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A85670 Bouleutērion, or A practical demonstration of county judicatures. Wherein is amply explained the judiciall and ministeriall authority of sheriffs. Together with the original, jurisdiction, and method of keeping all countrey courts. / By Will: Greenwood, philomath. Greenwood, Will. William. 1659 (1659) Wing G1870; Thomason E1789_1; ESTC R209680 323,562 484

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this day he hath ready under his seale and the seales of the said four lawfull men who were present at the Record as by the same Writ to him it was commanded to answer to the said C. D. in the same plea whereupon the same A. B at the same Court put in his place S. D his Attorney in the same plea. And the same C. D. at the same Court by his Attorney aforesaid complained against the same A. B. for that to wit that whereas the same C. D. the last day of Dec. in the year aforesaid at W. aforesaid and within the jurisdiction of the Court aforesaid was possessed of one piece of woollen cloath containing eleven ells price 34 s. as of his proper goods and chattels And being so thereof possessed the same piece of cloath out of his hands and possession casually lost which said piece of cloath afterwards to wit the 12th day of February then next following into the hands and possession of the said Defendant by finding came Notwithstanding the said Defendant knowing the said piece of cloath to be the proper piece of cloath of the said Plaintiff and to him of right to belong and appertain and minding and intending the same Plaintiffe of the same piece of cloath craftily and subtilly to deceive and defraud the same piece of cloath although thereof the third day of March in the yeare abovesaid he was requested to the same and hath not delivered but the same piece of cloath afterwards to wit the 18th day of March then next following at VV. aforesaid within the jurisdiction of this Court aforesaid unto his proper use he converted and disposed to the damage of the said Plaintiff of 39 s. And thereof he bringeth suit c. And the said Defendant at the same Court prayeth Licence thereof to imparle untill the next Court and hath it c. The same day is given to the said Plaintiffe then there c. At which day the Court was held within the said Honour of P. the 26th day of May then next following came aswell the said Plaintiff as the said Defendant by their Attorheys aforesaid And the same Defendant prayeth further Imparlance untill the next Court within the said Honour to be held and hath it c. The same day is given to the said Plaintiff then there c. At which said next Court holden within the Honour aforesaid the 26th day of May then next following came as well the same Plaintiff as the same Defendant by their Attorneys aforesaid and hereupon the said Defendant prayeth further imparlance thereunto to speak until the next Court of the Honour aforesaid to be held and hath it c. The same day is given to the said Plaintiff then there c. At which said Court held within the said Honour the day of then next following came aswell the said Plaintiff as the said Defendant by their Attorneys aforesaid And the same Defendant then defended the force and wrong when c. And said that he was in nothing guilty of the premisses above imposed upon him as the said Plaintiff by his said Declaration complained against him and of this he putteth himself upon the Countrey and the said Plaintiff likewise whereupon it was then commanded to the Bailiff of the Honour aforesaid that he cause to come to the Court of the Honour aforesaid to be held by 12 free and lawfull men of the Honour asoresaid to try the issue aforesaid above joyned Day was given to the parties abovesaid then there c. At which said next Court held within the said Honour the day of then next following came aswell the said Plaintiff as the said Defendant by their Attorneys aforesaid and the said Bayliff returned the Pannel with all the Jurors whereof 12 being called came and were sworn and said upon their oath that the said C. D. was possessed of the said piece of cloth in the Declaration aforesaid specified and that the same piece of cloth by finding came to the hands of the said A. B. and that the said Plaintiff requested the same A. B. to deliver to the same Plaintiff the same piece of cloth and that the said Defendant did not deliver the same to the said Plaintiffe And further the said Jury said that the said Defendandant doth yet detain in his hands the same piece of Cloth and if upon the whole matter in form aforesaid found the same Defendant to be guilty of the premisses in the Declaration aforesaid specified or not the Jury aforesaid are altogether ignorant and pray the advice of the Court in the premisses and if upon the whole matter in form aforesaid found it shall seem to the Court that the said Desendant is guilty of the premisses in the Declaration aforesaid specified then the said Jury say upon their oath That the same Defendant is guilty of the premisses in the Declaration afore said specified And then the said Jury do assesse damages by occasion of the premisses besides costs and charges by him about his suit in this behalfe laid out to 20 s. and for those costs and charges to 12 d. and if upon the whole matter in form aforesaid found it seemeth to the Court here that the said Defendant is not guilty of the premisses in the Declaration aforesaid specified then the Iury aforesaid say upon their oath That the said Defendant is not guilty of the premisses in the Declaration aforesaid specified And because the same Court will advise of and upon the premisses before they give Iudgement therein day is given to the parties aforesaid here until the next Court to be held in the said Honour to hear thereof their Iudgment c. At which said Court held in the said Honour the day of then next following came aswell the said Plaintiff as the said Defendant by their Attorneys aforesaid And because the same Court of giving their Iudgment therein are not advised day is given to the parties aforesaid until the next Court to hear thereof their Iudgment c. At which said Court held in the said Honour the day of then next following came aswell the said Plaintiff as the said Defendant by their Attorneys aforesaid whereupon the premisses being seen and by the Court here fully understood it seemed to the Court here that the same Defendant is guilty of the premisses in the Declaration aforesaid specified Therefore it is confidered by the same Court That the same Plaintiff recover against the said Defendant the said 21 s. by the Jury aforesaid in form aforesaid assessed and also 22 s. for his costs and charges by the Court here by his consent of increase adjudged which said damages do in the whole amount unto 53 s. And the said A. B. in mercy c. And hereupon the said C. D. prayeth That the said A B. may shew to the Court here and assign the defects wherein false judgment is made to him in the said plaint in the said Court if any be made Whereupon the
some times by the agreement of the Attorneys of both parties The Rule or dies datus is when further day is given to the Plaintiff to put in his Declaration or to the Defendant to put in his answer the time given is usually fourteen dayes or more or lesse according to the order of the Court and the agreement of their Attorneys The next Court after the filing of the Declaration and Emparlance given the Defendant is to put in his answer which he pleadeth and saith in bar to avoid the Action of the Plaintiff either by consession and avoidage or denying the materiall parts thereof It must be legall full and perfect for a bad or insufficient plea is in Law as no Plea If Issue be not joyned upon the answer then the Plaintiff is to file his Replication to the answer of the Defendant which must affirme and pursue his Declaration Then the Defendant must put in his Rejoynder to the Plaintiffs Replication which must pursue and confirme his answer for every Rejoynder ought to have these two properties specially that is it ought to be a sufficient answer to the Replication and also to follow and enforce the matter of the Bar. If the parties be not at issue by reason of some new matter disclosed in the Defendants Rejoynder that requireth answer then may the Plaintiff Sur-rejoyn to the said Rejoynder if there be cause but it salleth out very seldome This Sur-rejoynder is a second defence of the Plaintiffs Declaration opposite to the Defendants Rejoynder Demurrer cometh of the Latine word Demorari to abide and therefore he who demurreth in Law is said he that abideth in Law moratur or demoratur in Lege when so ever the Counsell of the party is of opinion that the Declaration or Plea of the adverse party is insufficient in Law then he demurreth or abideth in Law and referreth the same to the Judgment of the Court. Now there is no Demurrer in Law but when it is joyned and therefore when a Demurrer is offered by the one party as is aforesaid the adverse party joyneth with him and thereupon the Demurrer is said to be joyned and then the case is by Councell of both sides argued When the Declaration Answer Replication c. are defective in respect of some circumstance of time or place c. it may be remedied by consent of the Court or parties or by a motion to the Steward Non sum informatus is a formall answer of course made by an Attorney whereby he is deemed to leave his Clyent undefended and Judgment passeth for the adverse party It is a failing to put in answer to the Declaration of the Plaintiff in any Action by the day assigned which if a man do Judgment shall passe against him because he saith nothing to the contrary To an Action of Debt upon Specialty Not his Deed To an Action of Debt for mony lent c. He owes nothing by the Country To a Bond for performance of Covenants upon an Indenture or Arbitrament Not his Deed or not guilty To an Action of case upon an Assumpsit He did not assume To an Action of Trespasse Not guilty To an Action of Assault and Battery and Slander Not guilty To a Contract without Deed the Plea is Payment or an Obligation made for the debt c. To an Obligation the Plea is Payment c. but to plead payment to an Obligation without Acquittance is no Plea For an Obligation or other matter in writing may not be discharged by any agreement by word but by writing unumquodque dissolvitur eo modo quo colligatur But to plea d payment to an Obligation with Condition though no Acquittance by writing it is good for the Condition is in nature of a Defeasance to the Obligation To an Action of debt He owes nothing by the Country or by the Law or Paid If the Action be brought against an Executor or Administrator the ordinary Plea is that he never was Executor or hath fully Administred c. If the Suit be upon a Deed or Contract without Deed That he was within age when he made the Deed or Contract If it be against a woman That she was Covert that is to say had a Husband when she made the Deed or Contract If upon an Arbitrament That there was no Arbitrament legally made or That he hath performed the Award If upon an Action of Trespasse Damage feasant That the Beasts came in by the default of the inclosure of the Plaintiff or That he hath little of Common there c If upon an Action brought for Rent That there is no rent in arrear c. To an Action of Detinue That he doth not detain the thing sued for A release or gift to him by the Plaintiff or That he did tender the thing sued for before Action brought That the De-fendant did deliver it to him as Pledge for ten shillings which he hath not paid c. To an Action of the case for Slander Not guilty or Justifie the words Cafe upon a Warranty That he did not warrant Upon a Bond or Bill plead Conditions performed by Threats Duresse Imprisonment c. Upon a Demise Not demised To Trespass Not guilty an Arbitrament Tender of amends before the Action brought c. If diverse men do a Trespasse and one makes a good accord this will discharge and be a Bar to all the rest Co. 9. 79. If Freehold be pleaded the Court in that case can proceed no further There are divers Pleas to Actions of Trespass some of one nature and some of another as justification c. If the Defendant have matter of Justification or excuse to plead he must be sure to plead it specially for if he plead the generall Issue viz. Not guilty it will be found against him But now by the late Act made the 23 of October 1650. The Defendant may plead the generall Issue of Not guilty or such like generall Plea and give the speciall matter in Evidence Where the Defendant is not constrained to plead a speciall Plea he may plead the generall Issue proper for the Action brought and give the speciall matter in Evidence For every Plea must be so framed that it may give a full answer to the matter set forth in the Declaration to wit all such as are materially to be answered unto If one be sued upon an Obligation he cannot be compelled to plead before he have Oyer of the Condition of the Obligation If an Action of Debt be brought for Rent upon an Indenture of Demise for years the Defendant may plead payment without shewing the Deeds for the Lease shall be intended to be in being at the time of the Action brought Trin. 24. Car. B. R. If an Obligation of an hundred pounds be made with Condition for payment of fifty pounds at a day and at the
the day and place within contained and to the parties within written that day have prefixed that then they be there in that Plea as just it may be to proceed as within to me is commanded A. B. complaines of C. D. in a Plea of taking of the Beasts of him the said A. B. in testimony of which matter E. B. S. D. I. W. and I. R. four legall men of those who at the Record present were in full Court at the Castle of Y. in the County aforesaid the tenth day of Aug in the year c. to the same Record their Seals severally have put the day and year abovesaid Note that though the Plea be discontinued in the County yet the Plaintiff or Defendant may remove the Plaint into the Common Pleas or Upper Bench by a Recordare c. and it shall be good and he shall declare upon the same And the Court shall hold Plea upon the fame Plaint for if the Plaint be continued in the County and issue joyned upon it yet nothing shall be removed but only the Plaint and in the Common Pleas the Plaintiff may declare anew c. Likewise if the Recordare bear date before the Plaint was entred in the County it is good enough and the Record is well removed The nature of a Pone A Pone doth nothing differ from a Recordare but that a Pone is allwayes to remove such Suits as are before the Sheriff by Writ of Iusticies and not by Plaint onely but the Recordare is to remove the Suit that is by Plaint onely without Writ F. N. B. 70. 11. By vertue of this Writ to me directed I have put before the Justices c. of the Common Bench at Westminster the Plea which is in my County by Writ of his Highness the Lord Protector of Iusticies betwixt A. B. and C. D. of a Plea of debt as it is said as it appeareth in a certain Schedule to this Writ annexed c. At my County Court held at the Castle of Y. in the County aforesaid upon Munday the twelfth day of August in the year of our Lord 1658. c. A. B. complaineth of C. D. of a Plea of debt in testimony of which matter R. L. S. R. T. O. and S. D. four legall men of those who at the Record present were in full Court their seals severally have put the day and year abovesaid A. B. complaineth of C. D. of a plea of debt 20 l. That if a plea be removed by Pone at the suit of the Defendant or Plaintiff and afterwards they proceed in this Court in the plea and give judgement and award execution c. then the Defendant or he against whom the judgement was given and execution awarded shall have an attachment against the Sheriff directed to the Coroner to answer as well his Highness the Lord Protector for the contempt as the party his damages c. Of the Writ of Prohibition THe Writ of Prohibition is of the same nature of a Recordare and a Pone but not in use Of the Consultation or Procedendo THese two Writs are both of one nature though the Writ of Consultation be obsolete and the writ of Procedendo stept up into its place it lieth where a cause hath been formerly removed by Pone or Recordare from this Court into the Vpper Bench or Common Pleas and for want of sufficient cause of removeall is sent back again Fitz. old Natura brevium 50. The nature of a Writ of False Judgement A Writ of salfe Iudgement lieth where an erroneous Judgement is given in this Court being no Court of Record then the party grieved by the Judgment may have this Writ and remove all processe of the suit into the Common Bench and there it shall be examined if it be found erroneous the Judgement shall be reversed and the suiters of the Court who gave the Judgement amerced Note that a Writ of false Judgement lieth not but in a Court where there are Suitors for if there be no Suitors there the Record cannot be certified by them F. N. B. 43. H. By vertue of this Writ to me directed to be Recorded I have caused the Plea which is in my County together with the proceedings and the Judgement betwixt the parties beneath and to the same parties day have prefixed to be before the Justices within written at the day place within contained as the Writ exacts and requires which plea with the proceedings and judgment appeareth in a certain Schedule to this Writ annexed A Plaint by Writ in the County Court holden at the Castle of Y. in the County aforesaid on Monday the 23. day of August the year c. before the Suitors of the same Court in the time of I. B. Esquire Sheriff of the County aforesaid according to the Customs and Priviledges of the same Court time whereof the memory of man is not to the contrary have been used and approved in the same At this Court came A. B. in his proper person and brought here into Court a Writ of his Highnesse the Lord Protector of Iusticies which said Writ follows in these words O LIVER Lord Protector of c. To the Sheriff of Y. greeting A. B. hath complained to us that C. D. upon him the said A. B. at the Castle of Y. hath made an assault and hath beaten wounded and evil intreated him so that of his life it was despaired and hath done him other wrongs to the great damage and grievance of the said A. B. and therefore we command you that you hear the said plaint and after cause them to be therefore brought to justice for the same that we hear no more complaint therein for want of justice Witnesse our selves at Westminster the 10. day of August in the year of our Lord 1656. And thereupon found Pledges to prosecute the said plaint that is to say Io. Doo and Ric. Roo And thereupon the said A. B. put in his place S. D his Attorney in the plaint aforesaid and by his said Attorney required processe to be made to him upon the same And it was commanded by the said I. B. Esquire Sheriff of the said County to all and singular his Bailiffs jointly and severally and their Deputies that they or some of them should do justice to the said C. D. so that he should be and appear at the next County Court to be holden at the Castle of Y. on Monday the 20. day of September then next in the year aforesaid to answer the said A. B. in the plaint aforesaid At which day came the said A. B. by his Attorney aforesaid and offered himselfe against the said C. D. in the plaint aforesaid and then and there came I. P. one of the Bailiffs in the County aforesaid of the said I. B. Sheriff of the said County and returned the said precept so directed as aforesaid served and executed on him and the said C.
and governed himselfe Notwithstanding the said A. B. not ignorant of the premisses out of his meer and wicked malice preconceived indeavouring the name and same of the same W. B. to hurt detract make worse darken and utterly to destroy and also into perturbation vexation and insamy to lead and induce certain salse and scandalous words and lies of the same W. B. the 8. day of April in the yeare of our Lord 1656. at c. and within the liberty and jurisdiction of this Court in the presence and hearing of many faithfull subjects of the said Commonwealth said repeated and spread abroad in these English words following to wit W. B. meaning the same W. B. hath stoln my horse out of my Close which I will prove By pretext of speaking and spreading abroad of which said salse scandalous words the same W. B. not only in his good name and same is hurt but also in performance of his businesse with honest persons with whom the said W. B. in buying selling and lawfull bargaining is much hindred and damnified and also some subjects and people of this Common-wealth for that occasion will draw themselves from the company of the same W. B. and to converse with him or any wayes to intermeddle refused and yet do refuse whereupon c. damages to 39 l. And thereof he bringeth suit c. And the said A. B. by S. D. his Attorney cometh c. And saith that the said W. B. his action aforesaid against him ought not to have because he saith that he is not guilty of the speaking and spreading abroad of the words in the Declaration aforesaid specified nor of any part of them in manner and form as the said W. B. above against him complaineth And this c. Therefore according to the custom it is commanded to the Bailiff of the Weapentake of Ouze and Dar that c. that he cause to come before the Steward of the same Court at the next Court of the County aforesaid such a day 12. c. And that he then have there the same Precept together with the pannel of the names of the Jurors aforesaid the same day c. At which County Court held at the Castle of Y. aforesaid according to the custom before the Steward there upon Monday the 2. day of April came as well the same W. B. by his Attorney aforesaid as the same A. B. by his Attorney aforesaid c. and the same Bailiff of the Weapentake aforesaid returned the precept to him directed in all things served together with a Pannel of the names of the Jurors Annexed to the precept to wit in the same pannel are named L. M. N. R. c. to make a Jury between the parties aforesaid in the plea aforesaid who to speak the truth of the premisses being elected tried sworn say upon their oath that the said A. B. is guilty of the speaking spreading abroad of the said words in the said Declaration specified and they assessed the damages of the said W. B. by occasion of the speaking of the same words besides his costs and expences by him about his suit in this behalf laid out to 4 l. 5 s. for those costs expences to 8 d. Therefore at the same Court that the said W. B. should recover against the said A. B. his said damages by the Jury aforesaid in form aforesaid assessed and also 3 s. 8 d. for his costs and expences which said damages in the whole do amount unto 5 l. 17 s. 4 d. In witness whereof the seal of the Steward of the Court aforesaid is put Dated at the Castle of Y. the 12. day of March in the year of our Lord 1657. And hereupon the same VV. B. prayeth that the same A. B. may shew to the Court here and assign the defects wherein false Judgment is made in the said plaint if any be done to him whereupon the same A. B. saith that the same Record is vitious and much defective to wit in that it doth not appear by the Record before whom the first Court was held and in this that the said VV. B. by his Declaration did complain himself to be damnified and made worse to the value of 40 l. whereas by the law of the land that Court cannot hold plea of 40 s. In this also that the same Court held the 12. of March was held before the Steward whereas it ought to be held before the Suitors of the same Court and the Sheriff of the County for the time being so that the same Judgment was given Coram non Iudice Also in this that by the same Record it appeareth that the same VV. B. appeared by P. P. his Attorney and the same A. B. appeared by S. D. his Attorney but in the Record is not mentioned any Warrant of Attorney for the same VV. B. or for the same A. B. in the said plaint And to the same A. B. saith that divers manner of ways in the County Court aforesaid false Judgment is made to him in the said plaint And hereupon prayeth that the said Judgment for the said defects and others being in the same Record as false and erroneous may be adnulled and altogether taken for nothing And the same A. B. to the said 5 l. 17 s. 4 d. which the said A. B. by vertue of the same Judgment for his damages by occasion of the premisses recovered against him and unto all things which he by occasion of the same Judgment lost may be restored c. And the same W. B. saith that in the Record aforesaid there is no errour nor to the same A. B. in the same County Court held at the Castle of Y. aforesaid false Judgment is made in the same plaint and prayeth that the Justices here proceed to the examination of the same Record and to resorm and correct the false Judgment if any be found therein proved or can be made appear And because the Justices here will advise themselves of and upon the premises before they further proceed therein day is given c in Oct. pur to hear thereof what the Court hereof and upon the premises shall consider because the Justices hear thereof not as yet c. At which day here came aswell the said A. B. as the said W. B. by their Attorneys aforesaid And because the Justices here further will advise themselves of and upon the premisses aforesaid before they proceed further therein further day is given c. in Mens Pas to hear thereof what the Court hereof and upon the premisses aforesaid shall consider for that the Justices hear thereof not as yet c. If any errors and defects be found in the proceedings then will the Judgement be reversed and a Writ of Restitution awarded It was commanded the Sheriff if A. B. and C. D. should secure the same Sheriff of prosecuting their complaint then in his full County he should make to be recorded the plaint which was in
Statute doth extend only to Obligations of such as are within their guard and custody and not otherwise Trespasse brought for breaking his house and breaking three doores and breaking and carrying away three locks of those doores The Defendant justifies the entry into the house by vertue of a Fieri facias awarded against the Plaintiffe directed to the Sheriffe of and he being under Sheriffe and the other Defendants his Bailiffs two of the Defendants entred into the house and the door being open took the goods and the Plaintiff shut the doors upon the Bailiffs and imprisoned them for two hours wherefore he brake open the doors and the locks to rescue his Bailiffs Quae est eadem transgressio and it was thereupon demurred and all the Court held that although a Sheriff cannot break open an house being to take Execution by a Fieri fac yet when the door is open that he enters and be disturbed in his execution by the parties who are within the house he may break the house to rescue his Bailiffs and to take execution so it was adjudged for the Defendants And in regard this restraining of the Execution and detaining of the Bailiffs was confessed by the Demurrer an Attachment for the good behaviour was awarded against the Plaintiffe Crookes second part fol 555. and 556. If the Sheriff take Leases for years or other chattels real upon an Execution he may seize and sell them without taking Inquest by a Jury of them and the sale will be good Co 5. 90. 4. 74. And no return is required upon a Fieri facias if Execution be done which is grounded upon four strenous and solid reasons by Coo. in his 5. Report in Hoes Case 1. Because the levying of the debt is lawfull and well done and the party Defendant cannot resist the Sheriff to levy money 2. The effect of the authority the Sheriff hath by force of the Fieri facias is executed 3. The great prejudice that the Defendant whose goods are sold by the Writ and processe of Law for the satisfaction of the debt should have if the Sheriffs not returnig of the Writ should cause a new Execution to be sued forth against him and leave the Defendant to his action against the Sheriff 4. if the sale of the goods by force of the Writ shall be for not returning the writ wrongfully then the Sheriff will not finde Buyers of the Defendants goods by force of any Writ of Execution which would be very inconvenient and great delay of Executions which are the fruit and life of every suit and where the words of the Writ of Fieri facias are Ita quod habeas denarios c they are but words of command to the Sheriffe to make returne which if he do not he shall be amerced but the Execution shall stand in force Levari Facias what it is WE come to the seventh which is a Levari facias and it is onely to be levied upon the profits of the Lands and Tenements and upon the goods of him that hath forfeited a Recognisance c. Register Orig. fol. 298. b. 300. b. but he cannot seize the Land and deliver that to the party by this Writ Plow 441. and this ought to be sued within the year after the day of payment to be made by the Recognisance or after the Judgment for after the year the Conusee or Plaintiff is now by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 45. to have a Scire facias whereby the Sheriff is commanded that he give knowledge to the Defendant that he appear at a day certain in the Chancery there to shew what he can say why he should not pay the debt or damages and if he come not at the day or do 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 Sheriffe upon this Writ returne that he hath levied part of the summ viz. sixteen pounds part thereof which he hath delivered to the party now upon this return 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 summ Fitz. 265. h. Of Habere facias seisinam and Habere facias possessionem THere are other Writs of Execution which are necessary to be treated of viz. 1. Habere facias seisinam and 2. Habere facias possessionem Which Executions are for recovery of Land in a real action as Cap. ad sat fieri fac and Elegit are for Recovery of debt or damages in a personall action Co. 6. 51. F N B. 265. West 2. cap. 18. And first of the Habere facias seisinan which is a judicial Writ and lieth where one hath recovered certain lands in the Kings Court directed to the Sherif commanding him to put him in actual seisin of that Land which is done by delivering a bough of a tree or by a clod of the same land in the name of seisin c. and if the recovery be of a house then the Sherif may put him in seisin by delivering unto him the ring of a door or otherwise he may open the door saying to him Enter into the house and take seisin thereof by vertue and force of the recovery Perk. Sect. 206. 207. 208. F N. B. 220. 2. It is a Writ judicial and lieth where one was evicted from his farm and hath recovered it by Ejectione firmae or quare ejecit infra terminum it is directed to the Sheriff to command him to put the Plaintiffe in actual possession of the term again The Sheriff in executing both these two Writs may break the house and deliver seisin and possession thereof to the Plaintif But he cannot justifie the breaking a mans house to execute a Cap. ad satisfac or Fieri fac But where the Protector is a party there the Sheriff may justifie the breaking of the house to execute his Processe if they cannot be executed otherwise yet he must first request the opening of the door and withall signifie the cause of his comming F N B. 220. 221. Co. 5. 91. 6. 51. Dyer 278. Some select Cases which have not been yet published in any Treatise of this nature c. concerning Returnes of Writs where valid and good and where insufficient THis word Return hath a triple acceptation First as it is applied to the case of a Replevin and here it is called Returno habendo Secondly it is applied to the dayes of appearance in every term And thirdly it is applied to Sherifs and Bailifs and it is that which we are determined to handle And it is a Certificate made by the Sherif or Bailif to the Court from whence the Writ issued They ought to be very diligent in making true certain and perfect returns subscribing their names to them for if they make a false returne the party endamaged thereby may
the King c. And lastly That the same Court of the Kings did judge not onely according to meer right and Law but also after equity and good conscience And after this order and in these two Courts was all Justice administred This Court continuing untill the time of William the Conqueror and ever since during the times and raignes of the ancient Kings and doth yet continue in manner the same forme and substance that it then was and will doe in despite of those Sycophants that have had their Primum mobile from it and now endeavour its subversion that Viperous brood of Birds that have so much defiled their owne Nest that the whole Countrey laughs at their folly and that the pleas ought no more to be taken from it now in our dayes without cause than they ought then to have been which may evidently be proved by those ancient Writs of Pone Recordare Writ of false Judgment and Accedeas ad curiam which are yet in use to this day and to this onely end to remove suits upon cause out of this Court into superior Courts But because this requireth great search of Records to make any further progression whereunto I have no accesse I must leave it to such whose abilities are more strenuous to travell in that so intricate a path This Court is no Court of Record but onely a Court Baron though it had in ancient times the cognition of great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 23. 4. by Bracton and Britton in diverse places and by Fleta lib. 2. cap. 62. but it was abridged by the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 17. and much more by 1 E. 4. cap. unico therefore pleas holden in this Court by Plaint nor pleas holden by Writ of Justicies are not taken as matters of Record for those pleas are holden by reason of the Court which the Sheriff holdeth by reason of his Office This Court as Dalton reporteth in his Office of Sheriffs was ordained for the Sheriff to hold Pleas there for particular or private matters under forty shillings between party and party It is now as it was alwaies holden once every moneth upon a day certaine the moneth being computed according to twenty eight dayes in the moneth and not according to the Kallander 9 H 3. c. 35. 2 E. 6. c 25. It holdeth no plea of debt or damages to the value of forty shillings or above because a Fine is due thereby to the Lord Protector yet if the debt be forty shillings or above and the Plaintiff will acknowledge in his Declaration the receit of so much as to bring it within forty shillings in this case the plaint is good But if the debt be above forty shillings as five pounds the Plaintiff cannot divide this into five severall actions to make this Court hold plea of it for in this case the Defendant may wage his Law And of Debt Detinue Trespasse and other actions personall above forty shillings the Sheriff may hold plea by force of a Writ of Justicies to him directed for that is in nature of a Commission to him and is not returnable Neither doth this Writ alter the nature of the Court for therein the Sheriff is not Judge but the Freeholders or Suitors yet all Judgments shall be pronounced by the Sheriff This Court may be kept at any place within the County at the pleasure of the Sheriff but not out of it Yet the Sheriff of Northumberland by the Statute is to keep his County Court in the Towne or Castle of Alnewicke and in no other place The Sheriff of Sussex by the Statute is to hold his County Court one time at Chester and the other time at the Burrough of Lewes and so to be kept alternis vicibus for ever And also the Sheriff of the County of Chester is to keep his County Court in the Shire Hall of the sayd County Daltons Office of Sheriffs fol. 157. 158. To this Court all persons dwelling within the County owe suit by reason of their resiance No Fine can be imposed in this Court upon any offendor because it is no Court of Record Co. 8. 41. 60. 11. 43. Fitz. 73. d. But a man may be amerced for a contempt or a disturbance of the Court in the presence of the Court. This Court will entertaine no suits for Charters of Land or for Inheritance or for Freehold of Land or any titles of Land or to make severall plaints upon one entire debt by Bond or Trespasse Vi armis or actions touching life nor actions to compell one to render an account The Office of the County Clarke THe Sheriff being elected which is done yearly in the morrow after All soules in the Exchequer Chamber by the Statutes 9. E. 2. 14 E. 3. cap. 7. And his Letters Patents do commonly beare date the sixth day of November 1 2 E. 4. e. 1. unlesse it be in cases of necessity that the Court is sorced to adjourne it Crook fol. 595. before the next County day after his election and discharge of the old Sheriff he ought to be very diligent in deputing and constituting a County Clarke such a one as is sufficient and able to keep the Court that no corrupt dealing be in it as he will answer the contrary and that he be very skilfull in entring the proceedings in it He ought to be endued with these qualities according to the description of Fleta Provideat sibi Vice com' de Clerico circumspecto fideli viro provido discreto gratioso humili pudico pacifico modesto qui in legibus consuetudinibusque provinciae officio Commit ' Cleric ' se cognoscat jura in omnibus teneri affectei quique sub-balivos in suis erroribus ambiguis sciat instruere docere c. Which is thus Paraphrased That a County Clarke ought to be endued and qualified with circumspection fidelity providence humility peace and modesty and must know himselfe or be expert in the Lawes and customes of the Countrey and to have ability to instruct or direct the Bailiffs or other Ministers in dubious things wherein they may erre He must neither be attracted by price nor lucratory corruption nor any sinister affection to wander out of the way of right Qui nec as Bracton adviseth ad dextram nec ad sinistram vel propter prosperitatem terrenam vel adversitatis metum à tramite justiciae declinet The Sheriff and not the Protector hath power to delegate this Office to whom he pleaseth as it appears in Myttons case in the fourth Reports where Queen Elizabeth by Letters Patents did grant the Office of Clarkship of the County Court of Somerset to Mytton with all Fees c. for life Arthur Hopton Esquire Sheriff of the same Shire interrupted him because it was incident to his Office Mitton complained to the Lords of the Councell and was referred to the two chiefe
Justices Wray and Anderson and after many arguments concerning the validity of that Grant and conference had with all the other Justices It was resolved by all the Justices Nullo contradicente aut reluctante that the sayd Letters Patents were voyd and their reasons were That the Office of Sheriff was an ancient Office before the Conquest and of great trust and authority for the King committeth unto him Custodium Comitatus And although the King may determine the Office ad beneplacitum yet he cannot determine this in part as for one Town or Hundred nor abridge him in any incidents to his Office for the Office is entire and ought to continue so without any fraction or diminution unlesse by Parliament and the County Court and the entring of all Proceedings therein are incident to the Sheriffs Office c. And though it was granted when the Office of Sheriff was void yet the new Sheriff shall avoid it as Scroges case in the time of Vacation in the Office of Chief Justice of the Common Bench Queen Mary granted the Office of the Exigenter of London resolved that the next chief Justice shall avoid it for it was incident to his Office Also in all Writs directed to the Sheriff concerning the County Court the King sayes in comitatu tuo and in return of Exigents made by him he sayes ad comitatum meum tent c. and the stile of the Court proves it and by the Statute of 33 H. 8. the Sheriff of Denbigh shall keep his Shire Court at c. In a false Judgment it is said in pleno com tuo recordari facias c. and in a Precept of Tolt it is said summoneas c. quod sit ad comitatum meum and it should be very inconvenient that another should have the custody of the Enteries and Rolls of Court which may be imbezzelled and the Sheriff responsible for them And it was resolved that the custody of all the Goales within every County appertains to the Sheriff by right and are annexed and incident by Law to the Sheriffs Office vide an 14 E. 3. cap. 10. But note that his late Highnesse in the year 1653. granted the Office of Clark-ship for the County of York to one Master R. H. though dissonant to common Law yet consentaneous to a gladiatorie power like those in Livie in armis jus ferre omnia fortium virorum esse that all Lawes are engraven on the hilt of a victorious Sword to whose Mandamus both Statute and common Law must submit He cannot execute the Office of a County Clark and practice as an Attorny both at one time it being prohibited by the Statute of 1 H. 5. 4. being a cause of encreasing Suits and a hinderance in dispatch of Clyents causes He cannot act any thing without the assent of the Suitors if he do an Action of Trespasse lyeth against the Sheriff He must be carefull in deputing honest able and sufficient men as Bayliffs for the executing of the Precepts issuing out of the Court. He ought to enter no Plaints except in case of Replevins out of Court but in full County sedente curia yet the case is otherwise at this day and as it seems good enough verifying the Diverbe communis error facit jus He must make sufficient Precepts after the Plaints entred but not before against the Defendants directed to his Bayliffs to attach or warn the Defendants to appear at the next County Court and answer the Plaintiff The County Clark and Plaintiff upon complaint of the party grieved may be examined by one Justice of Peace concerning the taking or entring of Plaints in the County Court and book against the Statute If thereby the Justice find any fault or offence committed that shall stand for a sufficient conviction and attainder without any further inquirie or examination And the said Justice must certifie the examination within a quarter of a year into the Exchequer by the Statute of 11 H. 7. cap. 15. If a Writ of discharge of the ancient Sheriff be delivered to the County Clark sitting in the County Court the authority of the said Sheriff although absent shall presently cease At the adjourning of every Court he must appoint a day certain for the next Court to the intent the Country may know at what time they may resort thither to hear the Lord Protectors Writs of Exigent and Proclamations read The Office of a Coroner in this Court A Coroner is one of the principall Officers of this Court being chosen in it by a Writ de Coronatore elegendo directed to the Sheriff by the Freeholders or Suitors in open and full Court and is published there and after the Sheriff is to returne and certifie into the Chancery the election of every such Coroner and their names likewise the County Clark in Court must administer to the Coroner his oath for the due execution of his Office The Coroner being thus elected and sworn he is to sit there with the Sheriff every County Court to give Judgment upon Outlawries which Judgment shall be given and pronounced by him in the fifth County and there the Sheriff is to returne the Outlawry with the Exigent But by this Judgment no goods are forfeited before the Outlawry appear upon Record neither shall such an Outlawry disable the party Exigents and Proclamations are to be proclaimed five County dayes one after another and once in the open Sessions and once at the Parish Church doore where he doth or did lately dwell that he appear or else that he shall be outlawed And if Proclamation be made five County dayes and at the fifth County day the Defendant appear not then the Coroner shall give Judgment that he shall be out of the Protection of the Lord Protector and out of the ayd of the Law F. N. B. 163. But before I conclude let me give you in brief why a man is said to be outlawed and a woman waived viz. A man is said to be outlawed because he was sworn to the Law and now for his contumacy he is put from the Law and said outlawed as it were extra legem positus but a woman is not so but she is waived and not outlawed because she was never sworn to the Law Of Attorneys in this Court IT was once objected to me that no Attorney could legally practice in this Court and that every man ought to prosecute his own cause himself Epitomie of the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 10. That every man which oweth Suit to the County Court may make a generall Attorny to prosecute and follow his Suits in all Pleas And likewise in the Statute of Merton cap. 10. Quod quilibet liber homo qui sectam debet ad Com. c. libere possit facere Atturn suum ad sectas illas pro eo faciendas and an Attorny may doe every thing in the name and as the act of him who gave him the authority as if he did it himself he
Defendant in any Action or Suit is to do is to appear and shew himself in person or by an Attorny in the Court to answer the Action and defend the Suit He may also appear by an Essoin which is an excusation coming from the French word Exoine it doth delay the cause a Court day longer the common Essoin is de male vener and if he do not appear the next Court then it passeth by default Judgment entred and Execution issues out against his Goods and Chattels But after the Defendant hath once appeared in the Court by an Attorny there shall be no Essoin allowed But if he appear neither by an Attorny nor by Essoin then further Processe issues out against his Goods and Chattels viz. The Precept of Duces tecum and attachment and Distresse upon attachment infinite untill he do appear After the Processe executed the next Court the Plaintiff is to appear and file his Declaration to shew his cause of Action or matter of complaint in which must be shewn who complaineth and against whom for what matter how and in what manner the Action grew between the parties and at what time and place the wrong was done and in conclusion he must aver and profer to prove his Suit and shew the damage he hath sustained by the wrong done unto him Speciall care ought to be had that it be drawn in manner and form yet by the Statute of 36 E. 3. cap. 15. A Declaration shall be good if it have matter of substance though the terms he not apt however to avoid doubts and that the Attornies may not depend altogether upon uncertainties let them be diligent in taking right and full instructions from their Clyents and inform themselves of every puntilio which may be materially incident to the case that so they may know what manner of Action is most proper to be brought on the behalf of their Clyents In some cases manner and form is chiefly to be looked at but in other some not altogether so materiall As if an Action of debt be brought of the sale of a Horse for five pounds where the bargain was for two horses the Defendant pleads that he oweth him nothing in manner and form the Jury ought to find for the Defendant for that that the bargaine was for two horses for five pounds fo manner and form there is materiall and parcell of the charge and so it is in every case where the Action varies from the bargain or speciall matter But if an Action of the case be brought by the Husband alone upon an Assumpsit to him by R. the Desendant saith he did not assume in manner and form and the Plaintiff gives in evidence of an Assumpsit made to his wife and his agreement to it afterwards this is good and manner and form is not materiall If an Action be brought before there is any cause of Action the Declaration is insufficient But if a Trespasse was done the fourth day of May and the Plaintiff declareth the same to be done the fifth or the first day of May when no trespasse was committed yet if upon evidence it salleth out that the Trespasse was done before the action brought it sufficeth 19 H. 6. 47. 5 E. 4 5. 21 E. 4. 66. And Littleton saith That the Jury may finde the Defendant guilty at another day then the Plaintiff supposeth for the Law of England respecteth more the effect and substance of the matter then every nicity of forme and circumstance Apices juris non sunt jura Note that in actions of debt upon Emisset for Wares for Money or other things lent upon an In simul computassent actions of Trespasse Battery or upon the case c. you are not tyed to lay the certaine day but you may lay it any time after the cause of action accrued If an action upon the case be brought upon an Assumpsit the Plaintiff must declare upon the whole promise made and not upon part of it else the Declaration is not good Mich. 22. Car. b. r. If there be words in a Declaration which have no signification the words shall be adjudged to be void words and shall not hurt the Declaration but the Declaration shall be taken as if those words were left out of the Declaration Hill 23. Car. B. R. Pasc 24. Car. B. r. A Declaration ought not to shew a thing by implication it must be set forth expressely If the Plaintiff do alter his Declaration after the Defendant hath pleaded to it the Defendant may alter his Plea For by the amendment of it it may be so altered in matter that it may require a different answer from what was sormerly pleaded and in that case if he should not amend his Plea he might be triced sor want of a good Plea Prac. reg fo 235. A Declaration is sometimes called a Count as Count in debt Kitch 281. Count in Trespasse Brit. cap. 26. Count in an Action of Trespasse upon the case for a slander Kitch 251. But a Count is more properly used in Reall than Personall Actions And a Declaration more applyed to Personall than Reall F N. B. 18. a. 60. D. N. 71. a. 191. c. 217. a. If after Processe executed the Plaintiff do not appear and file his Declaration and the Defendant doth appear upon such default the Plaintiff is non-suited and the Defendant may have Judgment and Execution for his costs In every case where the Plaintiff may have costs against the Defendant there if the Plaintiff be non-suit or a Verdict passe against him the Desendant shall have his costs as in Trespasse Debt Covenant by Specialty or upon Contract Detinue Accounts Actions upon the case or upon the Statute for personall wrongs 23 H. 8. cap. 15. Administrators nor Executors shall not pay any costs neither upon Non-suit or Verdict because their Actions are brought upon Debts or Contracts not made between them and the Defendants But if they bring Actions for things done to themselves as for the taking away of goods from them c. and they be Non suit or Verdict passe against them in this case they shall pay costs After the Plaintiff hath appeared and Declaration filed upon the appearance of the Defendant Emparlance is to be entered Emparlance is when the Defendant being to answer the Suit or Action of the Plaintiff desireth some time of respite to advise himself the better what he shall answer being nothing else but a Continuance of a cause till a further day Now to demonstrate what the word Continuance signifieth it is after a Suit is begun and the Plaintiff hath declared he must continue his Suit from Court day to Court day or else the adverse party may take advantage of it and this is called a Continuance being but onely a proroguing of a Suit from time to time to keep it in being And this is by the Act or order of the Court and
and truly try this Issue between party and party according to your Evidence so help you God And as they are sworn enter by every mans name Jur. viz. juratus est he is sworn Being all sworn bid them stand together to hear their Evidence Then swear the Witnesses The Evidence that you are to give to this Inquest touching the matter in variance shall be the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth so help you God Then let the Jury depart from the Bar to agree upon their Verdict At their return command the Bayliff to call every one by their names and count them Then aske them if they be all agreed on their Verdict Jur. yea Who shall say for you Jur. The foreman Then call the Plaintiff A. B. appear or thou loseth thy Plaint three times Then aske the Jury if they will stand to their Verdict Jur. yea Whether do you find for the Plaintiff or for the Defendant Jur. for the Plaintiff What damages Jur. 2 d. What costs of Suit Jur. 2 d. Harken to your Verdict this you say you find for the Plaintiff and assesse damages 2 d. and costs of Suit 2 d. so say you all Jur. yea Then bid the Plaintiff pay the Jury If the Verdict find matter incertainly or ambiguously it is insufficient and no Judgment ought to be given thereupon as if an Executor plead plene administravit viz. fully Administred of all the goods and Chattels which were of the Testator and issue is joyned thereupon and the Jury find that the Defendant hath goods within his hands to be administred but find not of what value this is incertain and therefore insufficient A Verdict that findeth part of the issue findeth nothing for the residue this is insufficient for the whole because they have not tryed the whole Issue wherewith they were charged But if the Jury give a Verdict of the whole Issue and of more c. That which is more is Surplusage and shall not stay Judgment for utile per inutile non vitiatur but necessary incidents required by the Law the Jury may find The Court being ended adjourn the Court to another day to be kept commanding the Bayliff to make Proclamation O yes c. and say All manner of persons that have any more to do at this Court let them come forth and they shal be heard otherwise they and every one else may depart for this time and keep their houre here on Munday the fourth day of August next by nine a clock in the morning c. Now the Court being done and the Defendant condemned by Verdict then Judgment being entred a Fieri facias shall be awarded to make Levy of his goods and thereupon the Defendants goods shall be taken praised and sold to satisfie the party Plaintiff and if the Defendant hath no goods whereupon Levy may be made then the Plaintiff rests without remedy in this Court Of Distresse COnsidering the many lacrymable wrongs the Country hath sustained by those Locusts that litigious generation of men a clamorous company qui ex injuria vivunt Seminaries of discord worse then any polars by the high way side monstra hominum rabulas forenses irreligious harpies scraping griping catchpoles Bayliffs and corrupt practisers and how much the ignorant people are abused and deceived yea many times as the sad experience of many will inform us ruined and utterly undone by them they being the sole causes of those ignominious aspersions cast upon the Court The advantage that it would produce to the Common-wealth is in-explainable if the Statute of 1. of H. 5. cap. 4. were observed that is that Sheriffs Bayliffs one year not to be in that Office in three years after because by their continuall being in that Office they grow so crafty and cunning that they are able to deceive the Sheriff and ruine the whole Country Therefore that the Country may not be altogether ignorant of their seeming authorized Actions I will declare what and when they may distrain and what and when they may not But first to declare what a Distresse is A Distresse is either said to be reall that is when Land is distrained upon a grand cape or petit cape of which we have nothing to say here or it is said to be personall where moveable things are distrained and this is that we are to speak unto Therefore a Distresse is where one doth take and distrain the Beasts Cattell and other things of another man in some ground or place for debt rent or other duty behind or for some wrong or damage done The Sheriff nor his officers cannot break a mans house in the night time to execute any Processe or to do any ministeriall act for the Law giveth no colour to break a mans house by night None can be distrained that are out of the Jurisdiction of the Court Marl. cap. 2. No Distresse can be made in the night but for Damage feasant The Bayliff may attach a man by his goods citing him to appear and answer such a day at such a mans Suit in such a Court and for such a cause Or he may onely give the Defendant warning in the presence of two others to appear such a day in such a Court at such a mans Suit it is sufficient And if an Attachment be made it must be of such goods of the Defendants own proper goods as are movables viz. by meer Chattels personalls which may be forseited by Outlawry and not immovables A Bayliff cannot sever horses joyned to a Cart. Sheep may not be distraind if there be a sufficient Distresse besides No man shall drive a Distresse out of the County where it was taken A Distresse may not be impounded in severall places upon pain of five pounds and trebble damages A man cannot work goods distrained nor convert them to his own use The goods of any man may be taken in any place within the County in another mans house or ground as well as his own If a Bayliff distrain or attach the horse of a master where the Plaint is against the servant Trespasse lyes for the Master against the Bayliff for the Bayliff ought to take notice at his perill whose goods he distrains or attaches 13 H. 4. fo 2. 14 H. 4. 24. 11 H. 4. 90. Dr. and St. 139. After Distresse or Attachment made if the Bayliff doth not return his Precept the next Court Trespass lyes against the Bayliff for the Defendant and an Action of the case lyes against him for the Plaintiff for not returning of the Precept 10 E. 4. fo 18. 3 H. 7. fo 3. By Choke If one take Beasts in the name of a Distresse he ought to put them in an open Pound for that he who is distrained may give to them sustenance but if he distraine dead Chattels he may put them where he will but if they spoyl in his default he must answer for them 19 E. 4. fo 2. b. If goods distrained
chattels which late were W. W. deceased at the time of his death and now remaining in the hands of I. W. Executor of the Testament of the said W. W. and not administred of as well a certain debt of 40 l. which T. L. in my County Court by vertue of a Writ of Justicies recovered against him as also 20 s. which to the said T. L. in the same Court was adjudged for his costs and damages which he sustained by reason of the detaining of the said debt If the said I. W. Executor of the Testament of the said W. W. have so much goods or chattels in his hand which were the said W. W. at the time of his death sufficient to satisfie the debt and damages aforesaid If he have not so much goods or chattels in his hands which were the said W. W. at the time of his death sufficient to satisfie the said T. L. of the debt and damages aforesaid That then you or some of you levy of the proper goods and chattels of the said I. W. the damages and costs aforesaid so that I may have the said mony at my next County Court to be holden at the Castle of Y. c. to render to the said T. L. the debt and damages aforesaid whereof he is convict And this given under the Seal of my Office the c. I. B. Esq c. to all and singular my Bayliffs c. greeting I command you and every of you that of the goods and chattels of T. O. you levy 20 s. which S. D. in the County Court according to a Statute provided in that case were adjudged for his costs and damages which he sustained in his own defence in a certain Plea of debt which the said S. D. against the said T O. of late brought because the said T. O. did not prosecute his Suit but was thereupon non-suited and convicted so that I may have the mony at my next County Court at the Castle of Y. holden on Munday c. next to satisfie the aforesaid S. D. of his costs and damages aforesaid And this c. Given under the Seal of my Office the c. I. B. Esq c. to all c. greeting I command you that of the goods and chattels of T. C. you levy 40 s. which to P. P. in my County Court were adjudged for his damages which he sustained in his own defence in a Plea of debt by the said W. against him the said P. P. lately brought whereof the said P. P. was quieted and by Verdict of his Country whereof the said T. C. was convict have you the mony at my next County Court to be holden at the Castle of Y. on Munday c. to satisfie the said P. P. of his damages aforesaid And this c. given under the seal of my office c. I. B. Esq c. to all c. greeting I command you and every of you joyntly and severally that of the goods and chattels which late were of E. S. Esq who dyed intestate as it is said and now in the hands of R. M. Gent. and A. his wife Administratrix of the goods and chattels which were the said E. S. at the time of his death remaining to be administred you cause to be made as well a certain debt of 4 l. which I. W. hath recovered against the said E. S. in my County Court as 30 s. which to him the said I. W. in my same Court were adjudged for his costs and damages which he had by occasion of detaining of the same debt by vertue of a Writ of Justices so that I may have the said mony at my next County Court to be holden at the Castle of Y. c. to render the aforesaid I. W. of the debt and damages aforesaid whereof the aforesaid E. S. was convict And whereupon it was considered in my same Court that the aforesaid I. W. should have Execution against the aforesaid R. M. c. of the debt and damages aforesaid of the goods and chattels aforesaid by his the said R. M. his default And this given under the seal of my office the c. I. B. Esq c. to all singular my Bayliffs c. greeting I command you and every one of you joyntly and severally especiall to F. P. Bayliff of the Liberty of S. and his Deputies who hath the goods taken upon an Execution issuing out of this Court that those twenty weather Sheep of which each you cause to be apprised at eight shillings of the goods of I. C. Esq which you took and remain in your hands unsold for want of buyers as you your self returned to my Court you expose to sale and the mony thereof which in the whole amounts to eight pounds you have at my next County Court at the Castle of Y. holden on Munday the tenth day of May next to render to W. G. which to him the said W. G. in my Court were adjudged for his damages which he had by occasion of a certain Trespasse to him committed by the aforesaid I. C brought whereof he is convict And this given under the Seal of my Office the 18 day of October in the year of our Lord 1657. By the Sheriff Of a Scire Facias IF a Fieri facias do not issue out within a year and a day after Judgment entered it cannot be had till there be a Scire facias first sued out to summon the Defendant to shew cause why Execution should not be done and if now he neglect to answer or cannot be found to be summoned then a second Judgment shall be given that that Execution be done of the first Judgment If Judgment be given against a Testator albeit it be within a year after Judgment had yet there must first issue out a Scire facias against the Executor or Administrator before Execution to shew cause why it should not be had Or if a man recover against a Feme-sole and she become covert viz. take a Husband within the year and the day then he that shall recover must have a Scire facias against the Husband Scire facias post diem annum I. B. Esq Sheriff c. greeting Whereas W. F. of late in the Court of the aforesaid County by Judgment in the said Court of the County aforesaid held at the Castle of X on Munday the tenth day of February 1654. before the Suitors of the said Court recovered against G. L. as well a certain debt of thirty two shillings which the said W. F. in the same Court recovered against him as thirteen shillings and ten pence which to the said W. F. in the same Court were adjudged for his damages which he sustained by the occasion of the detaining of the debt of which he is convicted for as by the proceedings from thence in the same Court residing notwithstanding the manifest Execution of the aforesaid Judgment remains to be done as by
insinuation the aforesaid W. F. hath recovered And because that I will that those things which were in the said Court be rightly done to demand due of the said Iudgment Therefore I command you that by honest and lawfull men of my Bayliwick you give notice to the aforesaid G. L. that he be at the Castle of Y. at my next County Court there to be holden upon Munday the third day of May next to shew if he have any thing to say or no why the said W. F. ought not to have his Levy or Execution against him according to the force form and effect of the said Recovery if it seem expedient to him and have you then and there the names of them by whom you give him notice and have this Precept c. Given under the Seal of my Office the fourth day of Aprill in the year of our Lord 1656. Scire facias against an Executor after Judgment against the Testator I. B. Esq Sheriff c. greeting Whereas N. N. late in the County Court of the said County held at the Castle of Y. on Munday c. before the then Sheriff of the said County by Iudgment of the said Court had recovered against H. N. as well a debt of forty pounds as two and twenty shillings and two pence costs for his damages which he sustained by reason of the detaining of the said debt whereof he is convict as appears by the Proceedings remaining in the said Court And whereas the Execution of the Judgment yet remaineth to be done and the said H. N. since the giving of the Judgment aforesaid is dead as by the intimation of the said N. N. I am informed And because I am willing that those things which are rightly done in the said Court should be duly put in Execution I command you that by honest and lawfull men of the said County you make it known to F. N. Executrix of the Testament of the said H. N. that she be at the next County Court to be holden for the said County at the Castle of Y. on Munday c. to shew if she have any thing or know what to say why the said N. N. ought not to have his Execution against her of the debt and damages aforesaid to be levied of the Goods and Chattels which were of the said H. N. at the time of his death and further to do and recieve c. Given under the Seal of my Office c. Scire facias after marriage I B. Esq Sheriff c. greeting Whereas A. B. late in my County Court held at the Castle c. before the Suitors of the said Court had recovered against C. D. as well a certain debt of forty pounds as forty shillings which to the said A. B. in the said Court were adjudged for the costs and damages which she had by occasion of the detaining of the debt whereof he is convicted as by the Proceedings thereof in the same Court before the said Suitors remaining manifestly appeareth Neverthelesse Execution of the said Judgment remaineth yet undone And the said A. B. since the Judgment aforesaid given hath taken to Husband T. R. as by the allegation of the said A. B. I am given to understand and because I will that those things which are rightly acted in my said Court be duly put in Execution I command you that by honest and lawfull men of your Bailiwick you give notice and make known to the said C. D. that he be at my next County Court holden at c. to shew that if he hath or knoweth any thing to say or no for himself wherefore the said T. R. should not have execution of the said judgement of the debt and damages aforesaid according to the form and effect of the recovery aforesaid if to him it shall seem expedient and have you there the names of them by whom you give him notice and make known to him and have this precept c. Given under the seal of my Office the 4. day of Iune in the year of our Lord 1658. Venire facias Jurator I. B. Esquire Sheriff of the County aforesaid to the Bayliff of the hundred of O or his Deputy greeting I command you and every of you that you cause to come before me or my lawfull Steward by me appointed for the County Court to be holden at the Castle of Y. on Monday the c All those severall persons mentioned in the pannel hereunto annexed to trie such several issues between party and party as shall then and there be given them in charge And hereof you must not fail as each of you will answer the contrary at your perils together with this precept Given under the seal of my Office c. Or thus I. B. Esquire c. These are to require you the said Bailiff to cause to come twelve good and lawfull men of your Bailiwick that they be and appear at the next County Court holden at the castle of Y. on Monday c. by 9 of the clock in the forenoon to trie an issue joined between A. B. plaintiff and C. D. desendant concerning a plea of debt or as the case is And this given under the seal of my Office c. And if a full Iury do not appear then as many as make default shall be amerced and a Decem tales awarded to summon ten more as followeth and the same day given to the first Iury. Decem tales I. B. Esq c. These are to require you the said Bayliss to cause to come ten more good and lawfull men of your Bayliwick that they be here at the next County Court holden at the Castle of Y. on Munday c. with others which to them shall be adjoyned to try a certain Issue joyned between A. B. Plaintiff and C. D. Defendant of a Plea of Debt c. And as many of these as make default shall be amerced and then an Octo tales shall be awarded and if necessity require it afterwards a Sex tales Subpoena or a Warrant to summon Witnesses I. B. Esq Sheriff of the County aforesaid to I. B. I. G. c. greeting To you and every of you I command that all excuses and delayes being set apart you and every of you be and personally appear at the next County Court holden at the Castle of Y. on Munday the 10. day of Iune next to testifie the truth according to your knowledge in a certain Action there depending between A. B. Plaintiff and C. D. Defendant on the part and behalf of the Plaintiff in an Action of debt And hereof fail you not under the forseiture of one hundred pounds each of you And this given under the Seal of my Office the c. A Liberate to deliver goods taken upon Originall or mean Processe I. B. Esq Sheriff of the County aforesaid To all and singular my Bayliffs within the said County and their Deputies especially to A. B. greeting For as much
Scire facias 00-02-00 Tolt 00-01-02 Precept upon an accedas ad curiam 00-02-04 Supersedeas 00-02-04 Procedendo 00-02-00 Warrant of Attorney upon every Distringas 00-00-02 Warrant of Attorney upon a Iusticies 00-00-04 Entring Essoynes for every name 00-00-04 Entring Imparlance 00-01-00 Copying the Declaration 00-01-00 Allowing the answer 00-01-00 Copying the answer 00-01-00 Allowing the Replication 00-01-00 And for copying the Replication and allowing the Rejoynder c. and so of the rest 00-02-00 Entring a Rule 00-00-04 Entring a Default by Nihil dicit 00-00-04 Entring a Non-suit 00-00-04 Dividing a Plaint for every name 00-00-04 Entring Judgment 00-02-00 Transcript upon a Plaint 00-01-08 Transcript upon a Writ of Iusticies 00-03-04 Allowing a Recordare 00-04-00 Allowing a Pone 00-04-10 Allowing a Writ of False Iudgment 00-06-08 Fees to the Attorney FOr drawing every Declaration 00-01-00 Drawing every answer 00-01-00 Drawing the Replication 00-01-00 Drawing Rejoynder 00-01-00 Drawing Sur-rejoynder 00-01-00 For every Court day wherein he proceeds in the Action allowed as his Fee 00-02-00 Fees to the Bayliff for executing of Processe FOr executing a Distringas of the Plaintiff 00-00-04 and of the Defendant 00 00-08 A Duces tecum of the Plaintiff 00 00-04 And of the Defendant 00-00-08 A Iusticies of the Plaintiff 00-01-00 and of the Defendant 00-02-00 A Replevin of the Plaintiff 00-02-00 A Venire facias 00-02-00 If tried for the Habeas corpora 00-02-00 A Fieri facias 00-02-00 A Scire facias 00-02-00 The Order of the Judges of Assize at York the 24. day of July 1654. concerning Essoins illegally returned into this Court. WHereas of late Judgements have been surreptitiously obtained in this Court by reason of Essoins unduly brought into the Court by Bailiffs or their Deputies and others after attachment of goods for appearance which pretended Essoins being afterwards disavowed by the defendant have occasioned sundry complaints and suits when the defendants goods were taken in execution for preventing whereof it is ordered upon advice and consultation had with the Judges of Assize at Y this day that henceforth no common Essoin shal be entred and allowed by the Court to save a default unlesse it be warranted in writing under the proper hand-writing or under the hand seal or mark of the defendant thereby specially authorizing the party being the Essoiner to cast such Essoin for him and in his name for the truth of which subscription or sealing the same Essoin is to be sworn in open Court and no Essoin is to be admitted or received from henceforth being not affirmed and sworn unto and so entred upon the back of the warrant of attachment which is to remain upon the file amongst the Rolls or proceedings of the Courr and if any other person not being a Bailiff shall be the Essoiner he is to bring the like warrant from the Defendant in writing as is aforesaid and be sworn for the truth thereof which is to remain in Court as aforesaid And no jugdement shall be given where there is no other appearance but an essoin Unlesse the Essoin shall appear to be warranted as aforesaid To swear to warrant Essoyns in this Court is contrary to the Statute of Marlbridge cap. 19. which saith De essoniis autem provisum est quod in Com. c. nullus habeat necesse jurare pro Essonio suo warrantizand Of the nature and Return of those Writs that do remove actions out of this Court into superiour Courts WRits removing suits out of this Court may be without shewing cause in the writ if the remove be by the Plaintiff but not without shewing good cause if it be by the Defendant As that the suit is for Charters of land or for inheritance or for freehold of Land or any titles of Land or actions touching life or actions to cause one to render an accompt or trespass vi armis all which are not within the cognizance of the Court. Or that he before whom the action depends is a favourer of him that is on the other side or that the Defendant avoweth for damage feasant and the Plaintiff doth justifie for common of pasture which is a plea touching Freehold and thrrefore the prosecution in this Court ceaseth First of a Recordare facias loquelam A Recordare is a writ issuing out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff commanding him to send a plaint that is before him in his County Court without writ of Iusticies into the Court of Vpper Bench or Common Pleas to the end that the cause may be there determined And the Shiriff is hereupon to summon the other party to be in that Court into which the Plaint is to be sent at a day certain And of all this he is to make a certificate under his own Seal and the Seals of four Suitors of the same Court By vertue of this Writ to me directed at my County of Y. held at the Castle of Y. within written such a day and year to be Recorded I caused the Plea of which within is made mention which appears in a Schedule to this Writ annexed and that Record I have before the Iustices within written at the day and place within contained under my Seal and the Seals of W. H. E. R. c. four good and legall Knights of the same County of them who at the Record present were and to the parties within written that day I have prefixed that then they be there in that Plea as just it may be to prosecute as within to me is commanded The residue of the Execution of this Writ appears in a certain Schedule to this Writ annexed At my County Court held at the Castle of Y. in the County aforesaid such day and year before I. R. M. L. I. S. and S. D. four Suitors of the said Court amongst other matters is contained R. S. complaineth against B. W. of a Plea of debt or as the case requires I. B. Esq Sheriff pledg of prosec I. S. I. D. In testimony of c. By vertue of this Writ to be recorded I have caused the Plea which is in my County without Writ of Oliver Lord Protector c. betwixt A. B. and C. D. concerning the Beasts of him the said A. B. taken and unjustly detained as it is said and that Record I have before the Justices within written at the day and place within contained under my seal and the seals of E. B. S. D. R. B and I. L. four legall Knights of my County of those who at the Record present were as it appeareth in a certain Schedule to this Writ annexed according to the Exigency of this Writ At my County held c as before By vertue of this Writ in form within written I came to the Court within written and in that full Court to be recorded caused the plea within written and that Record as it appeareth in a Schedule to this Writ annexed I have before the Justices within written at
County of Y. there held c. the aforesaid I. H. and the rest of the Defendants within named the fifth time exacted were at which day the aforesaid I. H. appeared and rendred himselfe to the prison of his Highness c. of the Castle of Y. whose body before the Iustices within written at the day and place within contained ready I have as within to me is commanded but the rest of the Defendants within named appeared not therefore c. as above And besides I. S. who hath rendred himself to the prison of c. of the Castle of Y. whose body before the Justices within written at the day and place within contained ready I have as this Writ exacteth and requireth And besides I. C. who dead is will not appear therefore by Judgement c. and the aforesaid T. C. waved is in presence of T. C. and F. W. Coronors of c. of the County aforesaid At the County c. 1. 2. 3. 4. exacted he was and hath appeared and rendred himself to the prison of c. of the Castle of Y. where so sick he is that fore fear of death him before the Justices within written at the day and place within contained have I cannot The Return of the Writ of Proclamation BY vertue of this Writ to me directed at my County of Y. held at the castle of Y. within written on Monday c. the year c. within written the first time to be proclaimed I caused And at my County of Y. held at the Castle of Y. aforesaid in the said County of Y. on Monday c. the year c. within written the second time to be proclaimed I caused as also at the general Sessions of the peace held at Skipton for the West riding of the said County within written on Tuesday viz. the 12. day of Sept. aforesaid the year c. within written publickly to be proclaimed I caused that I. C. and all other the Defendants within named themselves to render to the within named Sheriffs of London so that the same Sheriffs have their bodies before the Justices within written at the day and place within contained as this Writ exacteth and requireth The manner of proceeding upon the Writs of Recordare Pone Writ of False Judgment c. in the Common Pleas after removall out of the County Court YOu must repair to the County Clerk or his Deputy and demand a Return of the Writ of Recordare or Pone If upon the return the Defendant appear then must you declare and when your Declaration is drawn enter it upon a roll in one of the Prothonotaries offices and see that it be docqueted together with the number of the roll If the Writ be returnable in the begining of a term especially in issuable terms the Desendant is to answer the same term unless the Desendant hath Emparlance to plead until the following term Rules to answer must be entred in the Remembrance in the Prothonotaries Office entring in the Margent or over the head of the Rule that if the Defendant do not plead within some few dayes let Judgement be entred And if no plea be brought in within the time then may you sign Judgement with the Prothonotary in default of answer If the Defendant appear not upon the return of the Writ then may the Plaintiff have a Procedendo to carry the cause back again into the County Court If the Plaintiffs Attorney declare not against the Desendant upon his appearance within a reasonable time of the Term then may the Defendants Attorney enter a Rule in the Bill of Pleas against the Plaintiff to declare and if he declare not then may he enter a Non prosec and sign it with the Prothonotary and costs given for the unjust vexation If the Defendant plead generall issue then must the Attorney for the Defendant set his hand to the Doquet book of the Plaintiffs Attorney who draws up the plea and makes a Copy of the issue and delivers it to the Defendants Attorney and then they usually give notice of triall If the Defendant plead specially he is to bring it to the Plaintiffs Attorney under a Serjeants hand and if the Plaintiff reply specially it must likewise be under the Serjeants hand the like upon a Demurrer to a Declaration and Rejoynder in Demurrer If your triall be by Nisi prius at the Assizes in the Countrey and the Jury appeare not full upon the Pannel then may you require a Decem tales de circumstantibus viz. ten of the standers by to fill up the Jury or more or lesse as is requisite which Tales must be mentioned upon the return of the Postea and the Judgment upon it in the Issue Roll. Having entred your Declaration with the Issue joyned in the Prothonotaries Office then make out a Venire facias upon your Issue and get signed with the Prothonotary and seal it then get it returned by the Sheriff of the County where the action is laid and upon the return of it sue forth an Habeas corpora and deliver the same to the Sheriff to summon the Jury and get it returned before the Assizes In suing forth your Nisi prius ingrosse your Record according to the copy of the Issue made up and the entry of it upon the Roll in the Prothonotaries Office and examine it if it be upon an Issue joyned the same Term whose hand must be to it then carry the same to the Clerk of the Treasury to signe and make up the Record If the Issue was entred of a Term past then must you deliver the paper Book of the Issue to the Clerk of the Treasury to examine the same by the Roll and to make up the Record which must be signed by him then must it be sealed with the Lord chief Iustice of the Court and then deliver it together with the Hab Corp Iur. returned by the Sheriff to the Clark of the Ass for that County where it is to be tried paying the Judges Then retain Councel and have your witnesses ready for the trial The triall being had and verdict passing for your Client the next Term you are to call of the Clerk of the Assizes for a return of the Postea and thereupon the Prothonotor will assesse costs and cause Judgement to be entred upon which you may have Execution by Capias ad satisfaciendum Fieri facias or Elegit c. according as you desire and as the nature of the action brought doth allow or require Note that a Capias ad satisfac is only against the body who must be imprisoned until satisfaction be made and if the Defendant cannot be found the Plaintiff cannot have another Execution 20 E. 2. for he may chufe at the first whether he will have a Capias or an Elegit but if he take the Capias he shall not have the Elegit afterwards nec è converso 15. H. 7. 15. The Writ of Fieri
facias is onely against the goods as Leases for years or moveable goods as Corn Houshold stuffe Cattle Apparrel Money Plate c. and it ought to be sued out within the year after the Judgement Co. 3. 13. After a Fi. fa. a man may have an Elegit but on the contrary after the Elegit he cannot have a Fi. fa. because the Elegit is of a higher nature then the Fieri facias An Elegit is a Writ whereby the Plaintiff is to have Execution of the half of all the Defendants lands and chattels except Oxen and beasts of the Plough till the debt and damages be wholly levied and paid to him and during the term he is tenant by Elegit Terms of the Law The Proceedings upon the Writ of False Judgement YOu must call of the County Clerk for a return of the Writ together with the whole Record of all the proceedings from the original and beginning of the cause in the County Court The Writ being returned you must assign Errors and take Copies thereof and thereupon sue forth a Scire facias to the Plaintiff in the Action to hear Errors To which the Plaintiff may appear and plead the common plea which is that The action nor proceedings in the County Court are in nothing erroneous Then must the Desendant endeavor to get a Rule or day given for the arguing of the same Errors But if the Defendant doth delay and doth not call for a return of the writ nor proceed then the Plaintiff may sue forth another Scire facias against the Defendant to shew cause why he should not have Execution upon the Judgement had in the County Court And if at the Return of the second Scire Facias Errors be not assigned then Judgment is confirmed in that Court into which the Writ is returnable If Errors be found and allowed to be sufficient and good then is the said Judgment to be reversed and made void But if Errors be not found good then is the Judgment in the County Court affirmed and further costs for delay of Execution allowed to the Plaintiff who may presently sue forth Execution out of that Court into which the Writ was returned against the Defendant Note that if the Judgment be reversed and made void yet notwithstanding it takes not away the Plaintiffs cause of action for he may commence a new action against the Desendant for the same cause The same proceedings are upon an Accedeas ad Curiam See the Record upon it The manner and form of drawing up Records upon a Writ of False Judgment and Accedeas ad Curiam THe Sheriff is commanded that if A. B. shall secure the same Sheriff to prosecute his plaint then in his full County he cause to be recorded the plaint which was in the same County by writ of his Highnesse the Lord Protector c. between W. B. and the same A. B. in a certain Trespasse upon the case to the same W. B. by the same A. B. done c. And whereupon the same A. B. did complain that False Judgment was done to him in the same County and that he should have here at this day that is to say Octab. pur under his Seal and by four lawfull Knights of the same County who should be present at the Record and that he should have here the Summoners the names of the four Knights this Writ and another Writ And now here at this day came aswell the same A. B. by Simon Dunn his Attorney as the said W. B. summoned c. by Phit Prince his Attorney And the Sheriff to wit Geo. Mar. Esquire now returneth that the same A. B. had found to the same Sheriff Pledges to prosecute his said Writ to wit Iohn Doo and Ric Roo And that he by vertue of that Writ to him directed at his County held at the Castle of York in the County asoresaid the 10. day of May in the year of our Lord 1657. made the same plaint to be recorded which was in the same County between the same A. B. and W. B. and the Record of the same plaint before the Justices here at this day under his seal and the seals of H. M. and four lawfull Knights of the same County hath ready of those who were present at the Record And that he summoned the same W. B. that he should be here at this day to hear the Record by R. S. and F. L. as by the same Writ to him it was commanded c. which said Record followeth in these words OLIVER Lord Protector c. To the Sheriff of York greeting W. B. hath requested that A. B. of C. in your County husbandman although the same W. B. be our true and faithfull subject and as our true and faithfull subject from the time of his nativity hitherto hath carried and behaved himselfe and of good name and same among many of our saithfull subjects was noted called and reputed notwithstanding the same A. B. not ignorant of the premisses the same W. B. unjustly to vex and him of his goods name fame and opinion whereof from his nativity to deprive conspurgate And the same W. B. into perturbation vexation and infamy amongst his neighbours and many other saithfull subjects and people of this Commonwealth to induce plain salse and scandalous words of the same W. B. at C. in the presence of many faithfull subjects and people of this Commonwealth said published and pronounced in these English words following to wit W. B. the same W. B. meaning hath stoln my horse By speaking publishing and pronouncing which same words the same W. B. not only in his good name and same is hurt but also in his doings and businesses with honest persons with whom the same W. B. in buying selling and lawfull bargaining before used is much prejudiced and made worse to the no little damage and losse of the same W. B. c. And therefore we command you that you hear the said Plaint and afterwards cause the same to be with-drawn that we hear no more clamour thereof for defect of Justice Witnesse c. Pleas held at the Castle of York in the County of York upon Monday the second day of June in the year of our Lord 1657. AT this Court W. B. complaineth of A. B. in a plea of Trespasse upon the case W. B. by P. P. his Attorney complaineth of A. B. in a plea of Trespasse upon the case for that to wit that whereas the same W. B. is a good true and faithfull subject of this Common-wealth of England from the time of his nativity hitherto hath carried and behaved himself and of good name same credit and reputation honestly with good and grave men as well his neighbours as other saithfull subjects of the said Cōmonwealth was had noted called and reputed without any falshood thest perjury selony deceit or stain of any other fault or hurtfull crime unspotted and untouched by the whole time aforesaid carried
answer for the same A. B. and C. C. his Clyents to the same E. F. in the said Plaint And the said Attorny for his said Clyents saith nothing in Bar as in others by which the said E. F. his damages against the said A. B. C. D. by occasion of the taking and unjust detaining of his Cattle aforesaid ought to recover but because it is unknown to the Court here what damages the said E. F. sustained by occasion of the premisses It is commanded to the said I. S. then Bayliff of the Wapentake of W. aforesaid one of the Ministers of the County Court aforesaid that he cause to come before the said Sheriffe at the next county Court of the County aforesaid to wit the 15th day of May in the yeare abovesaid at the Castle of Y. aforesaid then next following to be held twelve honest and lawfull men of the neighbourhood of S. to be suspected by neither party to enquire upon their Oath what damages the said E. F. sustained aswell by the occasion of the taking and unjust detaining of the cattle aforesaid as for his costs and charges by him about his suit in this behalf laid out and the same day was given to the said E. F. here c. At which said next County Court the same 15. day of May in the yeare abovesaid before the same Sheriff of the County aforesaid held came the said E. F. by his Attorney aforesaid And the same I. S. Bayliffe of the Wapentake aforesaid sent not his precept thereof Therefore as before it is commanded to the said I. S. Bayliff c. that he cause to come here at the next County Court before the same Sheriff of the County aforesaid to wit the 12 day of A. in the yeare abovesaid at the castle of Y. aforesaid to be held the 12th c. to enquire c to inform aforesaid c. At which day to wit the 12th day of April aforesaid before the same Sheriffe of the County aforesaid came the same E. F. by his Attorney aforesaid And the said I. S. Bayliffe c. and one of the Ministers of the same Court returned before the same Sheriffe the said precept de venire fac in all things served and executed And thereupon the Jury being thereof impannelled and called came and to enquire in forme as aforesaid sworn and charged say upon their oath that the said E. F. sustained damages by reason of the taking and unjust detaining of the Cattle aforesaid besides his costs and charges by him about his suit in this behalfe laid out 30 s. and for these costs and charges to 12 d. Therefore it is considered by the Court here that the said E. F. recover against the said A. B. and C. D. his said damages by the Jury aforesaid in form aforesaid assessed and also 26 s. to the same E. F. by the Court here for his said costs charges of his assent of increase adjudged which said damages in the whole amount unto 57 s And the same A. B. and C. D. in mercy c. Whereupon it was commanded to the same I. S. Bayliff of the Wapentake of W. aforesaid that of the goods and Chattels of the same A. B. and C. D. in his Bayliwick he should levy the damages aforesaid and that he have the money before the said Sheriffe at the next County Court at the castle of Y. to be held to wit the tenth day of March in the yeare abovesaid to render to the said E. F. for his damages aforesaid Whereupon the same E. F. prayeth that the said A. B. and C. D. would assigne and declare to the Court herein what or wherein false judgement is made to him in the said Plaint if any thing can be found proved or made appear c. And hereupon the same A. B. and C. D. say that the said Record is vitious and very much defective in this to wit that by the same Record it appeareth that the same cattle were taken the 15. day of January in the yeare abovesaid and that the complaint thereupon was levyed at the County Court of the Sheriff the 19th day of December in the yeare abovesaid so that the complaint was levied before the taking of the cattle afore made c. Also in this that by the Record it appeareth that the County Court aforesaid was held before the said Sheriffe of the County aforesaid whereas the same Court ought to be held before the same Sheriffe and suitors of the same Court so that the same Plaint was levied Coram non judice And the processe thereupon adjudged without any warrant in Law And so the same A. B. and C. D. say that in the County aforesaid false judgement was done to them in the said Plaint And pray that the said judgement for those errours and others in the same record and proceedings being may be revoked adnulled and altogether taken for nothing And that they unto all things which they by occasion of the judgement aforesaid have lost may be restored c. It was commanded the Sheriffe that if A. B. should secure the same Sheriffe to prosecute his complaint that then taking with him four discreet and lawfull Knights of the County aforesaid in his proper person he come to the Court of the Honour of P. and in full Court cause to be recorded that Plaint which was in the same Court of his Highnesse the Lord Protector between C. D. and the same A. B. in a certain Action upon the Case to the same C. D. by the same A. B. done as it is said Whereupon the same A. B. complaineth false judgement to be made to him in the said Court and that he should have here the Record at this day to wit Octab. Hill under his seal and by four lawfull men of the same County of those who shall be present at the Record and that he summon by good summoners the said C. D. that he should be here to hear that Record And that he have then here the names of the foure Knights and that Writ c. And now here at this day to wit Octab. Hill came as well the same A. B. by S. D. his Attorney as the same C. D. by P. P. his Attorney And the Sheriffe to wit G. M. Esq now returneth that the same A. B. found to the same Sheriff pledges to prosecute Io. Doo Ric. Roo And that the same C. D. was summoned to be here at this day by Io Den and Ric. Fen and that he by vertue of the same Writ to him directed took along with him I. S. W. P. I. H. and W. VV. four discreet and lawfull Knights of the County aforesaid and in his proper person came to the said Court held at P. in the County aforesaid the 15th day of October in the yeare of our Lord 1657. and in full Court made to be recorded the said Plaint whereof in the same Writ mention is made which said Record here at
same A. B. saith that the said Record is vicious and much defective and that false judgment is done to him in the said plaint in this that in the Record no mention is made whole that Court of the Honour of P. is and in this that no mention is made who is Lord of the said Court nor who are Suitors of the same and also in this that the Jury have not found that the said A. B. converted the same peece of Cloth to his proper use and so the same A. B. saith that divers ways in the said Court false Judgment is done to him in the said plaint And prayeth that the said Judgement for those divers errors and others being in the Record as false and erroneous may be revoked and taken for nothing And that he unto all which he by reason of the said false judgement lost may be restored And that the Justices here proceed to the examination of the premisses And because the Justices here c. SOME SELECT PRESIDENTS OF DECLARATIONS AND PLEADINGS Incident and belonging to this COURT Debt Executor against an Executor upon a Bill E. F. Executor of the last Will and Testament of I. F. deceased by vertue of a Writ of Iusticies to the Sheriff of the County aforesaid directed by I. S. his Attorney complains of M. VV. Executor of the last Will and Testament of R. VV. late of T. in the County Y. husbandman deceased otherwise called R. VV. late of T. of Y. Husbandman deceased of a Plea that he render unto him 7 l. of c. which he unjustly detains from him c. for that whereas the said R. VV. in his life time that is to say the 20. day of c. year c. at the Castle of Y. in the County of Y. and within the liberty and jurisdiction of this Court by his bill obligatory sealed with his Seal and here in Court produced bearing date the day and year abovesaid acknowledged himself to be indebted to the said I. F in his life time the whole and just sum of 7 l. of c. to be paid to the said I. F. his heirs executors administrators or assigns upon the third day of May next ensning the date of the said Bill and for the payment thereof the said R. VV. then and there bound himselfe his executors administrators and assigns Neverthelesse the said R. VV. in his life time though often thereunto required the said 7 l. to the said 1. F. whilest he was living hath not paid neither hath the said M VV. Executor of the last Will and Testament of the said R. VV. after his death paid the same to the said E. F. Executor of the last Will and Testament of the said I. F. to which said M. VV.'s hands came all and singular the goods and chattels which were the said R. VV.'s in his life time sufficient to satisfie all the debts which the said R VV. at the time of his death owed to any person or persons whatsoever as also to satisfie the said E. F.'s debt but the said R. W. whilst he lived refused to pay the same to the said I. F. in his life time and the same M. W. likewise after the said R. W.'s death refused to pay the same to the said E. F. after the death of the said I. F. and still refuseth so to do and unjustly detains the same by reason whereof the said E. F. saith he is damnified 10 l. and thereupon produceth this suit c. And the said E. F. produceth here in Court the said letters testamentary by which it appears the said E. F. to be Executor of the last Will and Testament of the said I. E. deceased c. Vpon a Bill to be paid at the day of marriage and issue upon it T. N and E. his wife Administratrix of the goods and chattels which were of I. B. deceased complains by S. D. his Attorney of I. H. of C. in the said County Gent of a Plea that he render unto them 5 l. which he unjustly detains c. for that whereas the said I. H. such a day year and place by his certain bill obligatory with his seal sealed and here in Court produced the date whereof is the same day and year For and in consideration of one Gold-ring with a certain Stone called a Diamond in the same Ring fixed of the aforesaid T. B. in his life time received the day of the making of the aforesaid bill did acknowledge and grant to and with the aforesaid T. B. in his life time that he the said I. H. his executors or assignes would pay or cause to be paid to the aforesaid T. B. his Executors or assignes for the same Ring at such a day and time as he the said I. H. should be wedded or married or at any other time after his marriage whensoever he should be required by the aforesaid T. B. his Executors or assignes or by him that should bring the said bill the said sum of 5 l. to his or their use the aforesaid time to be paid and the same T. N. and E. in fact say that the aforesaid I. H. after the making of the said bill to wit such a day year and place within the Parish Church of H. did take to wise one I. D. by which the action did accrew unto the said T. R. in his life and to the said E. after the death of the said T. B. whilst she was sole and to the said T. N. and E. after espousals between them celebrated to require and have of the aforesaid I. H. the same 5 l. Yet the aforesaid I. H. although often required the aforesaid 5 l. to the aforesaid T. B. in his life time or to the aforesaid E. whilst she was sole to whom the administration of all the goods and chattels which were of the aforesaid T. B. the time of his death such a day year and place was committed to the aforesaid T. N. and E. after espousals between them celebrated hath not rendred but the same to render to them hath denied and the same to them the said T. N. and E. as yet to render doth deny and unjustly detain whereupon they say they are damnified and have damage to the value of 10 l. and thereupon they bring their action c. And they bring into Court here the letters of administration c. The Defendant pleads that he was within age at the time of the making of the Bill AND the aforesaid I. F. by R. B. his Attorney comes and defends the force and injury when c. and sayes that the aforesaid N. and E. ought not to have their action aforesaid against him because he saith that he at the time of the making of the Bill aforesaid was within the age of one and twenty years and this he is ready to aver whereupon he demands Judgment whether the aforesaid T. N. and E. ought to have their action aforesaid against him c.
plaint and in his executed and assigned from the beginning of the World until the day of the date of the said Bill and this c. if Judgement c. Replication THe Plaintiff saith that he ought not to be barred c. because he saith that the aforesaid Bill of acquittance is not his deed and this he prayeth c. Justification of scandalous Words ANd c. when c. and saith that the said G L. his action aforesaid against him ought not to have for that he saith that before the speaking of the pretended scandalous words in the said declaration mentioned that is to say the day year c. at c the said G L. one Wether-sheep to the value of 10 s of c. of the goods and chattels of the said H. A. in the said Declaration mentioned then and there being sound feloniously did steal take and carry away contrary to the publick peace By reason whereof the said P. G. afterwards that is to say the said day year c. at c. the pretended scandalous words in the said Declaration mentioned did say affirm and declare to the said G. L. that is to say thou meaning the said G. L. art a Thiefe and stole H. A.'s Sheep and this he is ready to verifie whereupon he demandeth Judgement if the said G L. his action aforesaid against him ought to have c. Tender of amends in Replevin AND the said H. saith c. the just taking of c. ought not to avow because he saith that after the aforesaid time of the taking of the Cattel aforesaid in the aforesaid place in which c. und before the day of the issuing forth of the precept of Replevin of him the said H. that is to say the day year c. aforesaid at W. aforesaid he the said H. offered 12 d. to pay the said W. and I. to the use of the said W. for the damage of the said W. which he sustained by occasion of the trespass aforesaid which the cattel aforesaid in the aforesaid two acres of Land made which said 12 d. were sufficient amends for the trespass aforesaid which the cattel aforesaid in the said two acres of Land made which said 12 d. the aforesaid W. and I. then and there wholly refused to receive of the said H. and this c. Part of the debt paid The residue tendred before Suit and refused ANd c. when c. and saith that the aforesaid I. G. ought not to have or maintain his said action against him because he saith that the said I. A. the day year c. before the beginning of this action well and faithfully paid to the said I. G. 20 s. part of the above mentioned debt in the said Declaration specified that is to say at B. aforesaid and within the jurisdiction of this Court And as to the five shillings six pence the residue of the debt in the said Declaration specified the said I. A. further saith that he afterwards that is to say the day year c. abovesaid before the commencement of this action at B. aforesaid tendred to the said I. G. the said five shillings six pence which said five shillings six pence the said I. G. then and there refused to accept of and this the said I. A. is ready to prove and demands Judgment of the Court if the said I. A. ought to have his said action against him c. Replication ANd the said I. G. as to the plea of the said I. A. as to the said 20 s. parcel of the debt aforesaid saith that he by any thing before alledged ought not to be barred from having his said action against him for he saith that the said I. A. did not pay the said twenty shillings to the said I. G. as the said I. A. above hath alledged and this he prayes may be inquired of by the Countrey and the said I. A. likewise c. And as the said plea of the said I. A as to the said 5 s. 6 d. residue of the said Debt and the said I. G. saith that the same plea of the said I. A. in manner and aforesaid pleaded and the matter therein contained is insufficient in the Law to bar the said I. G. from having his said action against the said I. A. and that he to the plea aforesaid in manner and form aforesaid pleaded needeth not nor is bound by the Law of the Land to answer whereupon for want of a sufficient plea in this behalf the said I. G. prayeth Judgment and the said 5 s. 6 d. residue of his debt aforesaid together with his damages by reason of the detaining of that debt to him to be adjudged c. Not his Deed. ANd c. when c. And saith that he ought not to be charged with the said debt by vertue of the writing aforesaid because he saith that the said writing is not his Deed. And of this he putteth himselfe upon the Countrey And the said A. likewise c. By threats ANd c. when c. And saith that the said A. ought not to have his said action against him because he saith that the said A. at the time of the making of the said writing at N. aforesaid did impose upon the said B. such so great threats of his life may ming of his body to be inflicted on him unless he would make and seal unto the said A. the said writing that he the said B. did then and there make unto the said A. the said writing for feare of those threats And this he is ready to aver whereupon he prayeth judgment if the said A. ought to have his said action against him c. Replication ANd the said A. saith he by any thing before alledged ought not to be barred from having his said action because he saith that the said B. at the time of the making of the said writing aforesaid was of his own power at large And did make to the said A. the said writing of his meer and voluntary will and not for fear of threats as the said B. hath above alledged And he prayeth that this may be inquired of by the Countrey And the said B. likewise c. By hardnesse of imprisonment ANd c. when c. And saith c. because he saith that at the time of making of the said writing he was imprisoned by the said A. and other of his Covin that is to say at N. aforesaid and there in prison detained until the same B. by force and hardnesse of that imprisonment had then and there made to the said A. the said writing And this he is ready to aver whereupon he prayeth Judgment c. Replication ANd the said A. saith that he c. because he saith that the said B. at the time of making of the said writing was of his own right at large and out of prison and did of his meer and
b. A Bayliffe need not shew his precept when he cometh to execute it upon any man Yet upon the arrest he ought to declare the contents of it But if a Bayliffe be specially deputed or one that is not a known Officer he must shew the warrant to the party Co. 9. 69. 21 H. 7. 23. 37. Yet the special Bayliff is not obliged to shew it without demand 8 E. 4. 14. 14 H. 7 9. Co. ibidem If a Bayliffe by vertue of a Precept from the old Sheriffe after his discharge shall arrest a man this arrest is tortious and an Action of false Imprisonment lyeth both against the Sheriff and the Officer Cromp. 205. b. Notwithstanding the ground or maxime of Law that Dies dominicus non est juridicus and that no judiciall Act ought to be done on that day yet ministeriall Acts as to arrest and execute Processe are tollerated and allowed for an Officer ought to execute his office whensoever he can finde the party otherwise peradventure they shall never be executed and God forbid that things necessary should not be done on that day for bonum est bene facere Die Sabathi but this distinction and exception is taken away by a late Act made in the long Parliament In all cases where the Processe concerns his Highnesse the Sheriffe or other Officer upon refusall after demand to open the doore may breake open the door of the house or use other meanes to get in to do execution But in case of a common person the Law doth not permit the Sheriffe c. upon request made and denial to break into the house of the Defendant to execute any Process at the sute of any subject for the great inconvenience that might ensue thereupon because if men aswell in the night as in the day should have their houses which in revera are their Castles and fortresses broken open upon pretence thereof it would incur great mischief and damage for by colour thereof upon any seigned suite the house of any man at any time might be broken open when the Desendant might be arrested elsewhere and so men should not be in safety and repose in their owne houses And although the Sheriff be an Officer of great authority confidence yet it appears by daily experience that his Highness Writs are served and executed many times by Bailifs who are generally persons of little or no value or credit and therefore not to be trusted with the breaking open and ransacking of houses upon every slight occasion See Co. 11. 82. a. Lewis Bowles Case He ought In propria persona foure times a yeare to proclaime the Statute of Winchester within every Hundred of his Bayliwick and in all Faires and Markets by his Bayliffs 7 R. 2. cap. 6. 13 E. 1. cap. 1. 28 E. 1. cap. 17. The Statute provided against unlawfull games is likewise to be proclaimed foure times in the yeare in every Market and Faire within the County 33 H. 8. cap. 9. We will now handle the other Ministeriall part of his office and that as he is Custos vitae legis which extends to his doing Execution after a tedious and long spun sute which is the very life and spirit of the Law And this is divided into severall branches or kindes of Executions viz. Statute Merchant Statute Staple Recognizance Elegit Capias ad satisfaciendum Fieri facias c. Levari facias Of the last foure Executions two are by the Common Law viz. 1 Fieri Facias 2 And Levari facias And two by the Statute viz. 1 Elegit And 2 Capias ad satisfaciendum 22 Assize 47. And note that Execution by the Statute doth not oust Execution by the Common Law no more then the Execution by one Statute ousts the Execution by another We are determined to insist upon all the seven in discovering their natures manner of executing them c. And first of the Statute Merchant Statute Merchant IT is defined by West part 1. Symb. L. 2. Sect. 151. to be a Bond or Obligation of Record acknowledged before one of the Clerkes of the Statutes Merchant and Mayor and chiefe Warden of the City of London Yorke c. or before the Bayliffs of any Borough or other sufficient men for that purpose appointed sealed with the seale of the Debtor or Recognizor and of the Protector which consists of two parts the greater is kept by the said Major or chiefe Warden c. And the lesser part thereof by the said Clerks The forme of which you may see in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 64. c. And if the Debt be not paid at the day the proceeds upon it to have the fruits and effects thereof is not like to the procceeding in other cases or suits upon Obligations c. to reduce them to judgement but as they are in their owne nature much like to the nature of a Judgement so is the proceeding and Execution thereupon much like to the proceeding and execution upon a Judgement And therefore the Conusee may bring an Action of Debt upon a Statute or he may assoon as the same is forfeited have a present execution of it after this manner He must bring his Statute to the Mayor and Clerke or other Officer before whom it was acknowledged And there if they finde the Record of it and the day to be past for the payment of the money they are to apprehend and imprison the body of the Conusor if he be a Lay person and can be found within their jurisdiction and if he cannot be found there they are to certifie the Record into the Chancery which also if they refuse to do they may be compelled unto by a Certiorare And if that Certificate be faulty or Execution be not done upon it by reason of the death of the Conusee or otherwise the Conusee or his Executor or Administrator may have another Certificate And thereupon he shall have a Writ of Capias out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff of the County where the Conusor lives to apprehend and imprison him if he be not a Clergy man and this is to be returned into the Common Pleas or Vpper Bench. And when the Conusor is taken he shall have time for a Quarter of a year to make his agreement with the Conusee and to sell his lands or goods to satisfie the Conusee And for that purpose he may sell his lands or goods although he be in prison and his sale is good and lawfull And if in that time he do not satisfie the Conusee or if upon the Capias the Sheriff return a Non est inventus then by a Writ or by divers Writs if the Lands or goods lie in divers Counties called an Extendi facias then all his Lands and goods shall be delivered by the Sheriff to the Creditors upon a reasonable Extent to hold untill the debt be paid And if the Jurors
proceeding against the principal but in case where there are moveables of the principal to satisfie the debt the Sureties as it seems shall not be charged Stat. de Mercatoribus Execution by vertue or force of a Recognisance shall be of all the goods and chattels of the Reconusor except the Beasts of the Plough and implements of Husbandry and of the moyty of his Lands West 103. The Recognisee by the first Writ shall not have Execution but of the Land which the Reconusor had at the time of the Reconusance and upon return that he had no Land then he shall have a Writ to try who had it at the time c. or after c. 36 E. 3. Execution 47. 19 E. 3. 1. Where two sued Execution the money was delivered to one and the Attorney of the other Mich. 14. E. 3. Execution 76. and the Desendant in Court did pay the money to one the other being absent and it was good and the Recognizance was withdrawn Mich. 22. E. 3. 15 Execution 87. The heir shall be charged in debt of the Lands which he had by descent the day of the Writ brought and not the day of Judgement Mich. 18. E. 2. Execution 241. If a man be in Execution upon a Statue and findes bail and doth not appear at the day but at another day the bail brings him in now it is in the Election of the Plaintiff to take Execution of his body and Land or to take the bail See 59. E. 3. Execution 43. If two sue Execution and before the Extent one dieth the Sheriff shall extend the Land and shall deliver the same to the other 11. R. 2. Briefe 938. But if two sue Execution of a Statute-Merchant and the Reconusor is returned dead and then one of the Conusees doth acknowledge the death of his Companion he shall not have Execution without suing a Writ out of Chancery 25 E. 3. 38 Execution 92. Where three are bound in a Statute joyntly and severally the Plaintiff shall have Execution against one or all of them at his election and not against two and so of an Obligation But if he bring debt against them all upon a joynt Bond the Execution shall be against all but if he bring it by severall Praecipe's he shall not have Execution but against one 34 E. 3. Execution 129. 14 H. 4. 19 Execution 29. Note further that a Recognisance though in the speciall signification it doth but acknowledge a certaine debt and is executed upon all the goods and halse the Lands of the Recognisor Yet by extention it is drawn also to the Bonds or Obligations commonly called Statute Merchant and Statute Staple as appeareth by the Register of Originall Writs fol. 146. 151. 152. Elegit what 4 ELegit is a Judiciall Writ by the Statute and lyeth for him that hath recovered debt or damages against one not able in his goods to satisfie and directed to the Sheriff commanding him that he make delivery of halse the parties Lands or Tenements and all his Goods and Chattels Beasts for the Plow excepted Old N. B. fol. 152. Register of Originall Writs fol. 299. 301. and the Table of the Register judiciall which expresseth diverse uses of this Writ In Elegit by force of the Statute of Westminster 2. Cap. 18. the Sherif may take in Execution the moietie of the Lands of the Conusor and all his Goods and Chattels except as before and may deliver them unto the Conusee upon a reasonable price or extent untill the debt be satisfied But the valuation of the goods and lands ought to be first found by the Inquisition of a Jury Co. 4. 74. And the Sherif is to deliver him seisin of them who is tenant by Elegit and shall do no waste Upon Elegit the Sheriffe ought to returne the extent and also that he hath delivered the Lands c. 12 Edward 3. Scire Facias 117. and the extent shall be good for the summe due notwithstanding that it be of more 44 Edward 3. 11. Execution 35. A man sued an Elegit and had a terme of yeares delivered to him in Execution which the Desendant had in possession as a Chattell and adjudged good An Annuity may be extended and Rents c. In every Elegit the Sheriffe must returne and set out the moietie distinctly unlesse they be Tenants in Common and in that case he must returne the speciall matter An Elegit issued out against one Greisley by the name of Greisley Esquire who was at the time of suing out the Writ made Knight and Baronet and it was insufficient and the Plaintiffe prosecuted a new Writ Brownlows Rep. 38. A Lessee had a Lease to the value of 100 pounds and after the Teste of the Elegit and before the Sheriffe had executed it assignes his terme to one who assignes it to the Plaintiffe in the scire facias and asterwards and before the last assignment the Sheriffe executes the Elegit and delivers the Lease to the Plaintiffe to be holden c. for satisfaction of the debt which came but to 43 pounds 6 s. 8 d. and it was held by all the Judges that the Sheriffe could not deliver the Lease at another value then what the Jury had found it at and the sale made by the Sheriffe is as strong as if it had been made in the open Market and that all the Goods and Chattels are bound after the Teste of the Elegit and cannot be sold by the owner after the Teste of the Writ Brownlowes Rep. 38. Comers versus Brandling There are good diversities between an Execution not valuable as of the Defendants body and an Execution valuable as of Lands c. As if two men are bound joyntly and severally in an Obligation and the one is sued condemned and taken in execution and afterwards the other is also sued condemned taken in execution and then the first escapes and the other brings his Audita Querela In that case he shal be barred to bring that Writ untill the Plaintiff be satisfied So likewise if the Desendant in debt dye in Execution yet the Plaintiff may have a new Execution by Elegit or Fieri facias But if the Plaintiff have once Execution of the Lands of the Defendant and after the Lands are evicted there before the Statute of 23 H 8. Cap. 5. he shall not have any new Execution for the Execution of the Lands was valuable and accounted in Law for a satisfaction and to avoid infinitenesse he shall have but one valuable satisfaction or one Execution with satisfaction at the Common Law Co. 5. 86. b. 3. Blumfields case If upon an Elegit there be no Execution but upon goods because there is no Land and the goods appeare insufficient hee may have a Capias For note it is in effect but a Fieri Facias though the word be Elegit But if there be Land
have an action of the case against him that made such return See Co. 5. 90. 11. 40. and 4. 67. In Mich. term 8. Jac. The words of a Return were these viz. By vertue of this Writ to me directed I have taken the body of E. M. whose body I have here ready in Court at the day c. and as for the other two they are not to be found in my Bayliwick And at the end of the return was set down The answer of S. H. c. which S. H. at the time of the return was not then officer to the Court nor to the King and so disabled to make a return and therefore the return insufficient The Writ was directed to the Sheriff and so ought the Return to have been by the Sherif for none can make a returne of a Writ but such a person who at the time of the returne remained an Officer to the Court. If the old Sheriff be removed before the day of the return the new Sheriff is to make the return and to this purpose is the book of 22 E. 4. fol. 33. and 34. in the case of a Writ of Error to reverse a false Judgment given before the Major and Sheriffs in the Court at Coventry and Co. 3. fol. 72. Westbyes Case where it is resolved that after the election of a new Sheriff and before delivery over of the Prisoners to him they do remain in the custody of the old Sheriff and after the delivery of them over to the new Sheriff he at the day of the return ought to return Cepi corpus but in this case the return by the new Sheriff before any delivery over of the Prisoners to him by the old Sheriff is no return at all in Law And the old Sheriff can now make no return he being no Officer at all to the Court but the new Sheriffe is the Officer to the Court and ought to make his answer unto the Kings Writ to him directed and he doth not here return a Cepi corpus but only an indorsment in this manner setting his hand also to the return with this Postscript viz. This Writ as it is above subscribed I the now present Sheriff have received from my Predecessor the old Sheriff going out of his office and this upon the matter is no return at all Here the new Sheriff hath made a Return but the same is not good being but parcel of that which he ought to have returned For as to the other two his return is They are not to be found within my Bayliwick this Return is not good for he ought to have said that those two nor either of them were to be found And it is said that the old Sheriff put his hand to the Writ he was at that time out of his office and so he was no Officer of the Court and so it is in effect as if he had not put his hand at all to the return and and so the return being as no return in Law is meerly void Upon an Elegit the Sheriff returned that to be executed and the extent of the Church of S. Andrews alias S. Edes and it was prayed that the Sheriff might amend it and make it Andrews only for that was the true name and the Court said that the alias dictus is surplusage and will not hurt the return of the Writ Winch. Rep. fol. 27. A Writ of Proclamation upon the Exigent was returned by the Sherif out of office at the time upon which the Outlawry was adjudged void Stat. 6. H. 8. Dyer 103. To return Rescous upon a Latitat is no good return for the Sheriff might have had a Posse Comitatus aswell for the serving the same Processe as an Execution 10 H. 7. 26. 33 H. 6. 1. 10 E. 4. 3. F N B. 102. Dyer 162. If a Writ be directed to a place where there are two Sheriffs as London York c. and one of them doth return the Writ it is insufficient for though one according to custome doth execute it yet it must be returned in both their names 21 Ass 20. Br. Officer 22. If the Sheriff upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum returneth a Cepi corpus and hath not the body at the day c. he is chargeable for an escape Or if upon a Fieri facias he returneth a Fieri feci and hath not the money at the day c. he is chargeable with the money Br. Ret. 107. Yet in all Writs of Execution except an Elegit as upon a Cap. ad satisfac Habere facias seisinam vel posessionem Fieri fac Liberate c. If the Execution be duly done although the Writ never be returned or filed it much matters not if the Plaintiff have his demand for then he hath no cause of further proceeds in it But in case of an Elegit because the Extent is to be made by an Enquest and not by the Sheriff alone that ought to be returned otherwise it is invalid Coo. 4. 67 and 5. 90. But where no Enquest is to be taken but onely Land to be delivered or seisin had or goods to be sold which are but matters in fait these are sufficient although the Writ be not returned Co. 4 67. a. It is no good return for the Sheriff to say that the party will not pay his fee ergo he did not execute the Writ 34 H. 6. Br. Ret. 10. All Sheriffs and Bayliffs who have return of Writs ought to set both their names of Baptisme and sir-names to their returnes Plo. 63. a. so that the Court may know of whom they received such returns if necessity require And this is by force of the Stat. of 12E 2. Cap. 5. Yet by the Stat. 18 Eliz. cap. 13. imperfect or insufficient returns of Sherifs are corrigble Upon a Replevin the Sheriffe returns I have commanded the Bayliff of the Liberty of c who will make no deliverance c. these are no good returns for the Sheriff himselfe ought to have entered the Franchise and to have made deliverance of the Cattle c. Fitz. 68. f. He shall be amerced for the default of his Under-sheriff County Clerk or Bayliff 38 Ass p. 13. Br. 77. 1 R. 3. c. 4. But by the Stat. of 27 H. 8. c. 24. Amerciaments for insufficient returns of Writs made by Bayliffs of Liberties shall be impos'd upon such Baylifs and not upon the Sherifs Every return ought to answer the Writ ad punctum and therefore where the VVrit was That you make known to the heires of the Lands and Tenements which were of A c. And the Sherif returned That he made known to B. Esquire sonne and heire of the said A c. which was not good and assigned for Errour c. because he did not return him heire of any Lands or Tenements as the writ required for his writ was not to summon the heire of the said A but
Writ appeareth in a certaine pannel to this VVrit annexed R. S. Esq Sherif The names of the Jurors between A. B. Plaintif and C. D. Defendant of a plea of Trespasse E. F. of G. Gent. H. I. of the same K. L. of M. And so to the number of 24. Every of the said Jurors is severally attached by pledges Io Doo Ric. Roo R. S. Esq Sherif The execution of this writ appeareth in a certaine pannel to this writ annexed R. S. Esq Sherif The names of the Jurors between A B. Plaintif and C D. Defendant of a plea of Trespasse E F of G Gent H I of the same K. L of M And so to the number mentioned in the writ Every of the said Jurors is severally attached by pledges Iohn Doo Rich Roo Issues of every of them 10 s. R. S. Esq Sherif At my County of N. held at L. in the said County of N. the 8th day of Ian in the year of our Lord 1658. the within named A B C D and E F were the first time called and did not appear And at my County Court there held the first day of Feb in the same yeare 1658. they were the second time called and appeared not And at my county Court there held the first day of March in the foresaid year 1658. they were the third time called appeared not And at my county Court there held the 2d day of April in the year of our Lord 1659. they were the fourth time called and appeared not And at my County Court there held the first day of May in the year 1659. abovesaid they were the fith time called and the above named A. B. brought me his Highnesse VVrit of Supersedeas which I have to this writ annexed therefore against him the said A. B. I could no further proceed And the above named C. D. rendred himself into my custody whose body before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained I have ready as within it is commanded And the above named E F. did not appeare therefore by the judgement of J K. L M. Gent. Coroners of the County aforesaid the aforesaid E E. is outlawed R. S. Esq Sherif At my County Court of N. held at L. in the County of N. the 1. day of Feb. in the year of our Lord 1658 And at the general Sessions of the publique peace held at G. the 20 day of Apr. in the aforesaid year the 2 day of April in the yeare of our Lord 1659. And at the most usuall door of the Parish Church of c. within written on Sunday the 10 of April 1659. abovesaid I made publique proclamation as within it is commanded R. S. Esq Sherif There being four County Courts allowed at which the within named A B. C D. E F. were foure times called appeared now Now at my County Court of N. held at L. in the said County of N. the above named A B. C D. E F. were the first time called and appeared not therefore by the judgement of I K and L M Gent. Coronors of the County they are and every of them is outlawed R. S. Esq Sherif This Writ was so lately delivered me that by reason of the shortness of time I could not do due execution thereof according to the Exigence of the same R. S. Esq Sherif The within named A. B. was taken by R. C. Knight and Baronet late Sheriff of my County of N. and not by me now Sheriff of the same County R. S. Esquire Sherif By vertue of this writ to me directed I have before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained the Plaint which is in my County Court by his Highnesse Writ between the within named parties under the seals of A B. C D. E F. and G H. four lawfull men of my said County present at that Record as appeareth in a certain Scedule to this Writ annexed And have given notice to the within named I. K. that he may be then there ready to prosecute his plaint thereof against the within named T. W. And also I have there the other Writ to this Writ and Scedule annexed I. G. Esquire Sherif S. ss At my County Court held at I. in my said County the 11. day of in the year of our Lord 1657. ss I. K. complaineth against T. W. of a plea of Debt I. G. Esquire Sheriff By vertue of this Writ by C D. and F G. honest and lawfull men of my Bailiwick I have given notice to the within named L S. I. L. c. that they be before his Highnesse at the day and place within contained to shew c. Why the within named R R. should not be inlarged out of prison according to the act c. As within it was commanded I. G. Esquire Sherif The within named G. S. hath nothing in my Bailiwick whereby I can give him notice neither is he found in the same neither are there any tenants or tenant of any Lands or Tenements which were of the within named W. on the within written day of the Judgment within given or at any times afterwards in my Bailiwick unto whom I may give notice as this writ doth require I. G. Esquire Sherif Pledges of process Jo. Doo and Ric Roo Sum of the within named A. B. Anth. Sharp and Rich. Sharp And at the most usual Church-door of the Parish of D. where the within named A. B. inhabiteth upon the Lords day to wit the 4. day of Iu. in the year within written immediatly after divine service in the same Church ended I made publick Proclamation according to the form of the Statute c. R. S. Esq Sherif By vertue of this Writ to me directed the 26. day of A. in the year within written I have taken into the hands of his Highness the Lord Protector by the view of H. R. and T. R. honest and lawfull men of my Bailiwick the third part of the Messuage Lands and Tenements within mentioned with the appurtenances As within it is commanded The summoners of the within named A. B. Jo. Den. and Ric. Fen. R. S. Esquire Sherif Pledges of Processe Jo. Doo and Rich Roo The Summoners of the within named A. B. son an heir of A. B. I. W. and E. W. R. S. Esquire Sherif By vertue of this Writ I have caused to be delivered to the said A. B. his possession of his term within specified of the Messuage Lands and Tenements within specified And also have taken the body of the within named C. D whose body before the Justices within written at the day and place within contained I have ready as within it is commanded And where the Defendant is not found then close thus And I further certifie the Justices within specified that the within named C. D. is not found in my Bailiwick R. S. Esquire Sherif By
before the return of the same E. L. Knight late Sheriffe of the County aforesaid and that this Writ so as above indorsed and returned was delivered to me R. S. Esquire now Sheriffe of the County aforesaid by G. T. under-Sheriff of the aforesaid E. L. late Sheriff of the County aforesaid R. S. Esquire Sherif I hereby certifie the Justices within written That the Lands and Tenements which were of the within named F. B. the same day and year within mentioned in which judgement of the debt and accompts within specified was rendred are and yet be in the hands of our Soveraign Lord the King in his Court of Wards and Liveries by reason R. B. Gent. Tenant of the Lands and Tenements aforesaid hath not yet sued forth his Livery of the Lands aforesaid in the Court aforesaid Therefore to the execution of this Writ I may not proceed as within it is commanded R. S. Esq Sherif An Inquisition indented taken at W. in the County aforesaid the day of Ianuary in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred fifty eight before me R. S. Esquire Sheriffe of the County aforesaid by vertue of a Writ of his Highnesse the Lord PROTECTOR to me directed and ro this Inquisition annexed by the oath of M. P. and so to the number of twelve honest and lawfull men of my Bayliwick who say upon their oaths that H. S. in the said writ named was seized in his Demesne as of see the fourteenth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred fifty in the same writ mentioned of one Capital Messuage with the appurtenances with five acres of Lands six acres of Meadow and eight acres of Pasture scituate and being in Br. in the County aforesaid of the cleer yearly value in all issues above reprises forty shillings And the said Jurors further say upon their oaths that the said H. S. hath not any other or more Lands or Tenements the said fourteenth day of June abovesaid nor at any time since nor any goods or Chattels at the day of taking this Inquisition in my Bailiwick to the knowledge of the said Jurors the moyety of all and singular which said Messuage Lands Tenements and premisses that is to say the said Capitall Messuage and the said five acres of Land and the six acres of Meadow I the said Sheriff the said day of taking this Inquisition have caused to be delivered to T. C. in the said Writ also named to hold to him the said T. and his Assignes as his Free-hold according to the forme of the Statute in this case made and provided untill the debt and damages in the same Writ mentioned shall thereof be fully levied In witnesse c. Otherwise untill the said T. C. in the said writ also named shall be fully satisfied of his debt and damages in the same writ mentioned In witness c. R. S. Esquire Sheriff The within named A. B. is not found in my Bailywick The residue of the execution of this Writ appeareth in a certain indented Inquisition hereunto annexed R. S Esquire Sheriff An Inquisition indented taken at I. in the County aforesaid the one and twentieth day of October in the year of our Lord 1658. before me R. S. Esquire Sheriff of the same County of N. By vertue of a Writ of His Highnesse the Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the Dominions and Territories thereunto belonging to me directed and to this indented Inquisition annexed By the oath of H. S. and so to the number of twelve at least good and lawfull men of my Bailywick who say upon their Oath that R. T. in the aforesaid writ named the twentieth day of A. in the year of our Lord 1657. in the same Writ mentioned on which day the said R. T. became debtor to his Highnesse Oliver late Lord Protector in the aforesaid also mentioned was seised in his Demesn as of fee of and in one Messuage with the Appurtenances five acres of Land sixe acres of Meadow and eight acres of Pasture scituate lying and being in F. in the County aforesaid now in the tenure and occupation of J. G. or his Assignes of the cleer yearly value in all Issues above reprises 10 l. All which said Messuage Lands and Tenements with the Appurtenances I the said Sheriffe the same day of the taking this Inquisition have taken and seised into the hands of his Highnesse Richard now Lord Protector as by this Writ it is commanded And the same Jurors say upon their Oath that the aforesaid R. T. at the day of the taking this Inquisition is seised in reversion when it shall happen after the death of C. Widow in his Demesn as of Fee of one Messuage with the Appurt six acres of Land 5 acres of Meadow and 12 acres of pasture scituate lying and being in H. in the foresaid County of N. and now in the tenure and occupation of the same C. widow And that the aforesaid C. widow is now living so that at present the said Messuage Lands and premisses in H. aforesaid are worth nothing But after the death of the said C. widow will be of the cleer yearly value in all Issues above reprises 8 l. The reversion of which said Messuage Lands and Premisses with the Appurt in H. aforesaid when it happens I the same Sheriffe have also the same day of taking this Inquisition taken and seised into the hands of his Highnesse the Lord Protector according to the exigence of his Highnesse said Writ And moreover the said Jurors say upon their oaths that the above named R. T. at the time of the taking this Inquisition was and is possessed of all the Goods and Chattels severally mentioned comprised apprised and valued in a certaine schedule to this indented Inquisition annexed as of his owne proper Goods and Chattels and that the whole value of the same Goods and Chattels is forty shillings Which goods and Chattels the same day of the taking this Inquisition I the aforesaid Sheriffe have likewise seised into the hands of his said Highnesse the Lord Protector And the same Jurors further say upon their Oath that the same day of the taking this Inquisition R. J. of G. in the County of N. aforesaid Yeoman was indebted to the above named R. T. in the whole sum of twenty pounds for Rent And also that there is now in the hands of the same R. J. divers Goods and Chattels of the said R. T. that is to say one long Table c. which goods and Chattels together are of the value of 40 s. All which said debt of twenty pounds and the Goods and Chattels of the said value of 40 s. l the Sheriff aforesaid the same day of the taking of this Inquisition have also seised into the hands of his said Highnesse the Lord Protector as in the hands of the aforesaid R. I. And the aforesaid Jurors moreover say upon their Oaths that the within named
necessary to be done in for or about the better effecting of the premisses as fully and amply to all intents and purposes as I my selfe might do in person or otherwise and whatsoever my said Attorneyes or either of them shall joyntly or severally do in the premisses according to the true intent and meaning of these presents I do hereby allow of ratifie and confirme In witnesse c. The Grant of a Stewardship TO all to whom these presents shall come A. B. Knight sendeth greeting Know ye that I the said A. B. for divers good causes and considerations me thereunto moving have for me my heires and assignes given and granted and by these presents do give and grant unto John Preston of B. Gent. the Office of chiefe Steward and the place and execution of the Stewardship of my Mannor of Skipton in Craven in the County of York And the holding and keeping of all Courts Court-Leets viewes of Frank-pledge and of all other Courts of what kinde soever the same be to the said Mannor belonging or in any wise appertaining To have hold execute and enjoy the aforesaid Office of chiefe Steward and the place and execution of chiefe Stewardship and the holding and keeping of all manner of Courts usually held and kept within the same together with all manner of fees wages rewards profits advantages and emoluments to the said office of chiefe Steward or Stewardship of the said Mannor or Lordship belonging or appertaining or at any time heretofore accustomed and used to be paid rendered to or received by the chiefe Steward or Stewards there for the time being for or by reason of the said office of chiefe Steward or Stewards there for the time being from henceforth for and during the naturall life of him the said Iohn Preston In witnesse c. THE COURT OF Pypowders The definition of it what it is and why it was instituted together with its jurisdiction THis word Pypowder hath its definition from the French words pied i. pes and puldreux i. pulverulentus or as Skene de verb. significat Pede pulverosus dusty feet a Vagabond Pedder or Scotch Merchant who hath no certaine dwelling place and by whom Fares are usually kept to whom justice should be summarily ministred within three flowings and ebbings of the Sea or as some define it to be curia parvi ponderis and this is to be pedis-pulverizati and so the Lord chiefe Justice Anderson did use to define it for the speed and celerity there used in the present dispatch of businesse This Court of Pypowders is a Court of Record instituted and set up for the speedy and sudden dispatch of matters and differences arising in a Fare or Market and for the speedy doing of Justice and this in case of necessity for the sole benefit of Tradesmen and Merchants and for the present determination of all doubts and questions there then arising and that only upon sales and contracts had in the Fare and Market during the time thereof but not for matters acted and done before or at any time after the Fare or Market held but for matters happening and arising in pleno Mercato or in plenaferia 8 H. 7. fol. 4. b. This Court is of two kindes viz. 1. Either by prescription and this is an absolute jurisdiction 2. To be in a Fare and Market and to this a Court of Pypowders is incident And here two things are requisite viz. 1. This Court to be for matters arising in the Fare or Market 2. The matters to be determined there within and during the continuance of the Fare and Market and this appeares to be so by the Statutes of 17 E. 4. cap. 2. and 1 R. 3. cap. 6. and this is in a Court of Pypowders annexed unto a Fare or Market But in a Court of Pypowders which one hath by Prescription there they may heare and determine matters done before Bolstrod 2. part fol. 21. Goodson against Duffill Cro first part fol. 33. For in case of a Prescription such a Court may well be without a Fare from time to time and from day to day 13 E. 4. fol. 8. b. it was so adjudged in point of a Writ of Error where the error assigned to reverse a judgment given in curia pedis pulverizali there alledged to be held secundum consuetudinem ejusdem civitatis the Error insisted upon was because he shewed not that the matter upon which the action was brought was in pleno Mercato or in plena feria it is there expresly adjudged that this was no Error because the same was layd to be held secundum consuetudinem civitatis so that such a Court may be held without a Fare or Market and that the King may well grant such a Court to be held from day to day and such a Court may well be held by Custome without any Fare or Market and its proper denomination is from the speedy dispatch of businesse there so that the jurisdiction of this Court held by prescription may be extended unto all contracts and bonds to actions of trespasse and actions upon the Case and to this purpose was the case betweene Chambers Plaintiffe against Pert Defendant Hill 33. Eliz. Rot. 124. where an action of trespasse for an assault and battery was brought in a Court of Pypowders for an assault done long before and well maintainable as it was held But this Court held by prescription doth much differ from the ordinary Court of Pypowders and that by many circumstances This Court may be thus used and held viz. 1. Either by way of Grant 2. By way of confirmation And being thus held it differs from the ordinary Court of Pypowders which is incident to every Fare as appeareth by 12 H. 7. fol. 16. b. and 13 H 7. fol. 19. And the same Court is thus incident to a Fare and that of common right as it appears 13 E. 4. fol. 8. b. Old book of Entr. fol. 168. Fit dette en Gailor placito 1 f. 18. Fit account in Execution placito 3. If one will declare upon a matter in this Court in Fare there in such a case of necessity he ought to set forth in pleading that the same was done in pleno ferio or in plena Mercata otherwise not good But it is not so in case where a man hath and holdeth this Court by prescription in which Court they may heare and determine actions upon the case for words but not so in an ordinary Court held during the time of the Fare And by 6 E. 4. fol. 3. b. If a man in his Fare hath this Court here the Steward is Judge and no other for there are no Suitors and for a Judgment given in this Court a Writ of Faux judgment lieth not but a Writ of Error and with this agrees 7 E. 4 fol. 23. And where one claims to hold this Court by prescription and also by Charter if the Charter be not contrary
no such promise within six yeares ibid. Never Executor 134 Fully administred and Replication ibid. Not guilty 135 Bar by which in age ibid. Payment upon a Bill and a Release produced ibid. Free-hold 136 No action to cause one to render an accompt will lie in this Court ibid. In arrest of Judgment ibid. Conditions performed and Replication 137 138 Rejoynder ibid. Detain he doth not ibid. Bar by a generall acquittance and replication ibid. Justification of scandalous words 139 Tender of amends in Replevin ibid. Part of the debt paid the residue tendered before suit and refused and Replication 140 141 Not his Deed 141 By threats and Replication ibid. and 142 By hardnesse of imprisonment and Replication ibid. The assault made by the Plaintiff and Replication 143 The Defendant pleadeth the Plaintiff within age to bring his Action and should have brought it by Guardian and not by Attorney 144 To a trespasse in walking not guilty and as to the residue of the trespas tender of amends and Replication and Rejoynder 144 145 Misnomer in Baptism pleaded in abatement of the writ of Justicies 146 Plea in abatement for that the Plaintiff hath one name in the writ and another in the Declaration ibid. The Defendant justifies for horse meat not satisfied in answer to a Declaration in trover for the same horse 147 The Defendant plead leaves and liberty granted to him by the Plaintiff to enter and feed his cattle 148 The Defendant justifies in replevin the taking of the cattle for rent in arrear 149 The Defendant saith that the goods were taken as a pawn or pledge for money lent 150 Replication that he took them injuria sua propria without such a cause 151 Concord in assault and battery ibid. Replication No such concord or agreement made 152 The Defendant saith that as to the taking of the Oxe that he tooke it by the name of an Herriot ibid. Justification in trespasse for want of reparation of the hedges by the Plaintiffe 153 The Defendant justifies upon a Replevin the taking of the Cattel doing damage-feasant 154 Misnomer in the writ of Justicies ibid. Non cepit to a Replevin 155 Poverty ibid. Demurrer ibid. Joyning in Demurrer 156 Presentment in a Leet of petty Treason 342 Presentment of felony for burning a house 343 Presentment of a Felon ibid. Presentment of an Accessary ibid. Presentments in Court-Baron 375 The finding of the death of a Tenant and of a Surrender made to the use of his will with an admission of the Tenant according to the will ibid. The finding of the death of a Tenant 376 Pains found and set upon tenants for want of suit of Court ibid. 377 The presentment of a Surrender made out of Court into tenants hands with the admission of the tenant accordingly 377 The finding of a Surrender made into tenants hands to the use of a mans will 378 The finding of the death of a tenant and of the lands and that the youngest son is next heir according to the custom c. with his admission ibid. The finding of a sale made of Freehold lands with a distresse to the Bayliffe to distrain for want of taking it up 379 The acknowledgement in the Court of a Legacy paid ibid. A presentment of a Surrender made out of Court with the admission of the tenant 380 A presentment made in Court of an agreement made between the Son and his mother touching her Dower and the mothers release of her Dower 381 A pain set for an incroachment ibid. A pain set for the amending of the same ibid. A presentment for an offence done and a charge to the Jury to enquire and further day given for giving their Verdict 382 R REplevin 39 132 alias Repl. 40 Plures Repl. ibid. Return of a Tolt 43 Return of a Recordare fac Lo. 58 59 of a Pone 59 60 of a writ of False judgment 61 62 63 of an Accedeas ad curiam 65 66 of a Writ for the Election of a Coroner after the death of another 66 of an Exigent 66 67 68 of a Proclamation 69 of a Non est inventus 197 of a Cepi corpus in the Common Pleas ibid. of a Cepi corpus in the Vpper-Bench ibid. of a Cepi corpus and Non est inventus ibid. of a Cepi corpus and Languidus in prisona 198 of a Mandavi Ballivo libertatatis where the Bayliff makes no returne of the Sheriffs warrant or where he makes an insufficient return 198 and also where he returneth to the Sheriffe he hath taken the body and the like in case the Bayliffe returneth a Languidus in prisona or as he shall certified the Sheriff by his returne ibid. of a Scire facias where a Scire facias is returned ibid. of a Nihil to a Scire facias ibid. of Scire facias for one and Nihil for the other 199 of an Attachment and Proclamation in Chancery ibid. A Nihil returned of a Venire facias upon an Indictment presentment or information and summons returned of the like ibid. The Return of a Distringas nuper vic or Balliv ibid. of a Venire facias jur 200 of a Distringas or Hab. corp Jur. ibid. of an Exigent where one bringeth a Supersed one rendereth himselfe the other appeareth not ibid. of a Proclamation 201 of an Allocat ibid. of a Tarde ibid. of a Hab. corp where the Defendant was taken by a former Sheriff 202 of a Pone ibid. of a Scire fac for the release of Prisoners ibid. of Nihil to a Scire fac against the heir and ter-tenants ibid. of a Summons in Dower ibid. of a Cap. in manus in Dower 203 of a Summons upon an originall against an heir ibid. of a Habere facias possessionem Cap. where judgement is signed with costs ibid. of a Liberate out of Chancery 204 of an Acced ad cur ibid. of a Re. fa. lo. ibid. averia elongat and Cepi corp for damages 205 of a Rescous ibid. of a Devastavit 228 of a Nulla bona Devastavit by inquisition ibid. of a Fieri fac 229 of a Fieri fac where part of the debt is levied and for the residue a Nulla bona 230 another of a Fi. fa. ibid. of a writ where the Sheriffe dieth after execution thereof and so returned prout indorsat by the present Sheriffe ibid. of an Elegit where lands are in the Kings hands 231 of an Extent in the Exchequer 232 of a Scire fac against the heir and ter-tenants where notice is given 234 of a summons in Dower 235 Records upon a writ of False judgement and Accedeas ad curiam 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 Recognizance of a Coroner to binde witnesse to appear at the next assizes 290 Release of Lands made in a Court Baron 388 S SCire facias post diem annum 47 against an Executor after Judgement against the Testator ibid. after marriage 48 Subpoena or a Warrant to