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A47712 The fourth part of the reports of several cases of law argued and adjudged in the several courts at Westminster, in the time of the late Queen Elizabeths reign collected by a learned professor of the law, William Leonard, Esq. ... published by William Hughes of Grayes-Inn, Esq. ; with tables of the names of the cases, and of the matters contained in this book.; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster. Part 4 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1102; ESTC R19612 240,523 272

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Assumpsit MEgot brought an Action upon the Case against Broughton and Davy upon Assumpsit and it was found by Nisi Prius for the Plaintiff and afterwards before the day in Bank Broughton dyed and after Iudgment given Davy the other Defendant brought a Writ of Error in the said Court scil in the Kings Bench where Iudgment was given and assigned an Error in fact scil the death of Broughton depending the Writ vide 2 R. 3. 21. and this Case is not like to Trespass for Trespass done by many are several Trespasses but every Assumpsit is joynt If the Court may reverse their own Judgment and if the Court upon this matter might reverse their own Iudgment was the Question the Case was not resolved but adjourned CLII. Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IT was found by Office that J. S. held by the Queen and dyed without Heir whereas in truth he had an Heir scil A. S. who leased the Lands for an hundred years and afterwards traversed the Office Office trove and had an Ouster le mayne le Roy. Now the matter was moved in the Common Pleas by Fenner in behalf of the Sheriffs of London before whom the matter depended to whom it was said by Anderson Chief Iustice Conveyance by the Heir upon Entrusion That where the King is entituled by an Office to a Chattel as to a wardship c. there if the Heir without any intrusion bargain and sell levy a Fine or lease for years during the possession of the King it is void against the King but shall bind the Heir but where the King is intituled to the Fee-simple as in this Case such a Conveyance is meerly void Hil. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLIII Samuel Starkeys Case HOmine replegiando by Samuel Starkey to the Sheriffs of London Who returned that the said Starkey was indicted to be de mala fama deceptione Domini Regis with divers other general words and namely that he had deceived J. S. a Clothier and that he was a common Cozener and thereof being found guilty Iudgment was given by the Mayor and Recorder That he should be disfranchized of his Freedom and should be fined and imprisoned for a year and further said that he had not paid his Fine nor the year expired Cook Such Return hath not been seen and it is directly against the Statute of Magna Charta Wray Chief Iustice gave a Rule that the Sheriffs should make their Return at their perils before such a day Hil. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLIV. Bushy and Milfeilds Case IN Error brought by Bushy and Milfeild It was assigned for Error that where in the first Action the Iury gave four pence Costs and the Court gave de incremento three and twenty shillings that in the Iudgment the four pence was omitted Error It was the Opinion of the Court That for that Cause the Iudgment should be reversed although it be for the advantage of the Party so where the Iudgment is quod sit in misericordia where it ought to be Capiatur Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLV Bingham and Squires Case BIngham brought Debt upon an Obligation against Squire Obligation 3 Leon. 151. The Condition was If Squire did procure a Grant of the next Avoidance of the Archdeaconry of Stafford to be made to the said Bingham so as the said Bingham at the said next Avoidance may present that then c. The Case was That afterwards by the means and endeavour of Squire the Grant of the next Avoidance was made to Bingham but before the next Avoidance the present Archdeacon was created a Bishop so as the presentment of that Avoidance belonged to the Queen It was adjudged in this Case that the Condition was not performed and that by reason of these words scil So that Bingham may present And afterwards Iudgment was given that the Plaintiff should recover Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLVI Mansors Case A. Man bound himself in an Obligation to make an Assurance of Lands the first day of Jan. and the last day of December he to whom the Assurance was to be made scil the Obligee the said last day before Sun-setting came to the Obligor with a Deed ready to be sealed and prayed him to seal it who said to him that he was a man unlearned and said he would shew the same to his Counsel and then he would seal it And if the Obligation was forfeited or not because he did not seal it presently was the question And Fenner argued that it was not for when a thing is to be done upon request then he who makes the request ought to give sufficient and convenient time to perform the Condition I agree That where the Condition is absolute there if the Condition be not performed he shall not be excused by the default of another As if a man be bounden to marry A.S. and she will not marry him or to enfeoff J. S. and he refuseth as 3 H. 6. is the Obligation is forfeited Yet in these Cases if the Obligee himself be the cause that J. S. will not take the Feoffment or he will not marry A. S. the Obligation is not forfeited So in our Case for by his late request it is impossible for me to perform the condition for before my Counsel shall have perused it the time will be past If a man be bound to enfeoff one of Lands in Barwick request ought to be made so long time before that after that he may go to Barwick So if one be bounden to pay 1000 l. to J.S. he ought to make his Tender so long time before the last instant of the last day that the mony may conveniently be told This Case was in question A man made a Feoffment of the Manor of D. with the Appurtenances to which an Advowson was appendant and covenanted that the Manor upon request should be discharged of all manner of Incumbrances and before that the Feoffor had granted the next Avoidance to J. S. the Incumbent died the Clark of the Grantee was instituted and inducted the Feoffee requested the Feoffor to discharge the Incumbrance The opinion of many Sages of the Law was that he had not made his request within convenient time So if a man be bounden to infeoff the Obligee to have and to hold to him and his Heirs as long as J. S. shall have Issue of his Body If the Obligee demand Assurance after the death of J. S. without Issue yet the Obligation is not forfeited In 22 E. 4. if Lessee for the life of another continues possession for two or three weeks after the death of Cestuy que use where he could not have more speedy notice of his death he shall not be a Trespassor In 15 Eliz it was holden in Wottons Case That where he was bound to make a Feoffment to J. B. and J. B. came to him in Westminster Hall and tendred to him a Writing
Marchioness had devised all her Lands and had not left any thing to her Heir for which Case the Heir of the Marchioness entred into the third part of the Manor of Cauford of which the Lease upon which the Ejectione firmae was brought was made by the Lord Mountjoy to Insley and into the third part of the residue of the whole land now his meaning was That if the rent was not well passed by the name of the Manor then the same descended to the Heir which was sufficient for him For the Special Verdict found also That the rent was the third part of the value of the whole Land of the Marquess So that thereupon it may be collected That if a man hath three Manors some of them holden in Capite and of equal value and he deviseth two of them and suffereth the third to descend that the Devise is good for every part of the two Manors and the Heir shall not have the third part of each Manor Pasc 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXIII Spring and Lawsons Case ONe recovered in an Ejectione firmae and afterwards the Defendant made a new Lease for years and he who recovered ousted him and he brought an Ejectione firmae and the other pleaded the former Recovery It was holden a good bar by all the Iustices but Windham and Periam and by them the same is no Estoppel for the Conclusion shall be Iudgment if Action and not Iudgment if he shall be answered And although that it be an Action personal and in the nature of a Trespass yet the Iudgment is quod habeat possessionem termini sui during which Term the Iudgment is in force it is not reason that he should be ousted by him against whom he recovered for so Suits should be infinite and by Rhodes an Entry pendent the Writ shall abate it CLXIV Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. AN Action of Covenant was brought against one who had been his Apprentice The Defendant pleaded that he was within age The Plaintiff maintained his Action by the Custom of London where one by Covenant may bind himself within age Exception was taken to it that that was a Departure For 18 R. 2. an Infant brought an Action against his Guardian in Socage who pleaded that the Plaintiff was within age The Plaintiff did maintain his Declaration That by the Custom of such a place an Infant of 18 years might bring accompt against his Guardian in Soccage and it was there holden to be no departure Wray Chief Iustice was of Opinion that it was no departure for he said It should be frivolous to shew the whole matter in his Declaration viz. That he was an Infant and that by the Custom he might make a Covenant which should bind him But Quaere of the Matter and of his Opinion for that many learned Lawyers doubted much of it And vide the Case in 19 R. 2. of the Guardian in Soccage Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLXV Savage and Knights Case ERror was brought upon a Iudgment given in Leicester in Debt Tanfeild assigned Error because in that Suit there was not any Plaint for in all Inferior Courts the Plaint is as the Original at the Common Law and without it no Process can Issue forth and here upon this Record nothing is entred but only that the Defendant Summonitus fuit c. and because the first entry ought to be A. B. Queritur versus C. Clench a Plaint ought to be before any Process issueth and the Summons which is entred here is not a Plaint and for that Cause the Iudgment was reversed It was said That after the Defendant appeared a Plaint was entred But it was answered That that did not help the matter for there ought to be a Plaint out of which Process shall issue as in the Soveraign Courts out of the Original Writs 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVI Grindal Bishop of Yorks Case GRindal Archbishop of York made a Lease for one and twenty years another Lease for years of the same Land being in being not expired by four years and dyed and in time of vacation the Dean and Chapter confirmed it Clench It is a good confirmation A Bishop makes a Lease for years reserving the ancient rent but where it was payable at four Feasts of the year it is now reserved payable once in the year the same is within the Letter of the Statute but not within the intent the same Law if the Rent before was usually reserved to be paid upon the Land now it is reserved to be paid at any far remote place And he said that although his lease was in possession yet not to take effect before the four years of the former Lease are expired cannot be said an Estate within the Statute of 1 Eliz. whereby any Estate may pass before the commencement of it for he to whom it was made had but a right to have the Land and he could not surrender And he held that the second Lessee should pay the rent as well by the Contract as by the Estoppel Periam At the Common Law a Bishop with the Confirmation of the Dean and Chapter might have made a Feoffment Gift in Tail and a Lease for any Term of years and he spake much What shall be said the Possessions of a Bishop And therefore if a Bishop disseiseth another of certain Lands and makes a Lease thereof under the Seal of his Bishoprick it shall be now his Seal and it shall be his election in what capacity he will take and then this Land is to be reputed parcel of the Possession of his Bishoprick Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVII Hoo and Hoes Case JOhn Hoo brought a Writ of Intrusion against Richard Hoo depending which Writ the Demandant prayed Estrepement and had it and declared upon it scil That the Tenant after the Prohibition fecit Vastum Estrepementum in prosternendo c. To which the Tenant pleaded Not Guilty But the Plea was not allowed by the Court for there is no Issue in this Case but he might to plead Quod non fecit vastum c. after the Prohibition 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVIII Clinton and Bridges Case DEbt The Condition was for performance of an Award which was to pay 10 l. to the Plaintiff and to do divers other things The Defendant pleaded Quod perimplevit Arbitrium and shewed how the Plaintiff assigned for a Breach that the Defendant had not paid the 10 l. The Defendant rejoyned that he rendred it to the Plaintiff and he refused it It was the Opinion of Dyer that the same is a Departure for in the Bar the Defendant pleads that he hath performed the Award and shews how and now in the Rejoynder a Tender and Refusal which is not a performance of the Award although it is not any Breach of it 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CLXIX The Bishop of L's Case Tenures THe Case of the Bishop of
or his Servant had put the Horse to grass and afterward the Horse is stollen there an Action upon the Case doth lye Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCVII Neals Case IN a false Imprisonment by Neal against the Mayor Sheriffs Citizens and Commonalty of the City of Norwich the Original Writ was directed to the Coroners of the said City And Exception was taken to the Writ because it was not directed to the Sheriffs of the said City but to the Coroners Sed non allocatur for the Sheriffs are parcel of the Corporation as it is to see by the name by which they of Norwich are incorporated And also it hath been adjudged That a Sheriff cannot summon himself and therefore by the Award of the Court the Writ was allowed to be good Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCVIII. Sir John Bromes Case SIr John Brome 33 H. 8. acknowledged a Fine of certain Lands the Kings Silver was entred and the Conusans taken but the Fine was never engrossed and now he who claimed under the Fine came in Court and prayed that the Fine might be engrossed and the Court examined them upon their Oaths to what use the Fine was levied and in the Seisin and Possession of what persons the Lands whereof the Fine was levied had been after the Fine Vpon which Examination it appeared fully to the Court that the Party to whom the Fine was levied was seized after the Fine and suffered a Common Recovery of the Land and that the said Land had been enjoyed according to the said Fine at all such times since c. Whereupon the Court commanded that the Fine be ingrossed Vide Acc. 8 Eliz. Dyer 254. Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CXCIX The Lord Dacres and Philip Fines Case THe Case between the Lord Dacres and Fines was Tenant in Tail in remainder upon an Estate for Life of Lands holden in Capite levied a Fine thereof without Licence 3 Leon. 261. and Process issued against the Tenants for Life It was holden by all the Barons that by Plea he should be discharged it was holden That if the Conusor had any other Lands ubicunque in Anglia the Fine for Alienation should be levied upon them But it was moved If the Tenant should be driven to plead it because it appears upon Record that the Conusor was but Tenant in Tail in Remainder and that was in an Office containing such matter which was pleaded by another in another Cause before by which Office it appeared that the Lord Dacres was Tenant in Tail the Remainder in Tail to Philip Fines and now Fines had levied a Fine sur Conusans de droit c. and because the same appeared on Record Manwood awarded that the Process against the Tenants of the Lord Dacres should be stayed Trin. 29 Eliz. CC. Paston and Townsends Case IN Trespass by Paston against Townsend The Defendant pleaded that Tindal was seized in Fee by protestation and dyed seized and the Land descended To which the Plaintiff replyed and said c absque hoc that Tindal was seized in Fee upon which they were at Issue On the part of the Defendant to prove the Issue it was given in Evidence to prove the Issue in his right that the said Tindal long time before his death was seized and aliened and never after was seized It was said that that Evidence did not prove the Issue for the Defendant for the Seisin in Fee intended in the Issue is in the nature of a dying seized and so Periam conceived that the Defendants Plea did not intend any other Seisin a dying seized and the dying seized is taken by Protestation to avoid the doubleness So as the Seisin upon which the Issue is taken ought to be intended a Seisin continuing until the time of the death of Tindal and Seisin at large or a general Seisin at any time during the life of Tindal quod Anderson concessit Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCI. Griffith and Prices Case ERror by Griffith against Price upon a Iudgment in Chester in Ejectione firmae and the Error assigned was because the Original bore date 16 April 28 Eliz. and the Plaintiff declared of an Ejectment 17 April 28 Eliz. So as it appeareth that the Action was brought before there was any cause of Action and that was holden to be Error And also Ejectione firmae is not a personal Action and afterwards the Iudgment was Reversed Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCII. Harris and Caverleys Case A Iudgment was given in London between Harris and Caverley upon the Statute of 5 E. 6. for buying of Woolls and upon that Error was brought in the Kings Bench quod nota For this Writ of Error upon a Iudgment given in London ought to be sued before the Maior Vide ● N. B. 22 23. And Wray asked Wherefore the Writ of Error was brought here To which it was answered by Dodding Clark that the Record was removed by Certiorari out of the Kings Bench at the Suit of the Defendant to the purpose to bring a Writ of Error quod coram vobis residet And the Error was assigned in this that by the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 5. it is enacted that upon every Information that shall be exhibited a special Note shall be made of the Day Month and Year of the exhibiting of the same into any Office or to any Officer who lawfully may receive the same And here upon this Information there is not any such Note according to the said Statute And in truth no Information may be exhibited for there is not any Officer there appointed for that matter for the entry in such Cases in that Court is Talis venit deliberavit hic in Curia Miloni Sands c. But in the Case at Bar the Entry is Talis venit deliberavit in Curia but without shewing to whom But note that the words of the said Statute of 18 Eliz. are in the disjunctive into any Office or to any Officer and that such Information shall not be of Record but from that time forwards and not before wherefore here this Information is not upon Record and then no Iudgment can be given upon it Cook This Information may be well sued in London for the words of the said Statute of 5 E. 6. give Suit in any Court of Record of the King And the Court in London is a Court of Record of the King and every Court of Record hath an Officer to receive Declarations and Pleas and if it be delivered into the Office it is good enough 2. The Offence is laid in the Parish of Bow in Warda de Cheap alibi in Civitate London and so there is not any place laid where the Offence shall be tryed Cook This Alibi is a Nugation Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCIII Peuson and Higbeds Case IN Assumpsit the Plaintiff declared that in consideration that he by his Servant had delivered to the Defendant two Bills
defence c. and therefore if he maketh default or confesseth the Action it is a Forfeiture And as to the supposed recompence the same doth not help the Case for this common Recovery is no other but an Assurance and Recoverors are but Assignees and they shall take advantage of Conditions by 32 H. 8. and a recoveror shall be seized to the use of him who suffers the recovery if no other use be expressed And he also held that when Tenant for life bargains and sells his Land by Deed inrolled although no Fee passeth 1 Leon. 264. 3 Inst 251. b. Mores r. 212. 2 Leon. 60 65. yet it is a Forfeiture and that by reason of the Inrollment which is matter of Record And he said that if an Infant Tenant for life be disseised the Disseisor dyeth seized and afterwards the Infant dyeth that he in the remainder may enter Gent. to the same intent If Tenant for life c. the same is not simply a Forfeiture for he may have a Warranty or a Release or a Confirmation made to him Attornment doth not give a right but is only a consent yet if he who hath nothing in the reversion will levy a Fine of it to another and afterwards the Conusee bringeth a Quid juris clamat against the tenant of the Land and he Attorns it is a Forfeiture Manwood to the same intent This is a new Case and I have not read the Case in any Book nor seen any President of it And it is a great Case and a general Case and worthy to be argued and I conceive clearly that here is a direct and express Forfeiture at the Common Law without any aid or restraint of any Statute to make it a Forfeiture The dignity of Iudgment in the repute of Law hath been urged which ought to stand in force until they be reversed by Error or Attaint And also Littleton hath been urged 481. where upon the Statute of West 2. cap. 3. he saith that before the Statute aforesaid If a Lease had been made to one for life the remainder to a stranger and afterwards a stranger by feigned Action had recovered against the tenant for life by default and also the tenant for life dyed that he in the remainder had not any remedy But there Littleton doth not report the same as his own Opinion but as an Opinion conceived by a remainder upon the said Statute and it is in truth but a meer conceit And as to the main point he took this diversity Such Recoveries in which the title of the demandant stands indifferently to the Court and Non constat if it be good or not being suffered by tenant for life by default or confession without Aid prayer of him in the reversion do not make any Forfeiture although the tenant for life hath not dealt well with him in the reversion not having prayed in aid of him And in such Case If a Lease be made for life the remainder over in Fee upon such a recovery he in the remainder shall have a Formedon in the remainder or a Writ of Right and shall not oust him who recovered without Action and that by the Common Law. Then came the Statute of West 2. cap. 3. which gave to the Wife Cui in vita upon a Recovery against the Husband by default whereas before she had not any recovery but a Writ of Right and notwithstanding her former recovery ulterius necesse habet ostendere jus suum secundum formam brevis quod prius impetraverat and if his right be not better than the right of him in the Reversion he shall lose the Land notwithstanding the Iudgment given before for him And that Statute gave Resceit or Entry ad terminum qui praeteriit and that Statute is to be intended of such Recoveries where a good or at least an indifferent Title is so as non constat Curiae if it be good or not After that Tenant for life was driven to a near shift and would not make default or lose by nient dedire but would plead but yet faintly for the remedy of which Mischief the Statute of 13 R. 2. was made which gave Resceit in such Case the particular Tenant being restrained by that Statute He jugled yet and practised to suffer a Recover secretly without notice of him in the Reversion To remedy which Mischief the Statute of 32 H. 8. was made and that made such Recovery had against such particular Tenant void against him in the Reversion It hath been objected That the Statute of 32 H 8. doth not give any Forfeiture in that Case but makes that the Recovery be void therefore he in the reversion ought to tarry till after the death of the particular Tenant To that I shall speak after But how our Case is a common Recovery and constat Curiae that the Demandant hath not any right for the Tenant might have barred him and in truth he who recovereth is but a Purchasor Also this recovery is not to the use of the recoverer but to the use of him who was Tenant in it and not paramount as in the Case of a recovery upon a good title a Lease for years made by him who after suffers a recovery is good and shall not be defeated by the recoveree otherwise it is where the recovery is upon a good Title Vide Statute of Gloucest cap. 11. Where upon default of the Tenant resceipt is given for Lessee for years yet if the Tenant vouch upon default of the Vouchee the Lessee for years shall be received and now resceipt of Lessee for years is out of the Book for by the Statute of 21 H. 8. he may falsifie But no resceipt lyeth in the Case of a common recovery for he who recovereth cannot oust the Termor As to that which my Brother Clark hath said That the Bargain and Sale in this Case is not any Forfeiture but when the Deed of Bargain and Sale is inrolled it is a Forfeiture I am not of that Opinion for although that the inrollment be of record yet the Deed is not of record for against the Deed inrolled a man may plead Infancy although none can plead Non est factum to it Also he held that although by the Bargain and Sale and the inrollment of it the Bargainee had not Fee for by such act the reversion is not removed yet by the recovery and the Execution of it the Bargainee had gained the Fee out of the Lessor for the recovery is to the use of the Bargainee against whom it was had c. It hath been objected That he is only a Voucher which peradventure was lawful in this Case by reason of the Warranty paramount or of a release or confirmation with Warranty and two Cases have been vouched to such purpose viz. 5 E. 4. 2. Tenant for life being impleaded in a Praecipe vouched a stranger the Demandant counterpleaded the Voucher which was found for him he in the reversion had no remedy but
as the Statute of 11 H. 8. hath ordained in case of a Lease for years where the Lessor his Heirs or Assigns have suffered the recovery and not otherwise And afterwards he argued very much upon the reputation and dignity of common Recoveries that they are the strongest and most effectual Assurances in the Law and therefore they ought to be countenanced rather by the Iudges than in any part diminished or disabled and we ought to consider of them Non ex rigore juris rigida disquisitione but according to the common use and practice what is the ground and foundation of these Recoveries And so Iudges have used heretofore to examine Matters which peradventure according to the strict Rules of the Common Law drew them away But they perceiving that a dangerous Consequence thereby would follow to an infinite number of the Kings Subjects the Law having been otherwise practised before have framed their Iudgments not according to the exact Rules of Law but to avoid the Inconvenience aforesaid according to the common and received practice c. Nam communis Error facit jus and to that purpose he cited a Case very lately adjudged in B.R. viz. A Writ of Error was brought in B. R. upon a Iudgment given in Wales and the Error was in this That the Writ was returnable co●am Justiciariis Domini Regis Comitatus c. where it should have been coram Justiciariis Magnae Sessionis Dominae Reginae c and such are the words of the Statute of 34 H. 8. cap 26. the which Sessions shall be called the Kings great Sessions in Wales and notwithstanding that the Iustices in strict consideration of the Law thought the same to be Error for the said Statute had given to the said Court such name yet because it was well known to the Iustices That that was the common course in the said Court ever after the erection thereof And also if the said Iudgment should be reversed for that cause many Iudgments should be also reversed which should be a great disquietness and vexation to the whole Country there they in their discretion thought it convenient to qualifie the Law in that point and so to avoid the said Inconvenience affirmed the said Iudgment So in the case at Bar If this Rent-charge should stand against the said recovery no inconvenience should be so firm but it should be impeached no Title so clear but should be incumbred therefore for the common repulse of many the strict rules of the Law ought to yield to common practice for the avoiding of a common inconvenience it hath been holden for Law when Tenant in tail maketh a feoffment in fee the Feoffee is impleaded voucheth the Tenant in tail now forasmuch as he cometh in as Vouchee it is now said that he cometh in of all his estates I do not see any reason for that but common allowance practice and experience c. It was adjourned c. Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXIV Baxter and Bartlets Case IN Assise of Freshforce by Baxter against Bartlet upon Null tort Null Disseisin pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff who had Iudgment upon which the Tenant brought Error for that the Assize have generally found the Disseisin but have not enquired of the force And after many motions the Iudgment was affirmed CCLXV. Sir Henry Gilfords Case IT was found upon a Special Verdict That Henry Gilford Citizen and Freeman of London 7 Feb. 6 E. 2. seized of a Capital Messuage Devised the same by these words Lego volo Quod omnes Domus reddit ' quae habeo in Villa de London ordinentur assignentur per Executores meos ad sustentationem trium Capellanorum qui pro vita celebrabunt in Ecclesia Sancti Pauli London Et ad hoc faciend ' Do eis plenam potestatem and made his Executors William Staunton and others and dyed the Will was Proved and Inrolled according to the Custom Afterwards the Executors by their Deed bearing date 7 E. 2 granted and assigned the said Capital Messuage and his other Tenements in London to the Dean and Chapter of Pauls in London and their Successors Habend ' tenend ' in forma sequenti Haec est finalis Concordia c. That the Dean and Chapter shall have the said Lands for ever to find yearly a competent Sustenance of 10 Marks to a Priest to celebrate Mass for the said Henry Gilford and all Souls and that the said Priest at all hours of Divine obsequies should give his attendance in the said Church and faithfully do his Office to say Mass and Prayers according to the Degrees and Customs of the said Church and that the Dean and Chapter should find Bread and Wine and Massing-cloaths and Torch-light and granted the residue of the profits of the Lands to celebrate an yearly Obit and for the perpetual security of the said Chauntry the said Executors granted to the Mayor and Commonalty of London 20 s yearly rent for ever Ita quod the Mayor and Chamberlain for the time being presented a meet and convenient Chaplain to the said Chauntry to the said Dean and Chapter within 15 days after the Avoidance the which Chaplain the Dean and Chap●er are bound to admit And the form of the said Conveyance was such We the Executors H. G. do grant and assign to the Dean and Chapter of Pauls all the Lands Tenements and Rents aforesaid to have and to hold to them and their Successors for the sustentation of a Chaplain perpetual and his Clark for the said H. G. and all Souls receiving from the said Dean and Chapter 10 Marks for the celebrating of the said Obit of the said H. G. And that the Grant and Assignment of the said 20 s. to the Commonalty in the relief of the said Chauntry is such scil To have and receive of one Shop in Cheap maintenance of the said Chauntry aforesaid And that the said Dean and Chapter oblige themselves and their Successors and the Church to pay the same to the said Priest and Clark and that it shall be lawful for the Mayor and Commonalty aforesaid to distrain for the said Rents By virtue of which Will and Indenture the Dean and Chapter enter and were thereof seized in their demesne c. and that at all times after they had taken the profits thereof until 2 E. 6. and that the Dean and Chapter of the profits of the premises had yearly paid 10 Marks for the stipend of the said Priest And further the 27 July 16 H. 8. the Dean and Chapter demised the same to F. Cole for 40 years and that afterwards 15 Maij 36 H. 8. the said Dean and Chapter leased the same to Nicholas Wilford for 50 years rendring 9 l. Rent with Clause of Distress if the Rent was behind by half a year being demanded the Lease should be void which N. W. 1 E. 6. devised the same to his Wife who devised the same to Tho. Wilford the
Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXII Barton and Edmunds Case AN Infant and another were bound for the debt of the Infant Infant the Infant at his full age promised to save the other harmless the Infant died It was adjudged that upon this Assumpsit Assumpsit an Action upon the Case did lie against his Executors XXIII Mich. 36 Eliz. In the Kings Bench adjudged IF an Executor promise to pay a Debt when he hath not Assets It was the Opinion of all the Iustices that no Action upon the Case lieth against him but if he hath assets then it is otherwise And the Heir if he hath nothing by descent is not subject to an Action upon such a promise Mich. 28 Eliz. XXIV The Lord Pagets Case Indictments AN Indictment was Quare vi armis clausam A. B. apud D. fregit whereas A. B. then had a Lease at Will of the land the matter was for digging of Turfs the Indictment was holden to be good XXV 25 Eliz In the Kings Bench. Indictments INdictment De uno Equo where it was a Gelding holden not good But otherwise it is where Trespass was brought de Equo castrato and the Iury found a Gelding and adjudged for the Plaintiff 26 Eliz. XXVI Tucker and Nortons Case Execution AN Infant in Execution upon condemnation in Debt sued a Writ of Error his Father and Brother bailed him It was said the Recognisance shall be by them two only that the Infant shall appear and if the Iudgment be affirmed that they pay the mony and not that they shall render his body to prison for when he is once discharged out of Execution he shall never be in Execution again XXVII Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Nobleman Recognizance IT was holden by the Iustices That a Nobleman shall be bounden with his bail in a Recognizance that he shall render his body and that upon the Statute of 13 E. 1. If he hath not goods or lands his body shall be taken in execution for the Law in such case excepts only Clarks XXVIII Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Exchequer Felo de se THe Queen granted to one Catalla utlagatorum felonum de se within such a Precinct One indebted to the Queen having Goods is felo de se within the Precinct Resolved the Queen should have the Goods to satisfie her debt 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXIX King and Cottons Case LEssee for life the remainder in tail the remainder in fee Disseisin Lessee for life makes a Deed of Feoffment of the Land and delivers it and makes a Letter of Attorney to another to deliver Seisin who enters and makes Livery accordingly adjudged that the Attorney is a Disseisor 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXX Gerrards Case THe Owner of the Lands severed his Tythes Prohibition and a stranger took them and carried them away The Parson libelled in the Spiritual Court against the Owner of the Land for the Tythes who thereupon prayed a Prohibition It was adjudged no Prohibition should issue in this Case for that he might plead the same matter in Bar in the Spiritual Court. Hil. 31 Eliz. XXXI Willet and Wilkinsons Case NOte it was adjudged Surrender that if Lessee for years take another Lease from the Guardian in Soccage that the same is a Surrender of his first Lease Note the second Lease was made in the name of the Guardian Trin. 26 Eliz. XXXII Ould and Conyes Case IT was adjudged Commoner Conies that a Commoner cannot kill Conies which destroy his Common though he hath not any other remedy Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXXIII Mayes Case ONe sent a Letter by a Carrier to a Merchant for certain Merchandizes to send them to him receiving a certain sum of mony the Merchant sent the Merchandizes by the Carrier without receiving the mony It was the opinion of the Iustices that the Buyer should not be charged for the mony for it was a conditional bargain and it was the folly of the Merchant to trust the Carrier with the Wares Mich. 30 Eliz. XXXIV Haltons Case A Recognizance was acknowledged before Sir N. Read one of the Masters of the Chancery Recognizance Inrollment and the Recognizor died before it was enrolled it was doubted if it might be enrolled at the Petition of his Executors it was agreed by the Iustices that it might be well enough for it is like to a Conusans of a Fine before a Iudge which may be removed out of the hands of the Iudge by Certiorari and yet it is not a Record till the perfection of it At the same time it was doubted also if the Chancery would aid a man when there wanted the words Heirs in a Deed where the land was sold for mony Chancery compel Attornment But it was agreed that after a Fine levied the Chancery might compel the Tenant to Attorn Hil. 27 Eliz. XXXV Holland and Hopkins Case IN Ejectione firmae it was agreed by the Court that if a Disseisor be of an 100 Acres and he lets the same to divers for Years that the entry into one Acre by the Disseisee is an entry against them all but if they had been Tenants for life Quaere for that then he might have his Action against them And it was said Entre congeable that if one makes a Lease for years rendring for the first two years 10 l. and afterwards 30 l. every year with condition if the rent of 30 l. or any part of it be behind that the Lessor enter The Lessor enters for not payment of the 10 l. that his entry is lawful for the 10 l. was parcel of the rent for it was but one rent Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXXVI Clamp and Clamps Case Copyholder Surrender A Copyholder in possession surrendred the Reversion of his land post mortem suam to the Lord to an use c. It was adjudged that thereby nothing passed XXXVII Trin. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Lease was made of a Mannor with all Gardens Orchards Yards c. and with all the profits of a Wood except to the Lessor forty Trees to take at his pleasure It was a Question if the Lessee should have the Wood It was the opinion of Dyer That the Wood was not comprised within the Lease but the Lessee should only have the profits as pawnage Leases herbage c. And he said it was a Case adjudged a man made a Lease of a Wood ad faciendum maximum proficuum meliori modo quo poterit that the Lessee thereby could not cut the Trees nor do waste Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer XXXVIII Butler and Lightfoots Case IT was holden by the Barons Copyholder Surrender 3 Leon. 239. That if Tenant for life be of a Copyhold the Remainder over in Fee to another he in the Remainder may surrender his Estate if there be no custom to
Defendant that these Matters of Forgery were not within the Statute of 5 Eliz. nor also the Perjury or the procurement thereof upon which the Lords of the Council there Upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Perjury referred the consideration of the said Statute to both the Chief Iustices who at the next day in Court declared their Opinions upon the said Matters i. e That the said Matters did not extend to the Forgery of a Deed containing a gift of Chattels personals which see clearly by the Statute which as to that purpose extends but to Obligations Bills Obligatorie Acquittances Releases or other Discharges and that also a Deed of Assignment of a Lease of Lands in Ireland is not within the said Statute and also they were of opinion that the said Perjury and the procurement of it was not punishable by the said Statute because the Oath was taken coram non Judice for the Town-Clerk of London could not take an Oath in such a case Note no more than a private person But because that the Bill in the perclose and conclusion of it was contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm the two Chief Iustices were of Opinion That the said Court might punish these Offences as Misdemeanors at the Common Law but not according to the Statute and afterwards Shyriffe was fined and by Order of the Court to stand upon the Pillory Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber LXXX The Queen and Lord Vauxes Case Bills IN the Exchequer Chamber before the Chancellor c. the Lord Vaux brought a Writ of Error upon a Iudgment given against him in the Court of Exchequer and assigned for Error that a Bill was exhibited against him that the Lord Vaux had taken certain goods of the Queen at Westminster in the County of Middlesex and also had intruded into the Rectory of Ethelborough in the County of Northampton whereas the Queen ought to have brought several Bills being for several causes arising within several Counties But it was resolved by the whole Court That the Bill of the Queen was good enough and here is no mischief for if the Defendant will plead Not Guilty two several Venire Facias shall be awarded one into Middlesex the other into the County of Northampton Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. LXXXI Owen and Morgans Case GEorge Owen brought a Scire Facias against Morgan to have Execution of a Fine levied 8 Eliz. by which Fine the land was given to the Conusee and his heirs the Conusee rendred the same to the husband and wife and to the heirs of the body of the husband Note that the husband was the Conusor the remainder in Fee to the now Demandant and note that the Writ of Covenant was between the Conusee Plaintiff and the husband Deforceant without naming the wife And afterwards the husband suffered a common Recovery without naming of the wife Common Recovery the hushand and wife died without Issue and now Owen to whom the remainder was limited by the Fine brought a Scire Facias in bar of which the Recovery was pleaded It was argued by Shuttleworth Serjeant That the said Recovery had against the husband was a good bar Feme not party to the Writ of Covenant not bound by a Recovery and should bar the remainder and the wife ought not to be named in or party to the Recovery for that nothing accrued to her by the Fine because she was not party to the Writ of Covenant and to the Conusans vide 32 H. 8. Fines 108. None can take by the Fine but those who are named in the Writ of Covenant but every Stranger may take by way of Remainder Vide etiam 7 E. 3. Br. Fines 114. 6 E. 3. Fitz. Fines 117. 7 E. 3. Fitz. Scire Facias 136. It is said by Herle if such a Fine ut supra be taken it is good as long as it is in force LXXXII Sir Richard Lee and Arnolds Case Post 93. SIr Richard Lee Kt. seized of three Manors made a lease of them to Sir Nicholas Arnold for certain years reserving for the one Manor 5 l. and for the other Manor 10 l. and for the third Manor 10 l. upon condition that if the said rents or any of them or any part c. be behind a re-entry into all the Manors and afterwards he bargained and sold the reversion of one of the said Manors to William Winter in Fee and afterwards by Deed indented and inrolled bargained and sold the two other Manors and for the rent of one of the said Manors the Vendee did re-enter into all the Manors Manwood Here are several reservations Reservation of Rents upon a joynt Lease several rents and several leases for although that the words are joynt yet by construction they are become several as Land given to an Abbot and a Secular man although here be joynt words yet they are Tenants in Common Litt. 296. And if I sell to you two Horses the one for 5 l. and the other for 5 l. here are two several contracts the Parties to whom these reversions are assured ut supra are Assignees within the Statute of 32 H. 8. by which it is enacted that Assignees may take advantage of Conditions for such an Assignee is not meerly in by act of law as the Lord by Escheat and he is not such an Assignee but is in by conveyance The Lessor enters upon his Lessee Assigns and makes his Feoffment and the Lessee re-enters now the Feoffee is an Assignee and this condition is destroyed in part and continued in part Condition destroyed in part good in part If one hath Common in the land of another for 20 beasts and releases his Common for 10 beasts the Common for the residue remains but if he purchaseth part of the land in which he hath Common the whole Common is destroyed A Feoffment to two with warranty and one of them releases the warranty all the warranty is gone As to the condition for as much as it is not collateral but incident to the reversion it may be severed and is of the same nature as the rent and reversion A man possessed of lands for 20 years and seized of other lands in Fee Conditions divided leaseth all the land for 10 years reserving rent with clause of re-entry and dieth now the Heir hath a reversion for the land in fee and the executor for the other land so the condition is divided according to the reversion so if lands were given to one in general tail and others in special tail he thereof makes a lease rendring rent and dieth having several Issues inheritable to each tail now the condition shall go according to the rent and he conceived that the Grantee of parcel of the reversion is an Assignee within the said Statute Grantee of parcel of the Reversion is an Assignee within 32 H. 8. Of Conditions as if a Lease for years
of the said Anne and of the right heirs of the same W. Wallshot Anne died and if this Lease should bind the Conusee was the question for it was agreed by all that the Issue in Tail was bound by the Fine Quaere the Case was only put but not resolved CXLV Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. UPon a recovery in a writ of Entry sur disseisin of two Acres of Lands an Habere facias seisinam was awarded the Sheriff as to one Acre returned Habere feci and as to the other tarde And that return was shewed to the Court Amercement of the Sheriff and all the Iustices but Periam held that the Sheriff should be amerced for that return being contrary repugnant in it self but Periam said it may be that the Acre of which no seisin is had was so distant from the other Acre whereof the seisin was had that the Sheriff in time could not make execution of both being so remote the one from the other To which it was answered That if the truth of the case was such Then might the Sheriff make Execution in one Acre in the name of both Acres And if upon a Capias ad satisfaciend against two the Sheriff retorn as to one a Cepi and as to the other Tarde he shall be amerced for his several retorns cannot stand together Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXLVI Lees and Lord Staffords Case COmpton made Conusans as Bayliff to Edward Lord Stafford and shewed that Henry Lord Stafford Father of the said Edward and Ursula his Wife were seized of the place where and let the same for years to Edward Lees the Plaintiff Robert Lees and Elizabeth Atwood upon Condition they nor any of them should alien the said Term nor any part of the same without the leave of the Lord or his Heirs Henry Lord Stafford and Ursula died and that the Reversion thereof descended to Edward Lord Stafford and shewed further that the said Edward Lees the Plaintiff had aliened To which the Plaintiff in bar of the Conusans said that the said Edward now Lord Stafford gave License that the said Edward Lees Robert or Elizabeth might alien and that was without Deed. It was conceived by some that this Licence was not of any force to dispense with the Condition because it is uncertain and doubtful in the disjunctive and it was resembled to the Case of 11 H. 7. 13. where a man gives a thing to J. S. or A. B. it is void for the incertainty But all the Court was to the contrary For here the thing which is given is but a Liberty and is not to be resembled to a Gift or Interest and the intent of the Lord Stafford was that one of them might alien but not all of them and afterward Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXLVII Limver and Evories Case LImver as Administrator of one A. brought Debt against Evory and the case was F. made G. his Executor and G. made H. an Infant his Executor and died and during the minority Administration was granted to the Plaintiff who as Administrator of G brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond made to the first Testator and that was assigned for Error for the Plaintiff ought to bring his Action as Administrator of the first Testator vide 10 E. 4. 1. 26 H. 8. 7. and for that Cause the Iudgment was reversed Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXLVIII Knevit and Copes Case KKnevit brought Ejectione firmae against Cope and declared 3 Leon. 266. whereas John Hopkins by his Deed bearing date the 20 of May 32 Eliz. had let to him a House and two yard Lands containing forty Acres of Land Meadow and Pasture at Tithingham de forecomb in the Parish of Steep c. and upon Not Guilty the Visne was of Tithingham de Forecomb Exception was taken by Cook that the Declaration had not certainty for it is not shewed certain how much Meadow Land and how much Pasture is contained in the said two yard Lands and the Iury may find the Defendant Guilty as to so much Land but not to the residue also he hath not shewed in the Declaration when the Lease was made but only saith that by Indenture bearing date 20 May c. but doth not shew any day of delivery of the Indenture for then is the demise To which Exception it was said by the Iustices That the Declaration as to that was good enough for it shall be intended to be delivered at the day of the date Another Exception was taken to the Visne because that the Visne ought to have been from the Parish and not from Tithingham 11 H. 7. 23 24. Forcible Entry in the Manor of B. in B. the Visne shall not be from the Manor of B. but of B. Gawdy You shall never have a Visne of the Parish for divers Towns may be in one Parish but here the Visne is well of Tithingham for it may be that it is a Town Cook It is but a Vill conus from which a Visne cannot come CXLIX Trin. 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Rot. 1027. MIlbourn brought an Action upon the Statute of Winchester against the Inhabitants within the Hundred of Dunmow in the County of Essex it was found by Special Verdict that the Plaintiff was robbed 23 Aprilis inter horam secundam matutinam tempore nocturno ante Lucem ejusdem diei and the Opinion of the Court was clear that the Plaintiff should be barred for the said Statute provided for ordinary Travel as in the Case of Archpool who came to his Inn post Sunset ante noctem in tempore diurno which is an usual time for travelling to come to his Inn but the Law doth not receive any in protection of this Stat. who travel in extraordinary hours for it is the folly of the Traveller to take his journy so out of season and the Inhabitants are not bound to leave their Houses and to attend the ways tempore nocturno and another reason was alledged by the Iustices because the said Statute appoints watch to be kept in the time of night à Festo Ascensionis usque ad Festum Sancti Michaelis and this Robbery was done the 23 of April so as it was out of that time and afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CL. Barkers Case Estrepement in Partition A Writ of Partition by Barker heir of Gertrude Marquess of Exceter who devised all her Lands to Blunt by which the third part was descended to the Plaintiff and he prayed a Writ of Estrepement and it was the Opinion of the Court that the Writ ought not to be granted for that the Plaintiff might have a more proper remedy upon the Statute cum duo tres c. and in a Writ of Partition no Land is demanded Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLI Megot and Davies Case
the whole matter is not any sufficient demand and so Wray Chief Iustice said CCLXXVIII Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. ACtion upon the Case was brought for these words Thou wouldst have stoln my Cloak if J.S. had not come in the way and thou art a Thief and I will prove it After Verdict it was found for the Plaintiff It was objected in Arrest of Iudgment That these words were not actionable For the first words Thou wouldst have stoln my Cloak c. do not by Law give any cause of Action and when the words subsequent Thou art a Thief are depending apon the said former words and to be construed as spoken in respect of them and upon that intent But the Opinion of the whole Court was to the contrary And that the said latter words should be taken and construed in abstracto by themselves as in gross and not as dependant upon the former words and afterwards Iudgment was given that the Plaintiff should recover Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXIX Hungerford and Watts Case HUngerford brought an Action upon the Case againts Watts Words for that the Defendant had said That the Plaintiff had caused the Defendant to be arrested with forged Writs It was objected That the words were not actionable for it might be that the Writs were forged by strangers without the privity of the Plaintiff and that the Plaintiff not knowing them to be forged procured the Arrest But the Opinion of the Court was That the words were actionable for the word Caused extends as well to the Forgery as to the Arrest and so amounts to the slander of Forgery CCLXXX Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Costs IN an Action upon an Escape the Plaintiff is Nonsuited It was holden that the Defendant should not have Costs Note The words of the Statute upon an Action upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. for any offence or tort personal to be supposed to be done immediately to the Plaintiff Notwithstanding this Action is quodam modo an Action upon the Statute 1. by Equity of the Statute of West 2. cap. 11. which giveth it expresly against the Warden of the Fleet Yet properly it is not an Action upon the Statute for in the Declaration in such an Action no mention is made of the Statute which see in the Book of Entries 169 171. and also here is not supposed any immediate personal offence or wrong to the Plaintiff And an Action upon the Case it is not for then the Writ ought to make mention of the Escape and that it doth not here and yet at the Common Law before the Statute of Westm 2. an Action upon the Case lay for an Escape and so by Dyer Manwood and Mounson Costs are not given in this Case And by Dyer upon Nonsuit in an Action upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. the Defendant shall not have Costs for it is not a personal wrong for the Writ is quod disseisivit which is a real wrong Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXXI Hollingshed and Kings Case HOllingshed brought Debt against King and declared That King was bound to him in a Recognisance in 200 l. before the Mayor and Aldermen of London in interiori Camera of Guildhall in London Vpon which Recognizance the said Hollingshed before brought a Scire Facias before the said Mayor c. in exteriori Camera and there had Iudgment to recover upon which Recovery he had brought this Action and upon the Declaration the Defendant did demur in Law because that the Plaintiff in the setting forth of the Recognizance had not alledged That the Mayor of London had authority by Prescription or Grant to take Recognizances and if he had not then is the Recognizance taken coram non Judice and so void and as to the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 45. the same cannot extend to Recognizances taken in London which see by the words De his quae recordata sunt coram Cancellario Domini Regis ejus Justiciariis qui recordum habent in rotulis eorum irrotulantur c. and also at the time of the making of that Statute the City of London had not any Sheriffs but only Bayliffs And the Statute ordains That upon Recognizance Process shall go to the Sheriffs c. therefore not to them But the whole Court was clear to the contrary for we well know that they of London have a Court of Record and every Court of Record hath authority incident to it to take Recognizances for all things which do concern the Iurisdiction of that Court and which arise by reason of the matters there depending Another matter was Objected for that the Recognizance was taken in interiori Camera but the Court was holden in exteriori Camera therefore it was not well taken But as to that Anderson Chief Iustice said Admit that the Recognizance was not well taken yet because that in a Scire Facias sued upon it the Defendant shall not take any advantage he shall be now bound by that admittance As if one sues a Scire Facias as upon a Recognizance whereas in truth there is not any such Recognizance and the party pleads admitting such Record and thereupon Iudgment is given against him the same is not void but voidable And Fleetwood Recorder of London alledged many Cases to prove the Courts of the King ought to take notice that those of London have a Court of Record for if a Quo Warranto issueth to the Iustices in Eyre it doth not belong to them of London to claim their Liberties for all the Kings Courts have notice of them And at the last after many Motions the better Opinion of the Court was That the Plaintiff should recover Periam aliquantum haesitavit And it was said by Anderson and in a manner agreed by them all That if dependant this Demurrer here the Iudgment in London upon the Scire Facias is reversed yet the Court here shall proceed and take no notice of the reversal CCLXXXII Mich. 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Man seized of a Barn in which the Tythes of certain Lands have used to be inned let the same by these words Demises .. Demise and to Farm-let the Barn with all Tythes belonging to the same It was holden That by that Demise the Tythes did not pass but Tythes which had usually been demised with the Barn passed by such words as by the Demise of an House Cum omnibus terris eidem pertinent ' all the Lands pass which have used to be demised with the said House for the demising usually of the Tythes with the Barn makes the Tythes belonging to the Barn but not the Inning Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXXII Haltons Case Recognisance Inrollment A Recognizance was acknowledged before J. S. who was one of the Masters of the Chancery and before the same was Inrolled the Conusee dyed the point was whether at the request of the Executors
another thing 15 H. 7. 11. Cestuy que Use declares by his Will That his Feoffees shall sell his Lands and dyeth the Feoffees make a Feoffment to the same use yet they may sell so as against their Livery the Authority to sell remains to them And he cited Brents case Dyer 340. where a future Vse is limited to his Wife that shall be shall not be prevented by a Fine or Feoffment And vide the Statute of Fraudulent Conveyances 27 Eliz. where a Conveyance is made with Clause of Revocation if afterwards the party makes such a Conveyance bargain sell or grant the said Lands for money or other good consideration paid or given the first Conveyance not being revoked that then such former Conveyance against the last Purchasors shall be void Another matter was admitting that the said Power and Liberty be not extinct by the said Feoffment If by the said Indenture or Renunciation Relinquishment Release c. it be destroyed And he said that a thing in esse could not be released Litt. 105. 4 H. 7. 10. A Lease for years to begin at a day to come cannot be released before that it come in esse 11 H. 6. 29. Br. Damages 138. In Detinue The Defendant would have confessed the Action if the Plaintiff would have released the Damages and the Plaintiff would have so done but could not before Iudgment for before Iudgment the Plaintiff had not interest in the damages but he was intituled to them by the Iudgment so Lands in ancient Demesne are recovered at the Common Law and Execution had accordingly and afterwards the Lord reverseth the Iudgment the Tenant notwithstanding that Release may enter for his title which accrued to him by the reversal was not in esse at the time of the Release And it was adjudged 23 Eliz. that where Lessee for years devised his term to his Wife if she should so long live and if she dyed within the said term that then the residue of his term should go unto his daughter who then should be unpreferred and dyed the daughter released to her mother all her right in the said Land the mother dyed within the term That that Release did not bind the daughter for that at the time of the Release she had not any title Cook contrary And he said That by the Feoffment the said power and title was extinct and he well agreed the case cited before of 15 H. 7. for in such case the Vendee of the Feoffees shall be in by the Devise and not by the Feoffees 9 H. 7.1 The husband makes a discontinuance of the Land of his wife and takes back an Estate to him and his wife by which his wife is remitted they have Issue the wife dyeth the husband shall not be Tenant by the Courtesie for he hath extinguished his future right by the Livery 12 Ass ultimo A Praecipe brought against A. who loseth the Land by erronious Iudgment and after Execution had enters upon the demandant and makes a Feoffment his Writ of Error is gone 38 E. 3.16 In a Scire Facias to execute a Fine the Plaintiff recovers and makes a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards the Tenant in the Scire Facias by Writ of Error reverseth the Iudgment in the Scire Facias Now the Plaintiff in the Scire Facias shall not have a new Scire Facias 34 H. 6.44 A Recovery against B. by false Oath and after Execution had B. enters and makes a Feoffment to a Stranger who enfeoffs him who recovers it is a good bar in an Attaint 27 H. 8.29 The Feoffees to an Vse are disseised the Disseisor enfeoffeth Cestuy que Use who enfeoffs a Stranger now by that Feoffment his right to the Vse is extinct And as to the Release the same is not properly a Release but rather a Defeasance to determine the power and authority aforesaid as if A. enfeoffeth B. with warranty and afterwards B. covenants with A that the said Warranty shall be void that Covenant shall enure to defeat and determin the Warranty And afterwards in the principal Case Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff See more of this Case in Cook 1. part Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCLV. Owen and Morgans Case Ante 26. 93. GEorge Owen brought a Scire Facias against Morgan to have Execution of a Fine levied 8 Eliz. by which Fine the Land was given to the Conusee and his Heirs and the Conusee rendred the same to Husband and Wife Note that the Husband was the Conusor the remainder in Fee to the now demandant and Note that the Writ of Covenant was between the Conusee Plaintiff and the Husband Deforceant without naming of the Wife and afterwards the Husband suffered a common Recovery without naming of the Wife The Husband and Wife dyes without Issue and now Owen to whom the remainder in Fee was limited by the Fine brought the Scire Facias in bar of which the Recovery was pleaded It was argued by Serjeant Shuttleworth That the Recovery had against the Husband only was a good bar and should bind the remainder and he said That the Wife ought not to be named in or party to the Recovery for nothing accrued to her by the Fine because she was not party to the Writ of Covenant nor party to the Conusance and none can take by the render who was not party to the Writ of Covenant and to the Conusance Vide 30 H. 8. Fines 108. None can take the first Estate by the Fine but those who are named in the Writ of Covenant c. but every Stranger may take by Remainder Vide 3 E. 3. Er. Fines 114. 6 E. 2. Fines 117. 7 E. 3. Scire Facias 136. It is said by Horton If such a Fine is accepted it is good The Case was adjourned CCCLVI. A. Seized of a Manor to which two parts of the Advowson were appendant presents and afterwards aliens the Manor with the appurtenances the Alienee presents and purchaseth the third part of the Advowson and presents again one A. who was Chaplain to the Duke of Rutland and had a Dispensation from the Pope 1 Eliz. before the Statute was repealed and was instituted and inducted and afterwards accepted of a plurality viz. another Benefice and dyed 11 Eliz. The Queen presented for Lapse and her Clerk was instituted and inducted The said Lord of the Manor dyed seized inter alia and that Manor was allotted to the Wife of D. for her part and he brought a Quare Impedit It was moved if D. should not joyn in the Quare Impedit with him who had the third part and by Walmsley he is not to joyn in it 22 E. 4. by Brian If an Advowson descends to four Coparceners and they make partition to present by turns and the third doth present when the second ought for that time the presentment is gone but when it comes to his turn again he shall present which proves that they are as several
20 Of omnia bona by an Executor what passeth 22 Of a Reversion by a Bishop 23 Of the Office of a Sheriff 33 Habeas Corpus WHere the cause of Commitment must be retorned upon it Where not 21 Heirs The second Son shall inherit the Land purchased by his eldest Brother notwithstanding the Attainder of the Father 5 Jeofails WHere upon a Jeofail the Court awarded a Repleader 19 Indictment Quare Clausum A. B. fregit held good notwithstanding A. had but a Lease at will of the Land. 6 De uno Equo for a Gelding not good But where Trespass is brought de Equo ellato and the Jury find a Gelding c. it is otherwise ibid. Upon Stat. 13 Eliz. c. 8. for being a Broker in an usurious Contract for which he incurred a Premunire 32 Upon Stat. 5 E. 6. against P. for drawing his Dagger in the Church against J. S. holden void for that it is not said he drew it with intent to strike the party 49 Upon Stat. 8 H. 6. two Exceptions taken to it but disallowed ibid. For stopping quandam viam valde necessariam quashed for want of the word Regiam and for that the party indicted had not any addition therein 121 Infant Makes a Lease for years and at his full age says to the Lessee God give you joy of it the Lease is thereby affirmed 4 If an Infant being in Execution sues a Writ of Error and is bailed the Recognisance shall be by his Bail only that he shall appear and if Judgment be affirmed that they pay the mony and not render his Body to Prison 6 Inmates Who shall be accounted Inmates upon the Stat. of 31 Eliz. 10 Interest Difference between an Interest and a Limitation 33 Judgment Shall not be stayed upon Allegation that one of the Defendants was dead after Verdict for the Court cannot take notice of it judicially nor any of the parties have day in Court to plead it besides the party is not without remedy for he may have a Writ of Error 15 If the Court may reverse their own Judgment Quaere 60 Reversed for Error in omitting the Costs the Jury gave 61 Jurors Where bound by confession of the parties where not 56 A Juror before the Retorn of the Pannel became a Minister of the Church and therefore prayed to be discharged according to the priviledge of those of the Ministry but it was not granted because he was a Lay man at the time of the Pannel made 190 Justice of Peace One cannot be Justice of Peace by Prescription 149 Lease OF a Manor c. with all the profits of a Wood except 40 Trees to the Lessor to take at his pleasure the Wood is not comprised within the Lease but the Lessee shall only have the profits as Pawnage Herbage c. 9 If a man makes a Lease of a Wood ad faciendum maximum proficuum meliori modo quo poterit the Lessee cannot thereby cut the Trees nor do waste 9 Made by a Corporation void for Misnosmer 11 Good to maintain an Ejectione firmae 14 Leases by a Baron contrary to Act of Parliament void 17 By Tenant at will if a disseisin 35 Leases made by Prebendaries within the Equity of the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 28. 51 Leet Pound breach is not inquirable there 12 But excessive Toll is ibid. Nobleman SHall be bound with Bayl in a Recognizance to render his Body 6 By 13 E. 1. if he hath not Goods or Lands his Body shall be taken in Execution ibid. Obligation Forfeited 18 Outlary How avoided by Plea in person 22 186 Payment OF Rent before the day by the Obligee doth not discharge him 4 Of a Debt generally by a Surety Executor to the Principal if it shall be as Executor or as Obligor Quaere ibid. Pleadings In a special Justification in Trover the place of Conversion may be traversed but where a Justification is general the County is not traversable at this day 4 It is no good Plea for the Tenant in a Writ of Entry sur disseisin to say that the House in demand is within the City of London whereof he is a Citizen and that King H. 3. concessit civibus c. quod non implacitentur c. extra muros Civitatis praed sed illis rectum teneatur infra Civitatem praed secundum cons Civit. praed For he ought to have shewed That the Citizens for their Lands there ought to be impleaded in the Hustings 13 In Trespass for pulling Hurdles c. the Defendant justified by Prescription to have a free course for Sheep in the place where c. and because the Plaintiff erected Hurdles without leave of the Lord of the Manor the Defendant cast them down prout c. the Plaintiff replyed of his own wrong without cause and held naught for he should have traversed the Prescription 17 Traverse of the place in Trover where good 22 Special Plea to an Assumpsit not good and why 31 Posse Comitatus It differs from Posse Manerij 87 Possessio Fratris Where it shall not be of Copyhold Lands 38 Previledge Denied to the Treasurer of the Records of the Kings Bench and why 81 Prohibition If the Parson Libels in the Spiritual Court against the owner of Lands for Tythes which he severed but a Stranger took and carried away no Prohibition shall issue for that he might plead the same matter in bar in the Spiritual Court. 7 To the Spiritual Court to stay a Suit commenced there for Tythes upon a Prescription shewed in the Kings Bench. 25 Granted to stay a Suit in the Court Christian commenced against an Executor by one for a Legacy bequeathed to him by his Father who willed his Goods should be parted amongst his Children according to the Custom of London 12 Upon claim of Property 150 Quare Impedit May be brought by Executors to remove a Clerk collated wrongfully in the life time of the Testator 15 Recognizance IF a Recognizor of a Recognizance acknowledged before a Master in Chancery dye before it be inrolled it may be inrolled at the Petition of his Executors 8 Common Recovery Feme not party to the Writ of Covenant not bound by Recovery 26 Remainder Where void 21 Resceit One prayed to be received in a Formedon and was ousted of it by the Court. 51 Reservation Of Rents upon a joint Lease 27 Difference between a Reservation and a Contract 29 Retorn Of the Sheriff where void 21 Sale. OF a Bayliwick of an Hundred is not within the Statute of 5 E. 6. c. 16. 33 Of Goods by the Sheriff upon Execution where good where not 20 21 Surrender If Lessee for years take a second Lease from Guardian in Soccage made in his name it is a surrender of the first Lease 7 What shall be said to be a surrender of a Term what not 30 Treason UPon Attainder of Treason who shall seize the Goods for the Queen 34 Tythes Unity no discharge of Tythes 47 Venire Facias GRanted de novo after Verdict for that the first Venire Facias was of K. only for that it ought to have been de Vicento de K. W. 85 Vesturam terrae He who hath Vesturam terrae cannot dig the Land. 43 Those who have Lot-Meadow viz. to change every year according to Lots have not any Freehold therein but only Vesturam terrae 43 Writ DE fama gestu what it is 40 FINIS
Common Pleas. LII Frice and Fosters Case IN Ejectione firmae the Plaintiff declared upon a Lease made 14 Jan. 30 Eliz. to have from the Feast of Christmas then last before for three years and upon the Evidence the Plaintiff shewed a Lease bearing date the 13 day of January the same year and it was found by Witnesses that the Lease was sealed and delivered upon the Land the 13 day of January Variance Whereupon Puckering and Cowper Serjeants moved on the part of the Defendant that for that variance between the Declaration and the Evidence of the Plaintiff that the Iury might be discharged Evidence good to maintain Issue But Anderson Chief Iustice said that the Evidence was good enough to maintain the Declaration for if the Lease was sealed and delivered the 13 of January it was then a Lease 14 January Quod caeteri Justiciarii concesserunt LIII Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield The Case was that A. seised of an Advowson in Fee Quare Impedit by Executors the Church voided the Bishop collated wrongfully A. dyed Collation it was holden that his Executors might have a Quare Impedit upon that disturbance and that by the equity of the Statute which gave an Action of Trespass to Executors of Goods carried away in the life of the Testator 4 E. 3. cap. 7. and that the Clerk should be removed at the suit of the Executors Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIV. Harvey and Thomas Case THe Case was that the Husband seised of Land in the right of his Wife made a Lease of it for years Fine by the Husband where avoids a Lease ê contra 1 Roll. tit Charge in Marg. 389. Plow Quaer 31. 261. ib. plus and afterwards he and his Wife conveyed the Land to a stranger by Fine the Husband died Wray Chief Iustice was of opinion that the Conusee should hold the Land discharged of the Lease Gawdy contrary In case of a Rent granted or a Recognizance acknowledged by the Husband the Conusee of the Fine shall avoid any of them But in this Case the Conusee meddles with the Land it self and an Estate in the Land is conveyed by the Husband which none but the Wife or her Heirs shall avoid and if the Wife after the death of her Husband accept the Rent upon such a Lease by that the Lease is confirmed Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench LV. Blaby and Estwicks Case IN Assumpsit It was moved in stay of Iudgment Assumpsit that one of the Defendants was dead after verdict but notwithstanding that Allegation Iudgment was given Attornment for the Court cannot take Notice of it judicially nor any of the Parties hath day in Court to plead it and therefore the Court is not to have regard to such Informations Wray It is not honourable for us upon such surmises which cannot be tryed to delay Iudgment and also the Party is not without remedy for he may have a Writ of Error 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVI Hore and Briddleworths Case HOre brought Trespass against Briddlesworth Quare clausum Domum suam fregit the Defendant pleaded and put the Plaintiff to a new Assignment i. e. a House called a Stable a Barn and another House called a Carthouse and Garnier And that was assigned for Error for that Assignment is not warranted by the Declaration Gawdy said it was good enough for Domus in the Declaration contains all things contained in the new Assignment but if the Declaration had been of a Close and the new Assignment of a Barn it had not been good Wray Chief Iustice Domus est nomen collectivum and contains many Buildings as Barns Stables c. And such was the Opinion of the Court. Mich 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVII Mans Case Prohibition MAn was sued before the Commissioners in Ecclesiastical Causes for an Incestuous Marriage viz. for marrying his Wives Sisters Daughter and although it be not expresly within the Levitical degrees yet because more farther degrees are prohibited the Archbishop of Canterbury and other the Commissioners gave Sentence against him Consultation upon which he sued a Prohibition upon the Stat. of 32 H. 8. c. 38. The Prohibition was general where it ought to be special that it be not within the Levitical degrees and therefore a Consultation was granted Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVIII Doylies Case Appeals IN an Appeal de Roberie against Doyly It was agreed by the Iustices that the Party robbed shall have an Appeal of Robbery 20 years after the Robbery committed and shall not be bound to bring it within a year and a day as in the Case of an Appeal of Murder Vide contr 22 Ass 97. vide Stamford 62. Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIX Ruishbrook and Pusanies Case THe Plaintiff brought Trespass for pulling down his Hurdles in his Close The Defendant justified by reason that one Beddingfield was Lord of the Mannor of D. and that the said Beddingfield and all those whose Estate he had in the said Mannor had had a free course for their sheep in the place where c. And that the Tenant of the said Close could not there erect Hurdles without the leave of the Lord of the Mannor and that the said Beddingfield let to the Defendant the said Mannor and because the Plaintiff erected Hurdles without leave c. in the said Close he cast them down as it was lawful for him to do The Plaintiff replyed of his own wrong without cause c. It was holden by the Iustices to be an ill Plea Traverse for the Plaintiff ought to have traversed the Prescription 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. LX. Par Marquess of Northamptons Case PAr Marquess of Northampton took to Wife the Lady Bourchier Heir of the Earl of Essex Leases by a Baron contrary to Act of Parliament void 3 Leon. 71. who levied a Fine of the Lands of the Lady sur Conusans de Droit c. with a Grant and Render to them for Life the remainder to the right Heirs of the body of the said Lady And afterwards by Act of Parliament ●5 H. 8. It was enacted That the said Lady should retain part of her Inheritance and dispose thereof as a Feme sole and that the said Marquess should have the residue and that he might lease the same by himself without the Wife for 21 years or lesser term yielding the ancient Rent being Land which had been usually demised c. The Marquess leased the same for 21 years and afterwards durante termino praedict he let the same Land to another for 21 years to begin after the determination of the former Lease It was moved that the last Lease was void for three Causes 1. Because the Marquess had but for Life and then it cannot be intended that the Statute would enable
of giving the Reversion by her Will to whom she pleased and such a Grantee shall be in by A. and his Will for A. hath given expresly to his wife for life and therefore by Implication she shall not have any further Estate But if an express Estate had not been appointed to the wife by the other words an Estate in Fee should have passed Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXI Sir Thomas Kemp and Windsors Case SIr Thomas Kemp was outlawed at the Suit of one Windsor who had against him four Capias utlagat ' and none of them were served and afterwards he sued out a fifth Capias It was moved by Mead that the said Sir Thomas keepeth open House and yet the Sheriff had not served the Capias Dyer The Sheriff may justifie to break the House to take his body and seize his Goods for the Queen for this Process is in Law at the Suit of the Queen but contrary where the Process is sued at the Suit of a Subject And the Iustices commanded Ford Prothonotary to make a special Capias for Body and Goods and a pain in the Writ of 100 l. upon the Sheriff to execute the Writ accordingly CXII Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THis Case was moved by Anderson Serjeant at Law Improvement of Common if in case of Common appurtenant by Prescription without number the Lord of the waste might improve for it is not admeasurable therefore not improveable for the Common being without number the sufficiency cannot be proved Dyer and Manwood Iustices although it be without number yet it may be reduced to a certainty being by Prescription as the number of the Cattel and the best and most substantial Tenant of the said Tenement at any time within time of memory had kept upon the said waste and then the Plaintiff the Lord might improve leaving sufficient according to such Rate Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXIII The Earl of Derbys Case Debt not against the Husband upon a Contract by the Wife DEbt by a Merchant of London against the Earl of Derby and his Wife and declared upon a Contract for Silks and it appeared upon the Evidence that the Countess during the Coverture had bought of the Plaintiff certain Silks for her own wearing and for the mony which the Countess agreed to pay for the same the Action was brought It was the Opinion of Dyer Manwood and Mounion that the contract by the Wife during the Coverture should not bind the Husband but admit that the Husband should be bound yet this Action is not well brought against the Wife for she ought not to be mentioned in the Writ CXIV Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Indictments ONe was indicted in the Country because he commanded J.S. to take up a Bridge being in Regia via leading from such a Town to such a Town and also the said J. S. was indicted for executing the command of the other Exception was taken to the first Indictment because no place of the commandment is alledged in the Indictment and for that cause the Indictment was taken insufficient although Mr. Plowden strongly insisted upon the contrary as in Trespass the Defendant justifies by the commandment of J. S. the same is good without any place of the commandment for in the first Case the commandment is traversable but contrary put by Mr. Plowden Vide 3 H. 7. 11. Markenfields Case Another Exception was taken to the Indictment because it is not there alledged that the Bridge was a common Bridge but because there was other words in the Indictment which supplyed the same scil in via Regia the Indictment was holden good enough CXV 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a writ of Partition between Tenants in common upon the Statute of 20 Acres of Land the Defendant as to part scil 10 Acres pleaded Non tenet pro indiviso and as to the residue confessed the Partition and by Manwood and Ford chief Prothonotary the confession ought to be in the beginning of the Plea and Non tenet pro indiviso in the second place last so as that part of the Plea which agrees with the Demand ought to preceed the part which denies demand And the truth of the Case was that the Defendant had but 10 Acres in all and of them was sole seized Manwood If your Case be such you may safely plead to the whole Non tenet pro indiviso 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXVI Duffams Case A Man made a Lease by Deed indented for 20 years to begin after the expiration of a former Lease thereof made to one Duffam in an Action brought by the second Lessee against the Lessor the Lessor said there was no such Duffam in rerum natura at the time of the supposed Lease made to Duffam It was said that such a Plea did not lye for the Lessor Estoppel for he is estopped to say against the Indenture that no such Duffam was c. And also if no such person was then the first Lease was void and the second Lease should begin presently which Mounson and Manwood concesserunt And Manwood said that the Defendant should be estopped by the recital of the first Lease to say that no such Duffam was and although that the common ground is that a recital is not any estoppel yet where the recital is not material as it is here for the second Lease is to be begun upon the expiration of the Lease recited there is an estoppel Recital Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXVII Brown and Fulsbyes Case UPon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Vsury the Case was this Stat. 5 Eliz. of Usury A. borrowed of B. 80 l. and was bound in an Obligation to pay to him 90 l. at the end of the year It was the Opinion of the Iustices that although the 90 l. was tendred and B. the Lender did tell the same yet if he take and except but of 80 l. it is not Vsury within the Statute to make a treble forfeiture but yet in that Case the Obligation it self is void CXVIII Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer NOte in the Case of the Tenants of Owning and Northmaston It was holden by Manwood Chief Baron That he who hath vesturam terrae cannot dig the Land. And Gent Baron said where many have Lot-Meadow to be divided every year by lot who shall have the Grass of such an Acre and who of such an Acre c. and so change every year according to Lots they have not any Freehold therein but only Vesturam terrae Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CXIX Sir Walter Wallers Case 3 Leon. 259. Execution a Leon. 77. IN the Case of Sir Walter Waller it was moved if one hath Iudgment in Debt and thereupon within the year and day sueth a Capias ad satisfaciend although he doth not prosecute the same in two or three years yet when he pleaseth he may proceed
all the Iustices in the Case between Townsend and Pastor two Coparceners are in the use of a Manor after the Statute of 1 R. 3. the one of them enters and makes a Feoffment in Fee of the whole Manor that this Feoffment is not only of the moiety of the Manor whereof she might lawfully and by the said Statute make a Feoffment but also of another moiety by disseisin Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXVII Bulwer and Smiths Case BUlwer brought an Action upon the Case against Smith and declared how that H. H. had recovered against the Plaintiff in the Common Pleas 20 l. and before Execution died and that the Defendant knowing that at D. in the County of Norfolk malitiose deceptive machinans to Outlaw the Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment in the name of the said H.H. c. in performance of his said purpose at W. in the County of Middlesex took out a Capias ad satisfaciend in the name of the said H.H. against the now Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment directed to the Sheriff of London and Non est inventus being returned upon that took out an Exigent in the name of the said H.H. which Writ by the procurement of the Defendant was retorned and then the Plaintiff was Outlawed and afterwards the Defendant in the name of the said H. H. took out a Capias utlagatum against the Plaintiff directed to the Sheriff of Norfolk by force of which the Plaintiff was arrested and imprisoned for two months until he had gotten his Charter of Pardon by reason of which Outlawries the Plaintiff had forfeited all his Goods and Chattels and upon the said Declaration the Defendant did demur in Law and the principal cause of the demurrer was because that the Action might have been laid in Middlesex where the wrong began scil the Capias ad satisfaciend the Outlawry for this imagination at D. in the County of Norfolk set forth in the Declaration cannot give to the Plaintiff this Action But if divers conspire in one County for to indite one and they put the same in Execution in another County the Party aggrieved may lay his Action in which of the said two Counties he pleaseth 22 E. 4. 14. for a Conspiracy is more notorious than an imagination imaginatio est unius conspiratio plurimorum And in this Case the Deliverance of the Capias at D. in Norfolk is but accessary and the suing of the Process aforesaid at Westminster is the principal upon the part of the Plaintiff it was said that such an action might be laid in the County where the Plaintiff was wronged and the Plaintiff is not tied to lay his Action in the County where the original matter which was but conveyance to the said wrong was done A imprisoned upon a Capias ad satisfaciend in Middlesex escapes into Surrey the Action upon the escape shall be laid in Surrey Reteiner of a Servant in one County who departs in another County the Master shall lay his Action in which of the said Counties he will 15 E. 4. 18 19. 41 E. 3. 1. A Writ of Disceit was brought in the County of York and the Case was that in a Praecipe quod reddat of Land the Tenant shewed forth a Protection at Westminster the which was allowed for a year and within the year the Tenant stayed in the County of York upon his own occasions the said Writ of Disceit was holden to be well laid for there the wrong began notwithstanding that the Original i. e. the casting of the Protection was in Middlesex for the disceit is that the Tenant contrary to the pretence of the Protection continued at York for the Protection was quia Moraturus And always where the cause of the Action consists of two things whereof the one is matter of Record and the other is matter of Fact there the Action shall be laid in such County where the matter in fact may be more properly tried Vide 11 R. 2. Fitz. Action sur le Case 36 Br. Lieu 84. in the principal Case at Bar the Court was of Opinion that the Action was well brought in the County of Norfolk Another Exception was taken to the Declaration because the Plaintiff hath there set forth whereas his true name is John Bulwer by which name he now sues he was sued and outlawed by the name of John Buller and then the now Plaintiff upon that matter was never sued nor outlawed and then is not grieved by the Defendant but John Buller for here in his Declaration there is not any averment that John Bulwer and John Buller are one and the same and not divers Persons But the Exception was disallowed for the whole Court held that for As much as the Plaintiff hath declared that he by the name of John Buller was sued and Outlawed the same is an averment in Law c. and amounts to so much Another matter was objected because it appeareth in the Declaration that H. H. was dead before this Process was sued and then the Outlawry was erronious and so the Plaintiff is not at any mischief but that he may reverse the Outlawry by Error as in Conspiracy the Defendant pleads that the Indictment upon which the Plaintiff is arraigned is vitious and erroneous and so his life was never in jeopardy But as to that it was said by the Court that the erronious proceedings of the Defendant shall not give advantage to himself but because the Plaintiff was vexed by colour and reason of the Outlawry and put to his Writ of Error which cannot recompence the loss and damage by him sustained by reason of the Outlawry aforesaid it is reason that the Plaintiff have his Action wherefore Wray Chief Iustice ex assensu Sociorum gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff CXXXVIII Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. of Recusancy CErtain Persons were indicted upon the Statute 23 Eliz. for refusing to come to the Church and upon the same were Outlawed and now they came to the Kings Bench ready to make their submission and to conform themselves according to the said Statute and thereupon they prayed to be discharged But the Court would not receive such Submission but advised them to purchase their Pardon for the Outlawry and then to tender their Submission which they did accordingly and at another day came again and shewed to the Court their Pardon whereupon the Clerk of the Court asked them if they would conform themselves according to the said Statute who said they would wherefore they were discharged Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXIX Christian and Adams Case Action for words AN Action upon the Case was brought for speaking these scandalous words of the Plaintiff scil the Plaintiff did conspire the death of the Defendant it was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment that upon the matter the Action did not lye for the bare conspiring of the death of a man
on the other side That the Estate of the Alien is so weak that a confirmation cannot enure upon it for an Alien cannot take but to the use of the King and cannot be infeoffed to anothers use and if he be such use is void For there is not a sufficient seisin in an Alien to carry an use And it hath been adjudged on Forset Case Where an Alien and the said Forset were Ioynt-Purchasers and the Alien dyed that Forset should not have the whole by Survivour but that upon Office found the Queen should have the moiety Vide 11 Eliz. Dyer 283. Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXVI Jermine and Arscots Case THe Case between Jermine and Arscot was this A seized of Lands in Fee had Issue six Sons and one Daughter and devised the Manor of c. parcel of his said Lands to J. S. for ninety years if the said J. S. and G. his Wife or any of them should so long live the remainder to P. his eldest Son and the Heirs males of his Body the remainder to his other Sons in tail the remainder to his Daughter Provided That if the said P. his Son or any of the Sons of the Devisor or any of the heirs males of their bodies should endeavour by any Act or Thing to alien bargain or discontinue c. that then after such attempt or endeavour and before such Bargain and Sale c. were executed that the estate of such Person attempting should cease as if he were naturally dead and that then the premises should remain and come to such person to whom the same ought to come remain or be by the intent and meaning of his Will and died P. levied a Fine of the Manor he in the next remainder entred and claimed the Land by force of the Devise This Case was this Term argued by Walmesly Serjeant that an Estate tail cannot cease for it is an Estate of Inheritance and here is not any limitation for the Estate tail by the meaning of the Devisor shall remain revivable upon the death of the Offender but a Limitation determines the Estate utterly which is not here but here it appeareth as well by the meaning of the Devisor as by the words of the Devise that the Estate tail upon such act should be suspended and it cannot be resembled to the Case cited on the other side 22 E. 3. A Rent granted to one in Fee and that it shall cease during the Nonage of every Heir the Rent is but suspended between the Parties and Privies to the Gift as in the Case of Littleton of Re-entry and Retainer quousque but that a Stranger should re-enter and retain quousque that cannot be And in the Case of Scholastica reported by Plowden the Estate tail by such Offence is determined by the limitation But in our Case by the meaning of the Devisor only suspended so our Case is not like to that Case Shuttleworth to the contrary The purpose of the Devisor appeareth to be the continuance of the Land in the name and Family of the Caries and as to the difference of ceasing and suspending of an Estate tail the same is not to the purpose for the Tenant in tail himself may suspend his Estate tail therefore à fortiori the Donor upon the Creation of the Estate tail As by Littleton Tenant in Tail grants totum statum suum the Estate tail is thereby suspended and by Anderson if in such a Case after such a grant Tenant in tail levy a Fine in our Case If Tenant in tail offend and the party to whom the next interest is limited enters and after the Offender levies a Fine to a Stranger there although his Estate was determined by the offence yet the Estate tail is bound by the Fine Ad quod caeteri Justiciarii murmurabant Tenant in tail hath Issue two Sons the eldest in the life of his Father levieth a Fine and after the Father dieth the Estate tail is bound contrary if the Father had survived his eldest Son And afterwards in the end of this Term Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff for by the Will here is a good limitation and an estate to cease upon an act and upon another contingent to be revived is good enough Vide 30 E. 3. 7. A Lease for life rendring rent and if the rent he behind that the Lessor shall return quousque agreement be made so as a Freehold may cease and rise again according as the same is limited And all this was agreed by Rhodes Periam and Windham and afterwards Walmsley for the Plaintiff took an Exception to the Bar for that the Defendant pleaded Quod Petrus Cary tempore levationis finis praedict non habet exitum and doth not say that tempore quo ipse Henricus clamabat reversionem praedict the said Peter had not Issue for he said if Peter had Issue when Henry claimed the Reversion nothing had vested on him by the said claim But all the Court besides Anderson said that needed not be but if the matter had been such the same should come on the part of the Plaintiff Also they said That the Estate was vested in Henry without claim and although after the Offence committed and before claim Peter have Issue yet Henry should retain the Land during the life of the Offender against such Issue born after the Fine levied for by the Fine levied the Reversion vested in Henry without any claim by force of the said limitation CLXXVII Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Alien suffers a common Recovery 9 Co. 141. LAnd was given to an Alien in tail the Remainder over to another in Fee the Alien suffered a common Recovery and died without Issue All this matter was found by Office. It was moved That this Office should have return so as upon the matter the Alien was not Tenant of the Land at the time of the Recovery suffered But the whole Court held the contrary and that the Recovery was good and should bind him in the Remainder Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXVIII Seixtbark and Percies Case EJectione firmae of Lands in Knolton and Woodland the Parties were at Issue and the Venire facias was of Knolton only and it was found for the Plaintiff It was shewed in stay of Iudgment that the Venire facias was not well awarded for it ought to have been De vicineto de Knolton Woodland which was granted by the Court And that that defect was not relieved by any Statute for it is a Mis-trial and for that cause Iudgment was stayed and a Venire facias de novo granted 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXIX The Provost of Queens Colledge in Oxfords Case THe Provost Fellows and Scholars of Queens Colledge in Oxford are Guardians of the Hospital and Meason de Dieu in Southampton and they make a Lease of Lands parcel of the Possession of the said Hospital to one Hagel for term of years by the name of
the Husband dyed the Wife recovered and entred and surrendred to the Lord and by Wray the Stranger to whom the Lord granted it after the Surrender by the Husband should have the Land and not the Lord himself against his own Grant. Pasc 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXXVII Chomley and Conges Case CHomley brought Trespass of Assault and Battery made to his Wife against Cony and upon the general Issue it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Action was not well brought for the same being an Action of Trespass done to the person of the wife the Writ ought to be brought and prosecuted in both their Names for now if Iudgment be given for the Husband and he dye before Execution the Wife to whom the wrong was done should not have Execution but the Executors of the Husband and afterwards upon advice the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover Vide Cont. 9 E. 4. 51. 38 H. 6. 25. Pasc 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXXVIII Blithe and Colegates Case Vide this Case Reported by Cook 2 Part of his Reports REplevin by Blithe and Colegate who made Conusans as Bayliff to Roger Beckwith Son and Heir of Elizabeth Beckwith for damage feasant and upon a Special Verdict the Case was That the said Eliz. was seized and took to Husband Christopher Kenne and by an Indenture made by the said Eliz. without the assent of her said Husband by the name of Elizabeth Beckwith bearing date 14 March 14 Eliz. declareth the uses of a Fine to be levied c. 1. To the use of the said Elizabeth for life without impeachment of Waste and after to the use of the Conusees for their lives and after to the use of the said Elizabeth and her Heirs And that afterwards the said Christopher Kenne before any Fine levied in Feb. 20 Eliz. by Indenture between himself and the said Elizabeth his Wife of the one part and R. W. of the other part without the consent of the said Elizabeth declared that the uses of the said Fine so to be levied should be to the use of the said Christopher and Elizabeth for life c. And afterwards the said Fine was levied by the Husband and Wife and the only Question upon the matter was if the uses declared by the Wife or the uses declared by the Husband should stand It was argued by Shuttleworth Serjeant that the uses declared by the Husband should stand and that the Declaration by the Wife should be rejected for a Feme Covert is not sui juris but is sub potestate v●ri And therefore ●7 Ass 17. a Feme Covert without her Husband acknowledgeth a Fine the Husband shall avoid it and as to the Declaration of the uses it is no other thing but the shewing of the meaning of the Parties to the Fine how and in what manner the Land of which the Fine is levied shall be disposed of by the Fine but such a power cannot be in a Feme Covert For if an Infant levy a Fine and declare the uses by Indenture the Declaration is void and the Fine shall be to his own use and that was adjudged in the Court of Wards The same Law in case of a man of Non sanae memoriae and if an Ideot levy a Fine and declare uses upon it the Declaration is void and the Fine shall be to his own use and that Case also hath been adjudged in the Court of Wards And by intendment of the Law every Wife is at the disposition of her Husband as in a Praecipe quod reddat against the Husband and Wife the Wife makes default it shall be accounted the default of the Husband for the Law intends that the Wife is ameanable by the Husband 21 Ass The Husband seized in the right of the Wife made a Feoffment in Fee and in making of Livery his Wife interrupts him it was not any interruption or impediment quo minus the Livery operetur for cui ipsa in vita contradicere non potuit c. So in a Praecipe quod reddat against the Husband and Wife the Husband pleads one plea and the Wife another the Plea of the Husband shall be admitted 33 H 6. 43. 89 Ass 1 And the Husband may in some case prejudice his Wife in point of Inheritance as by Cession Vide E. 4 2. Fitz. Cui in vita 22. And he argued much upon the ground where it shall be said the folly of the Wife to take such a Husband If the Husband be seized in the right of his Wife they sell the said Land and for Assurance levy a Fine to the Vendee now the Husband alone shall have an Action of Debt for the mony upon the Sale which proves that it is the Sale of the Husband alone which see 48 E. 3. 18. Fenner Serjeant contrary And first he confessed that the Declaration by the Wife is utterly void and also the Declaration by the Husband and therefore when the Husband and Wife levy a Fine the Conusee in judgment of Law is in by the Wife and not by the Husband so as the Husband as to the right is a Stranger to the Land and to the Estate which passeth by the Fine although he be Party to the Fine for that is not for any Interest which he hath in the Land but for the conformity of Law which disables a Wife to levy a Fine without her Husband and therefore it is not any reason that the husband alone shall be received to declare the uses for he is no Proprietor of the Land in right especially forasmuch as in account of the Law the whole passeth from the Wife And the Law in divers Cases frames its Iudgment according to the possession of the Wife and that in acts done by the Husband 14 H. 8. 6 where A seized of a Rent-charge in Fee issuing out of the Land of the Wife A releases the Rent to the Husband and his Heirs the same shall enure to the Wife Vide 38 E. 3. 10. From such Cases the Law respects the nature of the Seisin and the manner of the possession And as to the Case vouched out of Dyer 12 Eliz. where the Husband and Wife were seized of a Messuage to them and to the Heirs of the Husband they suffer a common Recovery and the Husband alone declareth the uses the same is good for in that Case the Fee was in the Husband and always he who hath the Fee ought and may declare the use if all who have interest will not joyn and therefore if Lands be given to two and to the Heirs of one of them if they both joyn in a Fine he which hath the Fee may by himself declare the uses But if there be two Ioyntenants in Fee they both ought to joyn in the Declaration of the uses or otherwise make several Declarations of their several Moieties So if Cestuy que use and his Feoffees joyn in a Fine and make
of the body of the Husband and he said a Scire facias did lye upon the Fine well enough for the Fine is not void but only erroneous and being in its force this Writ doth well lye And he cited to this purpose 7 E. 3. Fitz. Sc. fac 136. where upon such a Fine levied and such Exception ut supra taken to it To which it was said by Herle that forasmuch as the Fine is excepted and yet in its force we ought to grant Execution and also 30 H. 6. none can take the first Estate in the Fine but he who is named in the Writ of Covenant but every Stranger may take by way of Remainder and such was the Opinion of the whole Court As to the matter in Law all the Court agreed That notwithstanding the Recovery the Demandant should have Execution for here the Land which by pretence of the said Recovery shall be Recoverd in value cannot go to the Estate which is given for the Estate given was to the Husband and Wife and the Heirs of the body of the Husband and then the Tenant against whom the Recovery was had was impleaded as sole Tenant in which Case the Vouchee when he comes in is to warrant a sole Estate but not another but now the Land to be recovered in value shall go to the Husband alone and the Wife shall have nothing so as the true Estate is not warranted and so not answered And he cited the Case of 38 E. 3. 5. in a Formedon the Tenant vouched himself for to save the tail and shewed that one A. was seized and gave the Land in Demand to the now Tenant and to E. his Wife in tail which E. is now alive and by award the Voucher was disallowed Because it was there said by Knevyt the Recovery in value cannot be according to the gift 45 E. 3. 18. Tenant in tail discontinues and takes back an Estate in Fee is impleaded and voucheth the Donor he shall be ousted of the Voucher for that he is in of another Estate and afterwards the Plaintiff had Iudgment to have Execution Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCIII Foles and Griffins Case DEbt upon Obligation by Foles against Griffin the Condition was That if the Obligee may enjoy certain Tythes demised to him by the Defendant during his Term against all Persons paying yearly the Rent of three pound that then c. To which the Defendant said that the Plaintiff did not pay the said Rent c. Beaumont Serjeant moved that the Plea is not good but he ought to say that the Plaintiff enjoyed the Tythes until such a Feast at which time such Rent was due which Rent he did not pay for which c. Quod Curia concessit Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXCIV Young and Taylors Case IN Debt upon an Obligation upon Condition to perform the Arbitrament the Obligation was laid to be made in the Parish of Bow in London and the submission was of all things depending between them so that they made an Award of the premisses before such a day and said further that no Arbitrament was made The Plaintiff Replicando said that the Arbitrators made an Award in the Parish of Pancras in Warda praedict and layed a breach c. The Defendant rejoyned that 300 l. was depending in Controversie between them for a certain thing of which no Arbitrament was made upon which they were at Issue and tryed by a Visne of the Parish of Bow only which passed for the Plaintiff It was moved in stay of Iudgment That the Trial was not good for no place is alledged where the Controversie of 300 l. is depending for which cause it shall be tried where the Bond and Arbitrament was made to which it was said That the alledging the place where the Arbitrament was made is superfluous for which Cause the Trial is good And also the Submission being conditional the Award ought to be of all things submitted or else it is void contrary if it be no Condition Vide Cook 8 Part Baspoles Case Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCV. The Queen and the Bishop of Lincolns Case THe Queen brought a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Lincoln and others And the Case was That F. Bishop of Lincoln Predecessor of the Defendant was Patron of the Church and presented to the same being void one Garth who being inducted took another Benefice by which by reason of the Statute of 21 H. 8. the first Benefice became void and remained void by the space of seventeen years whereupon the Queen was entituled to present to the same by Lapse The said F. then Bishop presented to the same and afterwards was translated to Winchester and the Defendant now Bishop was suffectus And he certified into the Exchequer that the Incumbent presented by the said F refused to pay his Subsidy upon which he was deprived and if now the Queen shall present by reason of her Title by Lapse notwithstanding the plenarty after or if the Title by Lapse of that Presentment of the Bishop was c. was a great Question And the Case late adjudged between Beverly and Cornwel was cited but there the Case was that the Clark presented where the Presentment appertained to the Queen by Lapse died but here he is deprived which may be the Covin betwixt the Ordinary and him Fenner argued to the contrary and put divers Cases to prove that the Prerogative of the Queen did not alter the right of the Parties As the Queen hath a Seignory consisting of Homage Fealty and Rent and the Queen grants the Seignory to a Stranger reserving the Rent and afterwards the Tenancy Escheats the Rent is gone The Queen leases for years rendring rent to a Stranger upon Condition who enters upon the Lessee the Condition of the Queen is suspended The Queen purchaseth Lands in Borough English hath Issue a Son and dyeth seized he hath the Land now by descent afterwards a younger Son is born that Land shall be divested out of the possession of the King and the Royalty of his person doth not alter the right of descent And afterwards forasmuch as the same deprivation is the act of the Incumbent the refusal the act of the Ordinary himself the sentence and not the act of God in the case before cited It was the Opinion of the Court That Iudgment should be given for the Queen CXCVI. Windham and Meads Case WIndham brought an Action upon the Case upon the Common Law of England concerning Hostlers The Case was That the Servant of Windham brought his Masters horse to the Inn and there it was stollen To which the Defendant said That the said Servant brought the said Horse to the said Inn to be put to Pasture and thereupon the said Horse was put to grass and was there stollen it was ruled in that Case that the Inn-keeper should be excused but if the Inn-keeper of his own head without direction of the Owner
that the same is not any Claim to avoid the said Fine upon the Statute of 4 H. 7. Pasc 29 Eliz. CCXIII. The Queen and Sir John Savells Case A Bill of Intrusion was exhibited by the Queen in the Exchequer against Sir Robert Savell Kt. who pleaded in bar her pretence and upon Issue joyned the matter was tryed by the Records and thereupon Iudgment was given for the Queen and an Injunction for the Possession awarded accordingly Sir Robert dyed and now Sir John Savell Son and Heir of the said Sir Robert brought a Writ of Error in the Exchequer Chamber upon the Statute of 31 E. 3. The perclose of which Writ was ad grave damnum ipsius Johannis Savell filii haeredis dicti Roberti It was objected against the Writ That no Writ of Error upon the said Statute of 31 E 3. lay upon such proceedings which at the time of the making of the said Statute was not in force For tryal of an Issue in the Exchequer by Record was enacted by the Statute of 33 H. 8. and the Statute of 31 E. 3. extended to give a Writ of Error upon such Iudgments which were given by Verdict Confession or Demurrer and not upon tryal by Records which was given but of late times But to this objection it was answered by the Lord Chancellor and the other Iudges That long time before the said Stat. of 33 H. 8. Issues joyned in the Exchequer have been tryed by the Records and he when he was the Queens Solicitor had seen divers Presidents to that intent in the time of Hen. 6. Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXIV. Houtiers Case DEbt was brought upon a Concessit Solvere according to the Law of Merchants and Custom of the City of Bristol Exception was taken because he did not mention the Custom in his Declaration And because in the end of his Plea he saith Protestando se sequi querelam secundum Consuetudinem Civitatis Bristol the Plea was awarded good and the Exception disallowed CCXV Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A Man was indicted upon the Statute of 4 Eliz. of Perjury in a Court-Leet And the Indictment was That he at the Leet of the Earl of Bath super Sacramentum suum coram Senescallo c. Exception was taken to it because it saith at the Leet of the Earl of Bath whereas every Leet is the Kings Court although that another hath the profit or commodity of it And it was said that the Steward of a Leet is not an Officer of Record and also his Oath was If he had done a Rescous or not with which he was charged And by Drew It is not within the Statute for it ought to be either before a Iury in giving Evidence or upon some Article But the Iustices in that were of opinion against him Mich. 25 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXVI Howen and Gerrards Case IT was adjudged in this Case That Partition of Lands made by the Bayliff of a Franchize was not good within the Statute of 31 H. 8. of Partition but it ought to be done by the Sheriff himself Mich. 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXVII Strangder and Burnells Case AN Action upon the Case of Trover of Goods and converting them to his own use in Ipswich The Defendant pleaded That the Goods came to his hands in Dunwich in the same County and that the Plaintiff gave to him all Goods which came to his hands in Dunwich absque hoc that he is guilty of any Trover or Conversion in Ipswich It was holden to be a good manner of pleading by reason of the special Iustification Vide 27 H. 6. But where a Iustification is general the County is not traversable at this day Vide 19 H. 6 7. 62 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXVIII Hodges Case IF one enfeoffeth his Son and Heir apparent and no use is expressed nor Consideration it was said It should be to the use of the Son and so hath the Law been taken and so it is in Case of a Covenant to stand seized to the use of the Son. The Court said that there was a difference betwixt the Cases or in the Case of Feoffment they seemed to be of Opinion that the Deed should have no operation but in the other Case it may be otherwise upon construction of the Result of the Vse to the Father 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXIX. Mark Stewards Case AN Assumpsit before Action brought may be discharged by word otherwise after Action brought Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXX Verney and Verneys Case IN Dower by Verney against Verney The Case was That Lessee for years by Fine to whom the Land was rendred by Fine for years upon the Default of the Tenant prayed to be received and it was Counter-pleaded because the Statute of Gloucester gave no Receit but where the Termor might have Recovery by Writ of Covenant but where the Lease as in our Case doth commence by render by Fine there cannot be any recovery by Covenant But it was the Opinion of the Lord Anderson That such a Termor shall be received CCXXI Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber IN the Exchequer Chamber before the Chancellor Treasurer c. A Writ of Error was cast upon the Statute of 31 E. 3. cap. 12. It was moved by Egerton Solicitor to the Queen for the Defendant That the Writ of Error ought to abate for false Latine for the Writ is Pertenet where it ought to be Pertinet But by Manwood Anderson and Wray The same is no Exception but notwithstanding that the Court may proceed to the Examination of the Errors For the same is not properly a Writ but rather a Commission to the Chancellor Treasurer c. and therefore it was ordered that the Party should proceed to the assignment of the Errors Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCXXII The Queens Fanes and the Archbishop of Canterburies Case THe Queen brought a Quare Impedit against Fane 1 Leon. 201. the Archbishop of Canterbury the Bishop of Chichester and Hudson Incumbent and counted that John Ashburnham was seized of the Advowson of Burwash and was Outlawed in an Action of Debt during which Outlawry in force the Church voided by which it did appertain to the Queen to present The Archbishop and Bishop pleaded that they claimed nothing but as Metropolitan and Ordinary Fane pleaded That King E. 4. ex gratia sua speciali c. and in consideration fidelis servic c. granted to the Lord Hastings the Castle and Barony of Hastings and Hundred c. Et quod ipse haberet omnia Bona Catal. Tenentium residentium non residentium aliorum resident quorumcunque hominum de in Castro Baronia c. seu infra eadem pro numero debit c. tam ad sectam Regis c. quam c. utlagatorum Et quod ipsi liceret per se vel ministros suos c. and from him derived to
the Office. Vide Stanford Prerogat 54 55. and Vide 20 E. 4. 11. A. seized of a Mannor with an Advowson appendant is attainted of Treason the Church void the King without any Office shall have the presentment But admitting that it is not in the King without Office yet the Pardon of 23 Eliz. doth not extend to it For the words of the Pardon are Treasons Felonies Offences Contempts Trespasses Entries Wrongs Deceits Misdemeanors Forfeitures Penalties and Sums of Moneys and if by any of these words the matter be helped is to be considered and if any thing shall help it it is the word Forfeiture But I conceive that the same doth not extend to this matter for although it be an ample word yet it shall be construed to extend beyond the words accompanied with it which concern only personal things as Contempts Wrongs Trespasses as the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 10. which is penned by general words as Colledges Deans and Chapters Parsons Vicars and others having Spiritual Promotions that Statute doth not extend by construction to Bishops and they have Spiritual Promotion yet the Statute shall be construed to extend to the Parties named and other Inferiour Orders and Degrees and shall not be extended higher So in the Commission of the Peace ad diversas Felonias alia Malafacta c. those general words do not extend to Treason c. Vide for the Residue of this Case Venable and Harris's Case which was the same Case and is Reported in Leonard 2 Part fol. 122. Placito 169. Pasc 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXXIX Downhall and Catesoy's Case IN a Formedon by Downhall against Catesby 3 Leon. 267. the Parties were at Issue and it was tryed by Nisi prius It was moved in Bank because that some of the Iury did eat and drink before they gave their Verdict that the Court would not receive the Postea Curia that we cannot do for we not know whether your Information be true or not and this matter ought to be examined by the Iustices of Assize or Nisi prius before whom the Trial was and they are to certifie thereof and then we shall have good cause to stay the Entry of the Postea In that Case it was said If any of the Iurors eat and drink before their Verdict at their own Costs it doth not make the Verdict void but if at the Costs of the Plaintiff or Defendant it is otherwise CCXXX Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Sheriff took an Obligation of a Prisoner bailable upon condition that he should personally appear in the Kings Bench c. It was holden a good Condition not against the Statute of 23 H. 6. So if the Condition had been that he should appear for to answer contrary that he shall appear and answer for in the principal Case the word personally is not of substance for although he appears by Attorney yet the Condition is well performed and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Anderson reclamante Vide 27 Eliz. B. R. Sedford and Cutts Case 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXXXI Haselwoods Case THe Case of Haselwood A seized of Land is indebted to the King by Obligation and enfeoffed B. of his Land And the Case of Fleetwood 15 Eliz. was vouched where it was holden That in purchase the debtor of the King was lyable But by Pigot who was of Counsel with Haselwood the Obligation in this Case was made before the Statute of 33 H. 8. or otherwise he should be charged 32 Eliz. CCXXXII Sir William Pelhams Case SIr William Pelham was Surveyor of the Ordinances and delivered of the Kings money to Painter Clerk of the Ordnance It was holden That for that money the Queen might have Account against Painter See this Case before Sect. 81. Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXIV. Ognell and Vnderhills Case IN Replevin the Case was as appeared upon the pleading That Rob. Bouchier was seized of a certain Farm called Cruchefield Grange and leased the same to Sir William Raynsford for thirty years who dyed thereof possessed by reason of which the Interest thereof came to Raynsford as Executor of the said Sir William Raynsford who assigned the said Farm except a parcel of it called Hobbes to Sir Henry Bear for parcel of the term and afterwards assigned the said parcel called Hobbes for part of the term to Frekington and others and afterwards granted the residue of the said term not expired to the said Bear and Frekington and afterwards the said Rob. Bouchier granted a Rent-charge of 40 l. per annum percipiendum de omnibus terris renementis quibuscunque vocat the Grange of Cruchefield in the Parish of Stoneleigh in the County of Warwick nuper in tenura occupatione William Raynsford milit nunc in tenura occupatione Hen. Bear. Bouchier granted the reversion of Hobbes to Lewknor in Fee to whom Scarre releaseth all his right estate and demand in the said Land called Hobbes the Lease expired the rent behind Lewknor leased at will to R. the first Question was If the said Rent-charge shall be said issuing out of the said Lands called Hobbes for if c. then by that Release the rent is gone But the whole Court was clear of Opinion That the rent was not issuing out of Hobbes but out of the Lands then in the possession of Bear and not out of the Lands in the possession of Frekington Although it was objected by Walmesley Serjeant That the words in the Grant of the rent in tenura occupatione Bear shall be construed in the disjuncive quasi sive and then the Close called Hobbes although it was not in the Occupation yet it was in tenura of Bear. The Matter was at another day argued by Fenner Serjeant for the Plaintiff and he much relyed upon the word quibuscunque in the Grant of the Rent de omnibus terris quibuscunque commonly called Cruchefield Grange As if I grant to you all my Trees my Apple-trees shall not pass but if the Grant was omnes arbores meas quascunque they pass and that by the Emphasis of this word Quibuscunque So if I grant you Common for your Cattel in such a place none shall have Common but those which are Commonable shall have Common there contrary where the Grant is pro averiis quibuscunque And it was adjudged in the Chancery in the Case of the Bishop of Ely That where the said Bishop leased all the Demeasns of a Manor for years that by the said Lease the Park within the said Manor should not pass But perhaps if such a Lease had been Omnes singulas terras dominicales quascunque the Park would have passed And afterwards the Counsel of the Plaintiff seeing that the Court was of Opinion with the Defendant took Exception to the pleading The Defendant made Conusans ut Ballivus Administratoris of the Grantee of the Rent and doth not shew the Letters of Administration And as to
that It was agreed by the Court that that had been a good Exception if the matter had not been relieved by the Statute of 27 Eliz. of Demurrers Another matter was objected upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 37. upon the words of the said Statute so long as the Lands remain in the possession of the Tenant in Demeasn who ought immediately to have paid the said Rent And it was said by Anderson and Rhodes that the Conusans was good enough and within the relief of that Statute For Lewknor was the immediate Purchaser and although he had let the Lands to another at will that did not make any thing for yet the Estate of the Land is within the words of the Statute for the Land remains in the Seisin of the first Purchaser And note that in this case Bouchier dyed before the Lease expired so as the Rent was not determined in his life And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Defendant Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXXXV Rawlins and Somerfords Case IN Ejectione firmae the Case was Cartwright possessed of a house for the term of 30 years demised a Stall parcel of it to Wartow for two years and afterwards assigned the whole house to Rawlins for all the years Rawlins redemised the same Stall to Cartwright for twenty years but Wartow did not attorn but before the said Redemise Cartwright by Deed indented demised the said Stall to Wartow for six years after the said two years ended and afterwards Rawlins redemised all the house to Cartwright for 21 years rendring rent with clause of re-entry and upon the Indenture of the said Redemise was endorsed that before the sealing and delivery c. it was agreed between the Parties that Wartow should have the said Stall according to the Lease for six years to him made And afterwards Cartwright redemised the said Stall to Rawlins for ten years and afterwards the Rent was behind And if the Rent reserved by Rawlins upon his demise to Cartwright was suspended or not was moved a question Cook argued it was not suspended for Rawlins had in the Estate but an Interest in futuro which cannot suspend the Rent before in possession And he put the Case 31 E. 1. Fitz. Discent 17. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is attainted of Felony and dyeth now the Seignory is not presently extinct For if the Lord takes Fealty of the Son the Seignory doth continue in Esse and Vide Acc. Fitz. N. B. 144. 26 E. 3. 72. Houghton the rent is suspended as if I lease Land and an Advowson rendrint rent and I take back an Estate in the Advowson now the rent is suspended But as to that it was answered That there the party hath a present interest in the Advowson but so it is not in the Case at Bar. And by Cook A. seized in Fee of three Acres makes a Lease of two of them for 21 years rendring rent and afterwards the Lessee leaseth one of the said Acres for years to the Lessor to begin two years after it is not a present suspension of the rent until the Lease come into possession c. And afterwards it was adjudged that by the Lease in futuro the rent was not suspended Pasch 28 Eliz. Rot. 255. Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCXXXVI The Guardians of the Monastery of Otleries Case IN the Exchequer it was found by Special Verdict 1 Leon. 4. That the Guardian and Chanons Regular of Otlery were seized of the Manor of O c. and that 22 H. 7. at a Court holden granted the Lands in question to W. and W. his Son for their lives by Copy according to the Custom of the said Manor and afterwards 30 H. 8. they leased the same Land by Indenture to H. rendring the ancient and accustomed rent and afterwards surrendred their Colledge c. and afterwards W. and W. dyed And if the said Lease so made during the Estate Customary notwithstanding the Statute of 31 H. 8. were good or not that was the Question being within a year before the Surrender c. And it was argued by Egerton Solicitor That the said Lease was void by the Statute the words of which are Whereof or in the which any Estate or Interest for term of Life year or years at the time of the making of any such Lease had his Being or Continuance and was not then determined finished or expired And therefore we are to see if this right or possession which W. and W. had at the time of the making of the said Lease was an Interest or Estate for Life And as to the word Estate est nihil aliud than measure of time for an Estate of Fee-simple is as much as to say an Interest in the Lands for ever and so of the rest and therefore W. and W. had at the time of the making of the Lease an Estate for the thing demised And although such Customary Tenants are termed in Law Tenants at will yet they are not simply so nor meer Tenants at will but Tenants at will secundum Consuetudinem Manerii which Custom warrants his possession here for life and therefore it is a more certain estate than an estate at will for the Copyholder may justifie against his Lord and so cannot a Tenant at will whose estate is determinable at the will and pleasure of his Lessor and although this estate is but by custom and by no conveyance yet it is such an estate which the said Statute intends non refert by what conveyance the estate is raised so it be an estate and this estate being supported by custom is acknowledged in Law to be an estate and so accounted in our Law and the Law hath notably distinguished Copyhold tenancies by the custom and tenancies at will at the Common Law for a Copyholder shall do fealty and have aid of his Lord in an Action of Trespass he shall have and maintain an Action of Trespass against his Lord his wife shall be endowed the husband shall be Tenant by the Curtesie without a new Admittance So customary Tenancies are within the Rules and Maxims of our Law As in the Case of Horewood There shall be a possest o fratris of it without admittance and it was adjudged 8 Eliz in the Kings Bench That if a Copyholder surrender to the use of another for years and the Lessee dyeth his Executors shall have the residue of the term without any admittance M. 14 15 Eliz. A Copyholder made a Lease for years by Indenture warranted by the custom the Lessee brought Ejectione firmae it was adjudged maintainable in the Common Pleas Although it was objected That if it be so then if the Plaintiff recover he should have an Habere facias possessionem and there Copyholds should be ordered by the Common Laws of the Land. 10 Eliz. Lord and Copyholder for Life the Lord grants a Rent-charge out of the Manor whereof the Copyhold is parcel the Copy-holder surrendreth to the use of
23 Eliz. is If any Person do any thing to move the People to Sedition the same is Felony but then it must be Sedition against the Queen and of that Opinion was the whole Court. Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLV Ratcliffe and Shirleys Case THe Lady Ratcliffe brought an Action upon the Case against Shirley for these words Words My Lady Ratcliffe is a beggerly Lady and giveth thread-bare Coats she bought Sheep and cosen'd men of their money and she is as very a Thief as he that robbeth by the High-way Vpon Not Guilty the Iury found that the Defendant spake these words She is a worse Thief than he that robbeth by the High-way It was holden that the words found by the Verdict were actionable as well as if the Defendant had called the Plaintiff Thief generally But it seemed to the Court that upon that Verdict the Plaintiff should not have Iudgment for it may be that the Defendant dixit utrumque at several times and so several Causes of Action And it is not like to the Case 3 Ma. 118. where part of the words is found quoad alia verba non dixit and so expresly acquit him of the remnant so it is not here for this Verdict doth not acquit him of the other words and for that Cause Iudgment was stayed Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLVI Herne and Crowes Case IN an Action upon the Case by Herne against Crowe and declared that whereas certain Irish Merchants had imported Furs here into England which were offered to be sold in London which Furs the Defendant desired to buy but because he was a Foreigner he could not buy them without peril of forfeiture and then the Plaintiff was in communication with the Merchants to have bought them that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff promised to the Defendant that when he had bought the said Furs the Defendant should have such a quantity of the said Furs as he pleased upon equal price assumed and promised that he would speak no more with the said Merchants for the buying of the said Furs yet that notwithstanding he proceeded in the said bargain and offered to the said Merchants sixty pound more than any other by reason of which the Plaintiff could not have them for such reasonable price as he might have had them before It was holden by Wray Chief Iustice That the Declaration here was insufficient upon which the Defendant might have well demurred Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXLVII. Bakers Case A Writ of Partition by Baker Heir of Gertrudi Marquess of Exeter who devised all his Lands to Blunt by which the third part descend to the Plaintiff Estrepement and prayed a Writ of Estrepement and it was the Opinion of the Court that the Writ is not to be granted for the Plaintiff may have a more proper remedy upon the Statute Cum duo vel tres and in a Writ of Partition no Land is demanded CCXLVIII Mich. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Conditions A Man was bound in an Obligation that he should release all his right in Black Acre to the Obligor and in the performance of the said Condition he made such a Lease and delivered the same to C. to the use of the Obligor The Opinion of the whose Court was That the Condition was not performed because the Obligor had not the Lease in his own hands to plead but is put to his Writ of Derinue against C. which was not the intent of the Condition Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXLIX Seaman and Brownings Case SEaman brought Debt in an Obligation against Broshnin and others Executors of one Marshall The Condition was That whereas the said Marshall had sold certain Lands to the Plaintiff If the Plaintiff peaceably and quietly enjoyed the said Lands against the said Marshall c and assigned the breach That the said Marshall had entred upon them and cut down five Elms there upon which they were at Issue And it was found that a Servant of the said Marshall had entred and cut them and that in the presence of the said Marshall his Master and by his commandment It was the Opinion of the Court that the Condition was broken and that the Master was the principal Trespasser Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCL Babingtons Case HUmphrey Babington brought a Writ of Disceit and counted that T. S. was seized of Land and held the same of the Manor of Rodely which Manor is ancient Demeasn And that the said T. S. being so seized a Writ of Entre sur Disseisin was brought against him in which T. S. pleaded and lost and Iudgment was given against him Et quod ipse Humphridus extitit Dominus Manerii praedicti and concluded ad exhaeredationis ipsius Humphr●di periculum manifestum Exception was taken to the Count because the words are quod cum ipse existit Dominus Manerii praedicti where he ought to say further Amendment Et tempore Judicii praedicti existebat for if the Recovery was before he purchased the said Manor his Action doth not lye which Rhodes and Anderson concesserunt wherefore day was given to the Plaintiff to amend his Count. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCLI Sir William Pelhams Case THe Case was A. Tenant for life the remainder in tall to B. c. A by Deed indented and inrolled bargained and sold the Messuage so conveyed to W. P. in fee who suffered a common recovery in which A. is vouched and so a common recovery had and executed and this was before the Statute of 14 Eliz. And if the recovery should bind B. and his remainder in tail was the question or if it be a forfeiture Altham argued that here is a forfeiture 1. It is to see if a common recovery suffered by Tenant for life which here is the Bargainee be a forfeiture or no by the common Law 1 Leon. 264. it s not forfeited 2 Leon. 60 65. if no Execution be sued upon the same Recovery 2. If it be executed then if he in the remainder may enter for the forfeiture When the Tenant for life bargains and sells the Messuage although upon it an estate in fee be limited yet nothing passeth from him but what he may lawfully pass and that was the estate for life of the Bargainor for such an estate only he might lawfully pass and here the Vendee is but Tenant for the life of another and when of his own assent he suffers a common recovery and that without right it is a forfeiture By matter in Fait a particular Tenant may commit a forfeiture as well as by matter of Record By matter in Fait he cannot commit a forfeiture if not thereby the reversion be not pulled out of him in the reversion As if a Lessee for 10 years make a Lease for 1000 years it is not a forfeiture for by that the reversion is not touched but if he by matter of Record do
by a Writ of Right So if the Vouchee had entred and lost c. As to that Case we ought to consider That every Book reported in our Law is not Law But let us observe of what Authority the Case is truly it is the conceit of the Reporter himself for he puts the Case and resolves it but there is no Iudge or Serjeant named in the Case c. The other Case is 5 E. 4. 2. Note by Hendon clearly If my Tenant for life voucheth a stranger who entreth into the Warranty generally and doth not know how to bar the Demandant the Tenant shall recover in value and the reversion of him who hath in value shall be to me in lieu of my former reversion as release to Tenant for life shall enure to him in the reversion But that is but the Opinion of one Serjeant c. But I answer to these Books If the Demandant in such recovery have a good title so as the Tenant or the Voucher as Hendon saith know not how to bar the Demandant there such a Voucher of a Stranger is not a Forfeiture nor such recovery suffered thereupon for against his will and volens nolens he suffered it But if the Tenant had good matter to bar the Demandant and no good cause of Voucher that the vouching of a stranger or suffering of a recovery is a Forfeiture of his Estate And here in our Case the Defendant had not any title The Tenant or Vouchee had not any Warranty or cause of Voucher But the Tenant might have barred the Demandant if he pleased And he said That the Voucher only doth not make the Forfeiture but much rather the Recovery for when Iudgment is given and Execution had then is the Fee plucked out of him in the reversion 6 R. 2. If Tenant for life claimeth a Fee it is a Forfeiture but here Pelham hath done more for he hath gained Fee by the Iudgment therefore à Fortiori it shall be a Forfeiture But let us a little see what medlings or attempts by the particular Tenant are causes of a Forfeiture and what not 5 Ass 3. Where A. brings an Entry against Tenant for life by collusion to oust B. of his reversion supposing that the Tenant for life held of his Lease The Tenant confesseth the Action upon which Iudgment is given B enters and his entry adjudged lawful for that recovery is adjudged in Law but an Alienation to the disinherisin of him in the reversion and here it appears That such recovery by Covin is but an Alienation and without any strength of a recovery And he cited many other Cases cited before by Altham 14 E 3. Resceit 135. Where Tenant for life pleads in chief or prays in aid of a stranger where he might bar the Demandant and will not it is a Forfeiture And also 22 E. 3. 2. 27 E. 3. where Tenant for life in a Quid juris clamat Attorns unto the Conusee upon a Fine levyed by him who hath not any thing in the Land the same is a Forfeiture and yet that Attornment doth not divert the Reversion out of the Lessor 50 E. 3.7 8. Land was given by Fine in tail the remainder over to a stranger in Fee the Donee took a Wife and dyed without Issue the Wife accepted Dower assigned by a stranger he in the Remainder brought a Scire facias against the Wife that she is Tenant in Dower of the Assignment of a stranger and pleaded to the Title the Demandant recovered she hath lost her Dower for she hath not pleaded dutifully as she ought being a particular Tenant Temps H. 4. Tenant for life loseth his Land in a Recovery against him against his will and thereupon brings Quod ei deforceat and declares upon an Estate tail and recovers the same is a Forfeiture because he hath challenged a higher Estate c. 5 H. 7. Tenant for life joyns the Mise upon the meer Right 2 H. 6. Lessee for years being ousted brings an Assise and recovers 1 H. 7. Accepts a Fine of a stranger sur Conusans c. come ceo que il ad de son done All these are Forfeitures In our principal Case here the Tenant who suffered the Recovery did not plead at all to defend the Right but where he might have barred the Demandant he gave strength to his pretended Title and made it a perfect Title and by suffering the Recovery and Iudgment to pass had taken away the Reversion out of the Lessor to whom he owed Fealty and therefore it is a Forfeiture And without doubt it is apparent to the Court that the Demandant in this Recovery hath not any Title for the Recoverers in such Cases are but Assignees and Purchasors which appeareth by the Statute of 7 H. 8. cap. 4. which gives Distress and Avowry to Recoverers c. As to the inventing of Recoveries it was a necessary Device for it was to take away Estate tails which were the causes of grand Mischiefs and Inconveniencies in this Realm and it was great reason for Tenant in tail might by the Common Law alien his Land post prolem suscitat and then he had an Inheritance and might commit Waste But he was so restrained by the Statute of Westm 2. all the Realm and the Subjects of it were inveigled thereby Ioyntures of Wives Leases of Farmers Mortgages to Creditors Statutes and other Assurances defeated by their deaths which was against the Common Law and all Conscience These matters tending to the knowledge of the Iustices and the Mischiefs thereupon ensuing very frequent and that Tenant in tail was become a perillous Fellow and there was no safe dealing with him Then they taking into consideration that several Warranties and Assets and collateral Warranty without Assets for that in it self implyed Assets did bar him Icil. the Entail upon that consideration they grounded the practice and usage of common Recoveries so that by that means Tenant in tail has potestatem alienandi as he had at the Common Law because his authority was restored to him and injury done to no man But as to Tenant for life he never had potestatem alienandi And as to that which hath been said That the Recovery shall stand in force till after the death of the Tenant for life and in our Case here Tenant in tail is living certainly if the Law should be such great mischief would follow for then greater Ioyntresses the Widows of great Persons having allowed unto them great and sumptuous Houses and Lands furnished with Timber of great value might suffer such Recoveries and so having plucked the Fee out of the Heirs might commit Waste and the same should be dispunishable c. which should be an intolerable Mischief And so he concluded that this suffering of a Recovery was a Forfeiture and Iudgment was given accordingly CCLII Grendon and Albanies Case JOhn Grendon brought Trespass for breaking of his Close against Tho Albany And upon the pleading the Case
was That Francis Bunny was seized and 1 May 20 Eliz. by Deed indented enfeoffed N. H. to the use of the said Fr. Bunny for term of his life the Remainder to D. in tail the Remainder to E. in tail the Remainder over to F. in Fee In which Deed of Feoffment a Proviso was That if it should happen one P. P. to dye without Issue Male of his Body that then it should be lawful for the said Fr. Bunny at any time during his life by his Deed Indented to be Sealed and Delivered in the presence of three credible Witnesses to alter change diminish or amplifie any use or uses limited by the said Deed aliquem usum vel usus inde alicui personae c. Limitare post mortem ipsius Fr. to begin After which the said Fr. Bunny 1 Aprilis 23 Eliz by his Deed Indented did renounce relinquish and surrender to the said N. H. D. E. F. all such Liberty Power and Authority which he had after the death of the said P.P. without Issue ut supra And further remised released and quit-claimed to them the said Condition Promise Covenant and Agreement and all his said Power Liberty and Authority and further granted to them and their Heirs that at all times then after as well the said Condition Promise Covenant and Agreement as the said Power Liberty and Authority should cease and to all purposes should be void after which P. P. dyed without Issue 1 Maij 23 Eliz. after which 20 March 24 Eliz. the said Fr. Bunny by Indenture between him and the said D. Sealed and Delivered ut supra altered the former uses and covenanted and agreed with the said D. that from thenceforth the said N. H. and his Heirs should be seized to the use of the Plaintiff and his Heirs c. And note that in this Case Fr. Bunny being but Tenant for life enfeoffed one Tomson upon whom the said D. entred for a Forfeiture And it was argued by Altham That by the Feoffment by Fr. Bunny to Tomson the Liberty and Power aforesaid was not extinct or lost for this Liberty and Power was not then a thing in esse for then was P. P. alive and also the Liberty is meerly collateral to the Land whereof the Feoffment was made 39 E. 3. 43. Fitz The Son and Heir apparent disseised his Father and thereof made a Feoffment to a stranger the Father dyed now against his own Livery the Son shall not enter but if the Son dyeth then his Son shall enter which proves that the Livery is not so violent to determine a future right but that afterwards it may be revived à fortiori in our Case where the thing pretended to be extinct is meerly collateral 36 E. 3. Fitz. garr 69. In an Assise of Common the Release of the Father with Warranty is not a bar because it is of another thing 15 H. 7. 11. Cestuy que use wills by his Will that his Feoffees shall sell his Lands and dyes the Feoffees make a Feoffment to the same use yet they may well Sell so as against their Livery the authority to sell remains to them And he put Brents Case Dyer 340. A future use limited to a Wife which shall be shall not be prevented by a Fine or Feoffment and so by the Statute of fraudulent Conveyances 27 Eliz. cap. 4. where a Conveyance is made with clause of Revocation if afterwards the party who made such a Conveyance shall Bargain Sell or Grant the said Land to another for Money or other good Consideration paid or given the first Conveyance not being revoked that then such former Conveyance against the latter Purchasor shall be void c. The other matter was admitting that the said Power and Liberty be not extinct by the said Feoffment if by the Indenture of Renunciation Relinquishment Release c. it be destroyed and he said that a thing which is not in esse cannot be released Litt. 105. 4 H. 7. 10. A Lease for years to begin at a day to come cannot be released before it comes in esse 11 H. 6. 29. Br. Damages 138. In Detinue the Defendant would confess the Action if the Plaintiff would release the Damages and the Plaintiff would have so done but could not before Iudgment for before Iudgment the Plaintiff had not Interest in the Damages but he is intituled to them by the Iudgment So Lands in ancient Demesne are recovered at the Common Law and Execution had accordingly and afterwards the Tenant releases to him who recovers and afterwards the Lord reverseth the Iudgment the Tenant notwithstanding his release may enter for his Title which accrued to him by the reversal was not in esse at the time of the release Vide 98. contr And it was adjudged 23 Eliz. in the Case of one Falsor That where Lessee for years devised his term to his Wife if she should so long live and if she dyed within the term that then the residue of his term should go unto his Daughter which should be then unpreferred and dyed his Daughter unpreferred released to her mother all her right in the said Land the mother dyed within the said term the release shall not bind the daughter for that at the time of that release she had no title Cook to the contrary And he said That by the Feoffment the said Power and Liberty is extinct And he agreed the Case cited before 15 H. 7 for in such Case the Vendee of the Feoffees shall be in by the Devise and not by the Feoffees 9 H. 7. 1. The Husband makes Discontinuance of the Lands of his Wife and takes back an Estate to him and his Wife by which the Wife is remitted they have Issue the Wife dyeth the Husband shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie for he hath extinguished his future right by his Livery 12 Ass P. ultimo A Praecipe against A who loseth the Land by an erronious Iudgment and after Execution had enters upon the Demandant and makes a Feoffment his Writ of Error is gone 38 E. 3. 16. In a Scire Facias to execute a Fine the Plaintiff recovers and makes a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards the Tenant by Scire Facias by Writ of Disceit reverseth the Iudgment now the Plaintiff in the Scire Facias shall not have a new Scire Facias 34 H. 6. 44. A. recovers against B. by false Oath and after Execution had B. enters and makes a Feoffment to a stranger who Enfeoffs him who recovers it is a good Bar in an Attaint 27 H. 8. 29. The Feoffees to an use are disseised the Disseisor Enfeoffs Cestuy que use who Enfeoffs a stranger now by that Feoffment his right to the use is gone And as to the release the same is not properly a release but rather a defeasance to determine the Power and Authority aforesaid as if A enfeoffed B. with Warranty and afterwards B. covenants with A. that the said Warranty shall be void
he could not put in a true Inventory and upon that the Plaintiff prayed a Prohibition surmising that he himself claimed Property in the said Goods and the Ecclesiastical Court would not allow of it and the Trial of the said Goods did belong to the Common Law And a Prohibition was granted Trin. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXII Mountjoyes and Andrews Case IN Scire Facias upon a Iudgment in Debt The Defendant pleaded that heretofore a Fieri Facias at the Suit of the now Plaintiff issued directed to the Sheriff of Leice●●er by force of which the said Sheriff took divers Sheep of the Defendant Execution adhuc doth detain them Retorn of Writ It was holden by the Court a good Plea although he doth not say that the Writ was returned for the Execution is lawful notwithstanding that and the Plaintiff hath remedy against the Sheriff CCLXIII Vide this Case reported by Cook 1 Part by the name of Capells Case THe Case between Hunt and Gately in the Exchequer Chamber was now argued by Fenne That the Rent granted by him in the Remainder upon an Estate tail is good and shall bind the Land after the Estate tail determined notwithstanding the common Recovery suffered by the Tenant in tail in possession Before the Statute of Westm 2. of Donis Condic c. no Remainder could be limited upon an Estate tail for that which remained in the Donor was but a possibility and therefore then a Formedon in Remainder did not lye But the said Statute which provided a Formedon in the Descender provided also by Equity a Formedon in the Remainder for a Formedon in the Reverter as appeareth by the said Statute was in use in Cancellaria And now here in our case is a Remainder lawfully vested in the Grantor which he may dispose of as he sees good and therefore when he grants a Rent-charge out of it the same is a thing vested in the Grantee and by no subsequent act can be divested and although the Estate which was charged be now charged by the Recovery yet it is the same Land which was charged and therefore the charge shall continue as if a gift in tail be rendring Rent and the Donee levieth a Fine yet the Rent remaineth and the Donor shall distrain 48 E. 3. 3 9. So here If after the grant of this Rent Tenant in tail in possession levies a Fine by which the Remainder which was charged is discontinued and afterwards the Conusor dyes without Issue the Grantee shall distrain upon such possession which passed by the Fine As if A. lease to B. for life and afterwards grants a Rent out of the same Land to C. B. aliens in Fee and dyes although that A. cannot re-enter but suffers the said torcious Estate gained de novo by wrong to continue yet B upon such possession shall distrain for the Rent for it is the same Land which was charged and by Law a thing in abeyance may be charged As if a Parson grant a Rent-charge to begin after his death and the Patron and Ordinary confirm it it shall bind although the Grant doth not take effect in the life of the Grantor but when the Freehold is in abeyance So if the Patron and Ordinary in the time of Vacation grant a Rent-charge out of the Parsonage the same is good and shall bind the Successor and yet at the time of the Grant the Freehold of the thing granted is in abeyance Vide 5 E. 6. Dyer 69. That a Rent which is not in esse shall be bound by a Iudgment 22 E. 3. 19. 5 E. 3. Fitz. Dower 343. By Bracton Jus concerning a real thing is threefold 1. Jus terrae scil the Ownership of the Land. 2. Jus in terra as a Rent Common c. 3. Jus ad terram scil Right permanent And by this Common Recovery in our case Jus terrae shall be bound but not Jus in terra And he said That if Land be given to A. in tail the Remainder to the Kings Villain in Fee and before any claim by the King A. suffers a common Recovery and dyes without Issue this Recovery shall not bind the King. And as to the Case of 26 H. 8. 2. which hath been Objected against the falsifying of the Recovery where a Parson made a Lease for years and afterwards in a Quare Impedit brought against him and the Patron they pleaded faintly to the intent to make the Lessee lose his Term now such a Lessee cannot falsifie in such case the Parson by another way might have defeated the Lease as by Resignation but in our case the Grantor of this Rent by no way might defeat his Grant And he said a common recovery did not bind Dower therefore nor this rent And if Tenant in tail in possession grants such a rent and after suffers a common recovery the rent shall stand why not also in the case of a remainder for upon them both as well the remainder as the possession the recovery operatur And recoveries shall always bind the possession and no farther and shall not disprove the right but the possession And the recovery by it self doth not bind the possession but in respect of the Voucher without which no recovery shall bar and that in respect of the recompence which the Law presumes c. which recompence cannot extend to this Rent-charge and then there is no reason that he to whom it was granted should be prejudiced by this recovery and always in case of recompence the Law is very precise As if I grant unto you an Annuity of 30 l. per Annum until you be presented to a competent Benefice a litigious Benefice is not a recompence intended nor shall determine the Annuity nor a Benefice of 15 l. If two make an exchange for their Lives and one of them dyeth the exchange is not determined but the Heir of him who dyeth shall enter and retain the Land as long as the other shall live Ad quod Manwod Chief Baron subsidebat And there is a great difference between a Lease for years and a Rent-charge for at the Common Law upon such Recovery the Lessee for years was bound contrary of a Rent-charge for it was unreasonable that a thing not demanded by the recovery should be bound by it especially because that the Land rendred in value shall not be charged with the rent Walmesley Serjeant contrary A remainder upon an Estate tail is debile fundamentum and cannot uphold with assurance a Rent-charge against a common recovery and it cannot be found in any Book but in 5 E. 4. 2. That a remainder upon an Estate-tail expectant may be charged for an Estate-tail is in Law presumed to be perpetual and therefore what Lands are entailed by Fee the words of the Fine are Sibi haeredibus de Corpore suo exeuntibus imperpetuum And it is the common learning in our Books that every Estate of Inheritance be it Fee-simple or Fee-tail shall be
rather a portion of the profits c. and therefore the Land shall be said the Chauntry and not the Sum and here the intent of the Statute extends to the intent of the Founder So that if the intent of the Founder was to give the Land to Superstitious Vses the same is within the Statute If Cestuy que use wills that his Feoffees have the profits of his Lands ut supra to the Sustentation of a Chauntry Priest and the Feoffees imploy but 20 l. per Annum whereas the Land is of the value of 100 l. per Annum by this Statute the King shall have all for the intent of the Founder was That all should be imployed And so here for upon the Matter the Dean and Chapter are but as Feoffees and see that this Statute of Chauntries makes a great difference between Obits and Lights and Chauntries for in the Case of Obits and Lights the King shall not have but that which was imployed Whetstones Case was That Whetstone seized of the Manor of Cocke made a Feoffment thereof to certain Feoffees to find two Obits in such a Chappel and with the residue of the profits to maintain the Chappel and Iudgment was given for the Queen Here the Condition knit to the Reversion upon a Lease made by the Dean and Chapter to Nicholas Wilford passeth to the King by the Act of Parliament for a Condition is an Hereditament and when the King grants over the reversion to Butcher the Condition also passeth by 32 H. 8. Bromley Solicitor The Statute extends to Chauntries in existence only and not to Chauntries in reputation Chauntry hath divers significations in Law 1. For the Service which the Chauntry Priest is to do as cessavit de Cantaria 2 Sometimes for the Advowson of the Chauntry scil Quod permittat praesentare ad Cantariam 3. Sometimes for the Body of the Chauntry scil the Land of which it is endowed and in that sense it is taken by the Statute I will agree if the same had been an ancient Chauntry time out of mind c. and the Incumbents thereof had taken the profits and made Leases of it that then it should be a Chaunt●y within this Statute for it might be corporated by prescription But the Chauntry here in question is not a Chauntry by prescription for the beginning of it is known so it is a Chauntry in reputation only and not in facto And he said That in that case the rent limited to the sustentation of the Priest shall go to the King and not to the Land for the Land was not given for the sustentation of a Priest but the rent only so as the Land was not immediately imployed for the finding of the Priest And he resembled this case to the case lately in question upon the Statute of 31 H. 8. An Abbot was seized of a great Wood which was never imployed in kind to the use of the House being seven Miles distant from the House but was never in Lease but was yearly sold by parcels and the Woodward rendred an Account of the same to the Auditor And the Opinion was That a Lease for years made of it within a year before the Dissolution was not within the said Statute for it was not immediately imployed for Hospitality But see the same reported by the Lord Dyer to the contrary 3 4 Eliz. 207. that such a Demise was void although that the Wood was not immediately imployed c. And see also the words of the Statute scil That the Land shall be in the actual Possession of the King in as ample manner as the Priest had it and the Priest had nothing in the Land but only in the Rent It was adjorned to be further argued c. Temps Roign Eliz. CCLXVI. Harveys Case HArvey seized of a Manor made a Feoffment thereof to divers persons to the use of himself for life and after to the use of his Son and the Heirs Males of his Body and if the said Son or any of the Heirs males of his Body discontinue or alien otherwise than for 21 years or three lives that then his Feoffees should be seized to the use of Nic. Harvey his Brother in Fee the Feoffor dyed the Son made a Lease for 21 years and afterwards discontinued against the Proviso if that lease should bind Nic. Harvey who came in by the latter use c. Dyer It is hard to avoid the lease for at the time of the making of it the lessor had a good interest and authority to make the lease and the act which impeacheth the Estate of the lessor commenceth after the lease by the discontinuance and therefore shall not avoid the lease Manwood The second use doth determine the first use and all Estates derived out of it Mounson contr ' For here this word Otherwise than for 21 years c so as such a lease is excepted As if a man man makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use of J. S. and his Heirs until J. D. shall pay to him 20 l. and then to the use of J. D. and his Heirs here if J. S. makes a a lease for years and afterwards the Monies are paid to J. D. now J. D. shall hold the Land discharged of the lease for there is no word Otherwise c. for these words Otherwise qualifie the second use Dyer The word Otherwise amounts to an Exception Manwood doubted of it and moved and demanded if the wife of the Cestuy que use should have Dower or not Barham conceived that she should c. CCLXVII Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. TEnant in Socage made a lease for four years and dyed his Heir within age of 8 years the Mother being Guardian in Socage leased by Indenture to the same lessee for 14 years It was holden that in this Case the first lease is surrendred but otherwise it is of a lease made by Guardian in Nurture CCLXVIII Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN Debt it was found for the Plaintiff 20 Eliz. and 21 Eliz. the Plaintiff released to the Defendant and the continuance was made until this Term scil Mich 29 Eliz. per Curiam advisare vult And now the Plaintiff against his own Release prayed and had Iudgment A Release pleaded after Judgment and Verdict without any knowledge to the Defendant and Process of Execution issued and now Walter a Clerk of the Court on the behalf of the Defendant shewed the Release to the Court and also the whole special matter and prayed the Release of the Court against this practice Anderson presently granted a Supersedeas But afterwards before the Process issued forth he and the other Iustices were of Opinion That the Defendant could not plead the said Release nor any further matter after Verdict and demanded the question of Nelson chief Prothonatory who advertised the Court That he could shew a President where an Arbitrement had been pleaded after a Verdict and Issue joyned upon it and that
he is not to have Damages because the Waste was not to his disinheresin and the Land he shall not recover against the Defendant for the Term is not determined and such was the Opinion of the Court. As to the matter in ●aw Shuttleworth said That the Action of Waste ought to be brought against the Lessee himself and not against the Assignee for when he grants over his Term excepting the Trees it is a good Exception for when the Land upon which the Trees grow is leased to another the Trees pass by the Lease as well as the Land and the property of them is in the Lessee during the Term by which when he grants his Land he may well except them as the first Lessor might have done and if the Lessee for years cutteth down the Trees the Lessor cannot take them for that he hath other sufficient remedy scil an Action of Waste Fenner and Walmsley contrary And they conceived that the Lessee had but a special Property in the Trees scil for Fire-bote Plough bote House-bote c. But if he demiseth the Land or granteth his Interest in it he cannot except the Trees nor his special Property in them no more than he who hath Common appendant may grant the Land excepting the Common And in such case the general Property in the Trees remains in the Lessor as parcel of his Inheritance And this appeareth by many cases 27 H. 8. 13. Lessee for life and he in the remainder joyn in a lease for life the Lessee commits Waste the Tenant for life and he in the remainder joyn in an Action of Waste the Tenant for life shall recover the place wasted and he in the reversion all the damages Vide 2 H. 7. 10 H. 7. cited before That the Lessor may licence the Lessee to cut the Trees which proves that the Property is in him And Vide 40 Ass 22. the Lessor shall have the Windfalls And as to that which hath been said That by the Exception of the Trees the Soil it self is also excepted that is true as to the Trees for nourishment and not otherwise for if the Lessor cutteth down the Trees or roots them up he shall not after meddle with the Land where c. but the Soil shall be entirely to the Lessee The Lessor during the Term may grant the Trees so cannot the Lessee therefore the greater and better Property in the Trees is in the Lessor and not in the Lessee and the Trees proprie loquendo are not parcel of the thing demised If this Exception of the Trees or Woods should hold place Inconvenience would follow for as it is holden in 15 H. 7. 11. If the Termor of Wood commits Waste in one corner of the Wood he should not lose all the Wood but that place only But if in the said Wood there are divers Plats of Land in divers places of the Wood if the Termor commits Waste in that Wood he shall lose all the said Plats although he hath not done waste in them for they are parcel of the Wood. Vide Temps E. 1. Fitz. Waste 127. and Vide ibidem Waste 112. 8 E. 2. Waste done in parcel of an House the whole House shall be recovered Vide also 30 E. 3. Fitz. Amendment 67. and 4 E. 3. Waste 10. Now if that be Law and the Exception be good how shall the place wasted be recovered here and against whom It seemed to the Lord Anderson That the Exception was void and that the Action was brought against the Assignee and he said it was a knavish and foolish Demise and if it should be effectual in Law some Mischiefs would follow which he would not remember Windham was of the same Opinion and that the Lessee could not assign his Estate with such Exception for he hath but a special Interest in the Trees scil for Fire-bote Plough-bote c. which should go with the Land. Periam conceived That as to such special Property that none could have it but he who hath the Land and therefore the Exception is void but as to the Fruit-trees such an Exception might be good and although that the Trees are not expresly demised yet quodam modo and after a sort they may be said demised as annexed to the Land and if waste be brought against him who made the Exception scil the Lessee he cannot say they were not let to him and therefore he doubted of the Exception And Rhodes doubted also of the Exception and Anderson said that he was clear of opinion that the Lessor should have the Windfalls and afterwards the Case was adjorned to be further argued c. Temps Roign Eliz. CCLXX. Audleys Case Uses THe Lord Audley 12 H. 7. enfeoffed Hoddy and others of certain Lands in the County of Somerset and afterwards by Indenture reciting the said Feoffment and the date of it and also that it was to the intent that his Feoffees should perform his Will as followeth in effect viz My Will is that my said Feoffees shall stand seized to the use that the said Hoddy shall receive of the said Lands ●00 l which he had lent to the said Lord Audley and also to stand seized to pay all his Debts upon Bills signed with his hand and after ●he Debts paid that the Feoffees shall make an Estate of the said Lands to him the said Lord Audley and Joan his wife and to the heirs of their Bodies c. with divers Remainders over The said Lord Audley had Issue by the said Joan and also having Issue by a former wife a daughter the Feoffees never made any Estate to the said Lord and his wife and by the opinion of divers Iustices and Sages of the Law upon this matter no use was changed for it is not a last Will but an Intent and although that the Feoffees shall be seized to the use of the Feoffor and his Heirs because no consideration was wherefore they should be seized to their own uses yet the same could not make a new use to the said Lord and his wife in tail without conveying an Estate c. for the wife is a stranger to the Land and the same cannot be a Will or Testament for the Estate mentioned in the said writing ought to be made to the said Lord and his wife who could not take by his own Will and this matter was depending in the Chancery And the advise of the Iustices being there required they delivered their Opinions That by that writing no use was changed nor any use vested in the said Lord and his wife and a Decree was made accordingly until proof was made that such an Estate was made c. Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXI. Walgrave and Somersets Case IN Trespass by Walgrave against Somerset the Case was That tenant at will cut down Trees and the Lessor brought Trespass vi armis And the Court was clear of opinion that the Action was well maintainable modo forma and Iudgment
the Land be holden of the Queen and so Nature cannot be transferred therefore neither this Proviso And so is the Tenure of Frankalmoigne 35 H. 6. 58. and it should be a great rigour to take the bridle out of the hands of the Natural Vncle into the hands of Iustice which is Manus regia And he cited the Case of the Lord Norris where it was rul'd That where the Act of Attainder of Norris gave to the King all Rights Titles c. yet a Writ of Error was not given thereby Manwood Actions are not expresly given by the said Act of Attainder As to the second point I conceive that the Coveyance is become void when the terms within the two years are passed and shall not expect until the two years be expired for the Inrollment ought to be within the term so that if all the terms of the two years be past it is now impossible for to inroll the Deed within the time limited by the Statute and then by 29 H. 8 the Conveyance is void and then is the Queen seized in Fee at the time of the making of the Lease by the Attainder of Sir Francis As to the Certificate without Office it is not sufficient to entitle the Queen to the Land and I deny the difference put by Popham between a Condition to be performed on the part of the Patentee and on the part of the King I confess that a Certificate to inform the Queen or her Councel of the quantity quality value c. of the Land is good without Office but not to entitle the Queen de novo to the Inheritance of another I grant that the Commission is of Record but the tender of the King is matter in pais and not of Record Three things ought to be observed in every Certificate to make it a good and lawful Certificate according to the course of the common Law unless it be in cases of necessity as in case of Ouster le mere c. 1. It ought not to be in the absence of the party 2. It ought to be pendente placito convocatis in ea parte convocandis 3. It ought to be directed to a known Officer but a thing certified by a private person being no Officer cannot be good Also a Certificate according to the course of the common Law being good is not traversable At another day the Case was argued by Egerton Solicitor for the Queen The Condition is given to the Queen by 33 H. 8. and also by 29 Eliz. and this Condition in it self is a general and ordinary Condition and rests not in privity and such an Act as may be made by any stranger as well as by Sir Francis himself scil the tender of the King. The reasons which moved Sir Francis to knit this Condition to the Conveyance were natural but the Proviso and the performance of it not tryed to Nature and therefore all the cases of privity are here out of Seisin As to the Lord Brays Case the same was not any Wardship but only an Order for the government or his Son and Heir for the Wardship of the Father in the Son is not a Chattel in him As to the Case of the Lord Norris the Writ of Error could not accrue to the Queen for by the Act of Attainder no Actions were given to the King And here is not any such privity as hath been pretended for by the words of the Proviso the Ring might be tendred to his Executors or Administrators therefore the Condition might be tendred when he is dead therefore without privity Title for alienation in Mortmain of Lands purchased by a Villain of the King or for a Condition broken are not in the King before Office But here the Condition is to be performed on the part of the Queen which her Royal Majesty cannot perform and therefore Commissioners are appointed to do it which they have done and upon the Commission retorned have informed the Queen of all the performance of it and all is now upon Record And there is a great difference between Certificates as in our case and Certificates which have been cited on the other side which are used to make Tryals upon Issues joyned betwixt party and party and in such Certificates I confess the Law as Cook hath argued The Sheriff is not known to be such an Officer but by his Commission under the Great Seal he upon a Writ of the King to him directed Summons Disseisins Attaches c. these are matters in fait but when the Sheriff hath retorned his Service then it is become matter of Record So in our case the retorn of the tender c. where the Queen is to be informed of the Lands of the Subject which she is to have there ought to be an Office but here the Queen is to do an act and that she hath done under the Great Seal by Commission by the Retorn of which she is in the whole matter therefore there needs not an Office to inform her of that which she her self hath done by another Authorized by her to do it And he said that the Leases made by the Queen being Tenant pur auter vie were not void ab initio but from the time of the two years but now the Estate of the Queen for life is determined therefore also the Leases derived out of it Exception hath been taken to the Information scil Praedictus Franc ' per Indenturam suam factam inter c. without saying sigillo suo sigillat ' that is good enough for facta esse non potuit nisi etiam sit sigillat ' therefore facta includes sigillat ' And afterwards Trin. 33. Eliz. this Case was argued by the Barons Clark puisne Baron said That Iudgment ought to be given for the Queen And first he said I conceive that here upon this Indenture is no use created in Sir Francis for he shall pay for a Licence of Alienation if the Lands be holden in chief and they themselves in pleading the uses say Virtute cujus the said Sir Francis was seized in his Demesne as of Freehold for his life the remainder thereof c. Although this Condition be tyed to Nature and rests in privity as hath been objected and so inseparable yet by Act of Parliament it may be transferred Impropriations Frankalmoign Frankmarriage Guardianship in Socage cannot be given away regularly but by Act of Parliament they may which vide for Impropriations by the Statute of 31 H. 8. Impropriations of Abbies and Priories dissolved nam Parliamentum omnia potest It may alter the nature of Lands make Gavelkind discendable according to the course of the common Law and so of Borough-English Attaint Error Disceit c. are Actions which lye in privity yet by Act of Parliament they may be transferred And in the case of the Lord Norris If the Act of Attainder had given to the Queen all Actions she might have had a Writ of Error And we see by experience That the
of the Conusee it might now be Inrolled It was the Opinion of all the Iustices That upon the request aforesaid it might be Inrolled like as it was of a Conusance of a Fine taken before a Iudge which may be removed out of his hands by a Certiorari although it be not a Record before that it be certified in the speaking of that Case It was made a question whether the Court of Chancery might help a man who purchased Lands for valuable Consideration where there wanted the words Heirs in the Deed of Purchase or not but the point was not resolved But in that Case it was agreed by all the Iustices That after a Fine is levied of Land Chancery Attornment that the Chancery may compel the Tenant of the Land to Attorn And so where an Annuity or Rent is granted to one for life or in Fee and the Deed is Executed Sealed and Delivered but no Seisin is given to the party of the Rent or Annuity the Court of Chancery may decree a Seisin of the Rent to be given and the Rent to be paid to the Grantee and that was said to have been often times decreed in the said Court of Chancery CCLXXXIV Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intrusion Trespass NOte by Anderson Chief Iustice If one intrude upon the Possession of the King and another man entreth upon him that he shall not have an Action of Trespass for that Entry for that he who is to have and maintain Trespass ought to have a Possession But in such Case he hath not a Possession for every Intruder shall answer to the King for his whole time and every Intrusion supposeth the Possession to be in the King which all the other Iustices agreed except Periam who doubted of it And Rhodes Iustice said and vouched 19 E. 4. to be that he cannot in such Case say in an Action of Trespass Quare Clausum suum fregit CCLXXXV Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. NOte It was holden by Popham Chief Iustice Remainder and so said by him to have been resolved upon a Special Verdict in the County of Somerset 20 Eliz. That where a Lease was made unto Husband and Wife for their Lives the remainder to the Heirs of the Survivor of them that the same was a good remainder notwithstanding the incertainty and that in that case after the death of the Wife he should have Iudgment to recover the Land. But if a man be possessed of a term for 20 years in the right of his Wife and he maketh a Lease thereof for 10 rendring rent to him his Executors and Assigns and dyeth that in such case though the Wife surviveth yet he shall not have the rent because that she cometh in paramount the Lease But if a man be possessed of a term in the right of his Wife Mortgage and Mortgageth for payment of a certain Sum of Money at a day certain and before the day the Wife dyeth and the Husband payeth the Money at the day and then dyeth whether his Executors or the Administrators of the Wife should have the term was not then resolved Ideo Quaere that Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCLXXXVI Bartase and Hinds Case NOte Manwood Chief Baron gave it for a general Rule for all Counsellors at Law That they did not advise any Collectors of Subsidies or Fifteens to exhibit Bills in the Exchequer Chamber for the Non-payment of Subsidies c. for such Bills should not be allowed hereafter because they had remedy by Distress Also it was holden That if any be assessed for the Fifteen which he ought to pay or if two Towns are to pay together and the one Town be taxed more than it ought to be or had been accustomed those which are grieved by such Sesment may have a Commission out of the Exchequer which is called Ad aequaliter taxand ' and that was put in ure in a Case between Bartase and Hind where one of them was Lord of the Town of Little Marloe and the other of Hedford And it was also holden That Fifteens are to be levied of Goods and Chattels properly and one Township sometimes is richer than another and therefore it is not reason that they pay their Fifteen always according to the same proportion But by Clark Baron where the Custom hath been that the Fifteen should be taxed according to the quantity of Acres there the Rate and Purport shall be always one whosoever holds the Land and as to the Commission Ad aequaliter taxand ' Manwood and Fanshaw said That they could shew above twenty Presidents of it Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXVII Barnard and Tussers Case Debt BArnard recovered in a Scire Facias upon a Recognizance against Tusser and afterwards brought an Action of Debt upon the same Recovery and it was adjudged maintainable notwithstanding that it was Objected That the Iudgment in such Scire Facias is not to recover Debt but to have Execution of the Iudgment And by Wray Chief Iustice If in a Scire Facias to have Execution of an Annuity the Plaintiff hath Iudgment upon such Iudgment he shall have an Action of Debt Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXVIII The Earl of Arundel and Bradstocks Case THe Case was The Earl of Arundel let Lands to Bradstock for years upon condition that the Lessee should not do any Act by which his Goods and Chattels might be forfeited Bradstock committed Felony and before any Attainder he obtained his Charter of Pardon It was holden in this case That the Earl might lawfully enter but if the words of the Condition had been Whereby the Goods ought to be forfeited chen it had been otherwise for before Attainder they ought not to be forfeited Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXIX Taylors Case Outlawry How avoided by Plea in Person TAylor was Outlawed in Debt and a Supersedeas of Record was delivered to the Sheriff before the awarding of the Exigent It was holden that the party should avoid the same by Plea then it was moved if the Plea should be pleaded by Attorney or in Person To which it was said by Manwood That where matter in fait is pleaded in avoidance of an Outlawry it ought to be pleaded in Person but matter of Record by Attorney And Ford Prothonotary said It was so agreed in Sir Thomas Chamberlains Case in 7 Eliz. and so it was adjudged in this Case CCXC. Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was The Prior of Norwich made a Lease for life by Indenture by which the Lessee covenanted to find Victuals to the Cellerer at all times when the Cellerer came thither to hold Court the Priory was dissolved and the Possessions given to the Dean and Chapter newly erected It was holden in this case That the Lessee should perform that covenant to him who supplyed the Office of Cellerer scil the Steward And
it was also holden That the Lessee should have an Action of Covenant against the Assignee of his Lessor or his Lessee at his Election CCXCI. Mich. 19 20 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A. B. C. three Ioyntenants give their Lands to D. in tail Joyntenants the remainder to A. in tail It was the opinion of Mead That the remainder is void Manwood and Harper A. and B. Ioyntenants Grants A. makes a Lease for life of his Moiety to C. and grants the reversion to B. the same is good quod Curia concessit A. and B. Ioyntenants of a Term A. grants his Moiety to his Companion the same is good without question if it be by Deed but if it be by Word Quaere Hil. 20 Eliz. CCXCII Hills Case HIll 20 Eliz. Rot. 371. Giles Hill seized of a Close of Pasture called Pitmonde and of Broome Acre two other Closes in his Demesne as of Fee and so seized the said Giles and Agatha his Wife and Robert their Son and B. his Wife by Indenture leased the same Broome Acre and the said other two Closes to W. Hutchin and B. and his Wife for 90 years Si quis eorum tam diu vixerit reddendo inde annuatim praedicto Egidio Uxori ejus Haeredibus ipsius Egidij viz. pro Broome Acre 3 s. 4 d. pro una Clausura 10 s. pro altera 20 s. ad quatuor anni Terminos with Clause of Re-entry If any part or parcel of the said rent be behind c. Giles and Agatha dyed The Son sold the reversion of Broome Acre 12 Febr. 12 Eliz. by Deed Indented rendring rent to Smith and Heale the rent of Broome Acree is behind Smith and Heale enter and lease the same to Reynolds for three years who being Ejected brings Ejectione firmae and Iudgment was given for him for that they are several Reservations and several Conditions And a difference was taken between this and Winters Case for in Winters Case the rent reserved originally is entire but in this Case the rent is originally several and also in Winters Case the condition was That if any part of the rent be behind that the Lessor should re-enter into the whole Note that the rent reserved for Broome Acre was 3 s. 4 d. and the condition was si contingat praedict ' reddit ' ou ascun parcel de ceo to be behind in part or in all by one Month after any Feast c. in quo solvi debuit Quod tunc bene licebit praefat ' Egidio c. in omnia singula praemista superius specificat ' re-entrare Et nomine That pro 10 de nariis pro Broome Acre pro uno quarterio anni aretro existent the Vendees of the Reversion did enter CCXCIII Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Leases NOte by Dyer and Manwood Iustices A. leaseth to B. for years the remainder to the right Heirs of the said B. and makes Livery accordingly that the said remainder is void because that there is not any person in esse who can take presently by the Livery and every Livery ought to have its operation presently But where a Lease is made to B. for life the remainder to his right Heirs that he hath a Fee executed and it shall not be in abeyance and Iudgment was given accordingly CCXCIV. Hil. 23 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was a Man made a Lease of a Garden containing three Roods of Land the Lessee is ousted and he brought Ejectione firmae and declared That he was Ejected of three Roods of Land And by Rhodes Serjeant The Declaration shall not be intended that the Plaintiff was Ejected out of the Garden of which the Lease was made which Dyer granted for Gardinum is a thing which ought to be demanded by the same name in all Praecipe's And this Action of Ejectione firmae is higher than an Action of Trespass and the Plaintiff if he recover shall be put into possession by it Mead and Windham held the contrary and they agreed That in all real Actions a Garden shall be demanded by the name of Gardinum But this Action of Ejectione firmae is in the nature of Trespass and it is in the Election of the party to declare as he doth or for to declare of the Ejectment of a Garden For a Garden may at one time be used for a Garden and at another time for Plough-Land But they conceived the better course to be and the better order of pleading to have been if the Plaintiff had declared That he was Ejeected of a Garden containing three Roods of Land as in the Lease it is specified Vide 22 E. 4. 13. Assise of a Garden Vide Cook 11 Part Savells Case Ejectione firmae of a Close vocat ' Leedes containing three Roods a Rule that such Action lyeth not of a Close although it hath a certain name but it ought to be of so many Acres and of what nature every Acre is CCXCV. Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Action of Debt was brought by an Administrator who declared That the Administration was committed unto him by the Archbishop of Canterbury It was holden That in such Case he needed not to declare Ratione Praerogativae suae or that the Intestate had bona notabilia in divers Dicocesses for if the Intestate had not Goods in divers Diocesses the same shall come and be shewed on the other side and then the Plaintiff shall shew the same in certain and to that purpose divers Presidents were shewed to the Court by Sandbege and Best principal Clerks of the Court and the same was also affirmed by the Prothonotaries of the Court of Common Pleas. CCXCVI. Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared upon Trover and Conversion to his use It was pleaded by Plowden That the Defendant before the Action brought had lawfully sold the Goods whereof c. and he demanded Iudgment of the Action As if one hath Goods by Trover and Bails them over before any Action brought against him Detinue doth not lye against him which Wray Chief Iustice concessit as to the Detinue But where such a person who hath Goods by Trover Bails them quibusdam ignotis such an Action will lye against him CCXCVII. Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Writ of Dower the Demandant recovered by default Retorn of the Sheriff and the Sheriff took an Enquest de Officio by which it was found that the Husband did not dye seized prout eis constare poterit and that Inquisition is retorned by the Sheriff and filed It was moved by Mead That the Office and Inquisition was not good for the Office ought to have expresly found That the Husband dyed seized or not and not ambiguously as it doth here prout eis constare poterit and therefore by the Award of the Court the Retorn was taken off the File because it was insufficient
Dyer that these Remainders were void for the term is determinable upon the death of William Cecill the Father and the residue of the said term cannot remain And by the Lord Anderson the Remainders of the term limited ut supra are utterly void for every Remainder ought to be certain but here is no certainty for it may be that the first possessioner of the term may live longer so as he in the Remainder cannot know what he shall have And such was also the Opinion of Rhodes And he put the Case between Gravenor and Parker 3 4 Phil. Ma. Dyer 150. A Lease was made to A. for life by Indenture Et provisum fuit by the same Indenture That if the Lessee dyed within the term of sixty years then next ensuing that then his Executors should have in right of the Lessee so many of the years as should amount to the number of sixty years to be accounted from the date of the Indenture and it was holden That that secondary Interest to the Executors was void and that the words concerning the same did sound in Covenant CCCIV. Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was A made B. and C. his Executors Executors Action they took upon them the charge of the Administration and afterwards B. dyed and now an Action of Debt was brought against the surviving Executor and the Executor of the other Executor and the Writ was abated because against the surviving Executor it ought only to be brought Pasc 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCV Smith and Babbs Case SMith brough an Action upon the Case against Babb for stopping of Water incessanter decurrent by his Land Action upon the Case Stopping of Water by which his Land was drowned and his Grass rotted Exception was taken to it because it is not alledged That the Water had so run time out of mind Gawdy Iustice If the Water hath run there but for one year if the Defendant hath diverted it so as he hath drowned the Plaintiffs Land the Action will lye well enough Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVI Basil Johnsons Case BAsil Johnson one of the Clerks of the Chancery Priviledge of a Clerk in Court. was impleaded in the Common Pleas by Bill of Priviledge by an Attorney of the said Court and now Basil came into Court and shewed that he is one of the Clerks ut supra and prayed his Priviledge but the whole Court was against it because the Plaintiff is as well priviledged in this Court as the Defendant is in the Chancery and was first interessed in his Priviledge by the bringing of his Writ but the Defendant was not entituled to his Priviledge before the Arrest and afterwards by the award of the Court the said Basil was ousted of his Priviledge 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVII Collier and Colliers Case Prohibition BEtween Collier and Collier the Case was That the Plaintiff was Sued for Incontinence in the Spiritual Court and there they would have him Answer upon his Oath if he ever had Carnall Knowledge of such a Woman upon which he prayed a Prohibition Vide inde F. N. B. 41. a. Register 36. Et nemo tenetur seipsum prodere But the Court would advise of it 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVIII Mountney and Andrews Case Execution IN a Scire Facias by Mountney against Andrews of Grays-Inn upon a Iudgment in Debt the Defendant pleaded That heretofore a Fieri Facias at the Suit of the now Plaintiff issued to the Sheriff of Leicester by force of which the said Sheriff took divers Sheep of the Defendants and that as yet he doth detain and keep them It was holden by the whole Court to be a good Plea although he did not say That the Writ was retorned for the Execution is lawful notwithstanding that and the Plaintiff hath his remedy against the Sheriff Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCIX Dawbney and Gores Case BEtween Dawbney Plaintiff and Gore and Gon Defendants in a Writ of Disceit In Arrest of Iudgment it was moved That two are accountable to one and the one of them accounts without the other that that is not any account and then no account can be assigned in that As to that it was said by Popham Attorney-General That notwithstanding that one be not compellable to account without his Companion and by way of Action of Account the one shall not account without the other unless the Process be determined against him and then he who appeareth hath accounted and the other against whom the Process is determined hath purchased his Charter of Pardon the account made by his Companion shall bind him Vide inde 41 E. 3. 13. Yet if one of the Accomptants will account willingly the same is a good account And in account if one confesseth and the other pleadeth in bar the confession of the one shall bind the other and such was the Opinion of the Court. Another matter was moved in this case because that one Tedcastell and Swinnerton being accountable to the said Gores and Dawbney they have accounted to Dawbney only and he alone hath accepted of the account and that is not any account therefore no desceit but the Action of Account doth remain To which it was answered by Popham That the same was a good account being accepted by Dawbney and should bind the Gores for an Account is a personal thing as an Obligation which may be released by one of the Obligees Vide 14 E. 4. 2. Where one was accountable to two and the one of them did assign Auditors before whom the Accountant is found in Arrearages and thereupon both of them brought Debt upon Account and well And so none of the Exceptions were allowed by the Court. Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCX Trivilians Case THo Trivilian Tenant in tail of White Acre Black Acre and Green Acre leased White Acre for years to B. and Black Acre to C. and afterwards made a Feoffment of all three Acres to F. and others by Deed in which Deed was comprised a Letter of Attorney in which he ordained Harris and three others his Attorneys joyntly and severally to enter in the Premises and every part thereof in the name of the whole and possession in his name to receive and afterwards to make Livery c with other ordinary and usual words and it was expressed in the said Deed of Feoffment that the Feoffment should be to the intent to perform his last Will and afterwards one of the said Attorneys entred into the Land demised for life and expelled the Tenant for life and made Livery and Seisin to the Feoffees accordingly and afterwards the said Harris another of the Attorneys scil one of the Ioynt Lessees being one of the three Attorneys made Livery of the Land demised for years and after the Feoffor in the time of Queen Eliz. by his last Will devised That the Feoffees should be seized of the
Land Rents and Reversion until of the Issues and Profits thereof certain Sums of Mony should be paid to his younger Sons and dyed And Exception was taken to the pleading because it is not specially shewn that the Land devised was holden in Socage And that was holden a sufficient Exception And the Court was of Opinion That the Opinion of Dyer Devises Whiddon and Bendloes in 16 Eliz. was not Law for by the common Law no Land was devisable but by Custom which ought to be pleaded where Title is made by Devise Tenances And now by the Statute all Lands holden in Socage are devisable and but two parts of the Land holden by Knight Service and therefore he who would make Title to himself by a Devise ought to shew the Tenure of it and so it was lately adjudged in the Kings Bench in Thompsons Case And by Anderson and Periam This Feoffment was well executed for the manner of it Attorneys make Livery for the Letter of Attorney is Conjunctim divisim ad intrandum in omnia singula praemissa and upon these words one Attorney may make Livery in one parcel of the Land and the other Attorney in the other parcel and in this case if one of the said Attorneys make Livery in one part only without medling with the residue by himself or by any other the same shall pass for it is not necessary that all pass or nothing at all 7 Eliz. Dyer 79. CCCXI. The Dutchess of Suffolks Case ADrian Stokes and the Lady Francisca Dutchess of Suffolk his Wife brought a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Exeter and others The Bishop pleaded and demanded Iudgment of the Writ because he said It appeareth by the Writ Quod praedicta Francisca uxor praefati Adriani nominatur in dicto Brevi Domina Francisca Ducissa Suffolk ubi per Legem terrae eadem Francisca by her Marriage betwixt the aforesaid Adrian and her the said Frances had lost her name of Dignity and ought to be named Francisca uxor praefati Adriani Wherefore and because the said Frances is named Lady Dutchess of Suffolk in the said Writ therefore he demanded Iudgment of the Writ And afterwards the Plaintiffs did discontinue their Suit and durst not proceed Vide the Case 7 E. 6. Dyer 79. Mich. 4 5 Phil. Mary CCCXII The Queen Due and Kirbys Case THe King and Queen brought a Writ of Disceit against Due and Kirby and declared That Colley was seized of certain Lands in Fee and holden of the King and Queen as of their Manor of Westbury which Manor is ancient Demesne and so seized levied a Fine to the said Due for Conusans de droit c. Due rendred unto Colley for life the Remainder over to Kirby in Fee Colley dyed Kirby entred as in his Remainder Kirby pleaded That the Land is Frank-fee c. upon which they are at Issue which Issue depending not tryed Due dyed It was moved that the Writ should abate But it was allowed for this Action is but Trespass in its Nature for to punish the said Disceit And Due had nothing in the Land but is named only because he was party to the Disceit And no Land is to be recovered but only the Fine reversed Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXIII. Russels Case RUssel was condemned in an Action of Debt Execution and after the year and day the Plaintiff sued a Capias ad satisfaciend ' against him and he was taken by force of it and committed to the Marshal as in Execution It was holden by the Court That the same was a void Execution and not only avoidable by Error and therefore the Defendant was discharged for it is not at any Execution and the Plaintiff may have a Scire Facias when he will. Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXIV Wroth and Capells Case BEtween Wroth and Capell the Case was 3 Leon. 102. That A. was indicted upon the Statute of 8. H. 6. and Exception was taken to the Indictment because there were no words of Freehold in it or to prove that the party grieved had any Freehold whereof he might be disseised But because the words of the Indictment were Expulit disseisivit which could not be true if the party expelled and disseised had not Freehold therefore the Exception was not allowed c. Another Exception was taken to the Indictment for that the words were in unum Tenementum intravit and this word Tenementum is too general and an incertain word and therefore for that cause the party was discharged But the Indictment was further in unum Tenementum 10 Acras terrae eidem pertinent and as to those Acres he was put to answer CCCXV. Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Execution NOte It was agreed by the Court and affirmed by the Clarks That if an Action of Debt be brought upon an Obligation against two upon one Ioynt Praecipe and the Plaintiff hath Iudgment to recover that one Ioynt Execution ought to be sued against them both but if the Suit were by Original and several Praecipe's Execution might be sued forth against any of them Mich. 8 9 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCXVI. Belfield and Rous's Case IN Dower by Sibill Belfield who was the Wife of Anthony Rous against Thomas Rous they were at Issue upon Detinue of Charters and it was found for the Demandant and it was further found That the Husband of the Demandant of whose Seisin she demanded Dower dyed having Issue Charles Rous Quodque idem Carolus dict' Sibill perceperunt receperunt per spacium sex annorum proxime post mortem dict' Anthonij the Issues and Profits of the said Lands whereof the Demandant now demands Dower and that the said Charles afterwards dyed without Issue after whose death the said Thomas Rous entred c. And Iudgment was given for the Demandant and to recover damages after the death of her Husband CCCXVII Pasc 7 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Uses BEfore the Statute of Vses a Feoffment is made to the use of a Man sole and a Woman sole and their Heirs and afterwards they inter-marry and afterwards the Statute of Vses came It was the Opinion of the Iustices That they should hold the Land in such sort as they held the Vse scil by several and divided Moieties for by the said Statute the possession shall be executed to the Vse in such Nature Condition and Quality as it was before Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXVIII Sir Gervaise Clyftons Case A Quo Warranto was brought against Sir Gervaise Clyfton 3 Leon. 184. Quo Warranto and shewed That the said Sir Gervaise was seized of a Manor and a Messuage within which he claimed to have a Court with view of Frank-pledge and other Liberties and that without any Grant or Authority usurpavit Libertates praedictas That the Defendant pleaded Quod non usurpavit Libertates praedictas
Bayliff of his Lord could not do better than admonish the said Bayliff of his duty for it concerned the Honour of his Master and also his Inheritance in the said Liberty But if the said Townsend had been a meer stranger to the said Earl so as no such privity had been betwixt them the same had been clearly Maintenance in Townsend as it was lately adjudged in that Court in the case of one Gifford where the parties being at Issue and a Venire Facias to the Sheriff to retorn a Iury a stranger wrote to one of the Iurors who was retorned in the Pannel praying him to appear at the day and to do in that cause according to his Conscience and the same was adjudged Maintenance And afterwards upon full hearing of the cause the said Townsend by the Sentence of the Court was acquitted of any Maintenance with great allowance and approbation of many Lords of the Counsel there present Bromley Cancellario tantum exclamante CCCXXVII Mich. 15 16 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Writ of Partition the Defendant prayed in Aid the Plaintiff counterpleaded the Aid upon which Issue was joyned and found for the Plaintiff It was the Opinion of the Court That it was peremptory for the Defendant And the Plaintiff shall have the Partition scil Quod fiat Partitio and the reason thereof is for the delay of the Plaintiff and for the vexation of the Country who are to try it otherwise it had been if it had been adjudged against the Defendant upon a Demurrer CCCXXVIII Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN a Formedon of a Manor the Tenant pleaded Ioynt-tenancy by Fine with J. S. The Demandant averred the Tenant sole Tenant as the Writ supposed and upon that Issue was joyned and found for the demandant Vpon which a Writ of Error was brought and Error assigned in this That whereas upon Ioyntenancy pleaded by Fine the Writ ought to abate without any Averment by the Demandant against it the Averment hath been received against the Law And by Southcote at the common Law If the Tenant plead Ioyntenancy by Deed the Writ should abate without any Averment but that was remedied by the Statute of 34 E. 1. but Ioyntenancy by Fine doth remain as it was by the common Law for he hath punishment enough in that because by that Plea if it be false he hath by way of conclusion given away the Moiety of the Land in demand to him with whom he hath pleaded Ioyntenancy and the Law doth not intend that he will so slightly depart with his Land for the abatement of a Writ Else in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant confesseth himself to be Villain to a Stranger the Writ shall abate without any Averment of Frank-estate for the Law intends that the Tenant will not enthrawl himself without cause Wray to the same intent But the Demandant may confess and avoid the Fine as to say That he who levied the Fine was his Disseisor upon whom he hath before entred c. And if Tenant in Fee-simple be impleaded and he saith he is Tenant for life the Remainder over to A. in Fee and prayeth in Aid of A. the Demandant shall not take Averment That the Tenant the day of the Writ brought was seized in Fee. Note That in this Fine Ioyntenancy was pleaded but for parcel and it was holden by ●ray and Southcote That the whole Writ should abate as in a Writ against many the misnosmer of the one shall abate the whole Writ against all the Defendants and so where the Demandant enters into parcel of the Land in demand if the Land in demand be one entire thing it shall abate the Writ in all In this Case the Demandant ought to have in his Writ a Foreprise of the Land parcel of the Land in demand whereof the Ioynt-tenancy by Fine is pleaded for this dismembring of the Manor and destruction of the Land whereof the Ioyntenancy is pleaded is peravail and beneath the Gift whereof the Formedon is conceived and therefore in respect of the title of the Demandant it remains in right parcel of the Manor and therefore it ought to be demanded accordingly with a Foreprise But if A. gives to B a Manor except 13 Acres in Tail there if after upon any Discontinuance the Issue in Tail is to have a Formedon in such Case there needs not any Foreprise for the said 10 Acres were never severed from the Manor upon the Gift But if Land in demand be several as 20 Acres but two this Foreprise is not good Vide Temps E. 1. Fitz. Br. 866. Praecipe unam bovat ' terrae except a Selion and the Writ was abated for every demand ought to be certain but a Selion is a parcel of Land uncertain as to the quantity in some places it is an Acre in some more and in some less Another point was That because that the Tenant hath admitted and accepted this Averment scil Sole Tenant as the Writ supposeth if the Court notwithstanding the admittance of the Tenant ought without exception of the party ex Officio abate the Writ And Wray conceived that it might for it is a possitive Law As if a Woman bring an Appeal of Murder upon the death of her Brother and the Defendant doth admit it without Challenge or Exception yet the Court shall abate the Appeal 10 E. 4. 7. And Vide the principal Case there Non ideo puniatur Dominus And if an Action be brought against an Hostler upon the common Custom of the Realm and in the Writ he is not named Common Hostler and the Defendant doth accept of such a Writ without any Exception unto it yet the Court shall abate the Writ ex Officio Vide 38 H. 6. 30. CCCXXIX Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. NOte this Case A. makes a Feoffment in Fee to B. and binds himself only to warranty without more B. is impleaded and voucheth A. who enters into the Warranty and loseth so as Iudgment is given against B. and also to recover in value against A. who before Execution dyeth It was the opinion of the Court that B. should have Execution in value against the Heir of A. CCCXXX Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A. Seized of Lands in the right of his Wife for the term of the life of the Wife made a Feoffment in Fee to the use of his said Wife for her life In that case the wife is remitted and it is not like Townsends Case Plowd Com. 111. for in that case the Entry of the Wife was not congeable for she was Tenant in tail which Estate was discontinued by the Feoffment of her Husband Periam Iustice cited Si●enhams case Baron seized in the right of his Wife for the term of the life of the Wife They both surrendred and took back the Land to them and a third person And it was holden that the Wife was not presently remitted but after the death of her Husband
she might disagree CCCXXXI Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A. B. and C. three Brothers A. hath issue and dyeth the middle Brother Purchaseth Land and deviseth the same to his Son in Tail and if he die without Issue that the Land shall remain to the King and Lineage of the Father sc of the middle Brother and if the Son of the eldest Son or the youngest Brother should have the Land was the Question and it was the opinion of the Lord Dyer That the Son of the eldest Brother should have it CCCXXXII Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Lease for life was made to B the Remainder to C. and D. in Tail It was holden that in this case C. and D. cannot disagree to that Remainder without matter of Record for they are Tenants in Common but if the Remainder had been limited to them in Fee so as they took joyntly it had been otherwise for then by the disagreement of the one the other shall take the whole Land. Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXXXIII Waite and Coopers Case IN Ejectione firmae between Waite and Cooper It was found by Verdict That Cranmer late Archbishop of Canterbury was seized of the Manor and Borough of Southwark in the right of his Bishoprick and that the Prior of Morton was seized of the House in which the Ejectment is supposed and held the same of the said Archbishop as of his said Manor and Borough after which 30 H. 8. the said Archbishop gave to the King the said Manor and Borough with confirmation of the Dean and Chapter and that the same year the said Prior surrendred by which the said King was seized as well of the said Manor and Borough as of the said House and afterwards the King by his Letters Patents gave the said House and other Lands in Middlesex and Essex to Curson and Pope in Fee tenend in Libero Burgagio per fidelitatem tantum non in Capite pro omnibus serviciis demandis And afterwards King Edw. 6. gave the said Manor and Borough to the Mayor and Commonalty of London Curson and Pope covey the said House to Welsh in Fee who dyed without Heir All the Question was What Tenure is here reserved upon the Words and Grant made by King Hen. 8. to Curson and Pope It was said It could not be a Tenure in Burgage because here is not any Rent reserved which see by Littleton 162 163 164. And the Lord Anderson at the first very strongly insisted upon that Another matter was because here is reserved for all the Lands and Tenements but one Tenure so that if the Court should adjudge the Tenure reserved to be Burgage then Lands at the Common Law out of Boroughs should be holden in Burgage Also a Tenure in Burgage cannot be created without these words ut de Burgagio And to that purpose Shute Iustice agreed Vide Br. Tenures 94. Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXXXIV Fullers Case NOte It is holden by the whole Court in Fullers case That if one give 300 l. to another to have an Annuity of 50 l. assured to him for 100 years if he his Wife and four of his Children so long shall live That this is not within the Statute of Vsury So if there had not been any Condition but care is to be taken that there be no Communication of borrowing of any Money before Trin. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXXXV Goore and Winkfields Case 3 Leon. 223. DEbt upon an Obligation by Goore against Winkfield the Obligation was written in this Form Know all by these Presents That I H. Winkfield am bound to William Goore in the Sum of c. for the payment of which Sum I give full power and authority to the said Goore to keep the said Sum upon the Profits of the Bayliwick of Swinstall from year to year until the same be paid To which the Defendant pleaded That the Plaintiff had levied parcel of the said Sum c. and did not shew how much and therefore the pleading was holden not good And it was clearly agreed by the whole Court That the Plaintiff was at Liberty either to bring his Action upon the said Obligation or to levy the Debt according to the Clause aforesaid Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXXXVI Powley and Siers Case POwley brought Debt against Sier Executor of the Will of one A. The Defendant demanded Iudgment of the Writ For he said That one B. was Executor of the said A. and that the said B. constituted the said Defendant his Executor so as the Writ ought to have been brought against the Defendant as Executor of an Executor and not as immediate Executor of the said A. The Plaintiff replyed That the said B. before any probate of the Will or any Administration dyed and so maintained his Writ upon which the Defendant demurred Wray was for the Writ for although here be not any Probate of the Will of A. or any other Administration yet when B. makes his Will and the Defendant his Executor it is an acceptation in Law of the Administration and Execution of the first Will. Gawdy and Ayliff Iustices that the Writ was not good Vide 23 Eliz. Dyer 372. Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCXXXVII Taylors Case TAylor was Outlawed in Debt where a Supersedeas upon Record was delivered to the Sheriff before the award of the Exigent It was holden that the Party should avoid the same by Plea Then it was moved If the Plea should be pleaded by Attorney or in Person To which it was said by the Iustices That where matter in fact is pleaded in avoiding of an Outlawry he ought to plead it in Person but matter of Record by Attorney And so Ford Prothonotary said it was agreed in the Case of Sir Thomas Chamberlain 7 Eliz. and so it ought to be in the principal Case here CCCXXXVIII Mich. 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. NOte It was agreed for Law in the Kings Bench if Lessee for years grant all his Estate and Interest to A rendring rent by Indenture and for default of payment a re-entry And the Grantor demandeth the rent and A. demands an Acquittance but the Lessee for years refuseth in such case A. may refuse to pay such rent for the rent is to be paid in this nature without an Acquittance but contrary if Lessee for years had leased parcel of his Estate rendring Rent with Clause of Re-entry c. CCCXXXIX Mich. 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe King seized of a Manor to which an Advowson is appendant a Stranger presented and his Clerk in by 6 Months It was holden that in such case the Grantee may present for the Advowson was always appendant and the Inheritance thereof passed to the Grantee for it was not made disappendant by the usurpation as in the case of a common person for the King cannot be put out of possession But the Patentee shall not have Quare Impedit
Tenants and therefore ought not to joyn c. It was Adjourned Temps Roign Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCLVII The President of Corpus Christi Colledge Case NOte It was holden by Cholmley Serjeant Plowden and many others in the Case of the President of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford That if the said Master or President of any such Colledge by his Will deviseth any Land to his Colledge and dyeth such Devise is void For at the time when the Devise should take effect the Colledge is without a Head and so not capable of such Devise for it was then an imperfect Body And so it was holden by the Iustices upon good advice taken thereof CCCLVIII Temps Roign Eliz In the Kings Bench. IN a Warrantia Chartae the Defendant said that the Plaintiff had not any thing in parcel of the Land the day of the Writ brought If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant aliens and afterwards vouches the Vouchee is not bound to enter into the Warranty But here in this Case it may be That at the time that the Plaintiff requested the Defendant to warrant he was Tenant of the Land in which Case the warranty is attached and then if ever the Land be recovered against him he shall have this Writ and of this Opinion was Brown Iustice For the Land which the Defendant had at the time of the request is bound by the request but if he alieneth after the request he shall not have the Warranty CCCLIX Mich. 9 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A Man seized of a Manor in which there are divers Copy-holds and the Custom there is That if any Copyholder leaseth his Land above the term of one year that he shall forfeit his Copyhold A Copyholder committed such a Forfeiture and afterwards the Lord leased the Manor for years and the Lessee entred for the Forfeiture and Weston said that his Entry was not lawful for although that the Heir may enter for a Condition broken in the time of his Ancestor because he is privy in blood yet the Lessee or Feoffee cannot do so for he is a Stranger such a one of whom an Estranger shall not take advantage Dyer If this forfeiture be preserved by Homage and enrolled in the Court Rolls the Lessee may well afterwards enter for by the forfeiture the Copyhold Estate is void and determined as if a Leafe for years be made rendring Rent upon Condition to cease if the Rent be not paid here presently by the not payment the Interest of the term is determined and of that the Grantee of the Reversion shall have advantage CCCLX Mich. 10 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Action upon the Case was brought for stopping of a way The Plaintiff declared that the Duke of Suffolk was seized of a House in D. and let the same to the Plaintiff for life and that the said Duke and all those whose Estate c. have used time out of mind c. to have a way over the Land of the Defendant to the Park of D. to carry and recarry Wood necessary for the said House from the said Park to the same House and further declared That the Defendant Obstupavit the way It was moved by Carus That upon that matter no Action upon the Case lay because the Freehold of the House is in the Plaintiff and also the Freehold of the Land over which c. is in the Defendant But if the Plaintiff or the Defendant had but an Estate for years then an Action upon the Case would lye and not an Assize and it is not material If the Plaintiff had but an Estate for years in the Park quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam It was also holden That this word Obstupavit is sufficient without any more without shewing any special matter of the stopping as the erecting of any Gate Hedge Ditch c. for Obstupavit implyes a Nusance continued and not a personal disturbance as forestalling or saying to the Plaintiff upon the Land where c. that he should not go over or use the said way for in such case upon such a disturbance an Action upon the Case lyeth But as to a local and real disturbance the word Obstupavit amounts to Obstruxit and although in the Declaration is set down the day and year of the stopping yet it shall not be intended that it continued but the same day for the words of the Declaration are further By which he was disturbed of his way and yet is and so the continuance of the disturbance is alledged and of that Opinion was the whole Court. Leonard Prothonotary He hath declared of a Prescription habere viam tam pedestrem quam equestrem pro omnibus omnimodis Carriagiis and upon that Prescription he cannot have a Cart-way for every Prescription est stricti juris Dyer That is well observed and I confess that the Law is so and therefore it is good to prescribe habere viam pro omnibus Carriagiis without speaking either of a Horse or a Foot-way CCCLXI. A. Enfeoffed B. to the intent that B. should convey the said Land to such person as A. should sell it A. sold it to C. to whom B. refused to convey the Land and thereupon he brought an Action upon the Case against B. And by Wray Chief Iustice and Gawdy Iustice here is a good consideration for here is a trust and that which is a good consideration in the Chancery is in this case sufficient Shute Iustice was of a contrary Opinion And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXII Sir Richard Lewknors Case SIr Richard Lewknor seized of Wallingford Park Ante 162. made a lease thereof for years and dyed the Lessee granted over his term to another excepting the Wood the term expired and an Action of Waste was brought against the second Lessee by the Coparceners and the Husband of the third Coparcener being Tenant by the Courtesie Shuttlewood and Snag Serjeants did argue That the Action would not lye in the form it was brought and the first Exception which was taken by them was because the Action was general viz. Quod fecit vastum in terris quas Sir Roger Lewknor pater praedict ' of the Plaintiff cujus haeredes ipsae sunt praefat ' Defendent demisit And the Count was that the Reversion was entailed by Parliament unto the Heirs of the Body of Sir Richard Lewknor and so they conceived that the Writ ought to have been special cujus haeredes de Corpore ipsae sunt For they said that although there is not any such Writ in the Register yet in novo Casu novum est apponendum remedium And therefore they compared the Case to the Case in Fitz. N. B. 57. viz. If Land be given to Husband and Wife and to the Heirs of the Body of the Wife and the Wife hath Issue and dyeth and the Husband committeth waste the Writ in that case and the like
that the Son for a Fine of three years paid should have the Land for his life Hutton said That the Traverse was good for if there was not any such Custom that the Son should have it so for life then ex consequente sequitur that there is not any such Custom that the Son should have it after the death of the Wife or her Surrender and therefore he needed not to Traverse the last Custom alledged But the whole Court was against him and ruled That the Traverse was not good for he ought to have traversed the last Custom because there are several Customs and the one is immediately to him the other not and the Defendant claimed by the Second Custom and therefore the Court awarded That he should amend his Plea. Pasc 12 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCCVII Sir Henry Rolls and Osborns Case Hob. Rep. 20. More Rep. 859 2 Brownl 169. SIr Henry Rolls brought a Writ of Warrantia Chartae against Sir Robert Osborn and Katharine his Wife and shewed That the Defendant ought to warrant him a Messuage 40 Acres of Land 700 Acres of Pasture in Kelmarsh and shewed That Sir Robert Osborn and his Wife levied a Fine to him and his Heirs of a Manor and of the Lands aforesaid with warranty to him and his Heirs and further shewed That a Writ of Entre sur disseisin was brought against him of the said Messuage 40 Acres of Land 700 Acres of Pasture and that he had demanded the Warranty of the Defendant or that he would minister to him a Plea which the Defendant hath refused to do to his damage of 1000 l. the Defendant confessed the Fine and Warranty as aforesaid but further pleaded That in the same Term that the Fine was levied a Writ of Entry was brought against Sir Henry Rolls in which Writ he vouched to Warranty the said Defendant who alone entred into the Warranty and vouched over the common Vouchee and so a Recovery was had accordingly And averred That the said Recovery was to the use of Sir Henry Rolls for his life and if there was a Marriage between him and A. S. within 4 years then to the use of the said A. S. for her Ioynture with divers remainders over and averred the life of Sir H. Rolls Vpon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law. Shirley Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff That the Warranty was not destroyed but that the Plaintiff might well mantain his Warrantia Chartae and for the same he vouched 22 H. 6.22 Cliffords Case That there ought to be an alteration of the Estate to which the Warranty is annexed and here is no alteration of the Estate for although the Recovery was had the said Term and a Voucher upon it yet because the uses did not take effect presently but were contingent uses he remained Tenant in Fee-simple as he was before and so the first Warranty remained and was not destroyed Mountague Serjeant contrary and that the Warrantia Chartae was gone and that for four Causes 1. He who comes to an Estate in the Post shall not have a Warrantia Chartae but Sir Hen. Rolls cometh to the Estate in the Post ergo he shall not have Warrantia Chartae And for that vide 29 Ass 34. Lord by Escheat shall not have Warrantia Chartae 22 Ass 57. The Lord of a Villain shall not have a Warrantia Chartae 21 H. 6. Disseisor shall not have Warrantia Chartae and so 19 H 6.25 10 H. 7.10 Tenant by the Courtesie shall not have the Writ because all these come to the Lands in the Post But see Cook 3. part Lincoln Colledge Case they may have peradventure benefit of a Rent or of a Condition but not of a Warranty 27 E. 3. garr ' Statham acc ' 2. Every Warranty ought to have the same Estate continuing to which the Warranty is annexed but Sir Hen. Rolls had not the same Estate continuing ergo he shall not have the Warranty because the Fine was to him and his Heirs with Warranty but this Recovery which was but a further assurance was but to the use of himself for life with divers Remainders over so as the first Estate is altered And 42 E. 3.2 40 E. 3. 14. it is a good Plea in a Warrantia Chartae that the Demandant is not Tenant And 41 Eliz. in Bointon Chesters Case it was adjudged in this Court That if a man makes a Feoffment with Warranty who enfeoffs the first Feoffor upon Condition that that Warranty remains he shall vouch by reason of the first Warranty but if upon that Feoffment he had limited any new use there because the Estate was altered the Voucher was gone Vide F. N. B. 135. 19 E. 3. T. Voucher 12.2 48 E. 3. 18. acc ' And it was Resolved 34 Eliz in Banco Regis in Kempe Henninghams Case That in such Case he should not have several Warrantia Charta's And therefore because in the principal Case he hath once vouched upon this Recovery and upon that the Estate is altered he cannot now have Warrantia Chartae 3. Every Warranty is a Covenant real which consists in privity and therefore destroy the privity and the warranty is gone But now in this Case the first privity is destroyed therefore the warranty is gone And therefore 11 H. 4. 8. if two Ioyntenants be with warranty and one of them maketh a Feoffment in Fee the warranty is destroyed because the first privity is destroyed 21 H. 6. 51. acc ' But Vide 19 E. 3. Statham Garr ' 31. If two Ioyntenants are with warranty and the one Releases to the Feoffor there the warranty remains because the privity remains Vide 2 H. 6. 7. Cook 1 Part Chudleighs Case 125. acc ' And see M. 31 Eliz. in this Court King and Watts Case Land is given to Husband and Wife and to the Heirs of the Body of the Husband and Wife the Husband levies a Fine and dyes without Issue the Wife is impleaded and adjudged that she could not have Aid nor Warrantia Chartae because the Estate was bound by the Fine the Husband being Tenant in special Tail. 4. No warranty can have but one recompence and if there be recompence given the warranty is gone and extinct But here is a recompence made by the Voucher in this Recovery therefore the warranty is extinct 34 Ass pl. 15. 23 E. 3. garr ' 77. acc ' and 15 E. 4. 13. 12 E. 4. 12. If he will not take advantage of the warranty when he may he shall never have it after Vide F. N. B. 134. acc ' And 36 Eliz. it was adjudged in Owens Case That if Tenant in Tail bargains and sells his Lands and suffers a Recovery and afterwards Inrolls the Deed that that Recovery is a good bar to the Estate tail because there is a supposition of recompence and so he prayed Iudgment for the Defendants It was adjourned Vide this Case now Resolved in the Lord Hoberts Reports
A TABLE OF THE Principal Matters Contained in this BOOK Abatement of a Writ IN Account the Writ abated for part and for part the Plaintiff had Judgment 39 In Action upon the Case and why 55 Account Of the King against a Stranger 32 Actio personalis moritur cum persona Trover is an Action personal for it is grounded upon a personal wrong and ariseth upon a disceit and wrong and if there was no Conversion then an Action of Detinue should lye 44 Where one takes my Horse and dyes I shall not charge his Executor 46 If a Smith pricks my Horse my Executors shall not have an Action for it ibid. Action upon the Case Assumpsit Where it is requisite for the party in an Action upon the Case to express the Assumpsit with the Request and where not 2 If one promise in consideration c. to assign to J. S. the Lease of a Stranger for this an Action will lye Adjudged 2 If A. Prisoner at the Suit of B. escapes and being at liberty promiseth to B. that if he will permit him to be at large c. that he will pay to him 10 l. for this no Action will lye Adj. 3 A Promise against a Promise will maintain an Action upon the Case ibid. By an Executor to a Creditor upon forbearance to pay his Debt makes him lyable to pay it of his own Goods Adj. 1. ibid. Will lye against the Executors of A. upon his Promise at full Age to save one harmless who was bound with him for his Debt when he was an Infant 5 Will not lye against an Executor if he promises to pay a Debt and hath not Assets ibid. Nor is an Heir subject to an Action upon such a promise if he hath nothing by Descent 6 An intire Assumpsit cannot be severed by Action ibid. To avoid Controversies and Suits is a good and sufficient Consideration to ground an Assumpsit upon 31 The Defendant exhibited a Bill to the Justices of Peace complaining that the Plaintiff is a disquieter of his Neighbours c. and served a Process upon J. S. on a Sunday and the Justices to whom it was exhibited awarded Process against the Plaintiff to find Suerties for his good Behaviour by virtue of which he was taken and imprisoned For this an Action of the Case will not lye 35 Action upon the Case for Words What words are actionable and what not 24 54 121 181 Action upon the Statute Upon 5 Eliz. of Apprentices holden clearly That if one hath been an Apprentice for seven years at any Trade mentioned within that Statute he may exercise any Trade named in the said Statute although he hath not been an Apprentice to it 9 Action upon the Statute of Hue and Cry. 18 Upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Perjury 25 Upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Usury 43 Upon the Statute of Hue and Cry 51 Upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. of Recusancy 54 Upon the Statute 4 Eliz. of Perjury 105 Upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. of Leases made by Bishops 61 Upon the Statute of Hue and Cry 85 Upon the Statute 5 E. 6. for buying of Woolls 103 Upon the Statute of 31 H. 8. of Partition 106 Upon the Statute of Hue and Cry 191 Alien Purchaser 82. suffers a Common Recovery 84 Amendment If a Writ of Error be brought and delivered to the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and allowed by him under his hand the Record cannot afterwards be amended 50 Day given by the Court to amend the Count in Disceit 123 Of a Writ of Quare Impedit openly in Court by a Clerk of the Chancery 12 Amercement Of the Sheriff for making a Retorn contrary and repugnant in it self 57 Appeal If Robbery may be brought 20 years after the Robbery committed and the party robbed shall not be bound to bring it within a year and a day 16 If the Defendant be attainted by Verdict in an Appeal of Robbery the fresh Suit shall be inquired of but otherwise if he be attainted by Outlary 48 Assignment Of Debts to the King. 80 No Bonds shall be assigned to the Queen but such as are made for payment of Mony. 9 Attaint Where the King is sole party against the Subject and the Jury find for the King no Attaint lyeth 46 But where the Suit is tam pro Domino Rege quam pro seipso contrary ibid. Attornment What shall be a good Attornment what not 23 Surrender of a Copyhold Reversion with the Rent to the use of a Stranger and his admittance thereupon are in the nature and so amount to an Attornment 25 If A. seized of a Manor Lease the same for years rendring Rent with Clause of Re-entry and afterwards levy a Fine sur Cognizance de droit c. to the use of himself and his Heirs and the Rent being demanded is behind he cannot re-enter nor avow for the Rent but is without remedy for the same without Attornment 34 If A. seized of a Rent in fee grants the same by Fine to B. to the use of C. there needs no Attornment to the Conusee because all the right of the Rent is out of the Conusor and transferred to Cestuy que use instantly 50 Attornment doth not give a right but is only a consent 129 Bargain and Sale. IF the Bargainee levies a Fine and within six months the Deed be inrolled the Land shall pass by the Fine 4 Bayl. If a Scire Facias issue against them before a Capias issue against the Principal and they be taken they shall be put to their Writ of Error 36 Bills The King may exhibit one Bill in the Exchequer for several causes arising within several Counties and it shall be good 26 Carrier SEnt with a Letter by one to a Merchant for Merchandizes to send them to him receiving a sum of Mony the Merchant sent them by the Carrier without mony the Buyer shall not be charged for the mony the Bargain being conditional and it was the Merchants folly to trust the Carrier with those Wares 7 Chancery May compell a Tenant to Attorn 8. 184. Common and Commoner A Commoner cannot kill Conies which destroy his Common 7 In what Case Common appurtenant by Prescription sans number is improveable by the Lord of the Waste 41 Condition Broken by Lessee for years 5 Destroyed in part good in part 27 Divided ibid. Grantee of parcel of the Reversion is an Assignee within 32 H. 8. of Conditions 28 Apportioned ibid. Suspended ibid. Conditions by Act in Law divided not by Act of the Party ibid. Statute of 32 H. 8. of Conditions taken by Equity 29 Condition suspended in part is suspended in all ibid. Shall be taken favourable for him who is to perform it 70 Consultation Was granted because the Prohibition was general where it ought to have been special 16 Conversion In Trover is Traversable and therefore ought to be certainly alledged 45 Conveyance By the Heir upon Intrusion 60 Copyholder Baron Surrenders Femes