont tiels estates que ont un condition per la ley a eux annex comment que ne sont specifie en escript sicome home grant person fait a un auter le office del Parkership pur terme de son vie le estate que il ad en le office sur condition en ley sc que le Parker bien loialment gardian le Park c. issint est de offic ' de Seneschalship c. auterment bien lirroit al grantor a ses heires de luy ouste c. Quia in eo quo quis delinquit in eo de jure est puniendus 15 E. 4. 3. l. 5 E. 4. 26. 28 H. 8. Bendloes c. Lib. 6. fo 50. 95. 96 99. Mich. 33 E. 1. Coram Rege in Thesaur ' levesque de Durhams Case Forresta est tuta ferar'mansio non quarumlibet sed silvestrium non quibuslibet in locis sed certis ad hoc ideonis unde Foresta E. mutata in O. quasi feresta hoc est ferarum statio Ockam vide Bract. fo 231. 316. Non-user of it self without some special damage is no forfeiture of private Offices but Non-user of publike Officers which concern the administration of Justice or the Commonwealth is of it self a cause of forfeiture Pl. 379 380. 2 H. 7. 11. 30 H. 6. 32 c. There is a diversity between Officers that have no other profit but a collateral certain fee for there the grantor may discharge him of his service as to be a Baily Receiver Surveyor Auditor c. the exercise whereof is but labour and charge to him but he must have his Fee for the main Rule of Law is That no man can frustrate or derogate from his own grant to the prejudice of the grantee 18 E. 4. 8. 31 H. 8. Grants Br. 134. 34 H. 8. ibid. 93. 11 El. Dyer 285. But in all cases where the Officer relinquisheth his Office and refuseth to attend he loseth his office fee profit and all There is another diversity where the grantee besides his certain fee hath profits and avails by reason of his Office as the Office of Stewardship of Courts there the grantor cannot discharge him of his service or attendance for that should be to the prejudice of the grantee 22 H. 6. 10. 3. 6 E. 6. Dyer 72. Conditions in Law be of two natures i.e. by the Common Law and by Statute and those
Case lib. fo 252 b. But if a disseiser had letten severally three acres to three persons for years there the entry upon of the the lessees in name of all the three acres shall recontinue and revest all the three acres in the disseisee for that the disseisee might have had one Assize against the disseisor because he remained Tenant of the Freehold for all the three acres 7 Ass 18. 12 E. 4. 10 36 H 6. 27. 32 Ass p 1 If I infeoffe one of one acre of ground upon Condition and at another time I infe●ffe the same man of another acre in the same county upon Condition also and both the Conditions are broken an entry into one acre in the name of both is not sufficient for that I have no right to the land nor action to recover the same but a bare Title But an entry into one part of the land in the name of all the land subject to one Condition is good although the parcels bee several and in severall Towns And so n●●e a diversity between several rights of entry and several Titles of entry by force of a Condition 11 H. 7. 25. Dyer 16 El. 33● Ennosme de tout c. dont il ad Title d'entry here in a large sence Title of entry is taken for a Right of entry If I b●i●g an Assize of two acres if I enter into one hanging the Writ albeit it shall revest that onely acre yet the Writ shall abate 5 H. 7 7. 4 E 4 19. 12 E 9 11. a Sect. 418 Nota A man may make a feoffment of lands in another County and make livery of seisin within the view albeit he might peacably enter and make actual livery and so may he shew the Recognitors in an Assize the view of lands in another County But a man cannot make an entry into lands within the view where he may enter without any fear for it is one thing to invest and another to devest 3● E 3 11 38 Ass 3 fo 253 a If livery of seisin be made of parcel of the Tenements c. in one Town in the name of all c. All the said Tenements c. pass by force of the said livery c. Agr. à minore ad majus if it be so in a Feoffment passing a new right à multo fortiori it is for the restitution of an ancient right as the worthier and more respected in Law which holdeth Affirmative Vide S. 438. Sect. 419 Fear of imprisonment sufficeth to avoid a Bond or a deed for the Law hath a special regard to the safety and liberty of a man But note a diversity between a Claim or an Entry into Land and the Avoidance of an act or deed for fear of Battery 4 E 4 7. 11 H 4 6 8 Ass 25 vide S 434 10 2 cap 49. 13 H ● Dures 2● If a man hath Title to enter into any Lands or Tenements if he dares not enter c. for doubt of maiming c. if hee goeth and approach as near to the Tenements as he dare for such doubt and by word claim the lands to be his this entry in Law is as forcible i● Law as an entry in Deed and upon such an entry in Law an Assi●e doth lie as well as upon an entry in Deed and such an entry in Law shall avoid a Warranty c. vide S 378. 11 H 6 5● But note a diversity here between an entry in Law and an entry in Deed for that a●●ontinual Claim of the disseisee being an entry in Law shall vest the possession and seisin in him for his advantage but not for his disadvantage And therefore if the diss●isee bring an Assize and hanging the Assize he make Continual Claim this shall not abate the Assize but he shall recover damages from the beginning but otherwise it is of an entry in Deed. Vide S 442. Pl. Com. 93. Parson of Hony lanes Case Arg. ab autor ' est fortissimum in lege 38 Ass p 13 Sect 421 422. Where a Continual Claim shall devest an estate in any other person in any lands or tenements there he that maketh the Claim ought to enter into the land or some part thereof But where the Claim is to bri●g him that maketh it into actual possession there a Claim within the view sufficeth as upon a discent the heir having the Freehold in Law may claim land within the view to bring himselfe into actual possession and in that sense is the opinion of Hull and the Court to be intended 9 H 4 5 c. But yet the entry in to some parcel in the name of the residue is the surest way vide S. 177. 11 H 6. accord with Li●tleton 51. At the Common Law upon a fine or f●●ll judgement given in a writ of right the party grieved had a yeare and a day to make his claime So the wife or heire hath a yeare and a day to bring an appeale of death c. After judgement given in a ●ea●● action the pl●i●tiffe within the yeare and day may have habere sac s●si●am and in an action of debt c. a Capias fieri fac or a L●vari facias A protection shall be allowed but for a year and a day and no longer and in many other cas● Vid. S. 385. 426. 14. H 4. 36. 7. E. 3. 37. Pl. 356. 357. 367 Brit. fo 45. b. Sect. 423 424. 426. Il covient a luy que fist claime c. de faire un cl ' deins chese ' an jour prochein apres chesc ' claime fait durant la vie son adversarie d●●●u●s a quecunque temps que son Adversary mor. Seisee son ●ntry ne ser toll per nul tiel dis cent Brit. fo 209. Dy. 17. Eli. 345. Si disseisor mor. Seise● dein l'an jour c. per que les tenements discend a son heire ●n cē case l'enter le disseisee ē toll car l'an le jour que a●droit le lessee en tiel case ne serre pris de temps de title dent a luy accrue mes tautsolment del temps de claime per luy fait en le maner avantd pur cest causeil serre bo●e pur tiel disseisee pur faire son cla●me en auxi breve temps queil puissoit apres le disseisin c. This in case of a disseisor is now holpen by the Statute of 37. H 8. ca. 33. For if the disseisor dye seised within five years after the disseisin though there be no cont claim made it ●●all not take away the entry of the disseisee but after the five years there must be such continuall claime as was at the Common Law But that Statute extended not to any Feoffee or donee of the disseisor immediate or mediate but they ●maine still at the common Law Vi. S. 385. 422. Sect. 428 429. Item sicome ē dit en les cases mises lou home ad title dent pur caus dun
in Curia nostra rite acta sunt debitae executioni demandari debent parum est latam esse sententiam nisi mandetur executioni Executio juris non habet injuriam Executio est fructus finis legis Juris effectus in executione coufistit Prosecutio legis est gravis vexatio executio legis coronat opus Boni judicis est judicium fine dilatione mendare executioni Favorabiliores sunt executiones aliis processibus quibuscunque When Littleton wrote by force of certain Acts of Parliament execution mtght be had of lands besides by force of the Elegit upon Statute Merchant Statute Staple and Recognizances taken in some Court of Record and since he wrote upon a Recognizance or Bond taken by force of the Statute 23. H. 8. before one of the Chief Justices or the Mayor of the Staple and Recorder of London out of Term which hath the effect of a Statute Staple 11. E. 1. Stat. de Acton Burnel 13. E. 1. de Mercat 27. E. 3. c. 22. 23. H. 8. cap. 6. 25. E. 3. 53. vide 32. H. 8. c. 5. a profitable Statute concerning executions of Lands Tenements c. Sed opus est interprete Vide fo 289. lib. 4. fo 66. Fulwoods Case If a man have a Judgement given against him for debt or damage or be bound in a Recognizance and dyeth his heir within age or having two daughters and the one within age no execution shall be sued of the Lands by Elegit during the minority albeit the heir is not specially bound but charged as Terre-tenant 15. E. 3. Age 95. 24. E. 3. 28. 29 Ass 37. 29. E. 3. 50. 47. Ass 4. 47. E. 3. 7. lib 3. f. 13. Brook Age 33. And so against an heir within age no execution shall be sued upon a Statute Merchant or Staple nor upon the obligation or recognizance upon the Statute 23. H. 8. for it is excepted in the processe against the heir Neither if the heir within age endow his mother shall execution be sued against her during his minority Temps E. 1. 402. 417. fo 290. a. Vide le statute 13. Eliz. cap. 5. made against fraudulent Feoffments gifts grants c. Judgements and Executions as well of lands and tenements as of goods and chattells to delay hinder or defraud Creditors and others of their just and lawfull Actions Suits Debts Damages Penalties Forfeitures Heriots Mortuaries and Releases Sed opus est c. Lib. 3. fo 80. c. Troyns Case l. 5. f 67. Gooches Case l. 6. f. 18. Pakemans Case l. 10. f. 56. the Chancellor of Oxfords Case See the Statute of 3. H. 7. c. 4. 50. E. 3. c. 6. M. 12. 13. Eliz Dyer 295. 18. Eliz. 451. Dyer Elegit is a judicial Writ and is given by the Statute either upon a recovery for debt or damages or upon a Recognizance in any Court The words of the writ be Elegit sibi liberari c. By this Writ the Sheriff shall deliver to the Plaintiff Omnia catalla debitoris exceptis bobus afris Carucae medietatem terrae And this must be done by an Enquest to be taken by the Sheriff W. 2. c. 18. W. 2. c. 18. Fieri fac is a Writ mentioned in the said Statute but is a Writ of Execution at the Common Law and is called a Fieri fac because the words of the Writ directed to the Sheriff be quod fieri fac de bonis catallis c. But note that a Capias ad satisfac is not mentioned in the said Statute because no Capias ad satisfac did lie at the Common Law upon a Judgement for debt c. or damages but only when the originall action was Qu. vi armis c. but later Statutes have given a Capias ad satisfac where debt c. or damages are recovered Lib. 3. fo 11. Sir William Herberts Case And note that these three Writs of Execution ought to be sued out within the year and the day after Judgment but if the Plaintiff sueth out any of them within the year he may continue the same after the year untill he hath execution And to none of these Writs of executions the Defendant can plead but if he hath any matter since the Judgment to discharge him of execution as a release of all executions c. he may have an Audita querela and relieve himself that way Sect. 505. Fol. 290. b. Scire fac is a judiciall Writ and properly lieth after the year and day after Judgment given But because the Defendant may thereupon plead this Scire fac is accounted in Law to be in nature of an action and therefore a release of all actions is a good bar of the same and so is a release of executions c. 19. H. 6. 3. 4. 18. E. 4. 7. This Writ was given in this case by the Statute of W. 2. c. 45. for at the Common Law if the Plaintiff had surceased to sue execution by fieri fac or levari fac a year and a day he had been driven to his new Originall 8. E. 3. 297 298. 18 E. 3. 33. l. 3. 12. Note that every Writ whereunto the Defendant may plead be it Originall or Judiciall is in Law an action Sect. 507. Fol. 291. a. Note a diversity between a release of all actions and a release of all suits If a man release all suits all execution is gone for no man can have execution without prayer and suit but the King only 26. H. 6. Exec. 4 l. 8. f. 153. Ed. Althams case Brook tit Rel. 87. So if the body of a man be taken in execution and the Plaintiff release all actions yet shall he remain in execution but if he release all debts or duties it is otherwise 26. H. 6. Exec. 7. If A. be accountable to B. and B. release him all his duties this is no bar in an action of account for what shall fall out upon the account is incertain but duties do extend to all things due that is certain and therefore dischargeth Judgments in personall actions and executions also 20. H. 6. per Paston Sect. 508 509 510 511. Fol. 291. b. 292. a. There be two kinds of Demands or Claims Pl. Com. Stiles Case 359 c. 1. Express or in deed as in all reall actions 2. Implyed or in Law as 1. In all actions personall 2. In actions of Appeals 3. Of execution 4. Of Title or right of Entry either by force of a condition or by any former Right 5. Of a rent service rent charge common of pasture c. verte fol. All which Littleton here and in the two next Sections following putteth but for example for by the release of all Demands other things also be released as rents seck all mixt actions a Warranty which is a Covenant reall and all other Covenants reall and personall Estovers all manner of Commons and profit appender Conditions before they be broken or performed or after Annuities
which inheritances put in Abeyance are by some called Haereditates jacentes Bract. l. 1. c. 2. and some say Que le fee est en baiaunce Brit. fo 249. Sect. 641. Fol 343. b. Principium est quasi primum caput from which many cases have their original or beginning which is so strong as it suffereth no contradiction Contra negantem principia non est disputandum 11 H. 4. 9. Note a diversity when the right of fee simple is perpetually by Judgement of Law in Abeyance without any expectation to come in esse there he hath the qualified fee Concurrent ' his quae in jure requiruntur may charge or alien it as in the case of Parson Vicar Prebend c. But where the fee simple is in Abeyance and by possibility may every hour come in esse As if a lease for life be made the remainder to the right heirs of I.S. the fee simple cannot be charged till I.S. be dead Lands intailed may be charged in fee for the estate Tail may be cut off by Fine or Recovery Also the estate Tail may continue and yet Tenant in tail may lawfully charge the Land and binde the issue in Tail 44 E. 3. 21 22. As if a disseisor make a gift in Tail and the Donee in consideration of a Release by the disseisee of all his right to the Donee grant a rent charge to the disseisee and his heirs proportionable to the value of his right this shall binde the issue in Tail Vide Sect. 1. Bridgewaters Case 59. fol. 48. b. Which Lands by the Rule of Littleton may be charged and therefore if the owner of those 13 acres grant a rent charge out of those 13 acres generally lying in the Meadow of eighty without mentioning where they lie particularly there as the state in the land removes the charge removes also If the Parson dye and in time of Vacation the Patron of the assent of the Ordinary and the Patron and Ordinary grant an Annuity or rent charge out of the Gleab this shall binde the succeeding Parsons for ever A Church Parochial may be Donative and exempt from all Ordinary Jurisdicton and the Incumbent may resign to the Patron and not to the Ordinary neither can the Ordinary visit but the Patron by Commissioners to be appointed by him And by Littletons Rule The Patron and Incumbent may charge the Gleab and albeit it be Donative by a Lay-man yet merè Laicus is not capable of it but an able Clerk infra sacros ordines is for albeit he come in by Lay Donation and not by admission or institution yet his function is spiritual Vide 133 530. 11 E. 3. Jur. utr 3. 8. Ass 29. 31. 13 Ass 2. As the King may create Donatives exempt from the visitation of the Ordinary so he may by his Charter license any subject to found such a Church or Chappel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not Presentable and to be visited by the Founder and not by the Ordinary And thus began Donatives in England whereof common persons were Patrons F.N.B. 35 E. 4. 2. A.B. Dyer 10. El. f. 273. 14 El. cap. 5. 2 H. 5. cap. 1. Ordinarius is he that hath ordinary Jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiastical immediate to the King and his Courts of Common Law for the better execution of Justice as the Bishop c. Regularly according to the Ecclesiastical Laws allowed by the Laws of this Realm viz. which are not against the Common Law whereof the Kings Prerogative is a principal part nor against the Statute and Customs of the Realm The Ordinary and other Ecclesiastical Judges do proceed in Causes within their Conusance and this Jurisdiction was so bounded by the ancient Common Laws of the Realm and so declared by Act of Parliament 25 H. 8. c. 19. 33 H. 6. 34. 32 H. 6. 28. Note that institution is a good plenarty against a Common person but not against the King unless he be inducted and that is the cause that Regularly plenarty shall be tryed by the Bishop because the Church is full by institution which is a spiritual act but void or not void shall be tryed by the Common Law 22 H. 6. 27. 38 E. 3. 4. At the Common Law if an usurpation had been had upon an Infant or feme Covert having an Advowson by discent or upon Tenant for life c. the Infant feme Covert and he in the reversion were driven to their Writ of Right of Advowson for at the Common Law if the Church were once full the Incumbent could not be removed and plenarty was a good plea in a Qu. imp or Assize of dar Presentment and the reason of this was to the intent that the Incumbent might quickly intend and apply himself to his spiritual charge And secondly the Law intended That the Bishop that had Cure of Soules within his Diocesse would admit and institute an able man c. 6 E. 3. 28. 39. 52. If the King do present to a Church and his Clerk is admitted and instituted yet before induction the King may repeal and revoke his Presentation But Regularly no man can be put out of possession of his Advowson but by admission and institution upon an usurpation by a Presentation to the Church Cum aliquis jus praesentandi non habens praesentaverit c. and not by collation of the Bishop 45 E. 3. 35. 38 E. 3 4. 13 El. Dyer 292. 18 El. Dyer 348. 14. E. 4. 2. 7 H. 4. 32. fol. 344. b. Nota that an usurpation upon a presentation shall not only put out of possession him that hath right of presentation but right of Collation also Therefore at this day the Incumbent shall be removed by a Qu. imp or Assize of dar ' presentment if there be not a plenarry by six moneths before the Teste of the Writ but then the Incumbent must be named in the Writ or else he shall never be removed 9 H. 6. 32. 56. 19 H. 6. 68. At the Common Law if hanging the Qu. imp against the Ordinary for refusing of his Clerk and before the Church were full the Patron brought a Qu. imp against the Bishop and hanging the Suit the Bishop admit and institute a Clerk at the presentation of another in this 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 pendentelite nihil innovetur and therefore at the common Law it was good policy to bring the Qu. imp against the Bishop as speedily as might be So it is good policy at this day to name the Bishop in the Qu. imp for then he shall not present by lapse 30 E. 3. Qu. imp Statham 5 E. 4. 115. 9 E. 4. 30. Sect. 649 650. fol. 345. a. If Tenant in Tail of lands holden of the King be attainted of Felony and the King after Office seiseth the same the estate Tail is
to her it is commonly taken for the third part which she hath of her husbands lands c. After his decease lib. rub c. 70. Bract. l. 2. s 92. To the consummation of this dower three things are necessary viz. Marriage seisin and the death of her husband s 31. a. Secundum consuetudinem regni mulieres viduae c. Debent esse quietae de tallagiis c. doti ejus parcatur quia praemium pudoris est Ockam f. 40. Where lands or tenements descend to the husband before entry he hath but a seison in law and yet the wife shal be endowed for it lieth not in the power of the wife to bring to be an actuall seison as the husband may doe of his wifes land when he is Tenant by the Curtesie F. N. B. 149. Grandfather Father and Son the Grandfather and father die c. In this Case dos de dote peti non debit if lands descend to the Father otherwise is it in a purchase if the Grandfather infeoffe the Father c. Vide lib. 5. E 3. t. Douch 249. Paris c. Non debent mulieribus assignari in dotem castra quae fuerunt virorum suorum quae de guerra existunt vel etiam homagia servitia aliquorum de guerra existentia Fo. 31. b. Pat. 1. E. 1. Part. 1. m. 17. Tenant in Fee Taile generall maketh a feoffment in Fee and takes back an estate to him and to his wife and to the heirs of their two bodies and they have issue and the wife dieth the husband taketh another wife and dieth the wife shall not be endowed for during the Coverture he was seised of an estate Tail special and yet the issue which the second wife may have by possibility may inherit Vide lib. 41. E. 3 30. Dier 41. Albeit of many inheritances that be entire whereof no division can be made by metes and bounds a woman cannot be endowed of the thing it selfe yet she shall be endowed thereof in a special and certain manner As of the third part of a piscary tertium piscem vel jactum retis tertium c. Fo. 32. a. 17. E. Dow. 104. A woman shall not be endowed of a common sans nomber en grosse nor of an annuity c. Nor of Rents c. If the freeholds of the Rents were suspended before the coverture But a woman shall be endowed of Tithes of the third part of profits of Courts Fines Heriots c. De nullo quod est sua natura indivisibile secationem sive divisionem non patitur nullam partem habebit sed satisfaciat ei ad vi●lentiam Brac. 97. Brit. 146. If the heire improve the value of the Land by building c. And on the other side if the value be impaired in the time of the heire she shall be endowed according to the value at the time of the assignment and not according to the value as it was in the time of her Husband 30. E. 1. Vouch. 298. It is not necessary that seisin should continue during the coverture for albeit the husband alieneth the Lands c. or extinguisheth the Rents c. Yet the woman shall be endowed But it is necessary that the marriage continue for if that be dissolved the Dower ceaseth Vbi nullum matrimonium ibi nulla dos but this is to be understood when the husband and wife are divorced à vinculo matrimonii as in case of precontract consanguinity affinity c. And not à mensa thoro onely as for Adultery In case of elopement shee shall lose her Dower but shee is not barred of her appeal Sponte virum mulier fugiens adultera facta dote sua careat nisi sponso sponte retracta Fol 32. b. Mirr ca. 5. Sec. 5. li. Intract 224. If a man seised of Lands in Fee took a wife and infeoffed eight persons Writ of Dower was brought against these eight persons and two confesse the action and the other six plead in Barre and descend to issue the demandant shal have judgment to receive the third part of two parts of the land in eight parts to be divided and after the issue being found for the demandant against the six the demandant shal have judgement to recover against them the third part of six parts of the same land in eight parts to be divided and so in some cases where the husband was sole seised the wife shall not be endowed in severalty by metes and bounds M. 2. and 3. Eliz. Dier 187. b. Nota. The endowment by metes and bounds according to the common right is more beneficiall to the wife then to be endowed against common right for there shee shall hold the land charged in respect of a charge made after her title of Dower It is necessary for the wife after the decease of her husband as soon as she can to demand Dower before good testimony for otherwise she may by her own default lose the value after the decease of her husband and her dammages for detaining of her dower Vide lib. Et Dotes suas habere non possunt sine placito The mean values and dammages are to be recovered against the Tenant in a Writ of Dower M. 8. and 9. Eliz. Rot. 904. conj Banco Vid. c. If the wise be past the age of 9 years at time of the the death of her husband albeit he were but 4 years old she shall be endowed quia minor non potest dotem promereri neque virum sustinere nec obstabit mulieri petenti minor aetas viri So that albeit concensus non concubitus facit matrimonium and that a woman cannot consent before twelve nor a man before fourteen Yet this inchoate or imperfect marriage from the which either of the parties at the age of consent may disagree after the death of the husband shal give Dower to the wife Fo. 33. a. Est uxor de facto de jure Fol. 33. b. Vid. c. Onely she that is a wise de jure in favorem vitae shall have an Appeale c. But a wife de facto shall have Dower if divorce be not had c. 50. E. 3. 15 10. E. 3. 35. Sect. 37. Rationabilis dos est cujuslibet mulieris de quocunque tenemento tertia pars omnium tium c. quae vir suus tenuit in dominico suo ut de feodo c.. By the custome of Gavelkind the wife shall be endowed of the moity so long as she keep her self sole and without child which she cannot wave and take her thirds for her life for consuetudo tollit communem legem Stat. de consuet Canciae c. And as customs may inlarge so it may abridge and restrain it to a fourth part c. Senentia signifieth widowhood fo ●3 b. in fine marg Sect. 39. Affidare est fidem dare sponsalia dicuntur futurarum nuptiarum repromissio conventio But this Dower ad ostium ecclesiae is ever after marriage
Affirmative of the common Law there as well as a man may prescribe c. Against the common Law so a man may do against such a Statute Fo. 115. a. Vide qu. M. Carta c. 35. None shall cut down any trees of his own within a forrest without view of the Forrester Statute 34 E. 1. 4. Forrest Rast But a man may prescribe to cut down his woods c. 16 El. in le Escheq The common Law appeareth in the Statute of Mag. Cart. and other ancient Statutes which for the most part are Affirmative of the Common Law in originall writs in judiciall Records and in our books of termes and yeares Acts of Parliament appear in the Rolls of Parliament and for the most part are in Print Particular customes are to be proved Fo. 115. b. Sect. 171. Every City is a Burgh but every Burgh is not a City And it appeareth by Littleton that a Town is the Genus and a Borough is the species for he saith that every Borough is a Town but every Town is not a Borough Et sub appellatione villarum continentur Burgi Civitates Fortescue cap. 24. CHAP. XI Tenure en Villenage Sect. 172. TEnure en Vill vnage ē pluis properment qut un villein tien terres c. Solonq le custome del Manner ou auterment a la volunt son Seignior de faire a son Seignior villeine service Nul terre tenus en villenage ne unqs fer home franke villaine Villaine à villa quia villae adscriptus est And therefore a Tenure in Villenage is twofold one where the person of the Tenant is bond and the Tenure servile the other where the person is free and the Tenure servile Serva terra liberos de sanguine existentes villanos facere non potest quia licet faciunt opera servilia tamen non faciunt ea ratione personarum sed ratione tenementorum c. A villain is called Nativus à nascendo quia plerumque natus est servus Fo. 116. b. Est autem libertas naturalis facultas cjus quod cuique facere libet * nisi quod de jure aut vi prohibetur Servitus est constitutio de jure gentium qua quis domino alieno contra naturam subjicitur Bract. l. ca. 6. It was ordained for the cruelty of some Lords that he that killed his villein should have the same judgement as if he had killed a freeman and thereupon they were called Servi quia servabantur à dominis non Occidibantur non à serviendo Servitude was first inflicted upon Cham for dishonouring of his Father Noah Ante vini inventionem inconcussa libertas non esset hodie servitus si ebrietas not fuisset Ambrose When the villain hath an estate of any thing certain the Lord shall have it as a Rent Commons Certain c. But the Lord shall not take advantage of any Obligation or Covenant or other thing in action made to the villaine because they lye in privity and cannot be transferred to others D. St. c. 43. 22. Ass p. 37. Quicquid acquiritur servo acquiritur Dom. Fo. 117. a. The Statute of Donis Condic giveth remedy to the issues of the Donee in Taile that have capacity and power to take and retain such a gift Pl. C. 555. Walsing c. Modus conventio vincunt legem Sect. 174. Aliud est tenere liberè aliud tenere per liberum Servitium Fleta l. 3. c. 13. Mirr ca. 2. Sect. 18. Sect. 175 Chesc villaine ou est un villeine pur tille de prescription sc que il ses Ancestors ont este villeines de temps dont memorie ne Court ou il est villaine per son confession dem en court de Record And every Court of Record is the Kings Court albeit another may have the profit wherein if the Judges do erre a Writ of error doth lie But the County Court the 100 Court c. are no Courts of Record and therefore the proceedings therein may be denied and tried by Jury and upon their judgements a Writ of error lieth not but a Writ of false judgement for that they are no Courts of Record because they cannot hold Plea of debt or tre●●●●s if the debt or dammages do amount to 40. s. or of any trespasse Vi armis l. 6. 11. 12. Jentlemans Case Sect. 177. I l serr adjudge le folly del seignieur s'il neutra pas quent les terres c. sont en le maine de son villeine For before entry the Lord hath neither jus in re nec jus ad rem sed nullum tempus occurrit Regi The act of law i. e. the descent or escheat may as well prevent the Lord of his entry as the act of the party by alienation fo 118. a. 9 H. 6. 21. Goods or Chattels are either personal as a horse and other beasts houshold-stuff c. or real as terms for years of Lands c. Wardships the interest of tenant by Statute Staple c. Nota That as the title of the Lord to his villains lands beginneth by his entry so his title to the goods beginneth by the seisure of them Si le seignieur claime les biens feisist parcel en nosm de seisin de touts les biens que le villeine ad ou aver poit c. Such a claim doth not only vest the goods which the villain then hath but also which he after that shall acquire and get Sect. 179. Le seignieur poit maintenant claime le reversion de son villaine car en aulter forme il ne poit vener al reversion And the Lord cannot claim the reversion but upon the Land and he by his coming upon the Land for that purpose is no Trespasser Sect. 180. Issent le seignieur c. poit vener al esglise claim le Advowson ac son villein c. for every claim or demand to devest any estate or interest must be made in that place which is most apt for that purpose Advowson of a Church is the Right of Presentation or Collation to the Church Every Church is either Presentative Collative Donative or Elective If the Church be Presentative the Church is full by admission and institution against any common person but against the King it is not full before induction fo 119. b. Incumbent of incumbo i.e. to be diligently resident id est obnixe operam dare 10 H. 6 7. A Church Presentative may become void five manner of waies viz. 1. By Death 2. By Creation 3. By Resignation 4. By Deprivation 5. By Cession as by taking a Benefice incompatible fo 120. a. F.N.B. 31 32. By the Statute of 31 Eliz. the Presentation Admission Institution and Induction into a Benefice by Simony are made void which before were but voidable by Deprivation Note If the Church becometh void albeit the present avoidance be not by law grantable over yet may the Lord of the villain present c. and thereby gain
gratum ingratum Fortescue cap. 46. fol. 137. b. There be some cases wh●re the Villain shall be privileged from the seisure of the Lord c. 1. Ratione loci as if a Villain in the ancient Demesn of the King a year and a day without claim or seisure of the Lord the Lord cannot seise him c. so long as he remains and continues there 39 E. 3. 6. b. F.N. B. 79. a. 2. Ratione professionis as if he a Monk be c. Gla●v l. 5. cap. 5. 3. Ratione dignitatis if he be made a Knight c. Britt fo 79. 4. Ratione matrimonii as if a Neife marry a free-man she is priviledged during the marriage c. But if the Lord himself marry the Neife then she is infranchised for ever Mirr c. 3. sect 18. acc Doct. S●u. 141. If a Niefe ●e regardant to a Manor and she taketh a free-man to husband by license of the Lord and the Lord make a feoffment in fee of the Manor the husband dyeth the feoffor shall have the Neife for that during the marriage she was severed from the Manor * and so is lib. 29. Ass which is falsely prin●ed to be understood If two Coparceners be of a Villain and one of them taketh him to husband she and her husband shall not have a Nuper obiit against her Coparcener but after the decease of her husband she shall 16 H. 3. Nuper ob 17. When the Lord enableth the Villain to have an action against him as for Debt or Annuity c. or if he sue against his Villain an Action of Debt or of Covenant c. or giveth to the Villain a certain and fixed estate in Lands c. as a lease for years by Deed or without Deed this is an infranchisement for ever But if the Lord atturn to his Villain c. or if he release all his right in black Acre and the Villain is not thereof seised this is no infranchi●ement because it is void and can give no cause of action fol. 138. a. 11 H. 7. 13. Sect. 208. The Tenant infeoffs the Villain of the Lord and a stranger * upon by Collusion in this case although the Lord may enter upon the Villain for the moity yet may he have a Writ of Ward against them both without infranchisement of the Villain for if the Lord should enter upon the Villain then should the seigniory be suspended and then could he not have a Writ of Ward against the other vide c. There is a Nonsure before appearance at the return of the Writ or after appearance at some day of continuance A Nonsute is ever upon a demand made when the Demandant or Plaintiff should appear and hee makes default A Retraxit is ever when the Demandant or Plaintiff is present in Court c. and this is either Privative as upon demand made that he depart in despight of the Court having made default c or Positive as when he saith that he will not prosecute his plea c. sed abin●e omnino se retraxit c. fol. 139. a. * Also a Retraxit is a bar of all other actions of like or inferior nature qui semel actionem renunciavit amplius repetere non potest But Reg. a Nonsute is not so but that he may commence an action of like nature c. again lib 8. fo 58. Bechers Case But yet for some speciall reasons Nonsute in some actions is peremptory as in a qu. imp if the Plaintiff be Nonsute after appearance the Defendant shall make a Title and have a Writ to the Bishop c. and the Incumbent that commeth in by that Writ shal never be removed 5 E. 3. 35. lib. 7. fo 27. b. Sir Hugh Portmans c. So it is in a Writ de Nativo habendo in favorem libertatis 6 E. 2. Vill. 26. F. N. B. 78. c. And in an appeal of Murther Rape Robbery c. in favorem vitae 9 H. 4. 1. Pl. Com. 148 a. 171. And in an appeal of Mayhem for the Writ saith Feloni●è Mayhemavit 43 Ass 39. And in Attaint and the reason is for the faith that the Law gives to the Verdict and for the fearfull Judgement that should be given against the first Jury if they should be convicted and therefore upon the Nonsute the Plaintiff shal be imprisoned and his pledges amerced but if the Process in an attaint be discontinued the Plaintiff may have another Writ of Attaint because upon the Nonsute there is a Judgement given but not upon the discontinuance F. N. B. 108. d. 32 Ass 13. Nonsuit before appearance is not peremtory in any case for that a stranger may purchase a Writ in the name of him that cause of action hath * In realor mixt actions the Nonsuit of one Demandant is not the Nonsuit of both but he that makes default shall be summoned and severed but Reg. in personal actions the Nonsuit of one is the Nonsuit of both unless it be in certain particular cases * F. N. B. 35. b. as in personall actions brought by Executors c. lib. * 6. fo 25. Ruddocks Case And in an Aud. quaer concerning the personalty * vide qu. lib. fo 139. a. In a quid Juris clamat the Nonsuit of the one is the Non-suit of both because the tenant cannot attorn according to the grant 20. E. 3. Severance 17. Some actions follow the nature of those actions whereupon they are grounded as the Writs of Error attaint Scire fac ' c. If a reall action be brought by severall Praecipes against two or more if the Demandant be Nonsuit against one he is a nosuit against all for as to the Demandant it is but one Writ under one Teste 47. E. 3. 6. b. Severance is twofold viz. by Summons ad sequend ' simul and that is when one of the Demandants or Plantiffs never apeared and by award of the Court of Nonsuit without any Summons and that is after appearance fo 149. b. At the Common Law upon every continuance or day given over the Plantiff might have been Nonsuit and therefore after Verdict given if the Court gave a day to be advised at that day the Plantiff was demandable and therefore might have been Nonsuit which is now remedied by the Statute of 2 H. 4. cap. 7. But after demurre in law joyned if the Court doth give a day over at that day the Demandant or Plantiff is Demand and may be Nonsuit for that is not holpen by any Statute 2 H. 5. 5. and after an award to account the Plantiff may be Nonsuit and so note a diversity between an interlocutory award of the Court and a finall Iudgement l. 11. fo 39. 41. Medcalfs Case Albeit the Lord be Nonsuit yet the infranchisment of the villain doth remain for that grew by the appearance to the Writ So it is if the Writ do abate Wheresoever the Lord giveth to the villain a just cause of action he is
the rent is behind the grantee hath election to bring a Writ of annuity * and charging the person only c. or to d●straine upon the Land and to make it reall * and charging the person onely to make it personall Put case that A. be seised of Lands in fee and he and B grant a rent charge to one in fee this prima facte is the grant of A and the confirming of B. but yet the grantee may have a VVrit of Annuity against both Two men grant an annuity of 20 l. per an to another although the persons be severall yet he shall have but one annuity But if the grant be Obligam nos utrumque nostr The grantee may have a VVrit of Annuity against B either of them but he shall have but one satisfaction 16 E. 2. tit annuity 47. If a rent charge be granted to a man and his heires he shall not have a Writ of annuity against the heire of the grantor albeit he hath Assets unlesse the grant be for him and his heires 2 H. 4. 13. Dyer 17 Eliz. 344. b. Vide c. Fo. 144. b. But Littl. is to be understood with some limitation for of a rent granted for owelty of partition a writ of annuity doth not ly because it is of the nature of the Land descended Also of such a rent as may be granted without Deed a Writ of annuity doth not lye though it be granted by Deed. 29 Ass p. 23. Note as to elections these diversities following 1 When nothing passeth to the Feoffee or Grantee before election c. There the election ought to be made in the life of the parties c. But when an estate or interest passes immediately to the Feoffee Donee or Gaantee there the Election may be made by them or by their heirs or executors Lib. 2. fo 36. c. Sir Row Haywards c. 2 When one and the same thing passeth c. and the Donee or grantee hath election in what manner or degree he will take this there the interest passeth immediately and the party his heires or executors may make election when they will 3 When election is given to severall persons there the first election made by any of the persons shall stand 4 In case an election be given of two severall things alwaies he which is the first agent and ought to doe the first Act shall have the. election 2 H. 7. 23. a. 5 When the granted is of things annuall and are to have continuance there the election remaineth to the grantor in case where the Law giveth to him election as well after the day as before otherwise it is when the things are to be performed unica vice 9 E. 4. 36. and ●3 E. 4. Grantee for life c. ought to bring his Writ of annuity in the disjunctive else the judgment c. shall determine his election for ever herein Fitzh is mistaken 6 The Feoffee by his act and wrong may lose his election and give the same to the Feoffer as if one infeoffe another of two acres to have and to hold the one for life and the other in tail and he before election make a Feoffment of both in this case the Feoffer shall have election to enter into which of them he will c. Note that this determination of the election of the grantee must be by action or sure in Court of Record If the grantee doth bring a Writ of annuity and at the returne thereof appear and account this is a determination of his election in Court or Record albeit he never proceedeth any further F.N.B. 152. a. 5 H. 7. 33. b So if the grantee bring an Ass for the rent and make his plaint he shall never after bring a Writ of annuity 10 E 4. 17. For an Anvowry in Court of Record which is in nature of an action is a determination of his election before any judgment given F. 145. b. It is a generall rule that the plaintiffe must have the property of the goods in him at the time of the taking 3 E. 3. 74. 6 H. 4. 2. But yet if the goods of a villain be distreined the Lord of the villain shall have a Replevy because the bringing of a Replevy amounts to a claim in Law and vests the property in ●he plaintiff But in that case if the goods of a villain be taken by a trns. the Lord shall have no Replevy because the villain had but a right 33 E. 3. Repl. 43. F.N. B. 69 F. Property ought to be tryed by Writ 30 E. 3. 22. A man cannot claim property by his Bayliffe or servant for that if the claim fall out to be false he shall be fined for his contempt which the Lord cannot be unlesse he maketh claim himself for nemo punitur pro alieno delicto 5 E. 3 38. 11 H. 4. 4. fo 145. b. In a speciall case a man may have a Replevy of goods not distreined as if the Mesner put in his catrell in lieu of the cattel of the tenant peravaile that he is bound to acquite he shall have a Replevy c. 34 H. 6. 47. It is against the nature of a distresse taken c to be irreplevisable 31 E. 3. Gage Deliū 5. And Bract. Lib 4. fo 233. a. and b. Saith E●dem modo de via obstructa per breve quod justiciet propter cōem utilitatem ne transeuntes ire diu impediantur quia hoc esset commune damnum in hoc vicecomes Justiciarii faciant sicut super detensionem averior contra vadium plegii propter commune utilit ne animalia diu inclusa pereant If the beasts of divers severall men be taken they cannot joyn in a Repleg but every one must have a severall Repl. and so in a Repleg it is a good plea to say that the property is to the plaintiff and to a stranger and where there be two plaintiffes that the property is to one of them 28 E. 3. 92. 2 E. 4. 23. Electio semel facta placitum cestatum ō patitur regressum Quod semel in electionibus placuit amplius displicere nō potest Note a diversity between the case * fo 65. a. aforesaid of the grant of the rent where he may take it either reall or personall and when a man may have election to have several remedies for a thing that is meerly personall or meerly reall from the beginning As if a man may have an action of account or an action of debt at his pleasure and he bringeth an action of account and appear to it and after it Nonsuit yet may he have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person So it is of an Ass and of a Writ of entry in the nature of an Ass c. 28 E. 3. 98. b. 27 E. 3. 89. b. Fo. 146. a. Sect. 220. By this Section it appeareth that when in a general grant the Law doth give two remedies that the grantor may provide that the
partitions in Law some be by act in Law without Judgement and some be by Judgement and not in a Writ de Partit fac If there be Lord three Coparceners Mesnes and Tenant and one Coparcener purchase the Tenancy this is not onely a partition of the Mesnalty being extinct for a third part but a division of the Seigniory Paramount for now he must make severall Avowries 26 H. 6. 7. If one Coparcener make a Feoffment in fee of her part this is a severance of the Coparcenary and severall Writs of Praecipe shall lie against the other Coparcener and the Feoffee 37 H. 6. 8. So it is if two Coparceners have issue and dye 17 E. 3. 15 16. Et si asc ' des parceners sont enget ou disturbe de sa seisin per ses auters parceners ou plusor al disseisee viendran● ass per several pleint sur les parceners recovera mes nemy a tener en severalty mes en common solonque ceo que avant le fist c. Britton fol. 112. a. And this seemeth reasonable for he must have Judgment according to his pleint and that was of a moity and not of any thing in severalty and the Sheriff cannot have any warrant to make any partition in severalty or by Metes and Bounds Lib. 6. fol. 12 12. Morrices Case Sect. 248. Si parceners ne voilont agere a partition dest fr. enter eux donque lun poit aver breve partition fac envers les auters c. le vic en son propter persona alera a les terres c. per le serement de 12 loial homes de son bail c. ilserra partit enter les parties c. There is a book in the Exchequer called Dooms-day dies judicii Sententia ejusdem libri inficiari non potest vel impune declinari ob hoc nos eundem librum judiciarum nominamus Sheriffe is the Reve of the Shire Praefectus Satrapiae Provinciae or Comitatus habet triplicem custodiam 1 Vitae Legis 2. Vitae Reipublicae Vicecomes dicitur quod vicem Comitis suppleat Marculphus saith This Office is Judiciaria Dignitas Lampridius That it is Officium Dignitatis Forter saith Quod Vicecomes est nobilis Officiarius Fortesc c. 24. R. 2. cap. Verum quod modo vocatur Comitatus olim apud Britones temporibus Romanorum in Regno isto B●tan vocabatur consulatus qui modo vocantur Vicecomites tunc temporis vice-consules vocabantur ille verò dicebatur vice-consul qui consule absente ipsius vice supplebat in jure in foro Lambert fol. 129. 12. Bayliff is an Officer concerning the administration of Justice of a certain Province Flet. l. 2. c. 67. Sect. 249 250. Et de la partition que l' vicount ad issint ft. il fer notice la Justices south son seale les seales de ches● ' de les 12. c. this c. doth imply That the principal Judgment upon the partition so returned is Ideo consideratum est per Cur ' quod partitio firma stabilis in perpetuum teneatur Lib. 11. fol. 40. Metcalfs Case Partition per agreement per curer parceners poit estre auxibien per parol sans fait come per fait But a partition between joint-tenants is not good without Deed albeit it be of lands and that they be compellable to make partition by the Statute of 31 H. 8. c. 10. and 32 H. 8. c. 32. because they must pursue that act by Writ de Partit fac And a partition between joynt-tenants without Writ remains at the Common Law which could not be done by Parol And where books say That joynt-tenants made partition without Deed it must be intended of Tenants en Common and executed by livery S. 290. 3 H. 4. 1. lib. 6. 12 13. 2 Eliz. Dyer 179. 28 H. 8. Dyer 29. 1 Mar. Dyer 98. Nota between joynt-tenants there is a two fold privity viz. in estate and in possession between tenants in common there is a privity onely in possession but parceners have a threefold privity viz. in estate in person and in possession Sect. 251 c. A rent may be granted for owelty of partition without Deed. So it is of Common of Estovers or a Corody or a Common of Pasture c. albeit they lie in grant c. But if rent be granted out of other lands then descended to the Coparceners then there must be a Deed 1 Mar. Dyer 18. Sect. 253 c. Mes tiel rent ē rent charge de common droit eroe reserve pur egality de partit Et nota that Reservation here is taken for a Grant I. S. seised of lands in fee hath issue two daughters R and A. Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne and dyeth R. and A. enter and make partition A. and her daughter are concluded for ever 21 E. 3. 34 35. 11 Ass 23. Sect. 256 257 358. 2 parceners prent Barons si parit fait perenter eux * soit egall c. donque il ne poit estre apurs defeater c. Judicicis officium est us res ita tempera rerum Quaerere quaesito tempore tutus eris An unequall partition in the Chancery shall not bind an Infant F.N.B. 256 259 260 c. But it may be avoyded either by Scire sac in the Chancery or by a Writ de partit fac at the Common Law 21 E. 3. 31. A partition made by the Kings Writ de partit fac by the Sheriff by the Oath of 12 men and Judgement thereupon given shall binde the Imfant though his part be unequal causa qua supra so 171. Sect. 259. Si asc ' fait feoffment grant release confirmation obligation ou auter escript ' soit fait per asc ' devant son plein age sc 21 ans ou si asc ' deins tiel age soit Bayliff ou receivor a a sc ' home tout sera pur nient c. Auxi home devant le dit age ne sera my jute en Enquest c. Fait is an instrument consisting on three things viz. Writing Sealing and Delivery comprehending a Bargain or Contract between party and party man or woman Obligation is commonly taken in the Common Law for a Bond containing a penalty with condition for payment of Mony or to do or suffer some act or thing c. And a Bill is most commonly taken for a single Bond without condition f. 172. a. An Infant may binde himself to pay for his necessary Meat Drink Apparel necessary Physick c. and likewise for his good tea●●ing and instruction whereby he may profit himself after●ards But if he binde himself in an Obligation or other Writing with a penalty for the payment of any of these that Obligation shall not binde him 18 E 4. 2. lib. 9. fol. 87. Pinchons case Also other things of necessity shall binde him as a presentation to a Benefice for otherwise the laps shall incur against him And it an Infant be Executor upon paiment
them taketh husband and dyeth yet the terme shall survive for though all chattels realls are given to the husband if he survive yet the survivor between the joynt-tenants is the elder Title and after the marriage the feme continued sole possessed for if the husband dyeth she shall have it and not the executors of the husband but otherwise it is of personall goods fol. 185. b. vide c. Inprimis autem debet quilibet qui testaverit dominum suum de meliore re quam habuerit recognoscere postea ecclesiam de alia meliore c. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 50. Sect. 288. Chesc ' joint est sei del terre que il tient joint per my per tout sic totum tenet nihil tenet sc totum conjunctim nihil per se separatim and albeit they are so seised yet to divers purposes each of them hath but a right to a moity as to enfeoffe give or demise or to forfeit or lose by default in a Praec 40. Ass 79. Brit. cap. 35. A communi observantia non est recedendum If two joyntenants be and both they make a feoffment in Fee upon condition and that for breach thereof one of them shall enter into the whole yet he shall enter but into a moity because no more in judgment of Law passed from him and so it is of a gift in taile or a Lease for life c. Pl. com Brownings c. If two joyntenants make a feoffment in fee and one of the feoffors die the feoffee cannot plead a feoffment from the survivor of the whole because each of them gave but his part but otherwise it is on the part of the feoffees 14 E. 4. 5. fol. 186. a. Two joyntenants de terres c. And one of them by Deed indent●● bargain and sell the Lands and the other joyntenant dyeth and then the Deed is inrolled there shall passe but a moity 6 E. 6. Tit. Faits inroll 9. Br. Sect. 289. En grant de rent charge per joint c. les tenements demurg touts foits come ils fuer adevat sans ceo que asc ' ad asc ' drt. daū asc ' parcel de les tenem fo rs eux me les tenem sont en tiel plite come ils fueront devant le charge c. mes ou leas ē ft. per un joint a un aut per terme de ans c. maint per force de lease le lessee ad drt. en m. la terre se de tout ceo que a son lessor affiert daū ceo per force de lease durant son Feme Fo. 186. b. If two joyntenants be of an Advowson and the one present c. and his Clark is admitted and instituted this in respect of the privity shall not put the other out of possession but if that joyntenant that presenteth dyeth it shall serve for a tittle in a Qu. Imp. brought by the survivor 11 H. 4. 54. 10 E. 4. 94. 1 H. 7. 1. b. 9 El. Dyer 259. 6 E. 4. 10. b. Doct. St. 116. F. N. B. 34. u. But yet if one jointenant or tenant in common present or if they present severally the ordinary may either admit or refuse c. such a presentee unlesse they joyne in a presentation and after the six moneths he may present by lapse But if two coperceners be c. and they cannot agree to present the eldest shall present and if her sister doth disturbe her she shall have a qu. imp and so shall the issue and the Assignee of the eldest and yet he is tenant in common with the youngest and so tenant per Curtesie of the eldest shall present 38 H. 6. 9. 5 H. 5. 10. F.N.B. 34. Sect. 290. Jointenants fils violont faire partition c. But this partition must be by Deed. Vide Sect. 249. 318. But jointenants for years may make partition without Deed 18 Eliz. 350. b. Dyer Since Littleton wrote joyntenants and tenants in common are compellable to make partition by writ Stat. 31 H. 8. c. 1. 32 H. 8. c. 32. Sect. 264. 247. 259. F.N.B. 9. b. 62. b. lib. 6. Fo. 12 13. Morrices c. If one joyntenant or tenant in common disseise another and the disseisee bring his Ass for the moity though the plaintiffe prayeth it yet no judgment shall be given to hold in severaltie for then at the common Law there might have been by compulsion of Law a partition bteween Joyntenants and tenants in common and by rule of Law the plaintiffe must have judgement according to his plaint or demand 187. a. Sect. 291. c. Baron feme sont forsq un person en ley vir axor sunt quasi unica persona quia caro una sanguis unus Lib. 4. fo 68. Tokers c. Pl. com 483. Nicholls ca. If an estate be made to a man and a woman and their heirs before marriage and after they marry the husband and wife have moities between them If a Feoffment be made to a man and a woman and their heires with warranty and they entermarry and after are impleaded and vouch and recover in valew moities shall not be between them for though they were sole when the warranty was made notwithstanding at the time when they recovered and had execution they were husband and wife in which time they cannot take by moities Fo. 187. b. Vide c. A right of Action and a right of entry may stand in jointure Vide Sect. 302. F.N.B. 193. k. A right of action or a bare right of entry cannot stand in joynture with a freehold or inheritance in possession and therefore if the husband make a Feoffment of the moity this was a discontinu of that moity and the other joyntenant remained in possession of the freehold and inheritance of the other moity which for the time was a severance of the joynture Statute of 32 H. 8. ca. 1. If two joyntenants be of a rent and one of them disseise the tenant of the Land this is a severance of the joynture for a time for the moity of the rent is suspended by unity of possession and therefore cannot stand in joynture with the other moity in possession Pl. com 419. Nihil de re accrescit ei qui in re quando jus accresceret habet A State of Freehold cannot stand in joynture with a terme for years nor a reversion upon a Freehold with a Freehold and inheritance in possession Neither can a seisin in the right of a politick capacity stand in joynture with seisin in a naturall capacity 37 H. 8. 8. 3 E. 4. 10. Fo. 188. a. Vide c. In all cases where the joyntenants pursue one joynt remedy and the one is summoned and severed and the other recover he that is summoned c. shall enter with him but where their remedies be severall there the one shall not enter with the other till both have recovered Littleton cap. Remitt the last
c. shall not take away the entry c. 17 H. 6. 1. Lestat 32 H 8. c. 33. Sect. 422 426. Pl. 47. Wimbishes case Fo. 231. a. vid. c. Ad ea que frequentius accidunt jura adaptantur The Feoffee of a disseisor is out of the said Statute and remains as at the Common Law M. 4. 5 El. Dyer 219. But if a man make a lease for life and the lessee for life is disseised and the disseisor dye seised within 5 years the lessee for life may enter but if he dye before he doth enter it is said that the entry of him in the reversion is not lawfull because his entry was not lawful at the time of the discent Sect. 386. If a disseisor make a gift in Tail and the donee discontinueth in fee and disseise the discontinuee and dyeth seised this discent shall not take away the entry of the disseisee for the discent of the fee simple is vanished and gone by the Remitter and albeit the issue be in by force of the estate Tail yet the donee dyed not seised of that estate Fol. 238. b. If a disseisor make a gift in Tail and the donee hath issue and dyeth seised now is the entry of the disseisee taken away but if the issue dye without issue the entry of the disseisee is revived and he may enter upon him in the reversion and remainder 9 H. 7. 24. So if there be Grandfather Father and Son and the Son disseise one and infeoff the Grandfather who dyeth seised c. the entry is taken away but if the Father dyeth seised and the land descend to the Son now is the entry of the disseisee revived and he may enter upon the Son who shall take no advantage of the discent because he did wrong unto the disseisee 13 H. 4. 8 9. 33 H. 6. 5. b. per Moyl 34 H. 6. 11. a. per Cur. S. 393 395. 13 E. 3. Br. Ent. cong 127. vide qu. If a disseisor make a lease to an Infant for life and he is disseised and a discent cast the Infant enters the entry of the disseisee is lawfull upon him Of Writs of Entry sur disseisin there be four kindes The 1. is a Writ of Entry in the nature of an Assize 19 H. 6. 56. 9 H. 5. 9. 2. A Writ of Entry sur disseisin in le per Brit. fo 264 c. 〈◊〉 E. 3. 216. 3. A Writ c. en le per cui as where A. being the feoffee of D. the disseisor maketh a feoffment over to B. there the disseisee shall have a Writ of Entry sur disseisin of lands c. in which B. had no entry but by A. to whom D. demised the same who unjustly and without Judgement disseised the Demandant These are called gradus degrees which are to be observed or else the Writ is abateable for sicut natura non facit saltum ita nec lex 22 E. 3. 1. b. F.N.B. 192. 4. A Writ of Entry sur disseisin en le post which lieth when after a disseisin the land is removed from hand to hand above the degrees 14 H. 4. 40. vide c. No estate gained by wrong doth make a degree and therefore neither abatement intrusion or disseisin upon disseisin doth make a degree Neither doth every change by lawful Title work a degree as if a Bishop or an Abbot c. disseise one and dye where his successor is in by lawful Title for though the person be altered yet the Right remains where it was viz. in the Church and both of them seised in the same Right c. An faciunt gradum de Abbate in Abbatem sicut de haerede in haeredem Et videtur quod non magis quam in computatione descensus quia etsi alternetur persona non propter hoc alternatur dignitas sed semper manet Br. l. 4. f. 321. If a disseisor by Deed inrolled convey the land to the King and the King by his Charter granteth it over the disseisee cannot have a Writ of enter en le per cui but in le post for the Kings Charter is so high a matter of Record as it maketh no degree 22 E. 3. 7. F.N.B. 191. k. Also an estate of a Tenant by the Curtesie or of the Lord by Escheat or of an execution of an Use by the Statute of 27 H. 8. or by Judgement or Recovery or of any others that come in in the post work no degree 5 E. 2. Entry 66. 7 E. 3. 360. But a Tenancy in Dower by assignment of the heir doth work a degree because she is in by her husband but assignment of Dower by a disseisor worketh no degree but is in the post 36 H. 6. Dower 30. When the degrees are past so as a Writ of Entry in le post doth lie yet by event it may be brought within the degrees again as if the disseisor infeoffe A. who infeoffs B. who infeoffs C. or if the disseisor die seised and the land descend to A. and from him to C. now are the degrees past and yet if C. infeoffe A. or B. now it is brought within the degrees again 44 E. 3 4 5. 5 H. 7. 6. If the disseisor make * a lease for life the remainder in * fee Tenant for life dieth he in the remainder is in the per because he now claimeth immediately from the disseisor and both these estates make but one degree 50 E. 3. 27. Note there be divers other Writs of Entry besides this of entry sur disseisin as a Writ of Entry ad Terme qui praeter ' in casu proviso in confirm ' casu ad com legem sine assensu capituli dum fuit infra aetat ' dum non fuit compos mentis cui in vita sur cui in vita Intrusion cessavit c. and that which hath been said of one may be applied to all Sect. 387. If a disseisor make a lease to a man and his heirs during the life of I. S. and the lessee dieth living I. S. this shall not take away the entry of the disseisee because he that died seised had but a Freehold onely and heirs were added to prevent an Occupant for the heir in that case shall not have his age Pl. 16 El. Com. Banco Lambs Case Dyer 8 El. 253. 7 H. 4. 46. 8 H. 4. 15. 11 H. 4. 42. 17 E. 3. 48. But if the Kings Tenant for life be disseised and the disseisor die seised this descent shall not take away the entry of the lessee for life because the disseisor had but a bare estate of Freehold during the life of the lessee * If the heir of the disseisor die before he enter the entry of the disseisee is taken away and yet in pleading the second heir shall make himself heir to the disseisor c. 24 E. 3. 47. An infant is disseised and after cometh to full age Sect. 388 c. En discents que tollent
disseisin c. mes la ley ē lou home ad droit dentr par case d●asc ' aut title c. Here is implyed abators or intrudors and not only their disseissors but the Feoffees or donees of disseissors abators or intruders or any other so long as the entry is cong and here title is taken in his large sense to include a right V Sect. 650. and 659. Si tenant in taile immediate puis tiel claime continua son occupation en les tenements ceo ē un disseisin c. a celuy que sist tiel claime sic par conseque le tenant adonques ad fee simple Sect. 430 431. The disseisee shall have an action of trespasse against the disseissor and recover his damages for the first entry without any regresse but after regresse ●e may have an action of trespasse with a continuando and recover as well for all the mean occupation as for the first entry and note that Littleton doth here include costs within dammages Ou il poit aver un breve sur lestat 5 R. 2. ca. 7. Supposant par son breve que son adversary avoit entry en les terres c. celuy que fist le claime c. par tiel action il recover ses dammages c. i.e. that he shall recover dammages for the first tortious entry but not for the mean profits though he made a regresse 37. H. 6. 35. 2 E. 4. 18. 21 E 4. 5. 74. 38. Ass 9. 44. E. 3. 20. 10. H 7. 27. Keilwey 1. b. And here note that also he shall recover his costs of suit 2 E. 4. 24. b. 9. E. 4. 4. b. 16. H. 7. 6. a. Fo. 257. a. One or more may commit a force three or more may commit an unlawfull assembly riot or rout A multitude is not restrained to a certain number but left to the discretion of the Iudges A writ of forcible entry is grounded upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. ca. 9. and lieth where one entreth with force or where he enters peaceably and detaineth it with force or where he enters by force and detaineth it by force and in this action without any regresse the plaintiffe shall recover treble dammages as well for the mean occupation as the first entry by force of the Statute and he shall recover treble costs also 3 E 4-19 24. F. N. B. 240. c. 11 E. 4. 11. b 6 H 7. 12. 22 H 6. 57 If three or foure goe to make a forcible entry albeit one alone use the violence all are guilty of force 10 H 7 1● Note that there is a force implyed in Law as every trespass Rescous et disseisin implyeth a force and is vi et armis and there is an actuall force as with weapons number of persons c. and when an entry is made with such actuall force an action doth lie upon the said Statute Vide Sect. 240 54 H 6 20. Sect. 433. Qui per alium facit per seipsum facere videtur If an infant or any man of full age have any right of entry into any lands any stranger to the use of the infant c. may enter into the lands and this Reg. shall vest the lands in them without any commandment pr●cedent or agreement subsequent But if a disseisor levy a fi●e with proclamation according to the Statute a stranger without a Commandment c. within the five yeers cannot enter in the name of the disseisee to avoid the fine and that resolution was grounded upon the construction of the Statute of 4 H. 7. ca. 24. But an assent subsequent within the five years should be sufficient omnis enim ratihabitio c. 7 E 3 69 11. Ass p 11 39. Ass p 18 10 H 7 12. a. 3 H 8. entry conque et faux recovery 29. lib. 9. fo 106 a. L. Audeleyes case 45 E 3. Release 18. and Breve 589 20 E 3. 62 par Thorp Sect. 434. Reg. it is true that where a man doth lesse than the commandment or authority committed unto him there the act is void and where a man doth that which he is authorized to doe and more there it is good for that which is warranted and void for the rest Impotentia aut●n excusat legem 1 H. 4 3. 12 Ass 24. 26. Ass 39 V. S 419. 46. E 3. petition 18. 33. H. 6. 8. Lex non permittit aliquod inconveniens Albeit the Recluse or Anchorite be shut up himself c. yet to avod a discent he must command one to make claim and such a recluse shall alwayes appear by Atturney in such cases where others must appear in proper person 43 E 3. 8. b. 30. a. Sect. 436. Quant home est in prison est disseise le disseisor mor feign c. The disseisee shall not be bound in this case for that by the intendment of Law he is kept without intell●gence of things abroad and also that he hath not liberty to goe at large to make entry or claim or seek counsell and so note a diversity between a Recluse who might have intelligence and a man in prison Pl. Com. 360. Stowels case But if he be disseised when he is at large and the discent is cast during the time of his imprisonment this discent shall bind him 9 H 7. 24. Vide lib. fo 259. a. Sect. 437. Si t●el que est en prison soit utlage en action de debt ou trespass ou en apucal de Robbery il reveria tiel utlage per b●eve de error Outlawries may be reversed either by plea or by writ of error By plea when the defendant commeth in upon the Caput utlagati c. he may by plea reverse the same for matters apparent as in respect of a supersedeas omission of processe varience or other matter apparent in the Record and yet in these cases some hold that in another term the defendant is driven to his writ of error 2 E 4. 1 4 E 4. 10. a 1 E 4. 73 11 H 7. 5 21 H 6. 50 9 H 4● ●3 El. Dy. 192. 2 El. 176. 37. H 6. 19. But for any matters in fact as death imprisonment service of the King c. he is driven to his writ of error unlesse it be in case of felony and there in favorem vitae he may plead it But albeit imprisonment be a good cause to reverse an outlawry yet it must be by processe of Law in invitum and not by consent or covin for such imprisonment shall not avoid the outlawry because upon the matter it is his own act 8. H 4. 7 21 H 7. 13 39 H 6. 1 H 7. 1. 1 E 4. 2 27 H 8. 2 38. Ass p. 17. V S. 439. Sect. 438. Auxi si un recovery soit per default vers tiel que est en prison il avoidam le judgement per breve de error c. For he shall have no writ of discent because the summons was according to
year and a day but this Statute extends onely to Fines and not to Non-claim upon a judgement in a Writ of Right and therefore the Statute of ●● E 3 16 which ousteth Non-claim onely to Fines levied extendeth not to a judgement in a Writ of Right to this day and therefore the Common Law in that case remaineth c. viz that claim must be made within a year and a day after judgement Also if a Fine be levied without Proclamations or without so many as the Law requireth then the Statute of Non-claim doth extend to such a Fine l 3 fo 44 c. Case del fines l 1. fo 96 Shelleys Case l 2 f 93 Binghams Case l 8 f 100 Lechfords Case l 91 f 139 c. Beaumands Case l 10. f ●9 b Lampots Case 99 a l 9 f 105 Margaret Podgers Case l 5. f 124 Saffins Case l 1● 96 Seymors Case l 8 f 72. Greysleys Case l 11 ●65 7● 78. Pl. Com. Smith and Stapl. Case Stows Case and Howels Case Bract. 435 Brit. 216 fo 262 a Finis finem litibus imponit A feme covert also they in reversion or remainder expectant upon any estate of Freehold are holpen by the Statute of 4 H 7 vide lib. fo ●62 b Sect. 442. In a Writ of entry sur disseisin against one supposing that he had not entry but by I. S. who disseised him the Tenant said that I.S. dyed seised and the land descended to him and prayed his age the Plaintiff counterpleaded his age for that he arraigned an Assize against S. who dyed hanging the Assize and he was ousted of his age for that the bringing of the Assize amounted to a Claim 24 E 3. 25. 9 E 2. Age 1●1 If Tenant in Dower alien in fee with Warranty and the heir in the reversion bring a Writ of entry in Casu proviso c and hanging the plea the Tenant dyeth the heir shall not be rebutted or barred by this Warranty for that the Praecipe did amount to a continuall Claim 3 E 3. Garr 62. Fleta l. 6 c. 52 Bract. l. 5 fo 436 Fo. 263 a. Nota c. If the goods of Villain before any seisure c. be distrained the Lord may have a Replevin and the very bringing of the Writ doth amount to a Claim of the goods and vesteth the property in the Lord 33 E 3 Repl. 43 ●2 E 3 18. b 9 H ● 25. Nemo debet rem suam sine facto aut defectu suo emittere Sect. 443. If an usurpation be had to a Church in time of vacation this shall not prejudice the Successor to put him out of possession but that at the next avoidance he shall present F. N. B. 34 M.W. 2 c 5. imp excus c. When there is no Dean or Mayor the Chapter or Commonalty in that case cannot make claim because they have neither ability nor capacity to take or to sue any action But during the vacation of the Abathy of D. if a lease for life or a gift in Tail be made the remainder to the Abbot of D. and his Successors this remainder is good if there be a● Abbot made during the particular estate 2 H 7 13. 40 As 26. 34 E ● Garr 29. Qu. de dubiis c. Inter cuncta leges percunctabere doctos Hor. As Collatio peperit artes so Collatio perficit artes Crescente scientia cresunt simul dubitationes Autortias Philosophorum Medicorum Poetarum sunt in causis allegandae tenendae fo 264. a. CHAP. VIII Of Releases Sect. 444 REleases are of two sorts viz. a Release of all the right which a man hath either in lands and tenements or in goods and chattels Or there is a Release of actions real of or in lands or tenements or personal of or in goods or chattels or mixt partly in the realty partly in the personalty vide S 4●2 Remis Relax quiet clamasse are proper words of Releases and be much of one effect besides there is Renunciare Acquietare and there be many other words of Release as if the lessor grants to the lessee for life that he shall be discharged of the rent vide S 532. Express Releases must of necessity be by Deed. Releases in Law are sometime by Deed and sometime without Deed. As if the Lord dissease the Tenant and make a Feoffment in fee by Deed or without Deed this is a Release of the Seigniory And so it is if the disseisee disseise the heir of the disseisor and make a Feoffment c this is a Release in Law of the right And the same Law is of a right in action 27 H 8. 29. Vse 34 H 6. 44. Attaint 3 E 3. 38. 21 E 4. 21. Pl. Com. de la mere If the Obligee make the Obligor his executor this is a release in law of the action but the duty remains for the which the executor may retain so much goods c. 8 E 4. 3. 21 E 4. 2. If the feme Obligee take the Obligor to husband this is a Release in Law So it is if there be two femes Obligees and the one take the debtor to husband 11 H 7. 4 ●0 H 7. 29 8 E 4. 3. If an Infant make the debtor his executor this is a good Release in Law of the action But if a feme execu●rix take the Debtor to husband this is no Release in Law for that should be a wrong to the dead and in Law work a Devastavit which an act of Law shall never work M. 30 31 E● adjudged Note a diversity between a Release in Deed and a Release in Law ● for if the heir of the disseisor make a lease for life his right is gone for ever But if the disseisee doth disseise the heir of the disseisor and make a lease for life by this Release in Law the right is released but during the life of the lessee for a Release in Law shall be expounded more favorably according to the intent of the parties then a Release in Deed which is the act of the party and shall be taken most strongly against himself 30 E 3. 24 32 E 3. sc fac 102. Ius includeth not onely a right but also any Title or Claim either by force of a Condition Mortmain c. for the which no action is given by Law but onely an entry Sect. 446 fol. 265. a. Null droit passa per un release forsque le droit que le relesior ad al temps del release fait Note a man may have a present right though it take effect in possession but in futuro As he that hath a right to a reversion or remainder and such a right he that hath it may presently release Brit. fo 101. The Baron makes a lease for life and dieth the Release made by the wife of her Dower to him in reversion is good albeit she hath no cause of action against him in present 16 E 3. Bar. 245. Hoes Case 5.
in tail to A. the remainder to his right heirs A. dyeth without issue the Collaterall heir of A. shall have a writ of right of the seisin of A. 4. E. 3. 16. 17. And so note a diversity between a seisin to cause posses fratris c. for there is required a more actuall seisin and a seisin to maintain a writ of right 40. E. 3. 8. 42. E. 3. 20. 37. Ass 4. 14. E. 4. 24. 7. H 5. 4. 11. H. 4. 11. Sect. 483. 484. Note a diversity where the issue taken goeth to the point of the writ or action there modo and forma are but words of form as in Littletons case of the writ of entry in casu proviso and so is the c. well explained in this Section But otherwise it is when a collaterall point in pleading is traversed as if a feoffment be alleadged by two and this is traversed modo and forma and it is found the feoffment of one there modo and forma is materiall So if a feoffment be pleaded by deed and it is traversed absque hoc quod feoffavit modo forma upon this collaterall issue modo forma are so essentiall as the Jury cannot find a feoffment without deed 9. H. 6. 1. 40 E. 3. 35. 21. E. 3. 4. 22. F.N.B. 205. 206. g. 40. E. 3. 5. 32. H. 8. issue Br. 80. 12. E. 4. 4. Here is another diversity to be observed that albeit the issue be upon a collaterall point yet if by the finding of part of the issue it shall appear to the Court that no such action lieth for the plaintiffe no more then if the whole had been found there modo forma are but words of forme as here in the case which Littleton putteth of the Lord and Tenant appeareth 10. E. 4. 7. 8. E. 4. 15. 20. and 21. E. 4. 3. Merlbr cap. 3. If the matter of the issue be found it is sufficient and this rule holds in criminall causes Pl. Com. 101. v. 6. E. 3. 41. b. 9. H. 7. 3. 13. H. 7. 14. 8. E. 3. 70. 8. Ass 29. 39. 5. H. 4. 22. 7. H. 4. 11. Pl. Com. 92. 3. Mar. Dyer 115. 116. 40. E. 3. 35. 31. E. 3. account 58. 28. Ass 48. The lessee covenants with the lessor not to cut downe any trees c. and binds himself in a bond of 40. l. for performance of covenants the lessee cuts down ten trees the lessor brings an action of debt upon the bond and assigneth a breach that the lessee cutteth down twenty trees whereupon issue is joyned and the Jury find that the lessee cut down ten judgment shall be given for the Plaintiff for sufficient matter of the issue is found for the Plaintiff Sect. 485. 486. An assault battery or taking of goods c. alledged in another county cannot be traversed without speciall cause of justification which extendeth to some certain place as if a Constable of a Town in another county arrest the body of a man that breaketh the peace there he may traverse the county but he must not rest there but all other places saving in the Town whereof he is Constable And so it is of taking of goods the Defendant justifies for damage feisant in another county he must as before traverse But where the cause of the justification is not restrained to a certain place that is so locall as it cannot be alledged in any other Town c. then albeit the action be brought in a forraigne county yet he must alledge his justification in the county where the action is brought In an action upon the case the Plaintiff declared for speaking of slanderous words which are transitory and laid the words to be spoken in London the Defendant pleaded a concord for speaking of words in all the counties of England saving in London and traversed the speaking of the words in London the Plaintiff in his Declaration denied the concord whereupon the Defendant demurres and Judgment c. for the Plaintiff Tr. 30. El. Kings Bench. Inglebert and Jones Com. Pleas. Pasche 38. El. Rot. 1656. It is an ancient Principle in Law That for transitory causes of action the Plaintiff might alledge the fame in what place or County he would It is better that it be turned to a default then the Law should be changed or any innovation made 2. H. 4. 18. 38. E. 3. 1. A man did grant a rent that the grantee should hold the distress against gages and pledges and yet he shall gage delivery for otherwise by this new invention all Replevins shall be taken away 4. E. 3. cap. 5. 4. H. 4. cap. 2. Where the Jury is bound to find as well locall things in many cases as transitory in other Counties Vide lib. 6. fol. 46. Dowdales Case 3. E. 3. Ass 446. 14. H. 4 35. 5. H. 5. 2. 37. H. 6. 2. 7. E. 4. 45. 18. E. 4. 1. 13. H. 7. 17. 2 Mar. Br. att 104. 20. El. Dyer 171. 19. H. 6. 48. 28. H. 8. Dyer 29. 12. H. 8. 1. Reg. by the Common Law if the Defendant hath cause of justification or excuse then can he not plead Not guilty for then upon the evidence it shall be found against him for that he confesseth the battery and upon that issue cannot justifie it but he must plead the speciall matter and confesse and justifie the battery If in battery the Defendant may justifie the same to be done of the Plaintiffs own assault he must plead it specially and must not plead the generall issue and so of the like In trespasse of breaking his close upon Not guilty he cannot give in evidence that the beasts came through the Plaintiffs hedge which he ought to keep nor upon the generall issue justifie by reason of a rent charge common c. 25. H. 8. Br. In Detinue the Defendant pleaded non detinet he cannot give in evidence that the goods were pawned to him for money and that it is not paid but must plead it but he may give in evidence a gift from the Plaintiff for that proveth he detaineth not the Plaintiffs goods 22. H. 6. 33. 20. El. Dyer 276. 2. M. Dyer 212. If two men be bound in a bond joyntly and the one is sued alone he may plead matter in abatement of the Writ but he cannot plead Non est factum for it is his Deed though it be not his sole deed lib. 5. fo 119. Whelpdales case vide c. fo 283. a. Reg. whensoever a man doth any thing by force of a Warrant or Authority he must plead it But all that hath been said must be under two cautions 1. That whensoever a man cannot have advantage of the speciall matter by way of pleading there he shall take advantage of it in the evidence For example the Rule of Law is That a man cannot justifie in the killing or death of a man and therefore he shall be received to give the especiall matter in evidence as that it
43. 43 E. 3. 5. Sect. 671. Note a diversity between a Remitter and a Discent For if a woman be disseised and being of full age taketh husband and then the disseisor dyeth seised this discent shall binde the wife albeit she was covert when the discent was cast because she was of full age when she took husband But albeit the wife that hath an ancient Right and being of full age taketh a husband and the Discontinue letteth the land to the husband and wife for their lives this is a Remitter to the wife for Remitters to ancient Rights are favoured in Law Sect. 672. Fo. 354. a Here it appeareth That the husband against his own alienation if he had taken the estate to him alone could not have been remitted But when the estate is made to the husband and wife albeit they be but one person in Law and no moities between them yet for that the wife cannot be remitted in this case unlesse the husband be remitted also and for that Remitters are favored c. therefore in this case in Judgement of Law both husband and wife are remitted which is worthy of great Observation Sect. 673. Fol. 354. b. Littleton having spoken of Remitters to the issue in Tail who is privy in blood and to the wife who is privy in person now he speaketh of Remitters to them in reversion or remainder expectant upon an estate Tail who are privy in estate and this case proveth That the wife is remitted presently for the equity of the Law requireth that as the discontinuance continuance of the estate in Tail is a discontinuance of the reversion or remainder so that the Remitter to the estate Tail should be a Remitter in the reversion or remainder 42 E. 3. 17 41 Ass 1. 36 Ass p. 4. Tenant for life the remainder to A. in Tail the remainder to B. in fee Tenant for life is disseised a collateral Ancestor of A. releaseth with Warranty and dieth whereby the estate Tail is barred the Tenant for life re-enters the disseisor hath an estate in fee simple determinable upon the estate Tail and the remainder of B. is revested in him And so note in this case the estate for life and the remainder in fee are revested and remitted and an estate of inheritance left in the disseisor 44 Ass p. 15. 44. E. 3. 30. If a Fine be levied sur grant rend to one for life or in taile the remainder in Fee if Tenant for life or in taile execute the estate for life or in taile this is an execution of the Remainder 20. E. 3. Aid 29. A gift in tail is made to B. the remainder to C. in Fee B. discontinueth and taketh back an estate in tail the remainder in Fee to the King by Deed inrolled Tenant in taile dyeth his issue is remitted and consequently the remainder as Littleton here saith and the diversity is between an Act in Law for that may devest an estate out of the King and a tortious Act or entry or a false and a fained recovery against Tenant for life or in taile which shall never devest any Estate remainder or reversion out of the King Pl. Com. 489. Nichols case and 553. Walsinghams case 17. El. Dy. 344. 25. E. 3. 48. Resceit 18. 49 E. 3. 16. Surre Staffords case l. 8. fo 76 b. But a Recovery by good Title against Tenant for life or in taile where the remainder is to the King by defeasable Title shall devest the remainder out of the King and restore and remit the right owners Cholmleyes case l. 2. 53. 7 R. 2. Aid le roy 61. 22. E. 3. 7. Sect. 674. 675 Fo. 355. Quod ei deforceat is a writ that is given by the statute of W. 2. ca. 4. to any Tenant for life or in Taile upon a Recovery by default against them in a Precipe and lyeth against the Recoveror and his heirs in which case the particular Tenant was without remedy at the common Law because he could not have a writ of right There hath been a question in our Books upon these words by default c. And some do hold contrary to three Objections made c. and as to the first they say That albeit that in the writ of waste judgement is not only given upon the default yet the default is the principal and the cause of awarding of the writ to enquire of the waste is an incident thereunto and the Law alwayes hath respect to the first and principal cause and therefore upon such a Recovery a writ of deceit lieth and that writ lyeth not but where the recovery is by default 17 E 3. 58. 29 E 3. 42. F. N. B. 98. b. 12 H. 4. 4. 19 E. 2 disceit 56. w. 2 ca. 3. 3 H. 4. 1. So in an acton of waste against the Husband and wife upon the default of the Husband the wife shall be teceived and yet the Statute there speaketh also per defaultam So upon such a recovery in waste against the Baron and feme by default the wife shall have a cui in vita by the Statute and it speaketh where the recovery is per defaul 9 E. 4. 16. and albeit the defendent may give in evidence if he knoweth it yet when he makes default the Law presumeth he knoweth not of it and it may be that he in truth knew not of it and therefore it is reason that seeing the statute that is a beneficial Statute hath given it him that he be admitted to his quod ei deforceat in which writ the truth and right shall be tried and so it is of a Recovery by default in an Ass albeit the Recognitor of the Ass give a verdict a Quod ei deforceat lyeth and all this was resolved by the whole Court of Common Pleas and so the doubt in 41 E 3. 8. well resolved 2 H. 4. 2. 21 H. 6. 56. 44 E. 3. 42. Br. quod ei deforceat 4 P. 33 Eliz Rot. 1125. inter Ed Elmer and William Thacker in quod ei deforceat Nota If Tenant for life make default after defaltation and he in Reversion is received and pleading to issue and it found by verdict for the demandant the default and the verdict are causes of the judgement and yet the Tenant shall have a quod ei deforceat As to the 2. Ob. That the defendant may have an attaint 1. It was utterly denyed that an Attaint did lie in this case for though it be taken by the oath of 12 men yet it is but an Enquest of Office where upon no Attaint did lye on either party us upon an enquiry of Collusion although it be by one Jury nor upon a verdict in a quale jus 2. Admitting that an Attaint did lye in that case yet it followeth ex conseq that a quod ei deforceat did not lye 33 E 3. quod ei deforceat pl. ult F.N.B. 156. Fleta l 5 ca. 11. 48. E. 3. 19. 40. Ass 23. 33 H. 6. 25. 39 H.
as no man that is innocent or free from injury or wrong be by a literall construction punished or endammaged and therefore in this case albeit the Letter of the Statute is generally to give damage against him that is found Tenant and the case that Littleton here putteth D. being survivor is consequently found Tenant of the Land yet because he waived the estate and never agreed to the Feoffment nor took any profits he shall not be charged with the damages Sect. 686 687. fol. 360. b. Feint ou fained action est tiel action que comit que les perols de le breve sont voyers encore per certaine causes home nad cause ne title per la ley de recover per mesne le action Et faux action est lou les perolls de breve Sont faux Sect. 687. postea vide As discents do remit the heire which comes in the Per so succession doth remit the successor albeit he cometh in the post and so in other cases where the issue in taile of full age shall be remitted there in the like case shall the successor be remitted also and all meane charges and incumbrances Vide Sect. 150. Stat. Merton Sect. 688. Fol. 361. a. Si home suist faux action c. recover envers le Tenant en Taile per defalt Littleton addeth by default because if the recovery passed upon an issue tried by verdict he shall never falsifie in the point tried because an attaint might have been had against the Jurors and albeit all the Jurors be dead so as the attaint doe faile yet the issue in Taile shall not falsifie in the point tried untill it be lawfully avoided pro veritate accipitur As if the Tenant in Taile be impleaded in a Formedon and he traverse the gift and it tried against him and thereupon the demandant recover In this case the issue in Taile shall not falsifie in the point tried but he may falsifie the recovery by any other matter as the Tenant in Taile might have pleaded a collaterall warranty or a release as Littleton here putteth the case or to confesse and avoid the point tried and Littletons case holdeth not only in a Recovery by default whereof he speaketh but also upon a nihil dicit or confession or demurre 12 E. 4. 19. 13 E. 4. 3. 11 H. 4. 89. 7 H 4. 17. 14 H. 7. 10 11. 28. Ass 32. 52. 34. Ass 7. 10 H. 6. 5. 19 H. 6. 39. Br. faux Recovery 55. Sect. 689. Fo. 361. b. Vide Sect. 686 687. Here note That a Remitter may be had after a recovery upon a feint action by a disseisin and a discent as well as by a discent after a discontinuance by a Feoffment c. Sect. 690. Fol. 362. a. Here it appeareth that if a Judgement be given against a Tenant in Tail upon a faint or false action and Tenant in Tail dye before execution no execution can be sued against the issue in Tail 10. H. 6. 6. 12. E. 4. 20. 23. El. Dy. 276. l. 1. f. 106. Shelleys case Pl. Com. 55. vide les Autor supra cited c. But if in a common recovery Judgement be had against Tenant in Tail where he vouched and hath Judgement to recover over in value albeit Tenant in Taile dye before execution yet the recoveror shall execute the Judgement against the issue in Tail in respect of the intended recompence and for that it is the common assurance of the realm and is well warranted by our Books and was not invented by Justice Cook in the time of E. 4 as some hold by tradition but it may be that it was upon former authors and opinions of Judges discovered by him assented unto by the rest of the Judges Vide S. 709. 15. E. 3. Bre. 324 1. E. 4. 5. 5. E. 4. 2. 12. E. 4. 20. 23. El. Dy 376. l. 10. 37. 38. Mary Portingtons case If a recovery be had against Tenant for life without consent or covine though it be without Title and execution be had and Tenant for life dyeth the reversion or remainder is discontinued c. but if such a Recovery be had by covin between the Demandant and Tenant for life then he in the reversion or remainder may enter for forfeiture So it is if Tenant for life suffer a common Recovery at this day it is a forfeiture of his estate 5. Ass 3. 5. E. 3. enter cong 42. lib. 1. 15. 16. Sir William Pelhams case Since Littleton wrote there were two Statutes made for preservation of Remainders and Reversions expectant upon any estate for life the one in 32 H. 8. the other in 14. El. But 32 H 8. extendeth not to Recoveries when Tenant for life came in as vouchee c. and that Act is repealed by 14 El. and full remedy provided for preservation of the entry of them in reversion or remainder But the Statute of 14 El. extend●●● not to any recovery unlesse it be by agreement or Covin 32 H 8. ca. 31. 14 El. ca. 8. 2. If there be Tenant for life remainder in Taile the reversion or remainder in fee if tenant for life be impleaded by agreement and he vouching Tenant in Taile and he vouch over the common vouchee this shall barre the reversion or remainder in fee although he in reversion or remainder did never assent to the recovery because it was not the intent of the Act to extend to such a recovery in which a Tenant in Taile was vouched for he hath power by common Recovery if he were in possession to cut off all Reversion and Remainders L 3. fo 60 61. Lincolne Coll. Case So if Tenant for life had surrendred to him in Remainder in Taile he might have barred the remainders and reversions expectant upon his Estate 3. Where the proviso of the Act speaketh of an assent of Record by him in reversion or remainder it is to be understood that such assent must appear upon the same Recovery either upon a voucher Aid prier Receit or the like for it cannot appear of Record unlesse it be done in course of Law and not by any extraiudiciall entry or by Memorandum Sect. 691. Fol. 362. a. Here it appeareth That upon the plea of non tenure or of a disclaimer of the Tenant in a Formedon in the descending albeit the expresse judgement be that the Tenant shall goe without day yet in the judgement of Law the demandant may enter according to the title of his Writ and be seised in Tail notwithstanding the discontinuance 5. E. 4. 1. 36 H. 6. 29. 6 E. 3. 8. 4 E. 4 38. Bract. l. 5. f. 431. c. Brit. ca. 84. And in this case the demandant hath not two rights but hath onely one ancient right and is restored to the same by course of Law and so Remitter here in a large sence is taken for a recontinuation of the right Here note that in such a praecipe where the demandant is to recover damages if the Tenant plead
non-tenure or disclaime there the demandant may averre him to be Tenant of the Land as his Writ supposes for the benefit of his damage which otherwise he should lose or pray judgement and entry 13 H. 7. 28. 22 H 6. 44. But where no damages are recoverd as in a Formedon in discent c. there he cannot aver him Tenant but pray his judgement and enter for thereby he hath the effect of his suit frustra fit per plura quod c. 8 E. 3. 434. 24 E 3. 9. 11 H. 4. 16. and 7 H. 6. 17. A general averment is the conclusion of every plea to the Writ or in barre of replication and other pleadings for Counts or Avowries in nature of Counts need not be averred containing matter affirmed ought to be averred hoc paratus est verificare c. Particular averments are as when the life of Tenant for life or Tenant in Tail are averred and there though this word verificare be not vsed but the matter avouched and affirmed it is upon the matter an averment and an averment containeth as well the matter as the forme thereof Sect. 692 Fol. 363. a. Albeit in this case and in the case before the entry of the demandant is his own act and the demandant hath no expresse judgement to recover yet he shall be remitted causa ●●a supra 36 H. 6 Fo. 29. Sect. 693. Fo. 363. b. Here note a diversity If a man of full age having but a right of action taketh an estate to him he is not remitted But where he hath a right of entry and taketh an estate he by his entry is remitted because his entry is lawful and if the disseisor infeoffe the disseisee and others the disseisee is remitted to the whole for his entry is lawful otherwise it is if his entry were taken away 29. Ass p. 26. 43. Ass 3. 11 H. 7. ●0 3 H. 6. 19. 40 E. 3. 43. If Tenant in Tail be of a manor where unto an advowson is appendant the Tenant in Tail discontinue in Fee discontinuee grant away the Advowson in Fee and dyeth the ●●e in tail recontinueth the Manor by Recovery he is thereby remitted to the Advowson and he that right hath shall present when the Church becometh void 8 R. 2. Qu. imp 199. 26. H. 8. 4. F.N.B. 36. 35. b. The Patron of a benefice is outlawed and the Church become void an estranger usurpeth and six moneths passe the King doth recover in a qu. imp and remove the incumbent c. Advowson is recontinued to the rightful patron 22. Ass p. 33. Theobald Grinvile and so note a diversity a remitter cannot be properly unlesse there be two Titles but a recontinuance may be where there is but one If the disseisor by Deed Indented make a Lease forlife or a gift in Taile c. yet the Deed Indented shall not suffer the livery made according to the form and effect of the Indenture to work any Remitter to the disseisee but shall estop the disseisee to claim his former estate and if the disseisor upon the feoffment doth reserve any Rent or condition c. the rent or condition is good 13 H. 4. 5. 3 H. 4. 17. 8 H. 4. 8. 12 H. 4. 19. 35. Ass 8. 17. Ass 3. 43. E. 3. 17. Parkers Case 21 H. 6. 2. per Paston Sect. 695. Fol. 364. a. Note a diversity A claime in paiis shall not hinder Remitter otherwise it is a claime of Record because that doth work a conclusion Sect. 696. Fol. 344. b. Here note a notable diversity If two joyntenants or coparceners joyn in a reall action where their entry is not lawful and the one is summoned and severed and the other pursueth and recovereth the moity the other Joyntenant or Coparceners shall enter and take the profits with her because their remedie was one and the same But where two Coparceners and they are disseised and a discent is cast and they have issue and dye if the issue of the one recover her moity the other shall not enter with her because their remedies were severall and yet when both have recovered they are coparceners again 10. H. 6. 10. 19 H. 6. 45. 31 H. 6. Ent. Cong 54. So here in this case that Littleton putteth then two joyntenants have not equall remedy for the Infant hath a right of Entry and the other a right of action and therefore the Infant being remitted to moity the other shall not enter and take the profits with her If A and B. joyntenants in fee be disseised by the Father of A. who dyeth seised his Sonne and heir enter he is remitted to the whole and his companion shall take Advantage thereof Otherwise here in the case of Littleton for that the Adventure is given to the Infant more in in respect of his person than of his right whereof his companion shall take no advantage But if the Grandfather had disseised the Joyntenants and the land had discended to the Father and from him to A. and then A. had dyed the entry of the other should be taken away by the first descent and therefore he should not enter with the heire of A. But here in the case of Littleton if after the discent the other Joyntenant had dyed and the infant survived some say that he should have entred into the whole because he is now in Judgement of of Law solely in by first feoffment and he claimeth not under the discent Vide 35 Ass p. ultimo ** CHAP. XIII Of Warranty Sect. 697. A Communi observantia non est recedendum minime mutanda sunt quae certam habuerunt interpretationem A warranty is a convenant reall annexed to Lands or Tenements whereby a man and his heires are bound to warrant the same and either upon voucher or by judgement in a writ of Warrant Cartae to yeeld other Lands and Tenements to the value of those that shall be evicted by a former title or else may be used by way of Rebutter i.e. to repel or barre Bract. l. 2. fo 37. and l. 5. fo 380. c. Glan l. 3. ca. 1. 2. 3. 38. E. 321. 45 E 3. 18. Fol. 365. a. Garronter en un sense signifie a defender son tenant en sa seisin en auter sence signifie que si il ne defendant que le garrant luy soit tenue a eschanges de faire son gree a la vaillaunce Brit. Fo. 197. b. By the Statute of Glocestor foure things are enacted 1. That if a Tenant by the Curtesie alien with warranty and dyeth that this should be no barre to the heir in a Writ of Mordanc without Assets in fee simple and if Lands or Tenements descend to the heir from the Father he shall be barred having regard to the value thereof 2 That if the heir for want of Assets c. doth recover the Lands of his mother by force of this Act and afterwards Assets discend c. 3. That the issue of the Sonne
in this case of Littleton when one Coparcener entreth into the whole and maketh a Feoffment of the whole this devesteth the Freehold in Law out of the other Coparcener Item when the one sister enters into the whole the possession being void and maketh a feoffment in fee this act subsequent doth so explain the entry precedent into the whole that now by construction of Law she was onely seised of the whole and this feoffment can be no disseisin because the other sister was never seised nor any abatement because they both made but one heir to the Ancestor and one Freehold and inheritance descended to them so as in judgement of Law the Warranty doth not commence by disseisin or by abatement and without question her entry was no intrusion Pl. Com. 543. fo 374. a. Tenant in Tail hath issue two daughters and discontinue in fee the yongest disseiseth the discontinuee to the use of her self and her sister the discontinuee ousteth her against whom she recovereth in an Assize the eldest agreeth to the disseisin as she may against her sister and become joynt-tenant with her And thus is the book in the 21 Ass p. 19. to be intended the case being no other in effect But A. disseiseth one to the use of himself and B. B. agreeth by this he is joyntenant with A. Fol. 374. b. Nota in these two last Sections four several Conclusions 1. That a lineal Warranty doth binde the right of a fee simple 2. That a lineal warranty doth not binde the right of an estate Tail for that is restrained by the Statute of donis Cond 3. That a lineal Warranty and Assets is a bar of the right in Tail and is not restrained by the said Act. 4. That a collateral Warranty made by a collateral Ancestor of the donee doth binde the right of an estate Tail albeit there be no Assets and the reason thereof is upon the Statute of Donis Cond for that it is not made by the Tenant in tail c. as the lineal Warranty is 3 E. 3. 22. 4 E. 3. 28. 50. M. 38 E. 3. Cor. Rege Ab. de Colchest case 45 Ass 6. Pl. Com. 554. 19 E. 4. 10. Vide S 703 747. To this may be added That the Warranty of the Donee in Tail which is collateral to the Donor or to him in remainder being heir to him doth binde them without any Assets For though the alienation of the Donee after issue doth not bar the Donor which was the mischief provided for by the Act yet the Warranty being collateral doth bar both of them for the Act restraineth not that Warranty but it remaineth at the Common Law as Littleton after saith And in like manner the Warranty of the Donee doth barre him in remainder Note Assets requisite to make lineal Warranty a barre must have six qualities 1. It must be Assets i e. of equal value or more at the time of the discent 2. It must be of discent and not by purchase or gift 3. It must be Assets in fee simple and not in fee Tail or for another mans life 4. It must descend to him as heir to the same Ancestor that made the Warranty Brit. 185. 4. E. 3. garr 63. 16. E. 3. Ass 4. 43. E. 3. 9. 7. H. 6. 3. 11. H. 4. 20. 5. It must be of Lands or Tenements or Rents or Services valuable or other profits issuing out of Lands Tenements and not personall Inheritances as Annuities c. 6. It must be in state or interest and not in use or right of actions or right of entry for they are no Assets until they be brought into possession 24. E. 3. 47. But if a rent in fee simple issuing out of the Land of the heir descend unto him whereby it is extinct yet this is Assets and to this purpose hath in Judgement of Law a Continuance 31 E. 3. Ass 5. 13. E. 3. Recovery in value 17. l. 3. f. 31. Butler and Bakers Case A Seigniory in franck-Almoign is no Assets because it is not valuable and therefore not to be extended and so it seemeth of a Seigniory of Homage and Fealty 14. E. 3. Mesne 7. Regist 293. But an Advowson is Assets whereof Fleta l. 2. c. 65. saith Item de ecclesiis quae ad donationem Domini pertinent quot sunt quae ubi quantum valeat quaelibet Ecclesia per annum secundum veram ipsius aestimationem pro Marca solidus extendatur ut si ecclesia 100. Marcas valeat per annum ad 100. solidos extendatur advocatio per annum Brit. 185. 5. H. 7. 37. 32. H. 6. 21. 33. E. 3. garr 102. Sect. 714. Fol. 375. a. Nota that albeit in this case the issue in Tail must claim as heir of both their bodies yet the Warranty of either of them is lineal to the issue 35 E. 3. garr 73. If Lands be given to a man and a woman unmarried and the heirs of their two bodies and they intermarry and are disseised and the husband releaseth with Warranty the wife dieth the husband dyeth albeit the Donees did take by moities yet the Warranty is lineal for the whole because as our Author here saith the issue must in a Formedon convey to him the right as heir to the Father and his Mother of their two bodies ingendred and therefore it is collateral for no part Sect. 715 716 717. Nunquam nimis dicitur quod nunquam satis dicitur And here it appeareth That it is not adjudged in Law a collateral Warranty in respect of the bloud for the Warranty may be collateral albeit the bloud be lineal and the Warranty may be lineal albeit the bloud be collateral But it is in Law deemed a collateral Warranty in respect that he that maketh the Warranty is collateral to the Title of him upon whom the Warranty doth fall 8 R. 2. gar 101. vide Sect. 704. Sect. 718. Fo. 376. a. Every Warranty doth descend upon him that is heire to him that made the Warranty at the Common Law Vide Sect. 3. 603 735 736 737. Hereupon many things worthy to be known are to be understood 1. That if a man infeoff another of an acre of ground with Warranty and hath issue two Sons and dyeth seised of another acre of land of the nature of Borough English the feoffee is impleaded albeit the Warranty descendeth onely upon the eldest yet may he vouch them both the one as heir to the Warranty and the other as heir to the Land 40 E. 3. 14. So it is of heirs in Gavelkinde c. 22 E. 4. 10. And in like sort the heir at the Common Law and the heir of the part of the Mother shall be vouched 49 Ass 4. 38. E. 3. 22. But the heir at the Common Law may be vouched alone in both these cases at the election of the Tenant sic de similibus Also if a man dye seised of certain lands in fee having issue a Son and a daughter by one