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A86253 The law of conveyances, shewing the natures, kinds, and effects, of all manner of assurances, with the manner of their several executions and operations. Also directions to sue out and prosecute all manner of writs, of extent, elegit, and judiciall writs upon statutes, recognizances, judgments, &c. A warrant to summon a court of survey: and the articles to be given in charge, and inquired of in that court. With an exposition of divers obscure words and termes of law, used in ancient records, &c. And also plaine decimall tables, whereby may be found the true values of lands, leases, and estates, in possession, or reversion. With a concordance of years, &c. / By John Herne Gent. Herne, John, fl. 1660. 1655 (1655) Wing H1570; Thomason E1597_2 165,473 258

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because that by a Release of Demands all the meanes and remedies and the causes of them which any hath to Lands Tenements Goods Chattels c. are extinct and by consequence the right and interest to the thing it self But note although that a Release of all Demands be of so great extent yet that extendeth not to such Writs by which nothing is demanded neither in fact nor in Law by doing onely to releive the Plaintiff by way of discharge and not by way of demand A Release of all Demands is not a bar in a Writ of Error to reverse an Outlawry By a release of all demands Rent-seck all Actions mixt Warranty which is a Covenant reall and all other Covenants reall and personall Estovers all manner of Commons Profits apprender Conditions before they be broken or performed or afterwards Annuities Recognizances Statutes Obligations and Contracts c. are released and discharged If a man by Dead covenant to make a house or to make an Estate and before the Covenant broken the Covenantee release to him all Actions Suits and Quarrels that is no discharge of the Covenant because that at the time of the Release nothing was due nor was it any debt or duty or any cause of Action in esse but in this case of all Covenants is a good discharge of the Covenant before it be broken A Release of all duties extendeth to all things due which is certaine and therefore dischargeth Judgments in personall Actions and Executions also If the Plaintiff after Judgments release all Demands the execution is discharged By a Release of all Quarrels all Causes of Actions are released although no Action be then depending Coke 10. pars fol. 51. 38 H. 8 Release 6 H. 7. 15. 19 H 6. 3. 4. 40 E. 3. 22. 5 Eliz. Dyer 217. By a Release of all Suites the execution is released If a man be in Execution If a man make a Lease for ten years the remainder for twenty years he in remainder releaseth all his right to the Lessee he shall have an estate for thirty years for one Chattell cannot drown in another and yeares cannot be consumed in years Cokes Littleton 260. b. Co. 6. pars fo 47. a Release of all Debts or Duties he is to be discharged of the Execution because the Debt or Duty is discharged If Judgment be given in an Action of Debt and the body of the Defendant is taken in execution by Capias ad satisfaciendum and afterwards the Plaintiff releaseth the Judgment by that the body shall be discharged of the execution In an Action of Debt brought by Hoe in the Kings Bench If a rent be behind for twenty years and the Lord do make an Acquittance for the last that is due all the rest are presumed to be paid And the Law will admit no proof against this presumption Cokes Littleton fol. 373. Phelix Marshall was baile for the Defendant and afterwards before any Judgment given the Plaintiff released to Pehlix all Actions Duties and Demands and after Judgment was given against the Defendant and upon a default of the Defendant Scire facias went out against Phelix Marshall who pleaded the said generall Release upon which plea the Plaintiff demurred And it was adjudged that this Release shall not bar the Plaintiff for the words of the baile are conditionall viz. Si contigeret predictum defendentem debit dam. ill prefat quer minime solvere aut se prisonae Mareshalss ea occasione non reddere c. So that it may not be by the said Baile any certaine duty untill Judgment be given for before that none may know to what summ the Debt and Damages will amount to he which is baile for the Defendant is not bound in any certaine summ at the first but his Recognizance being generall shall be reduced to a certainty by the Judgment and not before The effect of a speciall bail given in the Kings Bench. The Condition c. That where the above named H. C. and one R. H. in their proper persons have undertaken so the above bounden C F. by a Recognizance or Mainprise taken and knowledged before the Justices of the Kings Bench at Westminster that if it happen the said C. F. to be condemned in any Action at the suit of T. B. Esquire that then the said R. H. and H. D. did grant all Costs and Damages and Executions which should be judged to the said T. B. in that behalf should be levied to the use of the said T. B. of the Lands and Chattels of the said R. H. and H. C. if so it be that the said C. F. do not pay the same Damages himself to the said T. B. or restore and yeild himself againe by meanes thereof to the Prison of the Marshall of the Marshalsey if the said C. F. his Heires c. and every of them at all times hereafter from time to time do well and truly acquit discharge or save harmlesse the said H. C. and R. H. their Heires c. and every of them against the said T. B. his c of and for the breach and forfeiture of the said Recognizance and Mainprise and of and for the execution of the said Action whereupon the same Recognizance and Mainprise was so taken and knowledged and also of for and upon all other Bonds Obligations and Recognizances wherein the said H. C. standeth bound to any other person or persons for and in the behalf of the said C. F. that then c. Cases in Law of divers and sundry manners and matters I. A. by Indenture bearing date the third of May Livery and seisin void but if in this case Livery be made by the Lessor himself at the day that this Lease in futuro is to commence then the Lease is good but if by Attorney then void vide plus de hoc fol. 50. fol. 51. leaseth a Messuage to B. to have to the said B. from the Feast of the Annunciation of our Lady then next coming for the terme of his life and Livery is executed the tenth of March following the Livery in this case is void because every Livery ought to vest the Freehold in him to whome the Livery is made at the time of the Livery and this Grant did not commence untill the Annunciation following so that the livery could not bring a possession before the terme was to begin and where there is no Estate present whereunto the livery may be annexed nor whereunto it may unite in the mean time then such livery is void Plowden fol. 156. An estate of Frank-tenement at the Common Law may not commence in futuro A Frank-tenement be it in possession reversion or remainder may not be limited to commence at a day to come but ought to take effect forthwith in possession reversion or remainder as if a man make a lease for life to begin at Mich. next that is void so if a man make a lease for life to have from the date
claiming under him with penalty in the Statute of 27. Eliz. Cap. 1. This doth not extend to the avoyding of any grant c. upon good consideration and bona fide if any such conveiance be made with clause of revocation or alteration at his pleasure by writing and after he shall bargaine demise sell grant convey or charge the same Lands c. for money or other good consideration the conveyance not revoked or altered then the conveyance c. shall be void against the Barganees c. and all claiming under them lawfull Mortages only excepted A Lease was made of a Messuage and Lands for yeares A grant of land Habendum the reversion if the Lessee so long should live and afterwards the Lessor by his Deed indented granted the Messuage and Land to another to have and to hold the reversion to the grantee for life cum per mortem sursum redditionem vel forisfacturam of the Lessee aut aliter acciderit reddendo inde annuitie to the Grantor and his heires when the said reversion shall happen nine shillings and foure pence per Annum The Lessee dieth the Grantor of the reversion distraineth for the arrearages of the rent aswell before the death of the Lessee as afterwards whereupon four points were clearely resolved upon by the Court. That by the Demise of a Messuage and Land for life the reversion thereof doth passe but by the Grant of a reversion land in possession doth not passe Lofields case 10. pars fo 107. Plowden 197. A grant of the reversion Habendum the land By the Grant of a Messuage and Land Habendum revertionem c. or life after the death of the Lessee c. that the Habendum is good for in judgement of law nothing but the reversion is granted by the Premises and as in Throchmertons case Plowden Coment fo 147. when the reversion is granted habendum the land the habendum is adjudged good so when the land is granted habendum the reversion and after the death of the Lessee c. is in consideration as much to say as to take effect in possession after the death c. Also the habendum had been good although no mention had been made either of the Land or of the reversion in the habendum for the Office of the habendum is to limit the estate of the land contayned in the Premises It was resolved that by the said reservation the rent shall not commence before the reversion fall in possession and these words cum revertio predict acciderit shall be expounded according to the intention of the parties which was not that the Grantee for life should pay the rent before that he may take the profits to make the rent of them That the distresse was well taken for the Arrerages after the death of the Lessee and not for the arearages incurred before Statute released by matter in Law A statute was acknowledged the 26. of May the Cognusee by his release Dated the 25. May before released to the Cognusor all demands from the beginning of the world untill the making therof and sealed and delivered the release as his Deed the 27. May following the statute is freely discharged for the day of the delivery is dies confectionis but if the words had been untill the date or day of the Date of these presents then otherwise it had been See Dier fo 307. Defeasance of a statute mis-recited the statute becometh single If a Defeasance be made of a statute which is recited to bee made the tenth day of May where indeed it beareth Date the first day of May the Defeasance is void for the Mis-prision of time for the Law saith that in so much as it may be that there were two statutes the one dated the first day and the other the tenth day the time of the date is materiall Plowden fo 393. Attornement needlesse A reversion granted for yeares for consideration of money doth passe without Attornement Coke 8 pars fo 941. for let the case be that there is Lessee for terme of yeares or life rendant-rent Afterwards the lessor by Indenture for the consideration of 50 l. demiseth and granteth the Premises to another for 90. yeares rendant 40 pounds per annum although the first Lessee doth never Attorne yet the second demise shall be good and shall passe as a Bargaine executed by the statute of 27 H. 8. whereunto there needeth no Attornemnt or Inrolement of the Deed because it is not but a terme for yeares and no Frank-tenement And note that if a man for money do enffeoffe Alien and grant Land to one and his heires or in taile or for life by deed indented and inrolled that doth amount to a bargaine and sale and the land shall pass without livery and Seisin Attornement needlesse A grant of a reversion of Land habendum the land from the end and expiration of a former Lease in being is a good lease and needeth no attornement A demise of the reversion of Land Attornement needles habendum the reversion of the land from the end and determination of a former lease in being is a good Lease and needeth no attornement If a man make a gift in taile or a Lease for life Remainder voide the remainder to his owne right heires this remainder is void and he hath the reversion in him for the Ancestor during his life beareth in his body in the judgment of the law all his heires and this appeareth in a common case that if Land be given to a man and his heires all his heires are so totall in him that he may give the land to whom he will So it is if a man be seised of Lands in Fee by Indenture make a Lease for life Remainder voide the remainder to the heirs males of his owne body this is a void remainder for the donor cannot make his owne right heire a purchasor of an estate taile without departing of the whole fee-simple out of him as if a man make a Feoffement in Fee to the use of himselfe for life and then to the use of the heires males of his body this is a good estate taile executed in himselfe and the limitation is good by way of use because it is raised out of the estate of the Feoffees which the Feoffor departed with for a limitation of a use to himselfe had been good without question Cokes Littleton fo 22. b. The King may make a Lease for yeares rendant rent to a stranger and that is a good reservation Conditions Entries and re-entries may not be given or reserved to strangers and the stranger may distraine for it or have an Action of Debt after the lease determined and that is by reason of his prerogative which he hath above all persons for he is not bound so strictly by the lawes as others are but in the case of a common person otherwise it is because that no rent which is properly
a man recover debt or damages against against another he may chuse to have a cap. or elegit but if he take the Capias he shal not have the Elegit afterwards nec e converso 15 H. 7. 15. Fieri facias THis Writ of Fieri facias is onely against the goods scil Leases for yeares or moveables goods as Cattel Corne House-hold-stuffe Money Plate Apparrell and this Writ ought also to be sued within the yeare after the judgement Co. 3. 12. In the execution of a Fieri facias it is the surer course for the Sheriff either to keep the goods untill the parties be agreed or else to take good security of the Plantiff to defend and save him harmeless and to stay the returning of his Writs untill he may be well advised what to doe therein But if he take a bond of the Plantiff it is questionable whether it be good or no in law and not within the compasse of the Statute of 23 H. 6. ca. 10. to be taken colore Officii But the safest and surest course for the Sheriff or Officer is not to take in execution or not to meddle at all with any such goods as shall not not plainly appear to them to be the proper goods of the Defendant for it seemeth that the Officer is bound at his perill to take knowledge whose the goods are or at lest that they be the proper goods of the defendant Note that after the Fieri facias a man may have the Elegit but not e contra because the Elegit is of a higher nature then the fieri facias Upon a fieri facias the Sheriff may sell a Lease or terme of yeares and upon a fieri facias the Sheriff ought to sell to levy the debt Co. 5. 90. Co. 8. 171. Upon a fieri facias if the Sheriff sell the goods and after the judgement is reversed in a Writ of Error yet the defendant shall not have restitution of his goods but the value of them for what they were sold and those which so buy such goods of the Sheriff may lawfully enjoy them for the Sheriff which made the sale had lawfull authority to sell and by the sale the Vendee hath absolute property in the goods and if the sale of the Sheriff by force of the Fieri facias shall be avoided by subsequent reversall of the judgement then no man will buy and by consequence no execution shal be done Co. 5. 90. and 8. 96. and 143. Levari facias THis Levari facias is onely to be executed upon the profits of the Lands and upon the goods or the Sheriff may hereupon take the rents payable by the tenants in execution for the debt and bring them in Court but he cannot seise the land and deliver that to the party by this VVrit Plow 441. a. and this ought to be sued within the yeare after the day of payment to be made by the recognizance or after the judgement for after the yeare the Connusee or Plantiff is now by the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 45. to have a scire facias whereby the Sheriff is commanded that he give knowledge to the Defendant that he appeare in the Chancery at a certaine day there to shew what he can say why he should not pay the debt or dammages and if he come not at the day or doe come and can say nothing why execution ought not to be done then the Sheriff shall be commanded to do execution Fitz. 266. c. And if the Sheriff upon the Levari facias shall returne that he hath levied part of the sum scil 20 l. part thereof which he hath delivered to the party now upon this returne the party which ought to have the money may have a sicut alias Levari facias directed to the Sheriff to levy the residue of the sum Fitz. 265. h. Summons SUmmons is a Writ to the Sheriff to cite or warne one to appeare at a certaine day and the Summons must be made by or in the presence of two or three Summoners and these summonitors ought by law to be liberi legales homines as it seemeth In Summons in reall actions the Summoners in the presence of the Pernors or Veiors ought to summon the tenant first to keep his day of the returne and to name that in certainty to answer c. Secondly they ought to name the name of the demandant and Lastly they ought to name the Land in demand co 6. 54. This word Pernor seemeth to signifie the Pernor of the profits of the land or the Occupier or Farmer therof And this Veior to signifie such as are sent by the Court to take view of the place in question for the better decision of the right Minshaw Note that the Defendant ought alwaies to be summoned 15. daies at the least before the day of the returne of the Writ 28 E. 1. cap. 15. Fitz. 177. Note when the Tenant appeares by the summons he may not take advantage after to say that he was not well summoned and so if he bee essoined for all that affirmeth the Summons 46 E. 3. Br. Summons 22. Note also if the Sheriff shall summon him which hath no land to or by his person and shall returne him summoned it is good And in Actions of annuity Covenant or the like Summons is the process hath he land or not and where a man hath no land where he may be summoned there the Sheriff may summon him by his person 33 H. 6. 4. H. 7. 7. In a Writ of right of Advowson the Sheriff may summon the Defendant in the Church Br. returne 101. 11 H. 6. In a quaere impedit the Sheriff may summon the Defendant in the Church IX H. 6. and so by advise it was done inter Lancelotum episcopum Eliens and the Author of this book Anno 16. Jacobi regis In a Praecipe against 4. the Sheriff cannot summon the one but that is a summons to all 3 E. 4. Br. Summons 10. In a Praecipe there ought to be two summoners for if there be but one and the Tenant maketh default and loseth by default he shall have a Writ of disceit against the Sheriff Plow 393. Note that the Tenant may wage his law of non summons and yet a corporation recluse and decrepit may not do their Law but their summons shall be tryed by the country 33 H. 6. fo 8. Thel 334. Quaere Attachment ATtachement cannot bee by land nor by Chattel reall as a lease for yeares 7 H. 6. 27 H. 6. neither may a Table dormant or any other thing fastened unto the free-hold be attached 21 H. 7. fo 26. but an Attachment must be made by mooveables which may be forfeited by outlary and which shall be forfeited by the default of the party if he appeare not Br. 1. 4 In debt trespasse or the like a man ought not to attach the Defendant by his horse whereupon he rides where he hath other goods whereby he may be attached
during his life If a rent be granted to one for life by deed and willeth that the Grantee and his heires distraine in the Lands charged for the same rent the grantee hath in this case fee-simple in the rent and not estate for life for the distresse is the creation of the rent-charge and therefore the limitation and creation of the rent-charge shall enure according to the effect and limitation of the distresse for therein he retaineth it for a terme which is as long as he hath in the Land and therefore hath not any certainty that terme will ever commence and therefore the grant void And where Lessee for yeares without any habendum granteth to another all his tearme which shall be to come at the time of his death shall be all void A Termor reciting by Indenture his terme and lease granted all his terme estate and interest to another habendum sibi assign suis immediate post mortem ipsius the Grantor and the case was ruled and adjudged that the habendum was void and the premises of the grant good to make the whole terme to passe forthwith Dier fo 272. If I have a rent in Fee if I grant it to another and stay there this is a grant for life but if I goe further and say habendum after the death of I. S. there all shall be void vide fo 2. If tenant for yeares of land grant out of that a rent-charge to another for the life of the Grantee the grantee shall not have a state of Frank-tenement because he cannot have a stare of Frank-tenement derived out of a Chattel reall but he shall have the rent during all the yeares if the Grantee so long shall live Plowden fo 525. If I have a rent in fee and grant it to another post mortem I. S. this grant is void for the nature of a grant is that the thing ought to passe forthwith If a man make a lease for yeares and afterwards the lessor grants a rent charge out of the Land that grant shall charge the reversion And this proveth that the Land and the reversion are nor two distinct things but that in the reversion the Land is contained Plowden fo 173. The Abbot leased land for life and afterward leased the reversion to have the Land from Michaelmas next after the first Lease ended by death surrender or forfeiture for 21. yeares this is a good Lease Plowden fo 146. A grant of a reversion Habendum the said reversion after the end and expiration of the Tenant for life Attornement needdes for sixty yeares this is a good grant without Attornement If I make a Lease to one for life and afterwards I grant the reversion to another habendum from the Feast of St. Michael next ensuing to him and his heires this grant is void because that no franke-tenement be it in possession reversion or remainder may be limited to commence at a day to come If I have a rent in Fee I may not grant it to commence in futuro or at a day to come but if I have land I may grant a new rent out of it to commence at a day to come for there I shall not have any particular estate in the meane for it was not in esse before but doth commence of new and therefore I may appoint it to commence when I will Pertinentiis A man makes a Feoffement of a house cum pertinent nothing passeth by these words cum pertinentiis but the Garden Curtilage and close adjoyning to the house and whereupon the house is built and no other Land though other Lands have been occupied with the house A man leased a house cum pertin no land passeth by these word but otherwise it is where a man leaseth a house cum omnibus terris eidem partin there the lands therewithall used doe passe If a man makes a Feoffement of a house ac omnes terras tenementa heriditamenta eidem messuagio pertin aut cum eodem occupata locata aut dimissa existent hereby the land used with the house doth pass Tenant in taile and the Lessee shall acknowledge the Tenements to be the right of one A stranger Lease by fine to bind Tenant in Taile and his issue and that A. shall grant and render by the same fine to the Lessee for 60. yeares the remainder to the Lessor and his heires and it was with proclamations which shall bind the taile after proclamation made If Tenant in taile make a Feoffement and a common recovery is had against the Feoffee Recovery the best to barr estates taile and remainders who voucheth tenant for taile who voucheth over c. there the tail shall be barred because that he when he commeth in as vouchee shall bee in the degree of tenent in taile and the recompence in value which he hath or may have shall goe in taile and therefore such manner of recovery is best and the surest way to barr the taile and all the remainders and the reversion also If A. be tenant in taile the remainder to B. in taile the remainder to C. in taile the remainder to B. in Fee A makes a Feoffement the Feoffees suffer a common recovery wherein B. is vouched he over the common vouchee In this case A. is not bound but B. and all the remainders over are barred For although that by the Feoffment of A. all the remainders were discontinued and the estates that B.C.D. had converted into meere rights and though the remainders may never be remitted before the estate taile in possession be recontinued yet in case of a common recovery which is the common assurance of the Land he that commeth in as vouchee shall bee in judgement of Law in privity of estate which he over had though the precedent estate wherupon the state of the vouchee dependeth be devested or discontinued Coke 3 pars fo 60. Tenement is a large word Tenement and Hereditament to passe not onely lands and other inheritances which are holden but also Officers Rents Commons Profits apprender our of lands and the like wherein a man hath any Frankenement and whereof he is seised ut de libero tenemento but an Hereditament is the largest word of all in that kind for whatsoever may be inherited is an hereditant be it corporeall or incorporeall reall or personall or mixt Vesturam terrae If a man hath twenty Acres of Lands and by Deed granteth to another and his heires Vesturam terrae and maketh Livery secundum formam chartae the Land it selfe shall not passe because he hath a particular right in the land for thereby he shall not have the houses timber trees and other reall things parcell of the inheritance but he shall have the vesture of the Land that is the Corne Grasse and Vnder-wood Sweepage and the like and shall have trespasse quare clausam fregit Herbagium terrae If a man grant herbagium terrae he hath a
elder son was in possession of the dignity no more then of his blood for the dignity is inherent to his blood and neither by his own act nor by the act of another hath he gained more actuall possession then by the Law descended to him Coke 3. pars fol. 42. Actuall possession quid Possession in Law quid Here 's jure proprietatis heres jure representationis An actuall possession is when a man entreth in Deed into lands to him discended A possession in Law is when lands be discended to a man and he hath not yet really entred into them nor hath seisin of the rents reserved upon any estate made for life by him from whom he claimeth Every one that is heire unto another is as the eldest Son shall inherit onely before all his brothers Aut heres jure representationis as where the eldest Son dieth in the life of his Father his issue shall inherit before the youngest Son for although the youngest Son be magis propinquus yet jure representationis the issue of the eldest Son shall inherit for he doth represent the person of his Father And even as none may be procreate but of one Father and one Mother and ought to have in him two bloods viz. the blood of his Father and the blood of his Mother those two bloods commix in him by lawfull marriage doth constitute and make him heire So none may be heire to any one unless he hath in him both the bloods of him to whom he shall make himself heire And therefore the heire of the half blood shall not inherit because he wanteth one of the bloods that should make him inheritable for as in this case the blood of the Father and the blood of the Mother make but one blood inheritable and both are necessary to the procreation of an heire therefore desiciente uno non potest esse haeres And this is the reason of the Maxime of Possessio fratris de feodi simplex facis sororem esse haeredem Co. 3. pars Ratcliffs case fo 37. If a man be attainted of felony by judgment the heires begotten after the attainder are foreclosed from all manner of hereditary Succession as well on the part of the Mother as on the part of the Father And Britton gave this reason because the Son procreate after the judgment had not two bloods inheritable in him for at the time of his birth the blood of his Father was corrupt for ex leproso parente leprosus generatur filius And when the Father is attainted of felony the blood in respect of what it shall be inheritable being corrupt the Son as like to it hath not but half blood viz. the blood of the Mother in him without corruption And therefore he holdeth that such a Son shall not inherit his Mother And with him Bracton accordeth for saith he Non valebit felonis generatio nec ad hereditatem paternam vel maternam si autem ante feloniam generationem fecerit talis generatio succedit in hereditatem patris a quo non fuit felonia perpetrata Because that at the time of his birth he had two lawfull bloods commixt in him which may not be corrupt by attainder subsequent but onely as to that Father or that Mother by whom the Felony was done and committed Assise To arraigne an Assise is to cause the Demandant to be called to make the plaint and to set the cause in such order as the Tenant may be inforced to answer thereunto and is derived of the French word Arrayner to order or set in right place and the Assise is Arrained in French and entred in Latine Executed and things executory a difference There is a diversity between Inheritances executed and Inheritances executory As Lands executed by Livery c. cannot by Indentures of Defeasance be defeated afterwards And so if a Disseisee release to a Disseisor it cannot be defeated by Indenturs of Defeasance made afterward but at the time of the Release or Feoffment c. the same may be defeated by Indentures of Defeasance for it is a Maxime in Law Quae in continenti fiunt in esse videntur But Rents Annuities Conditions Warranties and such like that be inheritances executory may be defeated by Defeasance made either at that time or at any time after And so the Law is of Statutes Recognizances Obligations and other things executory Distress for a mercement He that distraineth for an Amercement and such like must be sure to distraine the Goods and Chattels of him that is amerced because he may not distraine another mans beasts for this amercement But for rent or services it is otherwise for the party may distraine the beasts found in the land that are levant and couchant there N. B. fol. 100. B. Distress Damage-feasant And if a man take beasts for Damage-feasant and the other offer sufficient amends he refuse c. Now if he sue a Replevin c. for the beasts he shall recover Damages onely for the Detinue of them and not for the taking for that was lawfull F.N.B. 69. The Lord may seise a Herriot service aswell as a Herriot custome Herriot service Herriot custome may be seised Warde and so it was then adjudged by the whole Court Plow fo 96. Replevin Woodland versus Mantle It was resolved that when the King maketh an heir apparent which in age of a Tenent by Knights service a Kt in the life of his ancestor after the ancestor dieth the said heir within age in this case he shall be out of ward and shall pay no value of his marriage nor the Lord shall have the custody of the Land for in such ease by the making of him Knight in the life of his Ancestor he is made as of full age so that when his Ancestor dieth no interest either in the body or in the land ever vesteth in the Lord. It was also resolved that when the heir within age is made Knight after tender made to him although that he within age marry else where yet he shall not pay the forfeiture of marriage Cok. 6. pars fo 73. Sir Drue Druries case If an infant in the life of his father be made Knight and his Father die he shall be in Ward but otherwise it is where an infant in Ward is made Knight there he shall be out of Ward 2. E 6. tit Garde 42. Magna Char. Cap. 3. Touching the time of the beginnning of a Lease for yeares it is to be observed Commencement of a lease Inclusive exclusive that if a Lease be made by indenture bearing Date the 26. of May c. to have and to hold for 21. yeares from the Date or from the day of the Date it shall begin the 27. day of May. If a Lease beare Date the 26. of May. c. to have and to hold from the making hereof or from henceforth or from the sealing and delivery hereof
to the Major to make Certificate notwithstanding the first Certificate and to have out of the Chancery a new Capias or no or whether at the suite of the Executors the Justices of the Bench might have awarded an alias Capias or a Writ of extent upon the first proceeding or not But it was agreed by the Court that no Scire facias did lie in this case but upon oath made by the Executors in the Chancery that the debt is not satisfied they shall have a new Certiorari to the Major c. to make a new Certificate of the Statute and so to begin all anew again Dier 180. Satute Staple THe Statute Staple is of two sorts or in two manners the one by force of the Statute 27 E. 3. cap. 9. the other by force of the Statute 23 H. 8. cap. 6. The first is an obligation of Record acknowledged before the Major of the Staple in presence of one of the Constables of the same Staple and is sealed with the seale of the Staple and Seale of the party but such Statute Staple shall not be taken but onely amongst Merchants of the same Staple and for Marchandizes of the same Staple 23 H. 8. ca. 6. The other is an obligation also of Record and of the same nature and force as the first is as to the execution thereof But it is acknowledged before the one of the chief Justices and in their absence out of Terme before the Major of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of London and is sealed with their Seales viz. with the Seale of the Connusor of the King and of one of the said Justices or of the Major and Recorder 23 H. 8. cap. 6. The formes of these Statutes Staple vide West 108. 109. Note that all Statutes Merchant and Staple shall be brought to the Clarke of the Recognizances within 4 Months and inrolled within six months or else such Statute shall be void against Purchasors c. 27. Eliz. cap. 4. A Statute Staple must be certified into the Chancery in the like manner as a Statute Merchant and upon that Certificate a Writ of execution shall go presently forth both against the body si laicus sit and against the lands and goods of the Connusor returneable in the Chancery in the petty-bagg Office there and not into the Court of common Pleas or Kings Bench as the Writs of Execution upon a Statute Merchant shall and upon the Writ of execution the Sheriff shall take the body of the Connusor and shall also per sacramentum proborum legalium hominum juxta verum valorem Fitz. 131 d. presently extend and price and shall seise into the Kings hands his Lands his Goods and Chattels and that extent and prizement or valuation of the Lands and goods shall returne and certifie into the Chancery as aforeraid and therupon the Reconusee shall have another Writ called a liberate to the Sheriff out of the Chancery to deliver to the Conusee those lands and goods to the value of his debt and upon that liberate delivered to the Sheriff then such lands and goods as are taken in execution shall be delivered to the Connusee by the Sheriff and not before And this execution shall be made in manner as is before declared upon a Statute Merchant 27 E 3. cap. 9. Plow 62. b. And so note that upon a statute Merchant the connusor shall bee imprisoned for halfe a yeare and if hee doth not sell his lands within the same time for to pay his debts then his lands shall be delivered to the obligee until his debt be satisfied And upon statute staple the Debitor or connusor after that hee is taken shall not have liberty to sell his lands and goods within the halfe yeare as he shall have upon Statute Merchant But by force of this statute Staple if the money be not paid at the day forthwith after certificate therof in the chancery the creditor may have Execution of the body Lands and goods of the Debitor ss the connusor shall be imprisoned and all his lands and goods shall be extended instantly 27 E. 3 cap. 9 Also note that upon Statute staple the extent shall be first made and returned and aftet a Writ of liberate shall be awarded but delivery shall not be made at the beginning untill the thing appeareth certainly by the return of the Sheriff Plow 62. b. All obligations and specialties made to the King or to his use for any cause shall bee of the same force as Statute Staple is 33 H. 8. cap 59. and so for obligations made by parsons for their first fruits 26 H. 8. cap. 39. The lands of many Accomptants to the King shal be liable and put in execution as if they had been bound in Statute Staple 13. Eliz. Cap. 4. The heir that claimeth by the gift of his Ancestor shall be bound to pay the Kings debt 33 H. 8. cap. 39. The heir in taile by the same Statute shall be liable to pay the Kings debt due by his Ancestor Plow 240. b. 249 b. 554. b. Fitz. 217. c. But if tenant in taile become in debt to the King by receipt of the Kings moneyes or otherwise unlesse that it be by judgement recognisance obligation or other specialty and dieth the land in the seisin of the issue in taile by force of the said act of 33 H. 8. shall not be extended for such debt of the King For the Statute of 33 H. 8. extendeth only to the said 4. cases and all other debts of the King remain at the common law Execution upon Statute IF Tenant in Taile become in debt to the King by one of the said 4. wayes scil by judgment recognisance obligation or other specialty and dieth and before any prosces or extent the issue in taile bona fide alien or Lease the Land intailed now this Land shall not be extended by force of the said Act of 33 H. 8. C. 7. 22. So where debt was originally due to a subject and after comes or accrues to the King by reason of attainder Out-lawry Forfeiture gift of the partie or by any other way or meane such debt is not within the said Statute of 33 H. 8. to charge lands intailed in the possession of the heir in taile Co. 7. 22. But lands in fee-simple were extendable at the common law for debt of the King into whose hands soever they should come and therefore as to them the said Statute of 33 H. 8. was not but a declaration of the ancient law Co. 7. 21. Two Joyntenants in fee the one of them being a debtor of the King dieth the other shall hold discharged Fitz. Execut. 113. The heire shall bee chargeable to pay debt of the King although he bee not named or that this word Heir be not comprised within the recognizance obligation or specialty 33 H. 8. cap 39. The King shall be preferred in his suit and execution before common persons by the Statute 9 H. 3.
deliver his goods in pledge after shal be condemned in personall actions there such Sheep or goods shall not be taken and put in execution untill the lease be determined or the money paid for the pledge Br. distresse 75. So it seemeth of Goods which are distrained for just cause as for rent amercement damage feasant such like and are impounded they are now in custodialegis as long as they are so they may not be taken in execution Br. pledges 28. If the Connusor enfeoffe the King that land is discharged from execution Fitz. 266. so all other lands of the King are exempted from distresses and executions Plowden 242. b. If many men be severally seised of lands and they all severally joyne in one recognizance Satute Merchant or Statute staple in this case the connusee may not extend the land of any of the Connusors onely but all the Connusors ought equally to be charged the one of them alone shall not beare all the burthen because they are all in equall degree and in executions which concerne the realty and charge of the land the Sheriff may not doe execution of the Land of the one alone Co. 3. 13. a 14. When the Connusor hath aliened part of his land yet the Connusor himselfe at the Will of the Connusee may be solely charged because he himselfe is the person which was the debtor and which was bound and therefore he and his lands may be solely charged Co. 3. 14. Br. suite 10 12. And as to a purchasor of lands although their said Lands after the judgement recognisance or Statute be subject to the execution yet such purchasors have greater priviledges given to them by the law then the Connusor himselfe or his heires have So that if land of a purchasor be onely extended for the entire debt such purchasor shall have contribution against all the others of the purchasors and against the connusor or his heir but note that by this word contribution it is not to be understood that the others shall give or allow to him any thing by way of contribution but ought to be intended that the purchasor or party which hath his lands onely extended for all may by Audita querela or scire facias as the case requireth defeate the execution and therby shall be restored to all the meane profits and drive the Connusee to sue execution of all the land so that in this manner every one shall be contributory that is the land of every ter-tenant shall be equally extended co 3. 14. But if the Connusor enfeoffee the connuse of parcell of the land and a stranger of another parcell and reserve parcell in his hands now the connusee shall not have execution against the stranger or any other Feoffee for all shall be extinct against the Feoffees but yet against the connusor the connusee shall have execution of parcell which remaineth in his hands If connusor of Statute Merchant or statute Staple be taken and die in Execution yet the connusee shall have execution of his lands and goods co 5. 86. 87. Fitz. 246. b. If the connusor upon a Statute c. be taken in execution and escape yet his goods and lands upon the same statute may be extended for the escape and the action which the Plantiff had against the Sheriff for the escape is not satisfaction for the debts co 5. 86. By the statute of 3. Jacobi cap. 8. no execution shall be stayed or delayed by Writ of Error or superseded for reversing of any judgement in any action of Debt except the party which sued such Writ of error with two sufficient sureties be first bound to the party for whom such judgement is given to prosecute the said Writ of error with effect and to pay all the debt damages and costs c. if the judgement be affirmed and also costs and damages for such delay And therefore if a man be condemned in any court and his body put in execution and after he procures a Writ of corpus cum causa or certiorari to be directed to the Sheriff to remove his body there the Sheriff upon the said Writ ought to return the truth scil that his prisoner is condemned by judgement given against him upon which the Prisoner shall be forthwith remanded to prison there to remaine untill he hath satisfied the Plantiff 2 H. 5. cap. 2. Fitz. 151. e. If a statute be acknowledged to 2. and the one of them after purchase lands of the connusor then it seemeth that the said statute hath lost his force against both see the Register 147. If execution be sued of the body and of the land and after the connusor enfeoffeth the connusee of the Land or surrender parcell descended to him in all these cases the body shall be discharged for by discharge of part of the thing in Execution all is discharged Plow 72. b When the extent upon a Statute is satisfied and ran out by efluxion of time the Connusor may enter againe Co. 4. 67. But when the extent is satisfied by casuall profit the Connusor must have a Scire facias ibid. Defeasance to a Statue made after execution is good and defeateth aswell the Statute as the execution thereupon Co. 6. 13. But note where the Statute of Actor Burnell is that if the Prisors of the goods of the Connusor prize them too high in favour of the Debitor and to the dammage of the Creditor the things so prized shall be delivered to the Prisors by the same price and they to yield the Credtior his debt these Statutes are penall and extend not to any other Writs of execution but upon the Statute Merchant or Staple or recognizance and therefore upon a Writ of Elegit or other Writ of execution upon judgement if the extenders or prisors praise the lands or goods too high the Plantiff scil the Creditor hath no remedy Benl 4. P. and M. Note that when the lands or goods are delivered to the extenders they forthwith shall answer to the Creditor his debt by the words of the Statute and yet they shall not pay the money untill the daies assessed and limited in the extent Plow 205. b. If the Debitor complaine that his goods or lands were sold or delivered to the Connusee at too low a rate yet he hath no remedy Stat of Actor Bur. for in such cases the Debitor may pay the money and recover his lands and good 15 H. 7. 15. The creditor may well refuse to accept because the Sheriff will not deliver but parcell of the lands of the Connusor for if he accept it he shall be concluded to demand all afterward Fitz h. execution 84. 88. Execution upon a Recognizance REcognizance is an obligation of record acknowledged in any Court of Record or before any Judge or other Officer having authority to take it as before the Judges of the Kings Bench or of commons Pleas the Barons of the exchequer the masters of Chancery the Justices of Peace
such lease or terme yet false recitall notwithstanding if the Sheriff sell also all the interest that the Debitor hath in the said land that sale is good Also the Sherriff need not to mention any certainty of a terme in his returne of Fieri facias but generally quod fieri fecit de bon catall c. Note that it is at the election of the Sheriff to extend or to sell a lease or terme as long as it remaineth in the hands of the Debitor scil the Sheriff at his election may sell that quite or he may extend and deliver it to the Connusee at a certaine yearely value as of Frank-tenement and there the Connusee to whom the terme is delivered hath a property which is uncertain and the Lessee or connusor himselfe hath another propetty so that upon the payment of the debt or upon the debt received of the revenew of that by the connusee the connusor shall have his terme Plow 5. 24 Co. 8. 171. Note there a diversitie between the sale by the Sheriff of a terme and an extent of a terme and that upon sale of a terme by the Sheriff the partie hath no remedie to have his terme againe if any remain after the debt satisfied as it seemeth Execution upon Capias ad satisfaciendum NOte upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum although the Defendant be not found the Plantiff may not have another execution 20. E. 2. and this capias ad satisfaciendum is onely against the body which the Sheriff must be sure to keep safe or else perhaps pay the debt himselfe and therefore if the Sheriff shall take a upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum to him directed or shall have any prisoner to him committed for debt upon any execution and he after shall let the Prisoner goe at liberty before the debt be satisfied the Creditor may either have his action of debt against the Sheriff and shall recover his debt or the Creditor may have his action of the case against the Sheriff 22 H. 7. 23 Fitz. 93. a. c. And if the Prisoner doe escape of his owne wrong against the Will of the Officer although he escape and get out of sight or into another County where the Sheriff or Officer hath no authority yet if fresh suite be made and he be taken again upon the fresh suite he shall be said to be still in execution Co. 3. 52. And if the Prisoner do escape against the will and without the consent of the Sheriff or his Officer may then the Sheriff or his Officer take him again where or whensoever hee can find him by vertue of the same Writ before the returne thereof yea though it be in another County And if that the prisoner which so escaped be followed with fresh suite and taken again before an action be brought by the Plantiff against the Sherriff for the escape it shall be adjudged no escape Co 3. 44. 52. And if the Plantiff hath brought his action against the Sheriff for the escape before he hath taken the prisoner againe Or if upon the escape the Sherriff or his Officers did not make fresh suit after the Prisoner yet in both these cases if the escape were against the will of the Officer the Sheriff may take such prisoner again and keep his body in custody untill the prisoner hath made his agreement with the Sheriff or otherwise the Sheriff may have his action upon the case against such prisoner for such his wrongfull escape if the prisoner that so escaped be able to make him satisfaction And the prisoner in these cases shall not be relieved because the escape was of his owne wrong and without the consent of the Sheriff or Officer co 3. 52. If the connusor of a Statute Merchant or Staple is taken and dies in execution yet the connusee shall have the execution of his goods and lands Co. 5. 87. Connusor upon a Statute is taken and escape yet his goods and lands upon the same statute may be extended For although by the law unica tantum fiat executio yet that is to be understood of an execution with satisfaction Where 2. men are condemned in debt and the one is taken and dieth in execution yet the other may lawfully be taken in execution co 5 86. So if two be bound joyntly and severally in one Obligation and the one is sued condemned and taken in execution yet the other also may be sued and taken in execution untill the Plantiff be satisfied in deed of his intire debt co 5. 86. If a man hath judgement in an action of debt and after the judgement outlawes the Defendant there if the Defendant be taken by Capias utlegat at the suite of the King he shall be in execution for the Plantiff if he will co 5 88. Also in all cases when the Plantiff may have a cap. ad satisfaciendum and the defendant is taken by cap. pro fine there the Defendant is in execution forthwith if the Plantiff will without any prayer of the partie co ibidem And in such cases if the Sheriff suffer such prisoner to goe at large it seemeth to be an escape and that thereby the Sheriff is subject to pay the Plantiff his debt Fitz. 121. p. By the law those which are in execution ought not to goe at liberty within the prison much lesse abroad though with their keeper but such prisoner ought to be keept in arcta salva custodia yea the Sheriff may keep such as are in execution in Gives and Fetters to the intent that they may the sooner pay and satisfie their creditors 13 E. 1. cap. 11. 2 R. 2. cap. 12. co 3. 44 Plow 360. a Where the Sheriff hath one in execution for debt an Habeas Corpus commeth to him to have the body in the Kings Bench at a certain day and he carrieth his prisoner to London to an Inne c. and the Prisoner of his owne head goeth at large and after commeth againe to the Sheriff so as the Sheriff at the day of the returne of the Habeas corpus doth deliver the body in court this was adjudged to be no escape for that the commandement of the Writ is performed scil to have the body in court at such a day and in such case the Sheriff may go and take what way or place he shall think to be most sure and safe for himselfe and to carry his prisoner co 3. 44. It was adjudged if one being in execution no commandement although of the K. himselfe without Writ is sufficient Warrant to discharge the Keeper c. and so by the same reason shall not discharge the Sheriff But note that inasmuch as escapes are so penall to Sheriffs Bayliffs of Liberties and Goalers the Judges of the Law have alwaies made a favourable construction as much as the law will permit in favour of the Sheriffs Bayliffs of Liberties and Goalers who are Officers and Ministers of Justice co 3. 44. Note if