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A38736 Tryals per pais, or, The law concerning juries by nisi-prius &c. by G.D. of the Inner Temple, Esquire. G. D. 1685 (1685) Wing E3413A; ESTC R36204 212,735 464

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shall not be tryed by Certificat but per pais Rolls tit Tryal 583. Concerning Certificates of Spiritual persons vide Rolls ibidem 591 592. 7. A Record shall be tryed by the Record it Records self and not per pais But matter of fact concerning a Record is tryable by a Jury as whether a plaint c. was levied according to the Custom non prosecutus est ullum breve is tryable by the Country Mixt with fact Hob. 244. Hutt 20. So if a Statute hath two Seals or but one 1 Leon. 229. 2 Cro. 375. 1 Inst 125. b. so in a per quae servitia if the Tenant say he held not of the Conusor Jour del note levie shall be tryed per pais In Escape upon a Cepi returned ne unques in son gard shall be tryed per Record but upon Rolls tit Tryal 574. a Capias not returned the prisal shall be tryed per pais So shall an action brought by Covin for the Covin is not of Record In a scire facias per Roy to have execution of a Iudgment in a Quare impedit if the Def. say that after the Recovery the King presented issint Judgement execute and the issue be whether the King presented per cause del Judgement or of an avoydance after the death of J. S. who was presented by a stranger after the avoidance upon which the King had Iudgment This shall be tryed per pais And Why there needs no visne where Letters Patents were made otherwise in pleading Deeds 4 Rep. 71. for this Reason in pleading of Letters Patents the place need not be alledged where the Letters Patents were made because the D●fendant cannot plead nul tiel Record but must plead non concessit and then the Jury shall come from the place where the Lands lie Vide li. 6. fo 15. 1 Inst 117. 260. Plo. Com 231. But upon a Non est factum pleaded to a Deed there must be a place alledged where the Deed was made because though the Deed as to the matter of Law be tryable by the Court yet the sealing and delivery thereof Dee● and other matter of fact must be tryed by the Jury so that in this case of a Deed there is a Tryal per Pais and by the Court. 1 Inst fol. 35. vide apres 18. The issue upon an Indictment or acquittal What issues shall be tryed per Record upon this shall be tryed by the Record So shall the allowance of a Protection in Bank The imprisonment upon the execution and not for other cause in escape The justification of an imprisonment because he is a Iustice of Peace A Statute-Merchant Count or not Count Baron of the Parliament or Vicount or not Whether a place be within the Ligeance of the King of England or in Scotland A Fine sur release Rendring his body in discharge of his Baile shall be tryed by the Record Rolls tit Tryal 574. But in escape against the Mayor of Astaple What per Pais for suffering J. S. in execution upon a Statute Staple to go at large if the Defendant say he was not in Prison upon the execution but upon a Plaint there this shall be tryed per pais and not per Record because 't would be unreasonable that the Defendant should certifie a Record where he himself was concerned ibid. The time of inrolliing Letters Patents shall be tryed per pais Co. Lib. 4. 71. 9 H. 7. 2. Disseisin of an Office in any Court or Office Raseing a Record rasing a Record in any Court by the Filizers and Attorneys of the Court. 8. A Peer of the Realm i. e. a Lord of Peers the Parliament shall upon an Indictment of Treason or Felony misprision of Treason and misprision of Felony be tryed by his Peers without Oath 1 H. 4. 2. But in an Appeal at the Suit of the Party he shall be tryed per probos legales homines Juratores 10 E. 4. 6. c. because that is not the Kings Suit but the Parties Vide li. 9. 31. Le case del Abbot de Strata Mercella And in a Praemunire his Tryal shall be per pais 12 Bep 93. Lamb. In●t 520. 3. Inst 30. Bolstr 1. part 198. Dutchesses Countesses or Baronesses although married shall be tryed as Peers of the Realm are but so shall not Bishops and Abbots Stam. 153. 20 H. 6. 9. 2. Inst 48 49 50. 156. b. 294. 9. The Customs and usages of every Court shall be tryed by the Judges of the Customs of Courts c. tryed by the Judges same Court if they are pleaded in the same Court ib. and many other things are tryed by the Judges as the reasonableness of a fine of an offender or upon surrender of a Copy-hold Estate and so it is of Customes services and also of the time that a Tenant at will shall have to carry away his Goods And these Cases come under the Rule which makes matter of Law to be tryed by the Judges Vide 1 Inst fol. 56. And in some Cases matter of fact shall be tryed by the Judges as if the Plaintiff appear by Attorney in Court and then the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff is dead If one appears and saith that he is the Plaintiff whether he is or not shall be tryed by Inspection the Judges li. 9. 30. So the non-age of an Infant generally by inspection of the Court But in many Cases Infancy shall be tryed per Pais as if an Infant appear by Attorney v. Bulst 1 part 131. Rolls tit Tryals 573. in Error this shall be tryed per Pais li. 9. 31. and so it is in an Aetate probanda Maihim in an Appeal of Maihim the Maihim Court may adjudge this upon the view at the prayer of the Defendant and this Tryal is peremptory to the Parties by a Jury of Chirurgeons Vide Rolls tit Tryal 578. Maihim may be tryed again by the Court by inspection for increase of Damages but then these things are to be considered First it must be a Maihim and not a bare wounding Secondly The Maihim must be ascertained in the declaration so as that it Maihim may appear that the Maihim inspected and the Maihim in the declaration be all one as was resolved Mich. 21 Car. 2. B. R. in the Case of Badwel and Burford the principal Case of which was that the Defendant whip'd the Plaintiffs Horse which made him throw her and another Horse trod on her and maim'd her hand and adjudged no increase of Damages in that Case being a Consequential and not a direct Maihim Nonage in a Writ of Error to reverse a Inspection Iudgement or a fine of the Tenant by resceit of one vouched come deins age issint praie le paroll à demurrer Nonage sur aid praier in Appeal Audita querela to avoid a Statute Accompt and in all actions where 't is prayed that the paroll demurroit Nonage shall be tryed per
without such consent of parties This is an insufficient Tryal not remedied by any Statute except it be upon an insuff●ient suggestion and then the Statute of 21 Jac. 13. helps it Vpon suggestion that the Plaintiff and Venire facias to some of the Coroners the Sheriff and one of the Coroners are of kindred to the Plaintiff or Defendant or upon any other suggestion which contains a Principal challenge the Venire facias may be directed to the other Coroners Dier 367. Error of a Iudgement in Northampton Bayliffs because in Northampton the Court being held before the Mayor and two Bayliffs the Venire facias upon the Issue was awarded to the two Bayliffs to return a Jury before the Mayor and Bayliffs secundum Consuetudinem which being returned and Iudgement given the Error assigned was because the Bayliffs being Iudges of the Court could not also be Officers to whom Process should be directed there being no Custome that can maintain any to be both Officer and Iudge But all the Court absente Hide conceived it might be good by Custome And that it is not any Error for the Iudges be not the Bayliffs only but the Mayor and Bayliffs and it is a common course in many of the Antient Corporations where the Bayliffs are Judge and Officer to return Writs Judges or the Mayor and they be Judges yet in respect of executing Process they be the Officers also And one may be Iudge and Officer diversis respectibus as in Redisseisin the Sheriff is Judge and Officer Whereupon Iudgement was affirmed Cro. 1 part 138. In Trespass and Assault laid in the Venire facias to the Garden of the Palace of Westminster Rolls tit Tryal 667. Court to be at the Palace of Westminster It was adjudged that the Venire facias shall issue al Garden del Palace and not to the Sheriff of Middlesex Bro. tit Ven. fac 31. In Trespass against two if one plead Award of Venire facias and two issues are joyned upon his Plea and two other issues are also joyned and the Court award a Venire ad triandum extitum illum quam praedictum alium exitum inter the Plaintiff and the other Defendant c. This is a good award although there be several issues betwixt the Plaintiff and both Defendants because that this word Exitus may be for all reddendo singula singulis Hob. 91. If an Inquest remain for default of Rapers and a Decem Tales is awarded and the Defendant saith for his deliverance that he is Lord of the Rape where c. and that all there are within his distress and prays a Writ to the next Hundred The Court may try this by Prochein Hundred Tryors presently without a return of the Sheriff and if it be true may award to the next Hundred otherwise if it be false 3 H. 6. 39. CAP. IV. What faults in the Venire facias shall vitiate the Tryal what not When a Venire facias de novo shall be awarded when several Venire facias's When the Venire facias shall be betwixt the party and a stranger to the Issue Who may have a Venire facias by Proviso and when WE have now shewed you to what Officer the Venire facias shall be directed The next step in the Writ is Praecipimus tibi quod Venire facias Which words Venire facias are Venire facias why the Writ so called the most effectual words in the Writ and therefore they give the denomination to the whole Writ And here opportunity is offered us to speak something of a Venire facias in general I am not ignorant how our Books swarm with Cases which arise from the defects in this Process and how that Verdicts have been set aside Iudgements stayed and reversed for want of sufficicient Returns misawarding disagreement with the Rolls discontinuance and many other faults in this Writ But the Statutes of Jeofailes especially the Statute 21 Jacob. cap. 13. have pardoned as I Statute of Jeofailes 21 Jac. 13. may so say these enormities As the awarding this Writ hab Corpora or Distringas to a wrong Officer upon any insufficient suggestion or by reason the Visne is in some part misawarded or sued out of more places or of fewer places than it ouhgt to be so as some place be right named The misnaming of any of the Jury either in Sir-name or addition in any of the said Writs or in any return thereupon so that upon examination it be proved to be the same man that was meant to be returned or if no Return be upon any of the said Writs so as a Pannel of the names of the Jurors be returned or annexed to the said Writ or if the Sheriff or Officers name having the Return thereof is not set to the Return of any such Writ so as upon Examination it be proved that the said Writ was returned by the Sheriff or Undersheriff or such other Officer In all these Cases the Iudgment shall not be stayed nor reversed for these defects But this Act doth not extend to any Writ Declaration or Suit of Appeal of Felony or Murther nor to any Indictment or Presentment of Felony or Murther or Treason nor to any Process upon any of them nor to any Writ Bill Action or Information upon any popular or penal Statute Wherefore since Informations and popular Actions are grown so frequent Popular Action c. the Attorneys c. herein had best beware of these Jeofailes By this Statute many defects are remedied which were not by the Statutes of 32 H. 8. Cap. 30. and 18 Eliz. Cap. 14. yet all are not for this Act only helps the mis-naming of a Juror in Sir-name or addition and saith nothing of his Christian name wherefore I conceive the Law in Christian name mistaken in the Venire facias incurable Codwels Case in the fifth Report remains as it was then which is that if a Juror be mis-named in his Christian name on the Venire though he be named right in the Distringas and Postea yet this is ill and not amendable and with this agrées Goddards Case Cro. 2. part 458. And since the Court Cro. 1. part so 203. doubted thereof I may well put the Christian name right in the Venine facias wrong in the Distringas Question if a Juror be right named upon the Venire and mis-named in his Christian Name in the Distringas c. whether this is amendable or not without dispute it is not by the Statute of 21 Jacob. for that only helps the Sir-name But with Reverence to the Courts doubt I conceive clearly it is holpen by the Statutes of 32 H. 8. and 18 Eliz. as a discontinuance of Process and I may with the more confidence believe it because in Codwels Case aforesaid where in the Pannel of the Venire a Juror was named Palus Cheale and in the Distringas c. he was right named Paulus Cheale and so because he
English County to cause the Jury to come de propinquiori Visne of his County to the Visne in Wales adjoyning For the Court shall not be ousted of the Plea Fitz. Abridg. tit Visne 8. Jurisdict 24. In an action against a Hundred the Venire facias may come from the next Hundred generally In Trespass if the Defendant plead not guilty to part and to the residue a Plea which causes the Tryal of that to be by a Jury de Prochein Hundred The Venire shall be awarded al Prochein Hundred for both issues because there ought not to be two Venire facias in one action vide Rolls tit Tryal 596. In an Appeal of murder committed in the Cinque Ports although the King be concerned yet because this is betwixt common persons the Venire facias to the next adjoyning Vill. ibidem If the issue be joyned of a matter in Ireland Ireland this shall be tryed by a Jury of the next County in England ib. If the issue be to be tryed by the Venue of Prochein Hundred a Mannor and the Plaintiff suggests that he is Lord of the Hundred in which the Mannor is and that all within the Hundred are within his Distress if the Defendant acknowledge this the Venue shall not be de Corpore Comitatus but of the next Hundred for if it should be de Corpore Comitatus this should be tryed by the Tenants of the Mannor Rolls ib. 667. If the Visne is in some part mis-awarded or Visne mis-awarded in part sued out of more places or fewer than it ought to be so as some place be right named this is aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes which hath ended the differences in many cases reported in our Books concerning this point wherefore I purposely omit them Error for that the Iudgment was given Infamy where the Land lies by default against the Defendant being an Infant upon issue that he was of full age adjudged that the Tryal should be in Norfolk where the Land was and not in Middlesex where the Action was brought Cro. 3. part 818. If the Visne cometh from a wrong place May be out of a wrong place by Consent yet if it be per assensum partium and so entred of Record it shall stand for Omnis Consensus tollit errorem 1 Inst 125. Holmes vers Sanders Hill 22 23 Car. B. R. Error to reverse a Iudgement given in the Kings Bench in Ireland in Debt for Rent brought by the Assignes of a reversion the Plaintiff declared of a Lease of Land in such a Parish in the Suburbs of Dublin on nil debet pleaded the Venire facias was from the said Parish in Civitate Dublin and Iudgement there per Plaintiff it was assign'd for Error because the Land lies in the Suburbs of the City and the Venire facias was from a Parish in the City Per Cur. It is all one for the Suburbs are always within the Franchise of the City as Fleetstreet is within the Suburbs of London but the Strand not though so reputed Note It was adjudged Error in an Inferior Court that the Venire facias was awarded secundum consuetudinem Curiae which ought to be per Curiam Reader vers More Mich. 1650. B. R. CAP. IX Challenges YOu have already seen of what Visne the Jury ought to be The next thing to be considered is concerning Challenges Challenge is a word common as well to the English as to the French and sometimes Challenge signifieth to claim and the Latine word is vendicare sometime in respect of revenge to challenge into the field and then it is called in Latine vindicare or provocare Sometime in respect of partiality or insufficiency to challenge in Court persons returned on a Jury And seeing there is no proper Latine word to signifie this particular kind of challenge they have framed a word anciently written Chalumniare and Columpniare and Calumpniare and now written Calumniare and hath no affinity with the verb Calomnior or Calumnia which is derived of that for that is of a quite other sense signifying a false accuser and in that sense Bracton useth Calumniator to Calumn●ator be a false accuser but is derived of the old word Caloir or Chaloir which in one signification is to care for or foresee And for that to challenge Jurors is the mean to care for or foresee that an indifferent Tryal be had it is called Calumniare to challenge that is to except against them that are returned to be Jurors and this is his proper signification But sometimes a Summons Sommonitio is said to be Calumniata and a Count to be challenged but this is improperly And forasmuch as mens Lives Fames Lands and Goods are to be tryed by Jurors it is most necessary that they be Omni exceptione majores and therefore I will handle this matter the more largely A Challenge to Jurors is twofold either Challenge is twofold to the Array or to the Polls to the Array of the principal Pannel and to the Array of the Tales And herein you shall To the Array understand that the Jurors names are ranked in the Pannel one under another which order or ranking the Jury is called the Array and the Verb to Array the Jury and so we say in common speech Battail Array for the order of the Battail Array And this Array we call Arraiamentum and to make the Array Arraiare derived of the French word Arroier so as to challenge the Array of the Pannel is at once to challenge or except against all the persons so Arrayed or Impannelled in respect of the Partiality or default of the Sheriff Coroner or other Officer that made the Return And it is to be known that there is a principal Principal Challenges cause of challenge to the Array a challenge to the favour principal in respect of partiality as first if the Sheriff or other Officers be of kindred or affinity to the Plaintiff or Defendant if the affinity continue Secondly If any one or more of the Jury be returned at the denomination of the party Plaintiff or Defendant the whole Array shall be quashed So it is if the Sheriff return any one that he be more favourable to the one than to the other all the Array shall be quashed Thirdly if the Plaintiff or Defendant have an Action of Battery against the Sheriff or the Sheriff against either party this is a good cause of challenge So if the Plaintiff or Defendant have an action of Debt against the Sheriff but otherwise it is if the Sheriff have an action of Debt against either party or if the Sheriff have parcel of the Land depending upon the same Title or if the Sheriff or his Bayliff which returned the Jury be under the distress of either party or if the Sheriff or his Bayliff be either of Counsel Attorney Officer in fee or of Robes or servant of either party Gossip or Arbitrator in the same
commanded and may do it after Iudgment If the party grieved be dead his Heirs or Executors c. according to the Case may have a Writ of Error upon this Bill of Exceptions And no diminution can be alledged for the parties are confined to the matter in the Bill If the Iustice dye before he acknowledgeth his Seal according to the Act a Scire sac shall go to his Executor or Administrator for the Death of the Iudge is the act of God which shall not prejudice the party As in the case of a Certificate of the Marshal of the King's Host that the person outlawed was in the King's Service beyond Sea in a Writ of Error a Scire fac shall go to the Marshals Executor or Administrator upon shewing the Certificate If the Iudge denyeth his Seal the party may prove it by Witnesses ib. Error of a Iudgment at the Grand Sessions in the County of Pembrok in an Assise of darrein Presentment by Henry Cort against the Bishop of St. Davids Dorothy Owen al. for the Church of Stackpoole The fourth Error assigned was because the Issue being whether H. Cort did last present one R. D. the last Incumbent who was instituted and inducted upon his Presentation The Plaintiff offered in Evidence Letters of Institution which appeared to be and so mentions that they were sealed with the Seal of the Bishop of London because the Bishop of St. Davids had not his Seal of Office there And those Letters were made out of the Diocess And the Defendant had demurred thereupon That those Letters were insufficient and the Demurrer was denyed which Jones said was an Error because they ought to have permitted the Demurrer and should have adjudged upon it But it was held that the not admitting of the Demurrer ought not co be assigned for Error for when upon the Evidence the matter was over-ruled by the Iustices of Assize That was a proper cause of a Bill of Exceptions and the remedy which the Statute appoints in that Case And for the matter of the Letters of Institution sealed with another Seal and made out of the Dio●ess it was held they were good enough for the Seal is not material it being an Act made of the Institution the writing and sealing is but a testimonial thereof which may be under any Seal or in any place But of that point they would advise Croke 1. part 340. Note This Bill is to prevent the precipitancy of the Judges and ought to be allowed in all Courts and in all places of Pleadings and may be put in at any time before the Jury have given their Verdict But this Bill is rarely used there being impar congressus betwixt the Judge and the Councel and the Prudence of the Judges induce them to find special Verdicts in Cases of doubt and difficulty A Release Pleaded at the Assises after Issue joyned Et pred Def. in propria persona sua ven dic quod pred Justic Dom. Regis hic ad caption Jur. ss pred inter ipsum Def. prefat Quer. procedere non debent quia dic ' quod post xii diem F. ult preterit de quo die Jurat pred inter partes pred continuat fuit ante hunc diem scilt diem de Assise scilt primo die M. Anno c. apud c. pred Quer. per nomen c. remisit relaxavit c. Et hoc c. unde pet quod Justic pred ad captionem Jur. pred ulterius procedere nolunt The Death of one of the Defendants Pleaded after the last Continuance Et pred Def. per A. B. Attorn suum ven pred T. non ven super hoc pred Def. dic quod post ult concinuationem placiti pred scilt post xv Pasche ult preterit de quo die loquela pred ult continuat fuit hic usq ad hunc diem scilt in Cro. sce Trin. tunc prox ' sequen ' ante eundem diem scilt decimo die Maii ult preterit pred T. apud A. pred obiit Et pet quod null process ' nec aliquid aliud in placito pred ulterius versus prefat T. fiat Et quia pred J. K. hoc non dedic Ideo null process nec aliqui● aliud in placito pred versus prefat T. fiat c. A Baron Challenges the Pannel because no Knight was retorned of the same Et sup hoc idem T. calumpniat arraiament panelli pred quia dic quod ipse est tempore arraiament panelli il●ius fuit Baro hujus Regni Angliae locum vocem habens in quol Parliamento hujus Reg. Quodque in eodem pan●llo nullus Miles nominat retorn existit Et hoo paratus est verificare unde petit Judicium quod panellum illud cassetur c. Evidence and demurrer upon Evidence Middleton against Baker Cro. Eliz. 42. fol. 751. In Eject It was held by all the Court upon evidence to a Jury That if the Plaintiff give in evidence any matter in writing or Record or a sentence in the Spiritual Court as it was in this case and the Defendant offers to demurr thereupon the Plaintiff ought to joyn in the demurrer or wave the Evidence because the Desendant shall not be compelled to put matter of difficulty to lay Gens and because there cannot be any variance of a matter in writing But if either party offer to demurr upon any evidence given by Witness the other unless he pleaseth shall not be compelled to joyn because the Credit of the testimony is to be examined by a Jury and the Evidence is incertain and may be enforced more or less But both parties may agree to joyn in demurrer upon such evidence And in the Queens Case The other party may not demurr upon evidence shewn in Writing or Record for the Queen unless the Queens Councel will thereto assent But the Court in such case shall charge the Jury to find the matter specially as appears 34 H. 8. Dyer 53. But this is by Prerogative vide lib. 4. 104. the same case and 1. Inst 72. where my Lord Cook says If the Plaintiff in evidence shew any matter of Record or Deeds or Writings or any sentence in the Ecclesiastical Court or other matter of evidence by Testimony of Witnesses or otherwise whereupon doubt in Law ariseth and the Defendant offer to Demurr in Law thereupon the Plantiff cannot refuse to joyn in demurrer no more than in a Demurrer upon a Count Replication c. and so è converso may the Plaintiff Demurr in Law upon the evidence of the Defendant but the Kings Councel shall not be enforced to joyn in Demurrer but in that Case the Court may direct the Jury to find the special matter So that the several sorts of evidence make no difference as to the joyning in Demurrer 1. part Leon. 206. Darrose against Newbott Cro. 4. Car. fol. 143. In Error of a Judgment in Bridgewater The Error assigned was for
men who would excel Beasts should labour that their lives might not pass in such silence as Beasts do It seems he deemed that man little inferior to a Beast who acted nothing to prolong his Memory For this he held to be the duty of every man saying Quo mihi rectius esse videtur ingenii quam virium opibus gloriam quaerere quoniàm vita ipsa quâ fruimur brevis est memoriam nostri quàm maxime longam efficere In my opinion 't is far better to acquire Glory by the Riches of Wit than strength and because our lives are short of themselves we should indeavour by Ingenuity to eternize their memory And to effect this Nulla dies abeat Nulla dies sine linea quin linea ducta supersit No day should pass over our heads wherein we should not act some memorable exploit Men should not live like Snails never stirring out of their houses but be active I mean not busie-bodies in other mens matters but in their own Callings of which the wise Cato tells us Every man should give a reasonable account And if we believe the famous Seneca Nihil est turpius quàm grandis natu senex qui nullum habet vitae suae argumentum quo diu se vixisse dicat praeter aetatem Nothing is more unworthy than an old man who hath nothing to shew for his Antiquity but a Gray-Beard Whose soul served only as Salt to keep his body sweet and is no sooner dead than forgotten long before he is half rotten yet who is so apt to deride the Endeavours of other men as this ancient Ignoramus whose wrinkles in his face worn-out looks and many years sway more with the vulgar people than all the Arguments of Law or Reason Had Seneca been such a silent Momus the World would never have been blest with his so learned Works And doubtless writing Books is needful in no Science more than in the Law For without Books how would the Lawyers do for Arguments at the Bar or Resolutions at their Chambers Whence the Oracle Sir Edward Cook pronounces this Omnes debere Juris-prudentiae libris componendis animum adjicere That all men ought to addict themselves to the Composing Books of Law some to the Reporting of the Judgments and Resolutions of the Judges who are Lex loquens and some to the collecting of these Cases and Resolutions methodizing and fitting them for some particular purpose as Littleton Stamford Fitzherbert Crumpton Perkins Finch c. and indeed most of the Law-Books extant if not all setting aside the Reports are nothing else but Collections out of others This I speak not in Derogation of them in the least for as 't is equally if not more laborious so 't is full as glorious Judiciously to cull authentick Cases out of the Volumes of the Law where so many are no Law and rightfully place them in a particular Treatise as 't is to report the Judgements and Resolutions from the mouth of the Court for the Reporter is but the Courts Secretary and Cook 's Institutes merit as much as his Reports And Ash's Tables Fitsherbert and Brooks's Abridgement are as useful as the Year-Books themselves of which kind of Collections one elegantly thus breaks out Quo quidem beneficio haud scio aut aliud aut legum Candidatis magis gratum aut Reipublicae magis commodum aut divini honoris illustrationi magis idoneum vel cogitando quidem consequi quisquam poterit Than which benefit I know not whether any man can even imagine another either to Lawyers more grateful or to the Commonwealth more profitable or for the illustration of Divine honour more fit For with the least labour a small price and little time they present you with those Resolutions and Judgements which lye scattered in the Voluminous Books of the Law which would otherwise cost much time pains and charges to find out The thoughts of which publick good first gave life to these Endeavors of mine Not that any one should in the least imagaine that I am so guilty of vain Ostentation as to believe that my Parts or Abilities can perform any thing in this kind like other men No Ipse mihi nunquam Judice me placui I could never yet please my self with my own labours much less are they worthy to please others haud equidem tali me dignor honore However when I consider that no man hath yet written particularly concerning this Subject and of what general use it is I doubt not but that this Treatise will receive a favourable construction from most men and a plausible acceptation from others The use of it is in a manner Epidemical since mens Lives and Estates The use of the Book are subject to that Tryal per Pais here demonstrated but in particular the Practisers at Law especially Circuit-Advocates Attorneys Sollicitors Clerks c. and all Jurors for whose directions it is of singular use are chiefly concerned herein But I will not hang a Bush out to invite and prepossess your Judgements Vincat Vtilitas The profit which every ingenious Reader shall gather out of it will speak more for it than the best Eulogical Preface And for my own part I profess my self to be Philomathes but not Polymathes And notwithstanding the hard-favoured objections which some men cast upon it I really think the study of the Law to be the most pleasant Study in the world And he which delighteth in the Study of any other Art or Science must consequently be delighted with this For the knowledge of the Law as Doderidge saith is most truly stiled Rerum Divinarum humanarumque scientia and worthily imputed to be the Science of Sciences for therein lies hid the knowledge of every other Learned Science So that he which gives himself to the study of Divinity may here fill himself with holy and pious Principles of Divine Laws For Lex est sanctio sancta jubens honesta prohibens contraria Fortescue cap. 3. sanctum etenim oportet quod esse sanctum definitum The Law is a holy Sanction or Decree commanding things that be honest and forbidding the contraries Now the thing must needs be holy which by definition is determined to be holy So that in this respect saith Fortescue men may well call Lawyers Sacerdotes that is givers or teachers of holy things For the Laws being holy it followeth that the Ministers and setters forth of them must be givers of holy things and so by interpretation doth Sacerdos signifie and doubtless he which duly considers those Rules of Theology which lie scattered throughout the whole body of the Law must needs conclude our Laws to be Commentaries upon the Old and New Testament and do so much bear the Image Legis Divinae that they may well be attributed to the Most High The Rules of Grammar Philosophy natural Political Oeconomick and Moral as also the Grounds of Logick and of other Arts and Sciences so much abound in our Books
whether a Statute shewed Statute before be the true Statute or not shall be by the examination of the Mayor and Clerk of the Statutes which took the Statute and not per pais ib. Whether a Statute hath two Seals or not shall be tryed per pais Leon. part 228 229. 27. In Assise the Tenant said that the Escheator Lands were taken into the Kings hands this shall be tryed by the Examination of the Escheator 28. If one in avoidance of an Out ' awry Certificate alledge that he was in Prison at Burdeaux ultra mare in servitio Majoris de Burdeaux this shall be tryed by the Mayor's Certificate and in such like Cases other Tryals shall be by the Certificate of the Marshal of the Messenger Host and by the Captain of Calice and also by Messenger of a thing done beyond Sea Ib. 29. At the Petit Cape the Tenant said Petit Cape that he was imprisoned 3. days before the default and 3. days after this shall be tryed by the Examination of the Attorney Nient Attach per 15. Jours in Assize shall Bayley not be tryed per pais but by examination of the Bayley ib. 30. It seems an Almanack is so infallible Almanack that it hath countervailed the Verdict of a Jury For in Error of a Iudgment given in Lynne the Error assigned was that the Iudgment was given at a Court held there on the 16th day of February 26 Eliz. and that this day was Sunday and it was so found by Examination of the Almanacks of that year upon which it was ruled that this Examination was a sufficient Tryal and that a Tryal per pais was not necessary although it were an Error in Fact and so the Iudgment was reversed Cro. 3. part so 227. 1 Leon. 242. the same Case and there it was said it was twice so ruled before 31. In ancient times there was a tryal in Criminal Causes called Ordalium for Orde al. upon Not Guilty pleaded the Defendant might put himself upon God and the Country as is the use at this day or else upon God only and then if he was a Fréeman he was to be tryed per ignem that is he was to pass over Novem vemeres ignitos nudis pedibus and if he was not hurt by this then he was to be acquitted otherwise condemned and this was called Judicium Dei But if he was a slave then his tryal was to be per aquam and that divers ways which all appear in Lambard verbo Ordalium From which kind of tryal I presume we still retain this expression of an innocent person That he need not fear fire or water this manner of tryal was first prohibited by the Canons then by Parliament The tryal by Battel is likewise prohibited by Battel the Canons but not by Parliament as you may read in the ninth Report fo 32. and in the authorities there cited which I therefore omit to recite here though I have the Books by me and so in this whole Treatise where I refer you to a Book I shall not set down the authorities cited in that Book which will avoid prolixity 32. When the matter alledged extendeth Which Tryal shall be first to a place at the Common Law and a place within a Franchise it shall be tryed at the Common Law 1 Inst 125. 4. Inst 221. In what Cases a Tryal in one issue shall Tryal in one issue binds in another bind the same party in another issue upon the same matter In Debt against two per several Precipes if one plead a release and they are at issue upon the Deed and the other plead the same issue if it be found the Deed of the Plaintiff in the former issue this shall bind him in the second issue 12 H. 4. 8. In trespass if the Defendant Plead villenage in the Plaintiff if this be found against the Defendant this shall bind him in the same issue in another action in the same Court betwixt the same parties 44. Ass 5. If a man be found guilty of a Conspiracy upon an Indictment at the Kings suit this shall not bind in a Writ of conspiracy at the suit of the Party but he may plead not guilty 27. Ass 13. If a man upon an Indictment of extortion confess it and put himself in the Kings grace and makes fine c. this shall bind him and he shall not plead not guilty to the suit of the party for a confession is stronger than a Verdict 27. Ass 57. per Sharde vide Rolls tit Tryal 625. He which is not party to the issue nor In what Cases tryal against one shall be against others can have attaint or challenge the Inquest shall not be bound by the Tryal 11. H. 4. 30. And therefore in Trespass against two and one pleads a Release and the other justifies as his Servant If the issue be found against the Master it shall not conclude the Servant 11 H. 4. 30. Rolls ib. 625. One shall not be compelled to try a traverse At what time the Tryal shall be the same Sessions he makes it for a man shall have time to make his defence and is not supposed to be ready to answer sudden objections and for this reason many Iudgments upon Indictments have been reversed Iustices of Oyer and Terminer nor Iustices of Peace cannot inquire and determine the same day But Iustices of Gaol Delivery and Iustices in Eyre may Justices of Peace cannot proceed to the delivery of a person indicted of Felony before them the same day he is arraigned 22 E. 4. Coron 44. Declared by all the Iustices of England to be observed as a Law In an Indictment in B. R. or in the same County and removed thither the Defendant may be arraigned and tryed the same day For the Kings Bench is a Court of Eyre for all Offences in that County Otherwise of an Indictment removed out of another County Vide Rolls tit Tryal 626. many Cases de ceo 33. All matters done out of the Realm of Marshal Affairs England concerning War Combate or Deeds of Arms shall be tryed and termined before the Constable and Marshall of England before whom the Tryal is by Witnesses or Witnesses or Combate by Combat and their proceeding is according to the Civil Law and not by the Oath of Twelve men 1 Inst 74. 261. Wherefore if the Kings Subject be killed by another of his Subjects in any Foreign Country the Wife or Heir of the Dead may have an Appeal before the Constable and Marshall who sentence upon the testimony of Witnesses or Combat ib. So if a man be wounded in France and dye thereof in England ib. 4. Inst 140. It is worthy our observation to take What Issue shall be first tryed notice when there are several issues which of them shall be first tryed And for this you have already heard that where issue is joyned for part and a Demurrer for
but by one of the Coroners or for affinity in one c. Yet the Process shall still go to the Coroners Ita quod the Coroner se non intromittat If Default be in the Sheriff and To whom Process shall be directed for default in the Sheriff and Coroners Coroners the Court may choose two Esliors and if the parties can say nothing against them they shall make the Pannel But the Distringas shall not be directed to Esliers for the Court cannot make Officers to distreyn the Kings Liege people but the King may 8 H. 6. 12. dubitatur Process may be directed to the Justices of Assise by assent of parties not without When a Pannel is made by the Esliors they shall afterwards serve all Process that comes upon this as the Sheriff should 15 E. 4. 24. 18 E. 4. 3 8. Rolls tit Tryal 670. For it may be the Sheriff will distreyn only those who are his friends and be partial When the Process is once awarded Venire facias once directed to the Coroners shall not be to the Sheriff afterwards to the Coroners for a default in the Sheriff if there be a new Sheriff made afterwards who is indifferent yet the Process shall not revert but continue to the Coroners pendant le plea. 14 H. 7. 31. Bro. tit Venire facias 17. So the Entry is Ita quod Vicecomes se non intromittat 18 E. 4. 3. 8 H. 6. 12. And therefore where the Sheriff ought Sheriff shall not return the Tales where he cannot the Venire facias not to retorn the Venire he cannot retorn the Tales For in Error in the Exchequer Chamber of a Iudgement in the Queen's Bench the Error assigned was because the Venire facias was awarded to the Coroners for Consanguinity in the Sheriff and it was retorned by the Coroner and afterwards a Tales was awarded and it was retorned by the Sheriff and it was tryed and a Verdict given and Iudgement And for this cause held to be Erroneous and not aided by the Statute of 32 H. 8. or 18 Eliz. Wherefore the Iudgement was reversed Cro. 3. par 574. Bro. tit Octo. Tales 9. I will instance one Case more in the same Reports fo 586. because it is very full in the point After issue in Trespass the Plaintiff for his expedition surmised that he was Servant to the Sheriff which being confessed by the Defendant the process was awarded to the Coroners and Where the Coroner returns the Venire facias he ought to return the Tales after Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Iudgement that the Tales de Circumstantibus was awarded and returned by the Sheriff which was held by the whole Court to be good cause for Staying the Iudgement For it is a mis-tryal not aided by any of the Statutes for process being once awarded to the Coroners the Sheriff afterwards is not the Officer to return the Jury no more than any other man And process ought always to be returned by him who is an Officer by Law to return it otherwise it is meerly void But afterwards upon view of the Record it appeared that the Tales was returned by the Coroners and their names annexed thereto wherefore it was without further question But the Court said if their names had not been annexed No name to the Return to the Tales yet it had been well enough for they be annexed to the first Pannel And it shall be intended that the right Officer return'd it and the usual course is That to such Tales there is not any officers name subscribed and yet it is good enough for it is not within the Statute of York which appoints that the name of the Sheriff should be subscribed but it was moved that the Record of the Postea is that the Tales were returned by the Sheriff But the Court held that it was amendable and it was done accordingly and the Plaintiff had Iudgement But if the Venire be awarded to the Coroners Venire facias to the Sheriff after one awarded to the Coroners for default in the Sheriff and they do nothing upon the Writ then I suppose upon a default discovered in the Coroners de puisne temps the party may shew this to the Court and have a Venire awarded to the Sheriff if there be an indifferent one made in the mean time or else to Esliors sice converso In Error of a Iudgement in Chester Venire facias to the Coroners after one to the Sheriff the parties being at issue a Venire was awarded to the Sheriff And at the day of the Return it was entred Quod Vicecomes non misit breve And then the Plaintiff prayed a Venire facias to the Coroners for Cozenage betwixt him and the Sheriff which was awarded accordingly and at the day of tryal the Defendant made default and there upon Iudgement Error was assigned because that after the Plaintiff had admitted the Sheriff to execute the Writ he could not pray a Venire facias to the Coroners without some cause de puisne Temps sed non allocatur because there was nothing done upon the first Writ And the Defendant having made default it was not material Cro. 3. part 853. But the Defendant might have demurred No Venire facias to the Coroners after one to the Sheriff to this prayer For if the Plaintiff pray a Venire facias to the Sheriff he shall not challenge the Array nor have a Venire afterwards to the Coroners because the Sheriff is his Cousin or for any other principal challenge whereof he might by common intendment have Conusance when he so prayed the Venire facias for upon shewing this Cause at first he might have prayed Process to the Coroners but for a principal challenge of which by common intendment the Plaintiff could not know at the first as that the Defendant is of kindred to the Sheriff c. he may afterwards challenge the Array when they appear or if the Sheriff doth nothing upon the Writ he may pray a new Venire to the Coroners 15 H. 7. 9. If the Plaintiff prayes a Venire facias to If the Defendant denies the Planitiffs suggestion he shall have no benefit of it by Challenge the Coroner because he is of kindred to the Sheriff if the Defendant will not confess this but denies it this shall be entred and the Defendant shall not challenge the Array for this cause afterwards Br. tit Venire facias 21. and 23. If a Venire facias be awarded to the Coroners By Consent the Venire facias may be directed to a wrong Officer where it ought to be to the Sheriff or the Visne cometh out of a wrong place yet if it be per assensum partium and so entred of Record it shall stand for omnis consensus tollit errorem 1 Inst 126. li. 5. Mistryal without such consent 36. But if it be directed to the Coroners where it ought to be to the Sheriff
the principal Pannel and two of the Tales notwithstanding Maynards Opinion to the contrary and Cro. 3. part 587. The Sheriffs used to summon above 24. scil effraenatam multitudinem but Must not return above 24. now they are prohibited by Statute to summon above 24. Westm 2. cap. 38. In what cases the Inquest shall remain for default of Jurors If the issue be to be tryed by 2 Counties if but one of one County appear although a full Inquest appear of the other yet this shall remain for default because they cannot try that whith is in another County 2 Counties There ought to be six of each County And so of one Inquest out of a Franchise and another out of the Guildable and so of 2 Pannels returned in an Assise by several Bayliffs of Franchises to try one issue and one Pannel makes default the issue shall not be tryed by the other Pannel for the Jurors in one Franchise cannot make the view in another Franchise Roll tit Tryal 673. If the Jury be of 2 Counties or 2 Pannels The manner of swearing the Jurors of the Guildable and Franchise c. they shall be sworn interchangeably first one of one then another of the other If the Jury go at large until another day after they are sworn and the Roll of the entry be not in Court they may be sworn anew Roll. tit Trial 674. To make a Jury in a Writ of Right Where there must be 16. and 24. in a Jury which is called the Grand Assise there must be 16. scil four Knights and 12. others the Jury in an Attaint called the Grand Jury must be 24. Finch 412. 485. But if the issue be upon a matter out of the point of the Attaint as upon a Plea of non-tenure the Tryal shall be by 12 Juratores 21 E. 3. 10. There may be more than 16 in a Writ of right Rolls tit Tryal 674. When Process used to be made out Where Witnesses joyn with the Jury the number is uncertain against the Witnesses in Carta nominat to joyn with the Jury in Tryal of the Deed as was used before the Statute of 12 E. 3. C. 2. his Testibus being then part of the Deed then the number was uncertain according as the number of Witnesses were in the Deed wherefore no Attaint lay if the Deed were affirmed because more than 12 joyned in the Verdict But otherwise Cannot prove a Negative if the Deed was not found because Witnesses cannot prove a Negative F. N. Br. 106. h. 1 Inst 6. 2 Inst 130. c. If 12 are sworn and one of them depart Juror departs and another sworn by consent by consent another of the Pannel may be sworn and joyn with the other 11. in the Verdict 11 H. 6. 13. In Error upon a Iudgment in Cornwal A Jury of 6. because the Tryal was but by 6. adjudged that it was erroneous though it was returned secundum consuetudinem ibidem ante c. for such Customs are against Law unless in Wales which are permitted by Act of Parliament Cro. 1. part 259. If the record be pleaded in Bar of the Per primer Jurors See hic cap. 4. Assise and the Party that pleads says the same Tenements were put in view to the former Jurors If the Plaintiff saith nient comprise This shall be tryed per primer Jurors auters 13 H. 4. 10. So if the Tenant saith that these Lands are not the same Lands before recovered this shall be tryed per primer Jurors auters 22. Assise 16. and so in a Redisseisin So in an Assise if the Defendant plead a Recovery per view de Jurors in another Assise this shall not be tryed by the Assise but per primer Jurors 13 H. 4. 10. And if at the return of the former Jurors and others all the former Jurors appear the Tryal shall be by them only but if any do not appear they shall be supplied by the others 40. Assise 4. In such cases where the Plaintiff is not to recover the Land nor to defeate the former Iudgement if nient comprise be pleaded upon a Recovery pleaded this may be tryed by other than the former Jurors 1 H. 6. 5. As in Trespass for Trees cut the Defendant pleads that he recovered before in an Assise the same Land where c. and cut c. the Plaintiff says this Land where c. was not put in view and so nient comprise This shall not be tryed by the first Jurors but by others because this action doth not defeat the former Iudgement nor recover any thing but Damages Note the difference 1 H. 6. 5. Where the Tryal shall be per primer Jurors Certificate of Assise what and where by them and auters and where only per auters see Rolls tit Tryal 593. This is where the Bayliff of a Tenant in an Assise pleadeth c. and loseth by the Assise and the Tenant himself hath a release or some other discharge to plead then he may by this means have the parties and first Jurors to appear again and if it be found he that before recovered shall lose the Land and yield double Damages Terms of Law CAP. VII Who may be Jurors who not who exempted and of their Quality and Sufficiency SO much for their Number next their Jurors must be Liberi Quality is to be considered And for this the Writ informs you who they ought to be 1. Liberos that is Freemen not Villains or Aliens and that not only Freemen and not bond but also those that have such freedom of mind that they stand indifferent without any Obligation of Affinity Interest or any other Relation whatsoever to either party sometimes the word Probos instead of Liberos is attributed Fortescue cap. 25. to them they are both good Epithetes for a Juror but I esteem the first most significant 2. They ought to be Legales not outlawed Legales not such as have lost Liberam legem or become infamous as Recreants persons attainted of Felony false Verdict Conspiracy Perjury Praemunire or Forgery upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 14. and not upon the Statute of 1 H. 5. 3. Not such as have had Iudgement to lose their Ears stand on the Pillory or Tumbrel or have been stigmatized or branded nor Infidels neither can any such be Witnesses 1 Inst 6. 3. Homines they ought to be men yet A Jury of Women there shall be a Jury of Women to try if a Women be Enseint upon the Writ de ventre inspiciendo But what kind of men these ought to be is worthy to be known And for this some men are exempted from serving in Juries in respect of their Dignity as Barons and all above them in degree Many are exempted by the Writ de non Exemption of Juries ponendis in Assisis F. N. B. 166. as aged persons 70. years old and many others are exempted as Clerks Tenants in
if it be alledged in a Ward in the City of Bristol c. the Venue shall be of the Ward not de Civitate A Venire facias was awarded from T. Ward and not de vicinet de T. and for this cause resolved to be ill and not amendable Cro. 2. part 399. Bro. tit Ven. fa. 8. If the issue be Si rex concessit per literas De vicinet left out ill patentes The Tryal shall be as hath been said where the Land lies and not where the Patent was made because the Patent is of Record and if it be traversed Where the Land lies it shall be tryed by the Record and therefore the issue being upon non concessit the issue is not upon the Patent but where the issue is upon non concessit or non dimisit of a thing which passeth by Deed the Tryal shall be where the Grant or Demise is alledged But of a Feoffment or Lease for life pleaded the issue being non Feoffavit or non dimisit Livery ought to be made and therefore the Tryal shall be where the Land lies Cro. 2. part 376. 3. part 259. Where the offence is laid in the Count Where the Action is laid in one County and the Justification in another the Tryal shall be where the Justification is to be in one County and the Iustification in another County and the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria c. The Visne shall be where the Iustification is alledged As one Example for all to illustrate In an Action upon the Case for words supposed to be spoken at Bridg-North in the County of Salop the Defendant pleads that he spake them as a Witness upon his Oath upon an issue tryed at Chard in the County of Somerset The Plaintiff replies de son tort demesne c And thereupon it was tryed by a Venire facias of Bridg-North And Error thereof assigned because it ought to have been by a Visne of Chard where the Iustification arose and it was held clearly to be a mis-tryal and not aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes wherefore the Iudgment was reversed Cro. 3. part 468. 261. 870. More 410. Replevin taking 2 Horses at such a place in Denford in Com. Northampton the Defendant makes Con●sans as Bayliff to the Lord Mountague of his Mannor of S. which Mannor is holden of the Honour of Gloucester and that the place in which c. is within the said Honour and alledges a Custome within the said Honour on which Custome the parties were at issue and the Venire facias was from Denford the place of taking which was moved after Verdict for that the Venue was not so large as the issue which was the Honour and of this opinion was the whole Court of C. B. Pasch 13 Car. 2. Hull vers B●nning But the great question was whence the Venue should arise in this Case and per Bridgman Ch. Just and Just Hide in no Case can a Venue arise from an Honour and Ch. Just said he had caused the Prothonotaries to search for Precedents and they Honours could not find that ever a Venue did arise from an Honour which is but a bundle of services and an incorporeal thing from which no Venue can come and yet an Honour may have demesns as the Honours of Grafton and Hampton have but Gloucester not Ch. Just and Just Hide seemed that the Venue should be de Corpore Comitat. Hob. 266. 249. But when the Court was after moved for their opinion they bad them take a Venire facias at their peril and would give no opinion An action of Debt was brought on a Bond to perform Covenants in an Indenture wherely the Defendant had granted to the Plaintiff a walk called shrob-walk in the Forest of in Com Northampton and Covenanted for peaceable in joyment c. and he was ousted per Earl of Northampton who had right on which Right issue was joyned and the Venire facias was from Shrob-walk Per Cur. It 's not good for it appears by the Record that Shrob-walk is not a Vill but if the Obligation had been laid to be made at Shrob-walk the Venue should arise from thence as a Vill. Inter. Stirt Bales Pasch 19 Car. 2. B. R. The Venue shall follow and be according Out of what County to the issue As for words in Warwick-shire Thou art a Vide ●ic ante postea Thief and stolest my Iron The Defendant justifies says the Plaintiff stole the Iron in Leicester-shire and brought it into Warwick-shire and therefore he spake the words in Warwick-shire If the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria absque tali causa the Jury shall come from Leicestershire to which the absque tali causa refers for the words are acknowledged See Rolls tit Tryal 598. 623. When part of the matter to be inquired of is in one County or place and part in another the Tryal shall be there where the best Conusans of the matter may be As in an action upon the Case the Plaintiff declares that the Defendant took the From the place best known Horse of A. at S. and sold him at D. to the Plaintiff as his proper Horse and afterwards A. retook the Horse If the Defendant plead that the property was in him at the sale upon which issue is ioyned The Venue shall be de S. where the taking is supposed for there the property may be best known which is only in question 42. Ass 8. see several cases in Rolls ib. 603. under this head If the issue be whether L. did ride from London to York and from York to London Where the Counties cannot joyn 5 times in six days this may be tryed by London only Although part of the matter to be inquired of was done in each County In an action of Battery in London if the Defendant justifies in defence of his posses●on in D. in Essex and the Plaintiff says de son tort demesn s●ns tiel cause this ought to be tryed by both Counties if they might joyn because he may be found guilty at another day and therefore because they may not joyn this may be tryed in Essex Of Assises in confinio Com. See 1 Inst 154. In case for words in one County if the Defendant justifie in another County and the Plaintiff reply de son tort demesn c. although the Counties ought to joyn if they could and the Iustification is principally put in issue yet the Tryal may be in either County at the Election of the Plaintiff In Ejectment in London upon a Lease Rolls tit Tryal 620. made there of Land in Mid. if the Defendant plead not guilty this may be tryed in London because the Counties cannot joyn although London cannot joyn with another County 49 E. 3. 20. the Jury ought to enquire of the Ejectment in Mid. and judgement affirmed in a Writ of Error See Rolls tit Tryal 602. Two Counties may
it may be supplied by matter ex post facto and how And for this know that if damages be left out of a Vide hic cap. 6. Verdict this omission cannot be supplied by Writ of Inquiry of damages for this would prevent the Defendant of his Remedy by Attaint which would be very mischievous for then such omission might be on purpose to deprive the Plaintiff of his Attaint li. 10. 119. And the Rule is That when the Court ex officio ought to inquire of any thing upon which no Attaint lies There the omission of this may be supplyed by ● Writ of Inquiry of damages as in a Quar impedit if the Jury omit to enquire of these 4 things that is to say de plenitudine ex cujus presentatione si tempus semestre transierit and the value of the Church per annum there the Plaintiff may have a Writ to inquire of these points Dyer 241. 260. because of these no Attaint lies as it is holden in 11 H. 4. 80. because that as to these the Inquest is but of Office But in all cases where any point is omitted whereof on Attaint lyeth there this shall not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry upon which no Attaint lyeth And therefore in Detinue if the Jury find Damages and Cost and no value as they ought this shall not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry of damages for the Reason aforesaid Ib. Et sic in similibus But how then What shall the Plaintiff Verdict set aside because the damages not well assessed loose the benefit of his Verdict because the Jury assessed no damages or did insufficiently assess them Certes in such Cases where damages only are to be recovered he must loose the whole benefit of his Verdict but where any thing else is to be recovered besides damages as in Debt Ejectment c. he may release his damages and have Iudgment Release Damages upon his Verdict as to the rest And so where damages are to be recovered if part of them are assessed insufficiently and part well he may have Iudgment for those damages well assessed And oftentimes the insufficienc● Verdict set aside in part of the Declaration shall set aside the Verdict as if an Action upon the Case be brought upon two promises and one of For insufficiency in the Declaration them be insufficiently laid and the Verdict give intire damages this is naught for the whole But if the Damages had been severally assessed upon the several promises then the Verdict as to the promise well laid should have stood In the 11th Report fo 56. Marsh brought a Writ of Annuity against Bentham and the parties discended to issue which was tryed for the Plaintiff and the Arrerages found c. But the Iurors did not assess any damages or Cost which Verdict was insufficient and could not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry of damages wherefore Release of damages where none were assessed the Plaintiff released his damages and costs and upon this had Iudgment upon which the Defendant brought a Writ of Error and assigned the Error aforesaid scil the insufficiency of the Verdict fed Judicium affirmatur because the Plaintiff had released his damages and costs which is for the benefit of the Defendant In Detinue of Charters or non detinet Verdict for the Plaintiff and Damages but the Iury did not find the value of the Déeds and a Writ of Inquiry was awarded to that purpose and returned and ruled good and by Twisden Just Debt against Executor who pleads plenè c. and it 's fou●d against him and the Iury give no damages that can't be aided by Writ of Inquiry Burton versus Robinson Pasch 17 Car. 2. B. R. In Dyer 22 Eliz. 369. 370. In a Wri Release of damages where they were not well assessed of Ejectione Custodiae terrae haeredis the Iurors assessed damages intirely which was insufficient for it lay not for the Heir yet the Plaintiff released his damages and had Iudgment for the Land And Note that insufficient assessment of damages and no assessing is all one The Iury ought to assess no more damages Damages and Costs pro injdria illata than the Plaintiff declares for But they may assess so much and moreover give cost which is called Expensae litis though in the proper and general signification Dampnum also comprehends Costs of Suit as the Entry reciting both damages and costs well affirms scil Quae dampna in toto se attingunt cum c. But if the Iury do assess more damages More damages than the Plaintiff declares for then the Plaintiff declares for the Plaintiff may remit the overplus and pray Iudgment for the residue as in the 10th Report fol. 115. in Trespass the Plaintiff declared ad dampnum c. 40 l. at the tryal the Iury assessed damages occasione transgressionis pr●dict ad 49 l. and for costs of Suit 20 s. upon which Verdict the Plaintiff at the day in Bank remitted 9 l. parcel of the said 49 l. assessed for damages and prayed Iudgement for 40 l. Damages remitted to which damage he had counted with increase of costs of suit and had 9 l. de Incremento added by the Court which in all amounted to 50 l. and had his Iudgment accordingly upon which a Writ of Error was brought and the Iudgment affirmed For as in real Actions the Demandant shall not count to Damages c. because it is incertain to what sum the damages will amount by reason he is to recover damages pendant le briefe so in the ease of Costs he shall recover for the expences depending the suit which being uncertain cannot be comprehended in the Count because the Count extends to damages past and not to expences of Suit For in personal Actions he counts Damages in real and personal Actions to damages because he shall recover damages only for the wrong done before the Writ brought and shall not recover damages for any thing pendant le briefe But in real Actions the Demandant never counts to damages because he is to recover damages also pendant le briefe which are incertain The Iury may if they will assess the damages Damages and Costs intirely assessed and costs intirely together without making any distinction 18 E. 4. 23. But then they must not assess more damages and costs than the damages are which the Plaintiff counts to for if they do the Plaintiff shall recover only so much as he hath declared for without any increase of cost because the Court cannot distinguish how much they intended for cost and how much for damages As in 13 H. 7. 16. 17. One Darrel brought a Writ of Trespass and counted to his damage 20 marks the Defendant pleaded not guilty and the Iury taxed the damages and costs of suit joyntly to 22 marks and the Verdict was held to be good for 20 marks and void for the residue because it doth not appear how much
was intended for damages and how much for costs so that there may be more damages than the Plaintiff declared for or less and so the Court knows not how to increase the cost wherefore he shall have Iudgment but for 20 marks by reason of the incertainty Where a special Verdict is not entred according Verdict amended by the Notes to the Notes the Record may be amended and made agrée with the Notes at any time though it be 3 or 4 c. Terms after it is entred lib. 4. 52. lib. 8. 162. Cro. 1 part 145. In the Case of Turnor and Thalgate Mich. 1658. B. R. It was said per Cur ' That special Verdicts may be amended by the Notes but the Notes cannot be amended or inlarged by any Averment or Affidavit for that were to f●●d a Verdict by the Court. Yet in that Case where the Notes were that the Iudgment c. was vacated pro ut per Rule the Verdict was amended vacated per Cur ' pro ut per Rule for so is implied in the Notes See a Verdict amended by the Notes after Iudgment and Error brought Rolls 1 part Reports 82. If the matter and substance of the Issue Form Hob. 54. be found it is sufficient for precise forms are not required by Law in special Verdicts which are the finding of Lay-men as in Pleadings which are made by men learned in the Law and therefore intendment in many Cases shall help a special Verdict as much as a Testament Arbitrament c. And therefore he which makes a Deputy ought to do it by Escript but when the Iury find generally that A. was Deputy to B. all necessary incidents are found by this and upon the matter they find that he was made Deputy by Déed because it doth tantamount lib. 9. 51. And in the 5th Report Goodale's Case It was resolved That all matters in a special Verdict shall be intended and supplyed but only that which the Iury refer to the Consideration of the Court. In all Cases where the Iury find the matter Ill conclusion committed to their charge at large and over more conclude against Law the Verdict is good and the conclusion ill li. 4 42. and More 105. 269. the Iudges of the Law will give ●udgment upon the special matter according to the Law without having regard to the conclusion of the Iury who ought not to take upon them Iudgment of the Law li. 11. 10. Vide Devant Where the Declaration in Trespass is As general as the Narr Cum aliquibus averiis of a number uncertain and the Verdict is as general as the Declaration cum aliquibus averiis there the Verdict is good Cro. 2. part 662. In Ejectione firme where the Plaintiff declared of a Messuage and 300 Acres of Pasture in D. per nomina of the Mannor of Monkhall and five Closes per nomina c. upon Not guilty the Iury gave a special Verdict viz. quoad four Closes of Pasture containing by Estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture that the Defendant was Not guilty Quoad residuum they found matter in Law And it was moved by Yelverton That this Verdict was imperfect in all For when the Quoad Residuum incertain Iury find that the Defendant was Not guilty of four Closes of Pasture containing by estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture it is incertain and doth not appear of how much they acquit him And then when they find quoad residuum tne special matter it is incertain what that Residue is so there cannot be any Iudgment given and of that Opinion was all the Court wherefore they awarded a Venire facias de novo to try that Issue Cro. 2 part 1●3 Ejectione firmae of 30 Acres of Land in D. and S. The Defendant was found guilty of 10 Acres and Quoad Residuum not guilty Quoad Resisiduum and it was moved in arrest of Iudgment That it is uncertain in which of the Vills this Land lay and therefore no Iudgment can be given sed non allocatur and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff for the Sheriff shall take his Information from the party for what ten Acres the Verdict was Cro. last part 465. diversitas apparet Where the Iury find Circumstances upon Circumstances an Evidence given to incite them to find fraud c. yet the same is not sufficient matter upon which the Court can judge the same to be fraud c. Brownlow 2. part 187. Yet in many Cases the Iury may find Circumstances and presumptions upon which the Court ought to judge As to find that the Husband delivered Goods devised by the Wife Vpon this the Court adjudged that More 192. the Husband assented to the devise at first Where a Verdict is certainly given at the Postea amended how Tryal and uncertainly returned by the Clerk of the Assizes c. The Postea may be amended upon the Iudges certifying the truth how the Verdict was given Cro. 1. p●rt 338. In many Cases a Verdict may make an ill Ill Plea made good by Verdict Plea or Issue good As in an Action for words Thou wast perjured and hast much to answer for it before God Exception after Verdict for the Plaintiff in arrest of Iudgment For that it is not laid in the Declaration that he spake the words in auditu complurimorum or of any one according to the usual form sed non allocatur for being found by the Verdict that he spake them it is not material although he doth not say in auditu plurimorum whereupon it was adjudged for the Plaintiff Cro. 1. part 199. Sée Cro. last part 116. Where the Barr was ill because no place of payment was alledged yet the payment being found by Verdict it was adjudged well enough for a payment in one place is a payment in all places Trespass by Baron and feme de clauso fracto of the Barons And for the battery of the feme ad dampnum ipsorum the Defendant Quoad the Clausum fregit pleaded Not guilty Quoad the Battery justifies And for the first Issue it was found for the Defendant And for the second for the Plaintiff and now moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Declaration is not good because the Baron joyns the feme with him in Trespass Baron Feme de clauso fracto of the Barons which ought not to be But for the Battery of the feme they may joyn whereto all the Court agréed But it was moved That in regard it was found against the Plaintiffs for this Issue in which they ought not to joyn and the Defendant is thereof acquitted and the Issue is found against the Defendant for that part wherein they ought to joyn This Verdict hath discharged the Declaration for that part which is ill and is good for the residue As in 9 E. 4. 51. Trespass by Baron and Feme for the Battery of both The Defendant pleaded Not guilty and found guilty and damages assessed
Castle but that there was a Goal this was for the Plaintiff because Goal is the Substance If the Issue be whether the Defendant had Accompted before R. and W. Auditors Accompt assigned by the Plaintiff and the Iury find an Accompt before R. only the Issue is found for the Defendant for the Accompt is the effect of the Issue Vide Rolls tit Trial. 707. c. If 11 agrée and the 12th will not the Verdict of the 11 cannot be taken but the Court Jury agree may carry the Iurors with them in Carts until they are agréed 41 Ass 11. A privy Verdict may be altered in open Verdict altered Court In an Extendi fac upon a Statute if the Iury deliver their Verdict in Writing they may afterwards make it more formal but they cannot alter it in substance for it is a compleat Verdict by the delivery So of Presentments c. A Fine pleaded in Barr and that after Fine and Non-claim the death of A. scil 1 August 3. Car. B. Father of the Plaintiff was alive in plena vita remansit infra hoc Regnum infra quatuor Maria c. apud W. in Com. D. and no Entry or Claim within five years after and the Plaintiff replies and takes Issue què Modo forma il non fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum Angliae modo forma c. And the Iury find quod non fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum Angliae 1 August 3 Car. but that he was there 1 Maii 4. Car. and remained there a Month and refer to the Court Au fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum modo forma c. This Issue is found for the Defendant for the matter and substance of the Plea is whether he was within the Realm after the death of A. and five years before Entry or Claim per him or the Plaintiff and modo forma shall not make the day material Roll. tit Trial. 713. Iudgment upon a Demurrer and a Writ Judgment Arrest at what time of Inquiry executed at the return the party may shew any thing in Arrest of Iudgment for Iudgment is not compleat until the last Iudgment The first is but an Award A man may plead any thing in Arrest of Iudgment after a Verdict which will make Error if the Iudgment be given In Debt upon a simple Contract against an Executor if he will not plead in Abatement but other Matter which is found against him he shall not afterwards alledge that he is not chargeable in Arrest of Iudgment So in Debt against Executors upon Arrearages of Accompt where they are not chargeable That which appears ill upon the same Record What may be alledged but not a ma●●er of Fact which doth not appear upon the Record because the parties cannot by the Issue As that a Iuror was challenged and yet served on the Tales for this cannot appear without alledging matter of Fact Nor that the Defendants Attorney had no Warrant But if there be any irregular or foul practice this may be offered to set aside a Iudgment If any thing be omitted in the Declaration Variance between the Verdict and the Declaration or if more be put into the Declaration than is found by the Iury if it make a material Variance betwixt the Nar. and the Verdict the Action shall abate These following are adjudged material Variances If the Declaration be for these words Thou procuredst eight or Ten of thy Neighbours Words to Perjure themselves and the Iury find that he said Thou hast caused eight or 10 c. for he might be a remote Cause scilicet causa sine qua non without Procurement Nar. He is a Bankrupt Verdict He will be a Bankrupt within two days Nar. He is a Thief Ver. He stole a Horse Nar. Thou art a Murderer Ver. He is c. Nar. I know him to be a Thief Ver. I think him to be a Thief So it is a material Variance if a special Promise be laid to be upon Request and the Verdict find it without Request So if the Promise Declaration be upon a Lease made by two or by Baron and feme and the Iury find that one of them had nothing in the Land or that the Baron only made the Lease or that the two were Tenants in Common and so several Leases otherwise if they were Coparteners So in Case that the Testator was indebted to the Plaintiff in 55 l. and the Defendant being Administrator in consideratione c. Promise to pay this upon non Assumpsit if the Verdict find the Promise to be to pay 30 l. part of the 55 l. So in Ejectment If the Nar. be of a Lease Eje ment of thrée Acres a Lease of a Moiety will not maintain the Nar. So in Wast for Cutting Trees and the Wast Verdict find that he eradicated the Trées but did not cut them A Prescription in modo decimandi That Prescription every one who hath seven Lambs or under seven shall pay to the person ob for every Lamb and the Iury find that and further That if he had more than seven Lambs he should pay a Lamb and that the Parson should pay the Parishioner ob This is not the same Prescription but makes a Variance But if there be a Variance between the Variance Verdict and the Nar. either by way of Surplus or Defect but if this matter of Variance be not material in the extenuation of the Action or Damages the Action shall lye notwithstanding the Variance These ensuing are adjudged not to be material Nar. Strong Thief Verdict Thief Nar. I say c. Ver. I affirm or I doubt not Nar. The Plaintiff will do such a thing Ver. I think in my Conscience he will c. Nar. Of a Lease by a Parson for five years if he tam diu should be Parson tam diu viveret And the Verdict find the Lease to be for five years if he tam diu viveret without the words and should continue Parson for the Law implyeth That if he be deprived or resign that the Lease Determines Nar. He is a Murderer Ver. He was a Murderer for when he says He is a Murderer 't is not intended that he did the Act in presenti but before So in Trespasses or Actions upon Torts and wrongs which are several If the Verdict find part 't is no material Variance and the Plaintiff in these Cases shall have Iudgment Roll. tit Tryal 720. A Jury of Middles●x was demanded in Enquest by default the Common-Pleas the first day of the Term and some appeared and some not so that there was not a full Jury and neither the Defendant nor his Attorney did appear and therefore the Plaintiff prayed that the Inquest might be awarded by default and by the opinion of Welsh and Dyer his prayer shall be granted and the Custos Brevium and all the Prothonotaries said the
morning in open Court they may either affirm or alter their privy Verdict Where there can be no privy Verdict and that which is given in Court shall stand But in Criminal cases of life or member the Jury can give no privy Verdict but they must give it openly in Court Neither can a Jury sworn and charged in Where the Jury cannot be discharged before Verdict The King cannot be nonsuit case of life or member be discharged by the Court or any other but they ought to give a Verd●ct And the King cannot be non-suit for he is in Iudgment of Law ever present in Court but a common person may be nonsuit And in Civil Actions the Justices upon cause may discharge the Jury Br. Enquest 68. 47. 39. c. But this is against Common practice and I have known that after a Iury of Life and Death have been sworn and charg'd with Prisoners Arraigned the Iudge having béen credibly Informed That it was a Iury pack'd to favour some Prisoner has discharged that Iury and made the Sheriff return another presently In Hillary Term Sexto H. 8. Rotulo 358. It was alledged in Arrest of the Verdict at the Nisi prius that the Jurors had eat and drunk And upon Examination it was found that they had first agreed and that returning to give their Verdict they saw Rede Chief Iustice in the way going to sée a fray and they followed him Et in veniendo viderunt cyplum inde biberunt And for this every one of them was fined 40 d. And the Plaintiff had Iudgment upon the Jurors fined Verdict Dyer 37. And Dyer 218. At the Nisi prius the Jury after their charge given returned and said That they were all agréed except one who had eat a Pear and drunk a draught of Ale Jurors at the Nisi prius fined in bank for eating Pears and drinking Ale for which he would not agrée And at the Request of the Plaintiff the Iury was sent back again and found the Issue for the Plaintiff And the matter aforesaid being examined by the Oath of the Iurors Seperatim and the Bayliff who kept them and found true the offender was committed and afterwards found Surety for his Fine Si c. And Fitzherbert the then Iustice of Assise gave him day in banco c. at which day a Fine of 20 s. was there assessed Et quoad Ball Curia avisare vult In Trespass by Mounson against West the Iury was charged and Evidence given and Iurors being retired into a House for to Fined for having Figgs and Pippins about them consider of their Evidence they remained there a long time without concluding any thing and the Officers of the Court who attended them seeing their delay searched the Iurors if they had any thing about them to eat upon which search it was found that some of them had Figgs and others Pippins for which the next day the matter was moved to the Court and the Iurors were examined upon Oath And two of them did confess that they had eaten Figgs before they had agréed of their Verdict and three other of them confessed that they had Pippins but did not eat of them and that they did it without the knowledge or will of any of the parties And afterwards the Court set a sine of 5 l. upon each of them which had eaten and upon the others which had not eaten 40 s. But upon great advice and consideration had and conference with the rest of the Iudges the Verdict was held to be good Notwithstanding the said misdemeanor Leon. 1. part 133. And sée the Book of Entries 251. The Fined for eating Raisins and Dates Iurors after they went from the Barr ad seipsos of their Verdict to advise Comederunt quasdam species scil Raisins Dates c. at their own Costs as well before as after they were agreed of their Verdict And the Iurors were committed to prison but their Verdict was good although the Verdict was given against the King In Ejectione firme it was found for the Finable for having sweet-meats c. about them though they do not eat them See Plo. Com. 519. One fined and imprisoned for having Sugar-Candy and Liquorish about him Defendant three of the Iurors had Sweet-meats in their Pockets and those thrée were for the Plaintiff until they were searched and the Sweet-meats found and then did agree with the other nine and gave Verdict for the Defendant It was the Opinion of the Iustices That whether they eat or not they were finable for having of the Sweet-mea●s with them for that is a very great misdemeanor Godbold 353. 40 Assise Placito 11. The Iustices said Jurors carted That if the Iurors will not agrée in their Verdict the Iustices may carry them in a Cart along with them till they are agréed The Iury were gone from the Barr to confer of their Verdict and one of the Witnesses before sworn on the Defendants part The same Evidence given to the Jury after they were gon from the Barr spoils the Verdict was called by the Iurors and he recited again his Evidence to them and after they gave their Verdict for the Defendant And complaint being made to the Iudge of the Assises of this mis●emeanor he examined the Enquest who confessed all the matter and that the Evidence was the same in effect that was given before Et non alia nec diversa And this matter being returned by the Postea the Opinion of the Court was That the Verdict was not good and a Venire facias de novo was awarded Cro. last part 189. Trin. 1653. between Wells and Tayler Copies of a Bill Answer and Depositions were proved but not all read and delivered to the Iury who carried them with them from the Barr in a bundle which they layd by them and did not look on yet their Verdict at the Barr was set aside for this Cause and the Court would not regard their saying that they did not read them for they might say that to save themselves it being a fault to take any thing without the Courts knowledge If one of the parties say to the Iury after they are gone from the Barr You are weak If a party speak to them men it is as clear of my side as the Nose in a man's face This is new Evidence for his affirmation may much perswade the Iury and therefore shall quash the Verdict So if any thing be read to them which they ought not to have with the● as a book of Depositions some whereof were read in Evidence Pratt's Case 21 Jac. The Plaintiff delivered an Escrowle to a Escrowle delivered to a Juror before he was sworn Vitiates the Verdict Iuror impanelled before he was sworn who afterwards being sworn and gone with the Iury from the Barr to consider of the Verdict shewed the same Escrowle to his Companions who found for the Plaintiff The Minister who kept the Enquest
informed the Court hereof and the Iury being examined confessed the matter aforesaid upon which Iudgment was stayed for after the Iury are sworn they ought not to sée nor carry with them any other Evidence but what was delivered to them by the Court Afterwards the Plaintiff said That the Escrowle proved the same Evidence which was given to them at Barr by him wherefore it was not so bad as if it had béen new Evidence not given before Sed non allocatur 11 H. 4. 17. Pasche 38 Eliz. Inter Vicary Farthing Church-Book delivered to the Jury act of Court at the Nisi prius The Issue was about Non-age and two Church-Books were given in Evidence one whereof was delivered to the Iury in Court by the assent of parties and afterwards the other was delivered to the Iury out of the Court by the Solicitor of the Plaintiff without the assent of the Court and a Verdict for the Plaintiff and this was indorsed on the Postea The Question was whether this should make the Verdict void or no for the Iustices differed in opinion Popham and Gawdy that it should not Fenner and Clench that it should the Negative Iustices gave these Reasons That the Book was delivered in Evidence in the Court and so the other party might answer to it and that the Court had informed the Iury of the validity thereof how far they were to believe i● with many other Reasons But the Affirmative was urged because there might be some matter in this Book to induce them otherwise than was intended before and because it was delivered on his part for whom the Verdict passed without the Courts assent yet one Book scil Cro. last part 411. tells us Iudgment was afterwards given for the Plaintiff sée More 's Reports 452. The Books differ for Cro. makes Clinch give Consider the Reasons in the former cases his opinion for the Verdict But More brings him on the other side which I conceive is truest and for my part I know no reason why foisting of Evidence to the Iury without the Court should have any favour at all In the Case of Taylor and Webb Trin. 1653 B. R. Twisden moved to set aside a Verdict given at Barr because that after Evidence when the Writings were delivered to the Iury some Writings which were not sealed and therefore ought ●ot to be delivered to the Iury were delivered by a stranger to the Iury. Hales Counsel of the other side produces an Affidavit of the Foreman 's of the Iury that they made no use of them in giving their Verdict and that most of those Writings were read in Court in Evidence upon the Tryal and Hales said That if this should avoid the Verdict then that would be in the power of any Stranger unknown and against the mind of the parties to avoid any Verdict Roll. Ch Iust The Affidavit of the Iury ought not to be allowed to make good their own Verdict for now they are as it were parties and have offended and shall not be allowed by their own Oath to take off their offence and it is the Duty of the Iury to look what Writings they receive before they go from the Barr and if any such Paper be wrap'd up among other Papers delivered to them by the Court so soon as they have discovered it they should call in the Tip-staff who keeps them and deliver it to him and to testifie they made no use of it and he said it would be dangerous to give the least way to the delivering of any Writings to a Iury. And at another day Roll cited 11 H. 4. 18. the Plaintiff before the Tryal delivered a a brevia●e of his Evidence to the Iury which contained no more than was proved in Court yet by this the Verdict was avoided So Mich. 31 Eliz. C. B. Metcalfe and Dean After the Iury were gone from the Barr they sent for one of the Witnesses and re-examined him who gave the very same Evidence that he had before given in Court yet the Verdict was avoided and the reason of both is a fear and jealousie that other matters might be given c. 37 Eliz. Farthing's Case a Paper not under Seal which was given in Evidence was delivered to the Iury this did not avoid the Verdict because here can be no such fear and per Roll If any Writing though not given in Evidence be delivered to the Iury by the Court it shall not avoid the Verdict And in the principal Case the Verdict was avoided Hill 40 Eliz. Rot. 847. In Arrest of Iudgment after Verdict it was alledged Escrowle from one who was no party that a Iuror delivered to his Companions an Escrowle for Evidence to them which was not given in Evidence at the Tryal and adjudged no cause to Arrest Iudgment unless it had béen received from one of the parties which did not appear More 546. but otherwise if it had béen given by a party and the Iury had found for him In the Case of Duke and Ve●tres Mich. 1656. B. R. tryed at Barr one Mr. Beverly of Suff. a Barrister was returned of the Iury who having béen at a Tryal of the same Cause above 20 years before in the Cheq and heard there great Evidence to make a Deed fraudulent which was now the Contest demanded of the Court whether he ought to inform the rest of the Iury privately of this or conceal it or declare it in open Court The Court ordered him to come into Court and deliver all his knowledge which he heard then proved which Evidence was not now given because the parties were dead and so he did being not sworn again but only upon the Oath taken as a Iuryman And certainly It is of dangerous Consequence to receive a Verdict against Evidence given on supposal that some of the Iury knew otherwise or on private Information given by one Iuryman to the rest where he can't be Cross-Examin'd and let such Iurors beware of Attaint but the best way is as before in open Court In a Writ of Error the first Error assigned was that Termino Trin. twelve Iurors and no more did appear This ex assensu partium was adjourned until Jury adjourned Crastino Animar on which day two others came in and were sworn being of the first Pannel The Court all clear of Opinion that this is no Error this being good enough they being all to be called again Leon. 3. part 38. If a Iuror depart after he is sworn Juror depart he shall be sined and imprisoned and by assent of parties another Iuror may be sworn Bro. Jurors 46 lib. 5. 40. If a man be non-suited after the Jury is ready to give their Verdict the Court may cause the Amercement of the Plaintiff to be presently affered by the Iurors li. 8. 39. CAP. XV. What Punishment the Law hath provided for Jurors offending as taking Reward to give their Verdict Of Embraceors Decies tantum Attaint several Fines on Jurors
that in an Action upon the Case far Asumpset the parties being at issue a demurrer was joyned upon the evidence and thereupon the Jury discharged and afterwards judgment was given for the Plaintiff and a Writ of Inquiry of damages awarded and damages found and Judgment thereupon where the Jurors which came to find the Issue although by the Demurrer they were discharged of the Issue yet ought to have assessed damages conditionally if judgment should be given for the Plaintiff And in proof thereof was cited Newis and Scholastica's Case in Plo. Com. fol. 408. and the old Books of Entries c. And it was said by the Court If these Precedents be good Law th●● it may be inquired of by the same Jury conditional●y But it may be as well inquired of by a Writ of Inquiry of damages when the Demurrer is determined And the most usual course is when there is a demurrer upon evidence to discharge the Jury without more inquiry But as My Lord Chief Baron Montague held at the Assises in Cambridgeshire 1682. it may be one way or other In the Assise by R. Newis and Scholastica his Wife against Lark and Hunt which was taken by default The Precedent in Plowd Com. as to this matter runs thus Recogn ' Assisae pred exacti venerunt qui ad veritatem de premissisdicend electi triati 8 ●●rati fuerunt sup quo Willielmus Bendlows Serviens ad legem de consilio predictorum R. Scholasticae in manutentione Assisae pred coram Justic Dominae Reginae de Banco hic in evident Recognit Assisae pred dixit quod diu ante diem impetration is Assisae pred quidam H. Clark fuit seisitus ●c Et condidit testamentum ultimam voluntatem sua in scriptis inter alia unde pars inde in hiis Anglicis verbis sequitur videl Also this is the last Will and Testament of me the said Henry Clark for and concerning c. Et ulterius idem Serviens ad legem ex parte pred R. S. dedit in evident eisd Recognit quod c. Quorum pretextu idem jam Serviens ad legem exigit quod iidem Recogn Assisae pred Assisam pred de tenementis pred cum pertin ' in visu c. pro parte ipsorum R. S. triari comparere debeant c. Et veredictum suum dare debent quod pred W. Lark J. Hunt dictos R. S. de tenementis pred cum pertin ' in visu c. disseisiverant c. Et pred W. Lark J. H in propriis personis suis dic quod evidentiae allegatione● pred ex parte pred R. S. superius allegat minus sufficien in lege existunt ad manutenend Assisam pred ad quos ipsi necesse non habent nec per leg terrae tenentur respondere unde pro defectu sufficien evident in hac parte pet judicium quod juratores pred de veredicto suo in premissis dicend exonerentur c. Et quod pred R. N. S. ab Assisa sua pred habend precludantur c. Et pred R. S. dicunt quod ex quo ipsi sufficien materiam in manutentione Assisae pred in evident recognit pred ostend quam quidem materiam pred W. Lark J. Hunt non dedicunt nec ad eam aliqualit respond petunt judicium Et quod iidem Jurator inde exonerentur quod pred W. J. de Assisa illa convincantur c. Sup. quo dict est Recogn pred quod inquir quae dampna pred R. S. sustinuertam occasione disseisinae pred quam pro misis custagiis suis per ipsos circa sectam suam in hac parte apposit si conting judicium pro eisdem R. S. in placito pred sup evidentias pred reddi Qui quidem Recogn dicunt sup sacram suum quod si conting judicium in placito pred pro pred R. S. sup evidentias pred reddi iidem R. S. sustinuer dampna occasione disseisinae pred ad 13 s. 4 d. pro misis custagiis suis ad 20 s. Et quia Justitiarii hic se advisare volunt de sup premissis priu●quam judicium inde reddant dies datus est partibus predict c. Note several Exceptions were taken to the manner of giving the Evidence First for that the intire Will was not shewed but part and that this being the foundation of the Evidence the whole Will ought to have been shewed for there might be some o●her matter of substance as a Condition Limitation c. in the parts not shewed But all the Justices disallowed this Exception and said the party in any Title or Bar needs shew no more than what makes for him As in an Act of Parliament in which are divers branches 't is sufficient to shew that branch which serves ones purpose and not like the Case of a Fine or Recovery of 20 acres where I must shew the whole Record although I am concerned but in one acre because the Originial is intire and so is the Record grounded upon it See also Fulmer●ton and Stewards Case Plo. Com. 102. Another Exception was That the fine was not shewed under the Seal of the Court or the Great Seal but one part indented of the Chirograph was only shewn which the Jurors were not bound to believe because it wanted a Seal But all the Justices were against this and said the Jury might find the Fine of their own knowledge without the shewing of the parties or they might find it upon the Credit of any Witness that had seen it and the shewing the part indented is the usual evidence of a Fine Note a Fine indented and not exemplified under Seal c. shall not be delivered to the Jury 34 H. 6. 25. And they said because it is only the Inducement of the verity to the Jurors the party could not Demurr upon this for the effect of the matter is that ther● is such a Fine which is amongst the Records And this is the substance of the matter and the part of the Chirograph is nothing but the Image of the verity and therefore suum coram Baronibus hic prestitum in premissis dicit quod c. here recite the Evidence Et pred Attorn Domini Regis pro eod Domino Rege dic quod evidentiae pred superius dat minus sufficien in lege existunt ad manutenend seu proband exit pred pro parte ipsius A. F. superius ad patriam junct unde ob insufficient earundem evident ac ex quo per evidentias illas non dedicitur forisfactura bonorum pred in informatione pred spec i em Attorn Domini Regis pro ipso Domino Rege petit judicium ac quod eadem bona remaneant Domino Regi forisfacta juxta formam statuti pred Et pred A. F. dic quod evidenciae pred superius ex parte ipsius A. F. dat
that the Sow was with Pigg when she was taken and afterwards cast her Piggs in the Custody of the defendant and the Plaintiff recovered Damages for says Bro. Aridg tit General Issue 88. This is a special taking in Law Dower of rent Hill ne unque seisie que Dower la poit Dower Horton J S. granted the rent to the Husband payable at Michaelmas next and the Husband dyed before the day and so he was seised in Law and demanded judgment Thirm You shall say generally quod seisie que Dower la poit and give your Case in evidence Et sic bene notwithstanding the doubt of the lay Gents for they ought to credit the Law and evidence is not to be pleaded 11 H. 4. 88. Tenant for life leaseth for years who is ousted and the Tenant for life is disseised The disseisor leaseth for years who sows the Land The Tenant for Life dies he in remainder in Fee brings Trespass against the Defendants claiming the Emblements Emblements Knivets Case lib. 5. 85. by the Lessee of the Disseisor Adjudged that they had not the meer right but in respect of their possession they should barr the Plaintiff who had no right and that the meer right was in the Lessee of the Tenant for Life and that he might bring Trespass against the Lessee of the Disseisor and recover all the mean profits But as to the entry into the Land to take the Emblements this was good matter of justifica●ion but in regard it was not pleaded it could not be given in evidence upon Not Guilty and therefore the Plaintiff had judgment for the entry and was barred for the residue Note that the Lessee of Tenant for Life had right to the Land and by consequence to the Emblements as things annexed to the Land and the death of the Tenant for Life determins his interest to the Land but his right to the Emblements remains It sufficeth to prove the substance without any precise Regula Substance Circumstance regard to the Circumstance As if an Indictment be that with a Dagger the offender gave another a mortal wound c. and in evidence it is proved to be done with a Sword Rapier Club Bill or any other Weapon the offender upon this evidence ought to be found guilty For the mortal wound is the substance and the manner of the Weapon is but the Circumstance yet some Weapon ought to be mentioned in the Indictment And so if A. B. and C. be indicted for killing of J. S. and that A. stroke and the other were Abettors To prove that B. stroke is sufficient c. Manslaughter upon an Indictment must be found if proved because the killing is substance upon which judgment shall be given Indictments for ●urther of Ministers of Justice in execution of their Office may be general viz. that the prisoners felonice voluntarie ex malitia sua praecogitata c. percusserunt c. without alledging the special matter which may be given in evidence for the Law implyes malice prepensed So if a Thief in robbing kills the man that resists him or a man is killed without any provocation or without malice prepensed that can be actually proved the Law adjudges this murder and implyes the malice and in these Cases the offenders may be indicted generally that they killed of malice prepense for the malice implyed by Law given in evidence is sufficient to maintain the general Indictment lib. 9. 67. Machallyes Case So of an Indictment as accessary to 2. to prove accessary to 1. is sufficient lib. 9. 119. In Cromwels Case lib. 4. 12. Although it was objected that in an Action of slander If the Defendant will justifie he must justifie the same words in the same sense as it is laid in the Nar. or else he must plead Not Guilty and give the special matter that is the variance in evidence Yet the Court held that the Defendant should not be put to the general Issue but might justifie although he varied from the Plaintiff in the sense and Copyhold In Pilkintons Case Stiles 450. Rolls said If Copies of Court Roll be shewed to prove a Customary Estate the enjoyment of such Estates must also be proved otherwise the proof is not good Forger Totum pars quality of the words and might set forth the coherent words As for calling the Plaintiff Murderer the Defendant may shew that they were speaking of Hares and the words were spoken in reference to killing of Hares Upon the Issue if the Lord of the Mannor granted the Lands per copiam rotulorum Curiae manerii pred secundum consuetudinem manerii pred To prove that there were customary Lands in the Mannor and that the Lord of late granted the Land c. per Copiam rotul Curiae where it was never granted by Copy before is no good evidence to find the Custom or that the Lands c. were grantable or demiseable by Custom Leon. 55. Kemp and Carters Case Forger of a Deed in which is contained a demise of the site of the Mannor of R. and terras dominicales c. A Deed of the site and all the Demesnes of the said Mannor Exceptis duabus clausuris c. is good evidence for it is not necessary to construe terras dominicales c. omnes terras dominicales c. for Lands not excepted are terrae dominicales and so the Count is satisfied by that evidence Leon 139. Atkins and Hales Case Debt against an Executor upon plene administravit it appeared that the Executor medled and administred Plene administravit and then refused in Court and administration was granted to another and that several summs were recovered against the Administrator it was said by Periam Justice 1. That if an Administrator who is a stranger administer without the Commandment of the Executor the Executor cannot give such administration in evidence to prove his Issue 2. That in the principal Case the Executor having administred he could not refuse and so the administration is granted without cause and what he did was without warrant and no administration Ieon 134. Hawkins and Lawse Case At Bury Assises 1682. before Judge Windham The Executor gave the administration of the Administrator in evidence and allowed but there what the Administrator did was by the Executors consent in Mr. Lun and his Mothers Case An Executor de son tort cannot give in evidence Plene administravit An Executor pleads plene administravit praeter a judgment replication and Issue that the judgment was fraudulent The Obligee who had the judgment was denyed to have evidence about his Debt for he sweareth to have Assets for himself and is interested in the thing Before Judge Windham at Bedford Assises 1682. his retaining of goods to pay himself for he cannot retain but if he takes out letters of Administration although pendente lite he may retain for a Debt of as high a Nature and plead this in Barr for