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A19476 The interpreter: or Booke containing the signification of vvords wherein is set foorth the true meaning of all, or the most part of such words and termes, as are mentioned in the lawe vvriters, or statutes of this victorious and renowned kingdome, requiring any exposition or interpretation. ... Collected by Iohn Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1607 (1607) STC 5900; ESTC S108959 487,900 584

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impleaded of certaine lands and I vouch to warrant another against whom the summons ad warrantizandum hath bene awarded and the Shyreeue commeth not at the day giuen then if the demandant recouer against me I shall haue this writ against the vouchee and shall recouer so much in value of the land of the vowchee if he haue so much and if he haue not so much then I shall haue execution of such lands and tenements as descend vnto him in fee-simple or if he purchase afterward I shall haue against him a resummons and if he can nothing say I shall recouer the value And note ye that this writ lyeth before apparence Thus farre goeth the booke Of these and the diuers vses of them see the Table of the Register iudiciall verbo Cape Capias is a writ of two sortes one before iudgement called Capias ad respondendum in an action personall if the Shyreeue vpon the first writ of distresse returne nihil habet in baliua nostra and the other is a writ of execution after iudgement being also of diuers kindes viz. Capias ad satisfaciendum Capias pro fine Capias vtlagatum Capias vtlaga 〈…〉 inquiras de bonis catallis Capias ad satisfaciendum is a writ of execution after iudgement lying where a man recouereth in an action personall as debt or dammages or detinew in the kings court and he against whome the debt is recouered and hath no lands nor tenemēts nor sufficient goods wherof the debt may be leuied For in this case he that recouereth shal haue this writ to the shreue commanding him that he take the body of him against whome the debt is recouered and he shal be put in prison vntill satisfaction be made vnto him that recouered Capias pro fine is where one being by iudgement fined vnto the king vpon some offence committed against a statut doth not discharge it according to the iudgement For by this is his body taken and committed to prison vntill he content the king for his fine Coke li. 3. fo 12. a. Capias vtlagatum is a word of execution or after iudgement which lyeth against him that is outlawed vpon any suite by the which the shyreue vpon the receite thereof apprehendeth the party outlawed for not appearring vpon the exegend and keepeth him in safe custodie vntill the day of returne assigned in the writ and then presenteth him vnto the court there farder to be ordered for his contempt Capias vtlagatum inquiras de bonis catallis is a writ al one with the former but that it giueth a farder power to the shyreeue ouer and beside the apprehension of the body to inquire of his goods and cattels The forme of all these writs see in the ould nat br fo 154. and see the Termes of law verbo Proces Lastly you may finde great variety of this kinde in the table of the Register iudiciall verbo Capias Capias in Withernamium de averijs is a writ lying for catell in Withernam Register orig fo 82. 83. see Withernam Capias in Withernamium de homine is a writ that lyeth for a seruant in Withernam Regist or fo 79. 80. see Withernam Capias conductos ad proficiscendum is a writ that lieth for the taking vp of such as hauing receiued prest mony to serue the king slink away and come not in at their time assigned Register orig fo 191. Captaine aliàs capitayne capitaneus commeth of the French capitaine and signifieth with vs him that leadeth or hath charge of a companie of souldiers and is either generall as he that hath the gouernance of the whole host or speciall as he that leadeth one only band The word capitanei in others nations signifieth more generally those that are in latine called principes or proceres because as Hottoman saith in verbis feudalibus tanquā caput reliquo corpori sic hij reliquis civibus praesunt He divideth them into two sorts and to vse his words alii sunt capitanei regni quo verbo Duces Comites Marchiones intelligūtur li. 1. feudo tit 1. § 1. ti 7. Alii impropriè qui vrbiū praefecti sunt quibus plebs ab aliquo superiorum gubernanda committitur qui vallasores regit maiores appellantur l. 1. feud tit 1. § 1. tit 7. tit 17. So we haue captaines of castels heere in England and other places as of the Isles of Gearsey and Gearnsey of the Isle of Weight c. Capite is a tenure which holdeth immediately of the king as of his crown be it by knights seruice or socage Broke tit Tenures 46. 94. Dyer fo 123. nu 38. fo 363. nu 18. not as of any Honour castell or maner and therefore it is otherwise called a tenure that holdeth meerely of the king because as the crowne is a corporation and seigneury in grosse as the common lawyers terme it so the King that possesseth the crowe is in accōpt of lawe perpetually King and neuer in his minoritie nor neuer dieth no more then populus doth whose authoritie he beareth See Fitzh nat br fo 5. F. Note by the way that a man may hold of the king and not in Capite that is not immediately of the crowne in grosse but by meanes of some Honour castel or maner belonging to the Crowne wherof I hold my land Whereof Kitchin saith well that a man may hold of the King by Knight seruice and yet not in capite because he holdeth happily of some honour by Knights seruice which is in the kings hands as by descent from his auncesters and not immediately of the king as of his crowne fo 129. with whome agreeth Fitzh nat br f. 5. K. whose words are to this effect So that it plainely appeareth that lands which be held of the king as of an honour castell or maner are not held in capite of the King because that a writ of right in that case shall be directed to the bayliffe of the honour castell or maner c. but when the lande be held of the King as of his crowne then they be not held of honour castell or maner but meerely of the King as King and of the Kings crowne as of a seigneury of it selse in grosse and the cheife aboue all other seigneuries c. And this tenure in capite is otherwise called tenure holding of the person of the King Dyer fo 44. n. 37. Author of the new termes verb. Tenure in capite Broke titulo Tenures nu 65. 99. And yet M. Kitchin fo 208. saith that a man may hould of the person of the King and not in capite His example is this if the King purchas a maner that I. S. houldeth the tenent shall hould as he held before and shall not render liuery or primier seisin nor hould in capite And if the king graunt that maner to W. N. in fee excepting the seruices of I. S. then I. S. holdeth of
high way ouerflowne with water for default of scowring a ditch which he and they whose estate he hath in certain land there haue vsed to scower and cleanse A. may trauerse either the mater viz. that there is no high way there or that the ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may trauers the cause viz. that he hath not the land c. or that he and they whose estate c. haue not vsed to scoure the ditch Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 13. pag. 521 522. Of Trauers see a whole chapter in Kitchin fol. 240. See the new booke of Entries verbo Trauers Treason traditio vel proditio commeth of the French trahison i. proditio and signifieth an offence committed against the amplitude and maiestie of the commonwealth West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 63. by whom it is there diuided into High treason which other call altam proditionem and petit treason High treason he defineth to be an offence done against the securitie of the common wealth or of the Kings most excellent Maiestie whether it be by imagination word or deed as to compasse or imagine treason or the death of the Prince or the Queene his wife or his sonne and heyre apparent or to deflowre the Kings wife or his eldest daughter vnmaried or his eldest sonnes wife or leuie war against the King in his Realme or to adhere to his enemies ayding them or to counterfeit the Kings great Seale priuie Seale or money or wittingly to bring false money into this Realme counterfeited like vnto the money of England and vtter the same or to kill the Kings Chaunceler Treasurer Iustice of the one bench or of the other Iustices in Eyre Iustices of Assise Iustices of oyer and terminer being in his place doing of his office anno 25. Ed. prim ca. 2. or forging of the Kings seale manuell or priuy signet priuy seale or forrein coine current within the Realme anno 2. Mar. cap. 6. or diminishing or impairing of money current an 5. Elizab. ca. 11. anno 14. El. ca. 3. 18. Elizab. ca. pri and many other actions which you may read there and in other places particularly expressed And in case of this treason a man forfeiteth his lands and goods to the King onely And it is also called treason Paramount anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. The forme of Iudgement giuen vpon a man conuicted of high treason is this The Kings Sergeant after the verdict deliuered craueth Iudgement against the prisoner in the behalfe of the King Then the Lord Steward if the traitour haue bene noble or other Iudge if he be vnder a peere saith thus N. Earle of P. For so much as thou before this time hast bene of these treasons indited and this day arraigned for thee same and put thy selfe vpon God and thy peeres and the Lords thy peeres haue foūd thee guilty my Iudgement is that thou shalt from hence be conueied vnto the Tower of London whence thou camest and from thence drawne through the middest of London to Tiburne and there hanged and liuing thou shalt be cut downe thy bowels to be cut out and burnt before thy face thy head cut off and thy body to be diuided in foure quarters and disposed at the Kings Maiesties pleasure and God haue mercy vpon thee Petit treason is rather described by examples then any where logically defined as when a seruant killeth his master or a wife her husband or when a secular or religious man killeth his prelate to whom he oweth faith and obedience And in how many other cases petit treason is committed See Cromptons Iustice of peace And this maner of treason giueth forfeiture of Escheats to euery Lord within his owne fee anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. Of treason see Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. nu pri 2. Treason compriseth both high and petit treason anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 4. Treasure troue The saurus inuentus is as much as in true French Tresor trouuè i. treasure found and signifieth in our common law as it doth in the Ciuile law idest veterem depositionem pecuniae cuius non extat memoria vt iam dominum non habeat l. 31 § prim Π. de acquir rerum Dom. Neere vnto which definition commeth Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. num 4. And this treasure found though the ciuill lawe do giue it to the finder according to the lawe of nature yet the lawe of England giueth it to the King by his prerogatiue as appeareth by Bracton vbi supra And therefore as he also saith in the sixth chapter it is the Coroners office to enquire therof by the countrie to the Kings vse And Stawn pl. cor lib. pr. cap. 42. saith that in auncient times it was doubtfull whether the concealing of treasure found were felonie yea or not and that Bracton calleth it grauem praesumptionem quasi crimen furti But the punishment of it at these dayes as he proueth out of Fitzh Abridgment pag. 187. is imprisonment and fine and not life and member And if the owner may any way be knowne then doth it not belong to the kings prerogatiue Of this you may reade Britton also cap. 17. who saith that it is euery subiects part as soone as he hath found any treasure in the earth to make it knowne to the Coroner of the countrie or to the Bayliffes c. See Kitchin also fol. 40. Treasurer thesaurarius commeth of the French tresorier i. quaestor praefectus fisci and signifieth an Officer to whom the treasure of another or others is committed to be kept and truly disposed of The chiefest of these with vs is the Treasurer of England who is a Lord by his office and one of the greatest men of the land vnder whose charge and gouernment is all the Princes wealth contained in the Exchequer as also the checke of all Officers any way employed in the collecting of the Imposts tributes or other reuenewes belonging to the Crowne Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 14. more belonging to his office see ann 20 Ed. 3. cap. 6. anno 31. H. 6. cap. 5. anno 4. Ed. 4. cap. pri anno 17. eiusdom cap. 5. anno prim R. 2. cap. 8. anno 21. H. 8. cap. 20. anno prim Ed. 6. cap. 13. Ockams Lucubrations affirme that the Lord chiefe Iustice had this authoritie in times past and of him hath these words Iste excellens Sessor omnibus quae in inferrore vel superiore scacchio sunt prospicit Ad nutum ipsius quaelibet officia subiecta disponuntur sic tamen vt ad Domini Regis vtilitatem iuste perueniant Hic tamen inter caetera videtur excellens quod potest his sub testimonio suo breve Domini Regis facere fieri vt de thesauro quaelibet summa liberetur vel vt computetur quod sibi ex Domini Regis mandato praenouerit computandum vel si maluerit breve suum
lib. 2. cap. 41. § Item inquiratur 12. and Cromptons Iurisd fol. 194. in these words without warrant no subiect may haue within the Forest a vacarie But in the statute anno 37. H. 8. cap. 16. I finde vacharie to be as it were a speciall proper name of a certaine quantitie and compasse of ground within the forest of Ashedowne Valewe valentia valor The word is in it selfe plaine enough But I cannot omitte one place in M. West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 70. V. W. touching the difference betweene value and price These be his words And the value of those things in which offences are committed is vsually comprised in Inditements which seemeth necessary in thest to make a difference from perit larceny and in trespas to aggrauate the faulte and increase the fine But no price of rhings ferae naturae may be expressed as of deere of hares c. if they be not in Parks and warrens which is a liberty anno 8. Ed. 4. fol. 5. nor of charters of land And where the number of the things taken are to be expressed in the Inditement as of yong Doucs in a Doue house yong haukes in a wood there must be saide pretii or ad valentiam but of diuers deade things ad valentiam and not pretii of coine not current it shal be pretii but of co●ne current it shall neither be saide pret● nor ad valentiam for the price and value thereof is certaine But of counterfeit coine shall bee said ad valentiam and in couterfeiting of coine shall not be said decem libras in denariis Dominae Reginae nor in pecunia Dominae Reginae but ad instar pecuniae Dominae Reginae Valour of mariage Valore maritagii is a writ that lyeth for the Lord hauing profered covenable mariage to the Infant without disparidgement against the Infant comming to his yeares if he refuse to take the Lords offer And it is to recouer the value of the mariage Regist orig fol. 164. old nat br fol. 90. Variance commeth of the French varier i. alter are it signifieth in the common lawe an alteration or change of condition after a thing done For example the communality of a towne make a composition with an Abbot Afterward this towne by a graunt from the king obteineth Bayliffes This is a variance and in this case if the Abbotcōmence any suite for breach of the composition he must varie from the words of the communalty set downe in the Composition and begin against the Bayliffes and the Communalties Brooke tit Variance fol. 292. It is also vsed for an alteration of some thing formerly laide in a plee which is easilier knowne what it is then when it may be vsed as it appeareth by Brooke through the whole title aforesaide See variance in the newe booke of Entries Vassall vassallus signifieth him that holdeth land in see of his Lord Hot. verbo Feudal we call him more vsually a tenent in fee whereof some owe fidelitie and seruice and are called vassalli iurati some that owe neither and are called vassalli iniurati But of this later sort I thinke that in England we haue not any Of these thus writeth Hotoman in his disputations vpon the Feuds cap. 3. Propriè is vassa dicitur qui ab Imperatore regale feudum accepit vassallus autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diminutivo nomine qui ab illo feudale beneficium adeptus est quasi qui in vassi fide clientela est c. M. Skene de verbor signif verb. Ligentia saith that vassallus is diuided into homologum non homologum Homologus is he that sweareth seruice with exception of a higher Lord and non homologus is he that sweareth with out exception all one with Ligeus And the same author verb. Vassallus saith that it is vassallus quasibassallus id est inferior soctus From the French bas i. humilis dimissus and the Dutch word gesel i. socius his reason is because the vassall is inferior to his master and must serue and reuerence him and yet he is in maner his companion because each of them is obliged one to the other He saith farder out of Cuiacius lib. prim de Feud that leades leodes fideles homines nostri feudatarii ministeriales beneficiarii beneficiati vassalli signifie almost all one thing And a litle after he saith thus In the lawes of the Feuds vassallus is called fidelis quia fidelitatem iurat Amongst vassals the first place of dignitie is giuen to them that are Duces Marchion●s Comites and are called Cap●tanti Regni The second is granted to Barons and others of like estate and are called Valvasores Maiores The third to them who are called Gentlemen or Nobles holding of Barons which also may haue vnder them vassals that be Gentlemen And such vassals holding in chiefe of Barons are called Valv aso●ts minores And they which hold of Gentlemen are called vassalli valvassini seu minimi valvasores But in this Realm he speaketh of Scotland they that hold of Barons are called Milites and they that hold of them are called subvassores Thus fa●e M. Skene Vasto is a writ that lyeth for the heire against the tenent for terme of life or of yeares for making waste or for him in the Reuersion or Remainder Fitzh 〈◊〉 br fol. 55. Regist orig fol. 72. 76. and Regist Iudic. fol. 17. 21. 23. 69. v. anno 6. Ed. pricap 5. Vavasour vavasor aliâs valvasor is one that in dignitie is next vnto Baron Camden Britan. pag. 109. Bracton lib. prim cap. 8 saith thus of this kind of men Sunt alii potentes sub Rege qui dicuntur Barones hoc est robur belli sunt alii qui dicuntur Vavasores viri magnae dignitatis Vavasor enim nihil meliùs dici poterit quàm vas sortitum ad valetudinem Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludio Feudorum tit prim num 4. c. calleth them valvasores and giueth this reason of it Quia assident valva i. portae Domini in festis in quibus consueueruat homines curtizare eis reuerentiam exhibere propter Beneficium eis collatum sicut libertus patrono M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 108. hath these words of them Primus etiam Normannorum temporibus Thani proximi à Comitibus in dignitate censebantur Et valvasores maiores si illis qui de feudis scribunt credimus iidem fuerunt Barones Venditioni exponas is a writ Iudiciall directed to the Vndershyreeue commaunding him to sell goods that he hath formerly by commaundement taken into his hands for the satisfying of a iudgement giuen in the kings Court Register Iudicial fol. 33. b. Venire facias is a writ Iudicall and goeth out of the Record lying where two parties plead and come to issue sc vpon the saying of the country For then the party plaintiffe or Defendant shall haue this writ directed to the Shyreeue that he cause to come twelue lawfull men
of any other countrie found within the kingdome in recompence of goods taken frō him in the said countrie after he hath hene denied restitution there Register orig fo 129. a. This among the aūciēt Civilians was called clarigatio now barbarously represali 〈…〉 Arretted arrectatus is he that is conuented before a Iudge and charged with a crime Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. 45. quasi ad rectum vocatus It is vsed somtime for imputed or laid vnto as no folly may be arretted to him being vnder age Litleton cap. Remitter The Latine substantiue Rettum is vsed in the Register orig Chawcer vseth the verb arretteth id est layeth blame as M. Speight interpreteth it I may probably coniecture that this word is the Latine rectum For Bracton hath this phrase ad rectum habere malefactorem i. to haue the malefactor foorth coming so as he may be charged and put to his triall lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. and in another place rectatus de morte hominis i. charged with the death of a man eod cap. 1. num 3. Articles of the Cleargie articuli Cleri be certaine statutes made touching persons and causes ecclesiasticall anno 9. Ed. 2. Like vnto which there were other made anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 3. Assay of measures and waights assaia mensurarum ponderum Register orig fol. 279. is the examination vsed by the Clerke of the market Assayer of the king is an officer of the mint for the due triall of siluer indifferently appointed betwixt the maister of the Mint and the merchants that bring siluer thither for exchange anno 2. H. 6. cap. 12. Assault in sultus commeth of the French verb assailir i. adormi appetere invadere which French also proceedeth from the Latine assilire i. vim afferre oppugnare It signifieth in our common lawe a violent kind of iniurie offered to a mans person of a higher nature then batterie For it may be committed by offering of a blowe or by fearefull speech M. Lamberd in his eirenar lib. 2. cap. 3. whome reade The feudists call this assultum and define it thus Assultus est impetus in personam aut locum fiue hoc pedibus fiat vel equo aut machinis aut quacunque alia re assiliatur Zasius de feud parte 10. nu 38. And assilire est vim adferre adoriri oppugnare li. feud 1. tit 5. § 1. Assach seemeth to be a Welch word and to signifie so much as a kind of excuse or strange kind of purgation by the oathes of three hundred men anno 1. H. 5. cap. 6. Assart assartum in M. Manwoods iudgement parte 2. ca. 9. ru 5. of his forest lawes commeth of the French assortir signifying as he saith to make plaine or to furnish but rather indeede to set in order and handsomly to dispose Assartum est quod redactum est ad culturam Fleta li. 4. ca. 21. § Item respondere It signifieth as the said M. Manwood saith nu 1. vbi supra an offence committed in the forest by plucking vp those woods by the rootes that are thickets or coverts of the forest and by making them plaine as eatable land where he also faith that an assart of the Forest is the greatest offence or trespasse of all other that can be done in the forest to vert or venifon containing in it as much as waste or more For whereas the waste of the Forest is but the felling and cutting downe of the couerts which may grow againe in time an assart is a plucking them vp c. which he confirmeth out of the redde booke in the Exchequer in these words Assarta verò occasiones nominantur quando sc forestae nemora vel dumeta pascuis latibulis ferarum oportuna succiduntur quibus succisis radiciti● avulsis terra subvertitur excolitur And again out of the Register originall fo 257. a. b. in the writ ad quod damnum sent out in case where a man sueth for a licence to assart his grounds in the Forest and to make it severall for tillage Soe that it is no offence if it be done with licence To this may Bracton also be added li. 4. ca. 38. nu 11. where he saith that these words boscus es●icitur assartum signifie as much as redactus in culturam of this you may read more in Cromptons Iurisdictions fo 203. and in charta de foresta anno 9. H. 3. ca. 4. where the english word is not assart but assert in Manwood parte 1. of his Forest lawes pa. 171. The word is vsed anno 4. Ed. 1. stat 1. in the same signification That which we call assartum is els where tearmed Disboscatio Decis Genu. 74. Assembly vnlawfull illicita assemblata cōmeth of the French assembler i. aggregare whence also is the substantiue assemblee i. coitio congregatio It is in our common lawe as M. Lamberd defineth it eiren li. 1. ca. 19. the companie of 3. persons or more gathered together to doe an vnlawfull act although they doe it not See vnlawfull assemblie Assets quod tantundem valet Bract. li. 5. tract 3. ca. 8. nu 2. is nothing but the French assez 1. satis For though this word masque vnder the vizard of a substantiue it is in truth but an adverb It signifieth in our common lawe goods enough to discharge that bruden which is cast vpon the executour or heire in the satisfying of the testators or auncestors debts or legacies See Brooke titulo Assets per discent by whome you shall learne that whosoeuer pleadeth assets sayeth nothing but that he against whome he pleadeth hath enough descended or come to his hands to discharge that which is in demaūd The author of the newe tearmes of lawe maketh 2. sorts of assets viz. assets par discent assets enter mains the former being to be alleaged against an heire the other against an executor or administrator Assigne assignare both it selfe and the French assigner come of the latine It hath two significations one generall as to appoint a deputè or to set ouer a right vnto another In which signification Britton fo 122. saith this word was first brought into vse for the fauour of Bastards because they cannot runne vnder the name of heires to their fathers and therefore were are comprised vnder the name of assignees The other signification of this word is especial as to appointe at or set forth viz. to assigne errour old br nat fo 19. is to shew in what part of the proces errour is committed To assigne false iudgement eodem fo 17. that is to declare how and where the iudgement is vniust To assigne a false verdict eodem fo 112. and to assigne an oath to be false anno 9. R. 2. ca. 3. To assigne the cessor old nat br fo 134. 1. to shew how the plaintife had cessed or giuen ouer To assigne wast is to shewe wherein especially the wast is cōmitted Reg. orig f. 72. Assigne in the generall signification
a distinction between those lands that the Lord of a maner hath in his owne hands or in the hands of his leasec dimised vpon a rent for tearme of yeares or life and such other lād appertaining to the said maner which belongeth to free or copy-houlders Howbeit the copyhold belonging to any maner is also in the opiniō of many good lawyers accounted Demeines Bracton in his fourth booke tract 3. ca. 9. nu 5. hath these words Item dominicum accipitur multipliciter Est autē dominicum quod quis habet admensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands anglie Item dicitur dominicum villenagium quod traditur villanis quod quis tempestiuè intempestiue resumere possit pro voluntate sua reuocare Of this Fleta likewise thus writeth Dominicum est multiplex Est autem Dominicum propriè terra admensam assignata villenagium quod traditur villanis ad excolendum terra precariò dimissa quae tempestiuè pro voluntate domini poterit reuocari sicut est de terra commissa tenenda quam diu commissori placuerit poterit dici Dominicum de quo quis habet liberum tenementum alius vsumfructum etiam vbiquis habet liberum tenementum alius curam sicut de custode dicipoter it curatore vnde vnus dicitur a iure alius quoque ab homine Dominicum etiam dicitur ad differentiam eius quod tenetur in seruitio Dominicum est omne illud tenementum de quo antecessor obiit seisitus vt de feudo nec refert cum vsufructu vel sine de quo si eiect us esset si viueret recuperare posset per assissam nomine disseisina licet alius haberet vsum fructum sicut dici poterit de illis qui tenent in villenagio qui vtuntur fruuntur non nomine proprio sed nomine Domini sui Fleta l. 5. c 5. § Dominicū autē And the reasō why copyhold is accoūted Demeanes is because they that be tenents vnto it are iudged in law to haue nor other right but at the will of the lord Soe that it is reputed still after a sort to be in the Lords hands And yet in common speach that is called ordinarily Demeanes which is neither free nor copy It is farder to be noted that Demaine is sometime vsed in a more speciall signification and is opposite to Franck fee. For example those lands which were in the possession of King Edward the confessor are called auncient Demaine all others be called Franck fee. Kitchin fol 98. and the tenents which hould any of those lands be called tenents in auncient demaine the others tenents in franck fee. Kitchin vbi supra And also tenents at the common lawe West parte 2. Simbol titulo Fines Sect 25. The reason is because tenents in auncient Demaine cannot be syewed out of the Lords court Tearmes of the Lawe verbo Auncient Demaine And the tenents in aunciēt demaine though they hould all by the verge and haue none other euidēce but copy of court rolle yet they are saide to haue free hould Kitchin fol. 81. See Awncient demaine Demayne cart of an Abbot seemeth to bee that cart which the Abbot vseth vpon his owe Demaine Anno. 6. H. 3. cap. 21. Demurrer Demorare commeth of the French Demeurer i. manere in aliquo loco vel morari It signifieth in our common lawe a kinde of pawse vpon a pointe of difficultie in any action and is vsed substantiuely For in euery action the controversie consisteth either in the fact or in the lawe if in the fact that is tried by the Iurie if in lawe then is the case plaine to the Iudge or so hard and rare as it breedeth iust doubt I call that plaine to the Iudge wherein hee is assured of the lawe though perhaps the partie and his councell yeeld not vnto it And in such the Iudge with his Assessors proceedeth to Iudgement without farder worke but when it is doubtfull to him and his Associates then is there stay made and a time taken either for the court to thinke farder vpon it and to agree if they can or els for all the Iūstices to meete together in the Chequer chamber and vpon hearing of that which the sergeants shall say of both partes to advise and set downe what is lawe And whatsoeuer they conclude standeth firme without farder remedie Smith de Repub. Angliae lib. 2. cap. 13. West calleth it a Demurrer in chauncery likewise when there is question made whether a parties answer to a bille of complaint c. be defectiue or not and thereof reference made to any of the bench for the examination therof report to bee made to the court parte 2. symb tit Chauncery sect 29. Denariata terrae See Farding deale of land Denizen commeth of the French Donaison i. Donatio and signifieth in our common lawe an Alein that is infrāchised here in England by the Princes charter an dinabled almost in all respects to doe as the kings natiue subiects doe namely to purchas and to possesse lands to be capable of any office or dignitie Yet it is saide to be short of naturalis●●ion because a straunger naturalised may inherit lands by descent which a man made onely a denizen cannot And againe in the charter whereby a man is made denizen there is commonly conteined some one claufe or other that abridgeth him of that full benefite which naturall subiects doe inioy And when a man is thus infránchised he is saide to bee vnder the kings protection or esse ad fidem Regis Angliae before which time he can inioy nothing in England Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 25. nu 3. Nay hee and his goods might bee seised to the kings vse Horn in his mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. de la Venue de franc plege Deodand Deodandum is a thing giuen or forseited as it were to God for the pacification of his wrath in a case of misaduenture whereby any Christian soule commeth to a violent ende without the fault of any reasonable creature For example if a horse should strike his keeper and so kille him if a man in dryuing a cart and seeking to redresse any thing about it should so fall as the cart wheele running ouer him should presse him to death if one should be felling of a tree and giuing warning to one cōming by whē the tree were neere falling to looke to themselues and any of them should bee slaine neuerthelesse by the fall of the tree In the first of these cases the horse in the second the cart wheele carte and horses and in the third the tree is to be giuen to God that is to be sold and distributed to the poore for an expiation of this dreadfull euent though effected by vnreasonable yea sensles dead creatures Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. ca. 2. whereof also read Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 5. and Britton cap. 7. and West parte 2.
Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 3. and Britton cap. 39. For hee pardoneth life and limme to offendours against his crowne and dignitie except such as he bindeth himself by oath not to forgiue Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 35. And Habet omnia iura in manu sua Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. num prim And though at his coronation he take an oath not to alter the lawes of the land Yet this oath notwithstanding hee may alter or suspend any particular lawe that seemeth hurtfull to the publike estate Blackwood in Apologia Regum c. 11. See Oath of the king Thus much in short because I haue heard some to be of opiniō that the lawes be aboue the king But the kings oath of old you may see in Bracton lib. 3. cap. 9. nu 2. for the which looke in Oath of the King The kings oath in English you may see in the old abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacram. Regis Fourthly the kings only testimonie of any thing done in his presence is of as high nature and credit as any Record Whence it cōmeth that in all writs or precepts sent out for the dispatch of Iustice he vseth none other witnesse but himselfe alwaies vsing these words vnder it Teste me ipso Lastly he hath in the right of his crowne many prerogatiues aboue any common person be he neuer so potent or honourable whereof you may reade your fill in Stawnf tractate vpon the Statute thereof made anno 17. Ed. 2. though that containe not all by a great number What the kings power is reade in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. nu prim 2. King of Heradls Rex Heraldorū is an officer at Armes that hath the preeminence of this Society See Herald This officer of the Romans was called Pater Patratus Kings Bench Bancus Regius is the Court or Iudgment seate where the Kinge of England was wont to sitte in his owne person and therefore was it moueable with the court or kings Houshould And called Curia domini Regis or Aula Regia as M. Gwine reporteth in the preface to his readings and that in that and the Exchequer which were the only courts of the king vntill Henry the thirds daies were handled all maters of Iustice as well Ciuill as Criminall whereas the court of common plees might not be so by the statute anno 9. H. 3. cap. 11. or rather by M. Gwins opinion was presently vpon the graunt of the great charter seuerally erected This court of the Kings bench was wont in auncient times to be especially exercised in all Criminall maters plees of the crowne leauing the handling of priuate contracts to the cownty court Glanuil lib. 1. cap. 2. 3. 4. li. 10. cap. 18. Smith de Repub Anglicana lib. 2. cap. 11. and hath president of it the Lord Cheife Iustice of England with three or foure Iustices assistaunts four or fiue as Fortescu saith cap. 51. and officers thereunto belonging the clearke of the crowne a Praenatory or Protonotari and other sixe inferior ministers or Atturnies Camd Britan pag. 112. See Latitat How long this court was moueable I finde not in any wrighter But in Brittons time who wrot In K. Ed the 1. his daies it appeareth it followed the court as M. Gwin in his said preface wel obseruethout of him See Iustice of the Kings Bench. Kings siluer is properly that mony which is due to the king in the court of common plees in respect of a licence there graunted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fo 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certaine waight of merchandize to the valew of a hundred or something vnder or ouer according to the diuers vses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger and Fagossa Knaue is vsed for a man seruant a. 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 3. And by M. Verstigans iudgemēt in his Restitutiō of decaied intelligence ca. 10. it is borowed of the dutch cnapa cnaue or knaue which signifie all one thing and that is some kinde of officer or seruant as scild-cnapa was he that bore the weapon or shield of his superior whom the latines call armigerum and the French men escuyer Knight Miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. Administer and by M. Camdens iudgment pag. 110. deriued from the same with vs it signifieth a gentleman or one that beareth Armes that for his vertue and especially Martiall prowes is by the King or one hauing the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of gentlemen and raised to a higher accompt or steppe of dignity This among all other nations hath his name from the Horse Because they were wont in auncient time to serue in warrs one horsbacke The Romans called them Equites the Italians at these daies terme them Cauallieri The French men Cheualliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Caualleros or Varoncs a Cauallo It appeareth by the statute anno 1. Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in auncient times gentlemen hauing a full knights fee and houlding their land by knights seruice of the king or other great person might be vrged by distresse to procure himselfe to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable seruice of his Lorde in the Kings warres To which point you may also reade M. Camden in his Britannia pag. 111 But these customes be not nowe much vrged this dignity in these dayes being rather of fauour bestowed by the Prince vpon the worthier sort of gentlemen then vrged by constraint The maner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto gladio leuiter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Cheualier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis Eques in nomine Dei The solemnitie of making Knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the priuiledges belonging to a knight in Fernes Glorie of Generositie pag. 116. Of these knights there be two sorts one spirituall another temporall Cassanaeus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both those sorts and of many subdiuisions reade him in that whole part The temporall or second sort of knights M. Ferne in his Glorie of generositie pag. 103. maketh threefold here with vs. Knights of the sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the soueraigne Order that is of the Garter of all which you may reade what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the termes especially of our common lawe Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M Skene de verb. significat verbo Milites saith that in the auncient lawes of Scotland Freeholders were called Milites Which may seem to haue bene a custome with vs
lyeth for the cognizee of a maner seignory cheife rent or other seruices to compell him that is tenent of the land at the time of the note of the fine leuied to atturne vnto him West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 126. To the same effect speaketh the old nat br fol. 155. See also the new booke of Entries ver●● Per quae seruitia Perquisite perquisitum signifieth in Bracton any thing purchased as perquisitum facere 〈◊〉 2. cap. 30. nu 3. lib. 4. ca. 22. Perquisites of court be those profits that grow vnto the Lord of a maner by vertue of his Court Baron ouer and aboue the certaine and yearely profits of his land as escheats mariages goods purchased by villeines fines of copie houlds and such like New terms of the law Person See Parson Personable signifieth as much as inhabled to hould or mainetaine plee in a court for example The demaundant was iudged personable to maintaine this action old nat br fol. 142. and in Kitchin fol. 214. The tenent pleaded that the wife was an alien borne in Portingall without the ligeance of the King and Iudgement was asked whether shewould be answered The plaintife saith shee was made personable by Parlament that is as the Ciuilians would speake it habere personam standi in iudicio Personable is also as much as to be of capacitie to take any thing graunted or giuen Plowden casis Colthirst fol. 27. b. Personall Personalis hath in our common lawe one strange signification being ioyned with the substantiue things goods or Chatels as things personall goods personall Chatels personall for thus it signifieth any corporeall and moueable thing belonging to any man be it quicke or dead So is it vsed in West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 58. in these words Theft is an vnlawfull felonious taking away of another mans moueable personall goods and againe fol. 61. Larceny is a felonious taking away of another mans moueable personal goods Kitchin f. 139. In these words Where personall things shal be giuen to a corporation as a horse a cowe an oxe sheepe hogs or other goods c. and Stawnford pl cor fo 25. Contrectatio rei aliena is to be vnderstood of things personall for in things reall it is not felony as the cutting of a tree is not felony The reason of this application see in Chatell Personalty Personalitas is an abstract of persouall The action is in the personalty old nat br fol. 92. that is to say brought against the right person or the person against whome in lawe it lieth I find these contrary words Personalitas Impersonalitas in the author of the booke called vocabularius vtriusque iuris as for example Personalitas significatur per has dictiones tu mihi ego tibi cum alto significato quod probabiliter conclulitur si nullo modo concludatur tunc est Impersonalitas quia actum vitiat prout ratio dictat verbi gratia Ego stipulor constituis te mihi soluturum debitum a Titio mihi debitum Tu respondes Satisfiet Haec Impersonalitas non contrahit obligationem Persons ne Praebendaries ne seront charges as quinsimes c. is a writ that lyeth for preb endaries or other spirituall persons being distreined by the shyreeue or collectours of fifteenths for the fiftenth of their goods or to be contributory to taxes Fitzh nat br fol. 176. Pesterable wares seeme to be such wares as pester and take vp much roome in a shippe anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Peter pence Denar 〈…〉 Sancti Petri otherwise called in the Saxon tongue Roomfooh i. the see of Rome or due to Rome and also Romescot and Rome penning was a tribute giuen by Inas King of the west Saxons being in pilgrimage at Rome in the yeare of our Lord. 720. which was a peny for euery house Lamberds explication of Saxon words verbo Numus whome see also fol. 128. in Saint Edwards lawes nu 10. where it is thus writen Omnes qui habent 30. denariatus viuae pecuniae in domo sua de suo proprio Anglorum lege dabit denariū Sancti Petri lege Danorum dimidiam merkam Iste verò denarius debet summoniri in solennitate Apostolorum Petri Pauli colligi ad festivitatem quae dicitur ad vincula ita vt vltra illum diem non detincatur Si quispiam detinuerit ad Insticiam Regis 〈◊〉 deferatur quoniam denarius hic Rogis eleemmoz 〈…〉 est Iusticia verò faciat denarium 〈◊〉 dere foriffacturam Episcopi● Regis Quòd si quis domos plures had buerit de illa vbi residens fuerit infesto Apostolorum Petri Paul● denarium reddat See also King Edgars lawes fol. 78. cap. 4. which containeth a sharpe constitution touching this 〈…〉 ter Stowe in his Annals pag. 67. saith that he that had 20. peni worth of goods of one manes catell in his house of his own proper was to giue a p 〈…〉 at Lammas yearly See Romes 〈…〉 Petit Cape See Cape Petit Larceny parvum latr 〈…〉 nium See Larcenye Petit treason parua traditio in true French is petit trahizon 〈…〉 proditio minor treason in a lesser or lower kinde For whereas treason in the highest kinde is an offence done against the securitie of the common wealth West parte 2. symb titulo Indi●ements sect 63. petit treason is of this nature though not so expresly as the other Examples of petit treason you shall find to be these if a seruant kill his master a wife her husband a secular or religious man his prelate anno 25. Edward 3. cap. 2. Whereof see more in Staw●f pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 12. See also Crom 〈…〉 Iustice of peace fol. 2. where he addeth diuers other examp 〈…〉 those of Stawnford For the punishment of petit treason see the statute anno 22. H. 8. cap. 14. and Crompton vbi supra Petition Petitio hath a general signification for all intreaties made by an inferiour to a superiour and especially to one hauing iurisdiction But most especially it is vsed for that remedie which the subiect hath to helpe a wrong done or pretended to be done by the King For the King hath it by prerogatiue that he may not be siewed vpon a writ Stawnf praer cap. 15. whome also read cap. 22. And a petition in this case is either generall or speciall It is called generall of the generall conclusion set downe in the same viz. que le Roy lui face droit reison that the King doe him right and reason wherevpon followeth a generall indorsement vpon the same soit 〈◊〉 fait aux partis let right be done to the partise Petition special is where the conclusion is speciall for this or that and the Indorsment to that is likewise speciall See the rest cap. 21. Petra lanae a stone of wooll See Stone Philiser See Filazer Piccage Piccagium is money paid in faires for breaking of the ground to set vp
either of two French words Prime or Primier i. primus and Notaire i. Notarius tabellio or of two Latine words prae notarius quasi primus aut principalis notarius The office is likewise borowed from the later Romanes who made his name of halfe Greeke and halfe Latine viz 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. primus principalis and Notarius It is vsed in our common lawe for the cheife clerks of the Kings courts whereof 3. be of the common pleas and one of the Kings bench For the pregnotarie of the commmon plees anno 5. H. 4. cap. 14. is termed the cheife clerke of that court He of the Kings Bench recordeth all actions civile siewed in that court as the Clerke of the Crowne office doth all criminall causes Those of the common plees doe enter and inrolle all maner of declarations pleadings Assises and Iudgements and all actions the same terme that the apparence is made Also they make out all iudiciall writs as the venire facias after issues ioyned and Habeas corpus for the bringing in of the Iurie after it is returned vpon the venire facias They also make forthe writs of executions and ofseisin writs of supersedeas for appearance to exigents as well as the exigents and writs of priuiledges for remouing of causes from other inferiour courts of Record in case where the partie hath cause of priuiledge Also writs of procedendo of scire facias in all cases and writs to inquire of dammages and all proces vpon prohibitions and vpon writs of audita querela and false Iudgement Finally they inrolle all recognisances acknowledged in that court and all common Recoueries and may make exemplifications of any Record the same terme before the rols be deliuered from them Prender commeth of the French prendre i. accipere acceptare capere prehēdere it signifieth in our common lawe sometime a power or right to take a thing before it be offered as such things as lie in Prender or such as lie in render West parte 2. titula Fines sect 126. where you haue these words If the lord graunt the seruices of his tenent by fine or otherwise the Lord before atturnment shall haue such things as lie in prender as the ward of the body of the heire and of the land escheats c. but not such things as lie in prender as rents and releifes heriots and other seruices For he canot avowe for them before the atturnment Prender de Baron signifieth literally in barbarous French to take a husband but it is vsed in our common lawe as an exception to disable a woman from persiewing an appeale of murder against the killer of her former husband Stawnf pl. cor li. 3. cap. 59. The reason whereof whether it be because by her secōd mariage she may iustly be thought to haue giuen vp the interest shee had in her former husband or for that shee is now couert againe or for both I leaue to consideration Prender del profits signifieth verbatim to take the profits It signifieth substantiuely the taking of the profits See Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 185. See Pernour of profits Prest is vsed for some dutie in money to be paide by the Shyreeue vpon his accoumpt in the exchequer anno 2. 3. Ed. 6. cap. 4. Prest mony is so called of the French word Prest i. explicatus promptus expeditus for that it bindeth those that haue receiued it to be ready at all times appointed Primage is a dutie due to the mariners and saylers for the loading of any shippe at the setting forth from any hauen anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Primier seisin Prima seisina ad verbum signifieth the first possession It is vsed in the common lawe for a braunch of the kings prerogatiue whereby he hath the first possession of all lands and tenements through the Realme holding of him in cheife whereof his tenent died seised in his demesn as of fee and so consequently the rents and profits of them vntill the heire if he be of age doe his homage if he be vnder yeares vntill he come to yeares See Stawnf prarog cap. 3. and Bracton lib. 4. tract 3. cap. pri Primo beneficio See Beneficio Prince Princeps is a french word and taken with vs diuersly sometime for the king himselfe but more properly for the kings eldest sonne who is prince of Wales as the eldest sonne to the French king is called Dolphine both being princes by their natiuitie M. Fearn in the glory of generositie pag. 138. For Edward the first to appease the tumultuous spirits of the Welch men who being the auncient Indigenae of this land could not in long time beare the yoke of vs whome they call strangers sent his wife being with childe into Wales where at Carnaruan shee was deliuered of a sonne therevpon called Edward of Carnarvan and afterward asked the Welch men seing they thought much to be gouerned by straungers if they would be quietly ruled by one of their owne nation who answering him yea then quoth he I will appoint you one of your owne country men that cannot speake one word of English and against whose life you can take no iust exception and so named vnto them his sonne borne in Carnarvan not long before from which time it hath continued that the kings eldest sonne who was before called Lord Prince Stawnf praerog cap. 22. fol. 75. hath beene called prince of Wales Stowes Annals pag. 303. See anno 27. H. 8. cap. 26. anno 28. eiusdem cap. 3. Principality of Chester anno 21. Rich. 2. cap. 9. See Cownty palatine and Cromptons diuers iurisdictions fol 137. Prior perpetuall or datife and removeable anno 9. R. 2. cap. 4. and anno 1. Ed. 4. cap. 1. paulo ante finem Lord prior of Saint Iohns of Ierusalem anno 26. H. 8. cap. 2. Priors aliens Priores alieni were certaine religious men borne in Fraunce and gouerners of religious houses erected for out-landish men here in England which were by Henry the fifth thought no good members for this land after such conquest obtained by him in Fraunce and therfore suppressed Whose liuings afterwards by Henry the 6. were giuen to other Monasteries and houses of learning Stowes Annals pag. 582. See anno 1. H. 5. cap. 7. but especially to the erecting of those two most famous Colledges called the Kings Colledges of Cambridge and Eton. Prioritie prioritas signifieth in our common lawe an antiquitie of tenure in comparison of another not so auncient As to hold by Prioritie is to hold of a Lord more aunciently then of another old nat br fol. 94. So to hold in posterioritie is vsed by Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fo 11. And Crompton in his Iurisdiction fol. 117. vseth this word in the same signification The Lord of the prioritie shal haue the custodie of the bodie c. fol. 120. If the tenent hold by prioritie of one and by posterioritie of another c. To which effect see also Fitz. nat br fol. 142. F.
to appeare there except their apparence be especially required vpon some extraordinary cause anno 25. H. 3. cap. 10. and Britton cap. 29. It seemeth to be called the Shyreeues Turn of the French word Tour. i. ambitus circuitus vicissitudo and is of Britton called Tour cap. 61. sub fine capitis as if we would say The Shyreeue his course for as Britton noteth in the said 29. chapter that which before the Shyreeue is called the Shyreeues Turne is called in the court of Fraunchises and Hundreds the view of Frank-pledge wherein inquirie is especially made of such as be not in any dozin with whome Fleta agreeth And by Fleta it appeareth that this Turn was the Shyreeues course to keepe his courtin euery Hundred lib. 2. cap. 52. in princip So that as the inferiour courts had their times to take knowledge of those and other causes belonging to their cognisance So the Shyreeue had his course or turne to doe the like at these two seuerall seasons That if there were any defects in them it might be redressed in these and Gods peace and the Kings so much the more carefully obserued This as Lamberd saith was of old called also the Shyreeues moote lib. 4. cap. 4. In this court as Britton saith vbisupra the Shyreeue causeth tobe found out 12. of the most sage loyall and sufficient men of all the Hundred for he kept his turne twice every yeare in each Hundred Magna charta cap. 35. Britton vbi supra whome he charged vpon their oathes to present the truth touching the articles ministred vnto them and set downe by Britton in the same chapter This done he put all other to their oathes according to their dozins and villages truly to present vnto the former twelue all things concerning such articles as by them they should be asked of But fithence the Hundred courts are all called to the county by the statute anno 14. Ed. 3. cap. 3. Statut. pri these Turnes be likewise kept in one cheife place of euery shire and not seuerally in euery Hundred as before they were Of this you may reade more in Britton or in Cromptons Iurisdiction fol. 230. and in the Mirrour of Iustices lib. pri cap. de Turnes Turney Torneamentum commeth of the French Tournoy i. Decursorium It signifieth a martiall exercise of Knights or Souldiers fighting one with another in disport and is thus defined ca● felicit Extra de Torneamentis Torneamenta dicuntur Nundinae vel feriae in quibus milites ex condicto convenire ad oftentationem virium suarum audaciae temerè congredi solent This word is vsed in the statute anno 24. Henric. octau capit 13. and as I haue heard it signifieth with vs in England those combats that are made with arming swords on horsebacke And I thinke the reason of the name to proceede from the French Tourner i. vertere because it consisteth much in agilitie both of horse and man Turno vececomitum is a writ that lyeth for those that are called to the Shyreeues turne out of their owne Hundred Register orig fol. 174. Tuain nithes gest hospes duarum noctium Roger Houeden parte poster suorum annalium fol. 345. b. who if he did harme to any his hoste was not aunswerable for it but himselfe See Thrid nithes hawan man Twelue men Duodecim homines legales is a number of twelue persons or vp wards to the number of 24. by whose discretion all tryals passe both in ciuill and criminall causes through all courts of the common law in this Realme First for ciuile causes when proofe is made of the mater in question as the parties and their councell thinke good on both sides the point of the fact that they are to giue their verdict of is deliuered likewise vnto them which we call the issue and then are they put in minde of their oath formerly taken to doe right betweene party and party and so sent out of the court seuerally by themselues to consider vpon the evidence of both sides vntill they be agreed which done they returne to the court againe and deliuer their verdict by the mouth of the foreman And according to this verdict Iudgement afterward passeth either condemnatorie for the plantife or absolutory for the Defendant These 12. be called 12. milites Glanuilo lib. 2. cap. 14. 15. and so be they in Bracton diuers times but that word is altered In causes criminall there be two sorts of Enquests one called the graund Enquest and the other the Enquest of life and death The graund Enquest is so called either because it consisteth commonly of a greater number then 12. as of 24. 18. or 16. at the least or els because all causes criminall or penall first passe through them whereas the other Enquest is especially appointed for one or few maters touching life and death committed to their considerations Those of the grand Enquest are also called by Bracton 12. milites lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. pri nu 2. because they were wont to be Knights as it see meth and not inferiours except so many knights could not be found Idem eodem num 1. in fine And their function is to receiue all presentments made vnto them of any offence and accordingly to giue their generall opinion of the presentment by writing either these words Balla vera vpon the bille of presentment which is an Inditement of the party presented or els this word Ignoramus which is an absoluing of him Now as criminall causes be of two sortes either capitall touching life and member or finable so is there a double course of these Inditements For in causes onely finable the party indited must either trauers the Inditement by denying it and so it is referred to a petit Iury whereby he is either conuicted or discharged of the crime or els he confessing it the court setteth his fine vpon his head wirhout more worke But in maters of life and death the party indited is commaunded to hold vp his hād āswer guilty or not guilty if guilty he standeth conuicted by his owne confession if not guilty he is farder referred to the Enquest of life and death which consider vpon the proofe brought against the prisoner and accordingly bring in their verdict Guilty or not Guilty So is he iudged to dye or deliuered by the court Of this read more in Iuditement Assise Iury See the statute anno 35. H. 8. cap. 6. 37. ciusdem cap 22. anno 2. Ed. 6 cap. 32. an 5. El. ca. 25. V VAcation vacatio hath an especiall signification in this kingdome being vsed for all that time respectiuely which passeth betweene terme and terme at London And when such times begunne and ended in our anncesters daies see Roger Hovedens annals parte posteriori fo 343. a. where you shall find that this intermission was called pax Dei ecclesiae Vaccarie aliâs vacharie vaccaria aliâs vacheria semeth to be a house to keepe kine in Fleta
villein yet that there is a two fold tenure called villenage one wherin both the persō the tenure is bound and in all respects at the disposition of the Lord and another which in respect of the tenure is after a sort seruile though the person be not bond This is well proued by Bracton li. 2. ca. 8. nu 3. in these words Item tenementum non mutat statum liberi non magis quam serut Poterit enim liber homo tenere purum villenagium faciendo quicquid ad villanum pertinebit nihilo-minus liber erit cum hoc faciat ratione villenagii non personae suae ideo poterit quando volucrit villenagium deserere liber discedere nisi illaque atus sit per vxorem natiuam ad hoc faciendum ad quam ingressus fuit in villenagium quae praestare poterit impedimentum c. So that a man may hould in pure villenage and yet be a free man in respect of his person But what is pure villenage Bracton aunswereth in the words there next following Purum villenagium est à quo praestatur seruitium incertum indeterminatum vbi scirinon poterit vespere quale seruitium fieri debet mane viz vbi quis facere tenetur quicquid ei praeceptum fuerit The other sort of villenage which is not pure is there called of Bracton villanum soccagium which differeth from the other in this because it is onely tyed to the performrnce of certaine seruices agreed vpon betweene the Lord and the Tenent Whereof see Bracton also in the same place by whom you may perceiue that a man may hould per villanum soccagium and yet haue liberum tenementum if he haue it to himselfe and his heires This villanous soccage is to cary the Lords dung into his feilds to plow his ground at certaine daies sow and reape his corne plash his hedges c. See Soccage Villenous iudgement Villanum iudicium is that which casteth the reproch of villeny and shame vpon him against whom it is giuen as a Conspiratour c. Stawnf pl cor lib. 3. 12. f. 175. This M. Lamb. in his Eirenarcha lib. 1. ca. 13. pag. 63. calleth villenous punishment and saith that it may well be called infamous because the iudgement in such a case shal be like the auncient iudgement in Attaint as it is said anno 4. H. 5. Fitzh Iudgement 220. and is in 27. lib. Assis pl. 59. set downe to be that their oathes shall not be of any credit afterward nor lawfull for them in person to aproch the Kings Courts and that their lands and goods be seised into the Kings hands their trees rooted vp and their bodies imprisoned c. And at this day the punishmēt apointed for periury hauing somwhat more in it then corporall or pecuniary paine stretching to the discrediting of the testimony of the offender from euer after may be partaker of this name Thus farre M. Lamberd Virgata terrae Register orig fol. 167. a. See yard land Viridario eligendo is a writ that lyeth for the choice of a verdour in the forest Register orig fol. 177. Visitation of maners Visitatio morum was wont to be the name of the Regarders office in auncient time Manwood parte pri of his forest lawes pag. 195. See Regarder Visne Vicinetum signifieth a neihgbour place or a place neere at hand anno 16. R. 2. ca. 6. Vtsu Franciplegū is a writ to exempt him from comming to the view of Frankpledge that is not within the Hundred resident For men are bound vnto this view by reason of their habitation and not of lands held where they dwell not Register orig fol. 175. Vitteller victualarius commeth of the French victuailes i. commeatus and signifieth with vs him that selleth victuals For these there is a writ in Fitz. nat br fol. 172. if they exercise their trade bearing a magistracie in any towne corporate Vmple anno 3. Edvard 4. cap. 5. Vncore prist is a plee for the Defendant being siewed for a debt due at a day past to saue the forfeiture of his bond saying that he tendered the dept at the time and place and that there was none to receiue it and that he is now also readie to pay the same 7. Ed. 6. 83. Dyer See Vnquest prist Vncuth is a Saxon word signifying as much as incognitus It is vsed in the auncient Saxon lawes for him that commeth to an Inne guest wise and lyeth there for two nights at the most In which case his host was not bound to answer for any offence that he committed whereof he was guiltlesse himselfe But if he laid there the third night then he was called guest hospes and thē must the host answer for him as for one of his owne familie And if he taried any longer then was he called Agen hine that is to say familiaris Whom if he offend against the Kings peace his hoste was to see foorth-comming or if he could not bring him out within a moneth and a day he must satisfie for his offence Lamberd Archaiono fol. 133. num 7. Of this Bracton lib. 3. cap. 10. num 2. writeth thus Item secundum antiquam consuetudinem dici paterit de familia alicuius qui hospitatus fuerit cum alio per tres noctes quia primâ nocte poterit dici Vncuth secunda verò Gust tertiâ nocte Hoghenhine c. This law was made for the better preseruation of the Kings peace and to shew in what pledge euery man was to be accompted that trauelled by the way See Tuainnithes gest Vnde nihil habet is a writ See Dote vnde nihil habet Vnder-chamberlaine of the Exchequer is an Officer there that cleaueth the taileys written by the Clerke of the Taileys and readeth the same that the Clerke of the Pel and the controllers thereof may see their entrie be true He also maketh searches for all Roords in the Treasurie There be two Officers there of this name Vnderescheateur Subescheatour anno 5. Ed. 3. cap. 4. See Escheatour Vndershyreeue Subvicecomes See Shyreeue Vndersitter is an Inmate See Inmate Vndertakers be such as are employed by Pourueyours of the King as their deputies anno 2. 3. Phil. Mar. cap. 6. and such as vndertake any great worke as drying of Fennes c. anno 43. Eliz. cap. 11. Vnder-treasurer of England viccthesaurarius Angliae anno 39. El. cap. 7. anno 43. eiusdem Subsidie of the Clergie This Officer as some Exchequer men thinke was first created in the time of king H. the seuenth to chest vp the Kings Treasure at the end of euery Terme and to note the content of money in each chest and to see it caried to the Kings Treasurie in the Tower for the ease of the Lord Treasurer as being a thing too meane for him to be troubled with and yet meete to be performed by a man of great secrecie and trust He in the vacancie of the Lord Treasurers office doth all things
for so as the partie who in equitie hath wrong can haue none ordinary remedie by the rules and course of the common lawe West part 2. symbol titulo Proceedings in Chauncerie sect 18. where you may reade many examples of such cases as sub poena lyeth in There is also a sub poena ad testificandum which lyeth for the calling in of witnesses to testifie in a cause as well in Chauncerie as in orher courts And the name of both these proceede from words in the writ which charge the partie called to appeare at the day and place assigned sub poena centum librarum c. I find mention of a common sub poena in Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 33. which signifieth nothing else but such a sub poena as euery common person is called by into the Chauncerie whereas any Lord of Parlament is called by the Lord Chauncelers leters giuing him notice of the suit intended against him and requiring him to appeare Crompton eodem Subsidie subsidium commeth of the French subside signifying a taxe or tribute assessed by Parlament and graunted by the commons to be leuied of euery subiect according to the value of his lands or goods after the rate of 4. shillings in the pound for land and 2. shillings 8. pence for goods as it is most commonly vsed at this day Some hold opinion that this subsidie is graunted by the subiect to the Prince in recompence or consideration that whereas the Prince of his absolute power might make lawes of himselfe he doth of fauour admit the consent of his subiects therein that all things in their owne confession may be done with the greater indifferencie The maner of assessing euery mans lands or goods is this first there issueth a Commission out of the Chauncerie to some men of honour or worship in euery Countie by vertue thereof to call vnto them the head Constables or Bayliffes of euery Hundred and by them the Constable and three or foure of the substantiallest housholders in euery towne within their hundred at a day certaine which men so called or so many of them as the Commissioners thinke good to vse do rate the inhabitants of their owne towne in such reasonable maner as they find meete yet by the discretion of the said Commissioners And then euery man after his value set downe must at his time pay to the Collectour appointed after the rate aforesaid Yet in auncient time these subsidies seeme to haue beene graunted both for other causes as in respect of the Kings great trauell and expences in warres or his great fauours toward his subiects as also in other maner then now they be as euery ninth Lambe euery ninth fleece and euery ninth sheafe anno 14. Ed. 3. stat prins cap. 20. And of these you may see great varietie in Rastals Abridgement tit Taxes Tenths Fifteenths Subsidies c. whence you may gather that there is no certaine rate but euen as the two houses shall thinke good to conclude Subsidie is in the statute of the land fometime confounded with custome anno 11. H. 4. cap. 7. See Beneuolence Suretie of peace securitas pacis is an acknowledging of a bond to the Prince taken by a competent Iudge of Record for the keeping of the peace Lamberds Eirenarcha li. 2. cap. 2. pag. 77. This peace may a Iustice of peace commaund either as a Minister when he is willed so to doe by a higher authoritie or as a Iudge when he doth it of his owne power deriued from his commission Of both these see Lamberd Eirenarcha lib. 2. ca. 2. pag. 77. see Peace see Supplicauit Suffragan Suffraganeus is a titular Bishop ordeined and assisted to aide the Bishop of the Dioces in his spirituall function c. Suffraganeus Extra de electione For the Etimology Suffraganes dicuntur quia eorum suffragiis causae ecclesiasticae iudicantur Ioach. Stephanus de Iurisd li. 4. ca. 16. nu 14. It was inacted anno 26. H. 8. ca. 14. that it should be lawfull to every Diocesan at his pleasure to elect two sufficient men within his Dioces and to present them to the King that he might giue the one of them such title stile name and dignity of sease in the saide statut specified as he should think conuenient Suyte Secta commeth of the French Suite i. affectatio consecutio sequela comitatus It signifieth in our common law a following of another but in diuers senses the first is a suite in lawe and is diuided into suite reall and personall Kitchin fol. 74. which is all one with action reall and personal Then is there suite of Court or suite seruice that is an attendance which a tenent oweth at the court of his Lord. Fitzh nat br in Indice verbo Suite suyte seruice and suyte reall anno 7. H. 7. cap. 2. The newe expositour of lawe Termes maketh mention of foure sorts of suites in this signification Suite couenant suite custom suite reall and suite seruice Suite couenant he defineth to be when your auncester hath couenanted with mine auncester to siew to the court of mine auncesters Suite custome when I and mine auncesters haue beene seised of your owne and your auncesters suite time out of minde c. Suite reall when men come to the Shyreeues Turne or Leete to which court all men are cōpelled to come to knowe the lawes so that they may not be ignorant of things declared there how they ought to be gouerned And it is called reall because of their allegance And this appeareth by common exeperience when one is sworne his oath is that he shall be a loyall and faithfull man to the King And this suite is not for the land that he holdeth within the Countie but by reason of his person and his aboade there and ought to be done twice a yeare for default whereof he shall be amerced and not distreined I thinke this should be called rather regall or royall because it is performed to the King for royall The French word in the vsuall pronuntiation commeth neere to reall the leter o being almost suppressed see Leete Suyte seruice is to siew to the Shyreeues Turn or Leete or to the Lords court from three weekes to three weekes by the whole yeare And for default thereof a man shall be distreined and not amercied And this suite seruice is by reason of the tenure of a mans land Then doth suite signifie the following of one in chace as fresh suite West 1. c. 46. a. 3. Ed. 1. Lastly it signifieth a petition made to the prince or great personage Suyte of the Kings peace secta pacis Regis anno 6. R. 2. stat 2. ca. pri anno 21. eiusdem cap. 15. anno 5. H. 4. cap. 15. is the persiewing of a man for breach of the K. peace by treasons insurrectiōs rebelliōs or trespasses Summoneas is a writ Iudiciall of great diuersitie according to the diuers cases wherein it is vsed which see in the table of the Register Iudiciall Summoner summonitor
signifieth one vsed to call or cite a man to any court These by the common lawe ought to be boni that is by Fleta his Iudgement liberi homines ideo boni quia terras tenentes quod sint coram talibus Iusticiariis ad ce ●tos diem locum secundum mandatum Iusticiariorum vicecomiti directum parati inde facere recognitionemilib 4. cap. 5. § Etcum Summons Summonitio see Sommons Common Summons Marlb cap. 18. anno 52. Henric. 3. is l. Summons in terra petita Kitch fol. 286. is that summons which is made vpon the land which the party at whose suite the summons is sent forth seeketh to haue Summons ad Warrantizandum Dyer fol. 69. nn 35. Sumage Sumagium seemeth to be tolle for cariage on horseback Crompton Iurisd fol. 191. Forwhere the Charter of the Forest cap. 14. hath these words for a horse that beareth loades euery halfe yeare a halfe penny the booke called Pupilla ocult vseth these wordes pro vno equo portante summagium per dimidium annum obolum It is otherwise called a Seame And a Seame in the Westerne parts is a horse loade Superoneratione pasturae is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth against him who is impleaded in the County for the overburdening of a common with his catell in case where he is formerly impleaded for it in the countie and the cause is remooued into the Kings court at Westm Supersedeas is a writ which lieth in diuers and sundry cafes as appeareth by the table of the Register originall and the Iudiciall also and by Fitzh nat br fol. 236. and many other places noted in the Index of his booke verbo Supersedeas But it signifieth in them all a command or request to stay or forbeare the doing of that which in apparence of law were to be done were it not for the cause wherevpon the writ is graunted For example a man regularly is to haue surety of peace against him of whome he will sweare that he is afraide and the Iustice required herevnto cannot denie him Yet if the party be formerly bound to the peace either in Chauncerie or else where this writ lyeth to stay the Iustice from doing that which otherwise he might not denie Superstatutum Ed. 3. vers servants and labourers is a writ that lyeth against him who keepeth my seruant departed out of my seruice against lawe Fitzh nat fo 167. Super statuto de York quo nul sera viteller c. is a writ lying against him that occupieth vitteling either in grosse or by retaile in a Citie or Borough towne during the time he is Maior c. Fitzh natur bre fol. 172. Super statuto anno pri Ed. 3. cap. 12 13. is a writ that lyeth against the Kings Tenent holding in cheife which alienateth the kings land witout the Kings license Fitzh nat br fol. 175. Super statuto facto pour seneshall Marshall de Roy c. is a writ lying against the Steward or Marshall for holding plee in his court of freehould ot for trespasse or contracts not made within the Kings houshold Fitzherbert nat breu fol. 241. Super statuto de Articulis Cleri cap. 6 is a writ against the Shyteeue or other officer that distreineth in the Kings high way or in the glebe land aunciently giuen to Rectories Fitzh nat br fol. 173. Super praerogatiuae Regis cap. 3. is a writ lying against the kings widow for marying without his licence Fitzherbert nat br fol 174. Supplicauit is a writ issuing out the Chauncerie for taking the surety of peace against a man It is directed to the Iustices of peace of the county and the Shyreeue and is grounded vpon the statute anno pri Ed. 3. cap. 16. which ordeineth that certaine persons in chauncerie shall be assigned to take care of the peace See Fitzh nat br fol. 80. This writ was of old called Breve de minis as M. Lamberd in his Emenarcha noteth out of the Register originall fol. 88. Sur cui in vita is a writ that lyeth fot the heire of that woman whose husband hauing alienated her land in fee shee bringeth not the writ Cui in vita for the recouery of her owne land for in this case her heire may take this writ against the tenent after her decease Fitzh nat br fol. 193. B. Surgeon commeth of the French Chirurgien i. Chirurgus vulnerarius signifiing him that dealeth in the mechanicall parte of phisicke and the outward cures performed with the hand The French word is compounded of two greeke words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. manus and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. opus And therefore are they not alowed to minister inward medicine See the statut 32. H. 8. ca. 4. and M. Powltons new abridgement titule Surgeons Surcharger of the forest is he that doeth common with more beasts in the forest then he hath right to common withall Manwood parte 2. of his forest lawes cap. 14. nu 7. Surplusage surplusagium commeth of the French surplus i. corollarium additamentum It signifieth in the common law a superfluity or addition more then needeth which sometime is a cause that a writ abateth Brooke titulo Nugation Superfluity fol. 100. Plowden casu Dine contra Maningham fol. 63. b. It is sometime also applied to mater of accoumpt and signifieth a greater disbursement then the charge of the accoumptant amounteth vnto Surreioynder is thus defined by West parte 2. symb titulo Supplications sect 57. A Surreioynder is a second defence of the plaintifes actiō opposite to the Defendants Reioynder And therefore as he saith Hotoman call eth it Triplicationem quaeest secunda actoris defensio contra Rei duplicationem opposita Not Hotoman onely calleth this triplicationem but the Emperour himselfe De Replicationibus libro 4. Institut titulo 14. Surrender sur sum redditio is an Instrument testifiing with apt words that the particular tenent of lands or tenements for life or yeares doth sufficiently consent and agree that he which hath the next or immediate Remainder or Reuetsion thereof shall also haue the particular estate of the same in possession and that he yeeldeth and giueth vp the same vnto him For euery surrender ought forthwith to giue a possession of the things surrendred West parte pri lib. 2. sectio 503. where you may see diuers presidents But there may be a surrender without writing And therefore there is said to be a surrender in deede and a surrender in law A surrender in deede is that which is really and sensibly performed Surrender in law is in intendment of law by way of consequent and not acutall Perkins Surrender 606. seqq as if a man haue a lease of a serm during the terme he accept of a new lease this act is in law a surrender of the former Coke vol. 6. fo 11. b. Sursise supersisae anno 32. H. 8. ca. 48. seemeth to be an especiall name vsed in the Castle of Douer for such penalties and