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A29389 Reports of that grave and learned judge, Sir John Bridgman, knight, serjeant at law, sometime chief justice of Chester to which are added two exact tables, the one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters therein contained. Bridgman, John, Sir.; J. H.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1659 (1659) Wing B4487; ESTC R19935 180,571 158

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Bartons Case Two Ioynt-tenants are for life and one lets his moyety for years to commence after his death and dies and agreed to be a good Lease against the Survivor for as Litton saith every Ioynt-tenant is seised Per my per tout and hath an Estate in one moyety not only for his own life or his own time but also for the time and life of his Companion and therefore every Estate made by him is good for a moyety so long as the Estate of himself and his Companion continues but a Rent-charge shall not bind his Companion because he claimes by the first Conveyance which is above his Companions Estate And as to the second point it is cleer that when Husband and Wife Part. 2 make a Feoffment in Fee or a Lease for years of the Land of the Wife rendring Rent the Wife after the death of her Husband may accept the Rent and make the Lease good as in 26 H. 8. 2. the case of the Feoffment is agreed and if a Woman after the death of her Husband does accept the Rent she shall be barred in a Cui in vita 11. H. 7. 13. 15. Ed. 4. 17. and Dyer 91. B. Husband and Wife make a Lease for years by Indenture and the Husband dies and she accepts the Rent she shall be bound thereby and shall not avoid the Lease Vpon which two things being as I conceive unquestionable it follows that this Lease at the time of the making thereof is not void but voidable And therefore the sole question will be how this Lease is voidable and if it may be avoided by the surviving Ioynt-tenant or not And I conceive that it is avoidable by the Wife only if she survive her Husband and not by the other Ioynt-tenant and that for two reasons First Because the Survivor comes in above the Lease and therefore cannot take advantage of any imperfection or defect to avoid the Lease 14. Ed. 4. 1. B. If a Feoffment or a Lease for life be made to two and one dies the other may plead the Estate to be made to him only for he is not in by him that is dead but by the Feoffor or Lessor and Dyer 187. a. Two Ioynt-tenants for life one makes a Lease for yeares rendring Rent and dies the Survivor shall not have the Rent And if Tenant for life makes a Lease for years rendring Rent and surrenders to the Lessor the Lessor shall not have the Rent for he is in by his Reversion which is above the Lease for years and 28. H. 8. 96. a. An Executor had Iudgment to r●cover a Debt and died intestate whereupon Administration is committed to another he shall not have a Scire facias upon this Iudgment because that he being Administrator immediately to the Testator is above the recovery Secondly There is no privity between the surviving Ioynt-tenant and the Lessor to make him avoid the Lease which is voidable as in 8. Rep. Whittinghams case Privies in blood as Heir generall or speciall shall avoid a voidable estate made by the Ancestor as if an Infant make a Feoffment in Fee his Heir may well enter and avoid the Feoffment but Privies in Law as Lord by escheat Lord of a Villain or Lord who enters for Mortmain shall never take benefit of the Infancy because they are but strangers And therefore if an Infant make a Feoffment in Fee and dies without Heir the Feoffment is unavoidable 49. Ed. 3. 13. 6. H. 4. 3 7. H. 5. 9. 39. H. 6. 42. And as to Privies in Estate as Ioynt-tenants Husband and Wife Donor in Tail and Donee Lessor and Lessee it is there also resolved that they shall not take advantage of Infancy unle●●e it be in some speciall cases And therefore if Tenant in Tail within age makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies without Issue the Donor shall not enter contrary to the opinion of Rick and Frisby 6. H. 4. 3. because that here is only a Privity in Estate between them and no right does accrue to the Donor by the death of the Donee So if two Ioynt-tenants in Fee be and one of them being within age makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies the Survivor shall not enter but if two Ioynt-tenants within age do make a Feoffment one joynt Right remains in them and therefore if one dies the Right will survive and the Survivor may enter in all and the same Law of Covertue or non sanae memoriae as it is said also in Whittinghams case and in Fitzherb N. B. 192. K. If two Ioynt-tenants within age do alien in Fee they must sue severall Writs of Dum fuit infra aetatem because that the cause of their Action is their nonage which is severall for the nonage of the one is not the nonage of the other But if Husband and Wife within age do make a Feoffment of the Wifes land and the Husband dye the Wife shall have a Dum fuit infra aetatem 14. Ed. 3. Dum fuit infra aetatem 6. and 12. H. 7. 18. B. Kelloway In a Formedon by the Lord Brook against the Lord Latimer if an Infant does make a Feoffment none shall avoid this but the Infant himself and his Heirs and no stranger and the same Law of a Feme Covert And as to the case of Harvey and Thomas 33. Eliz. cited in the Lord Cromwells case Where the Husband made a Lease of his Wifes Land for years and then he and his Wife aliened by Fine and the Husband dies the Conusee shall avoid this Lease which I agree to for the Lease being made by the Husband only is utterly void against the Wife and cannot be made good by any Act done by the Wife and the Land passeth all from the woman by the Fine and therefore the Lease cannot bind the Conusee The Survivor in one case cannot make the Lease good by the acceptance of the Rent because that the Rent does not belong unto him and therefore he shall not be received to avoid this Lease as in Nat. B. 138. B. the Heir shall not have a Cessavit for ceasing in the time of his Ancestor for he shall not have the Rent or the arrearages incurred in the life of his Ancestors and the reason is as I conceive because that the Law does give this benefit to the Tenant for the saving of his Tenancy for the tender of arrearages the which cannot be to the Lord because that the Rent is not due to him and therefore the Lord shall lose his action rather then the Tenant shall be deprived of his advantage of saving the land by his tender And by this case also the Aunt and the Neice shall not joyne in a Cessavit for a ceasing made before the Title of the Neice accrued but in Nat. F.B. 139. it is otherwise there of joynt-tenants as I conceive the reason whereof is because as I conceive the Survivor shall have all the Rent and therefore the tender may be made to him
13. H. 4. 17. B. If one makes a Feoffment in Fee rendring Rent upon condition to re-enter for non-payment and dies the Rent being arrear the Heir cannot demand the Rent or enter for non-payment because that the Rent is not due to him and as he cannot dispence with the Condition for acceptance of the Rent so cannot he enter for non-payment thereof And I argued this Case again on Fryday being the first day of Trinity Term 14. Jac. 31. Maii at which day Daston did also argue for the Defendant but the Court did not then give any direct Opinion but seemed to incline very much for the Plaintiff And Hil. 14. Jac. the case was argued by Chilborne Serjeant for the Plaintiff and Davenport for the Defendant at which time all did agree that the Lease continued But Davenp took exceptions to the replication For he said that the marriage of Jane with Rob. Hawkins is alledged to be 21. of No. 39. Eli. and the death of William Agborrow her first Husband the 20. of Febr. 39. Eliz which is after the marriage but that was held not materiall for it is said that William Agborrow died the twentieth of Febr. 39. Elizab. and that atferwards viz. the one and twentieth of Novemb. 39. Eliz. Jane did marry Thomas Hawkins so that the afterward is sufficient Trin. 37. Eliz. Rot. 206. Butler against Wallis In a Trespasse the Defendant justified by vertue of an Extent upon a Statute and did shew the Extent and that the 28. of Febr. a Liberate was awarded by vertue whereof the Sheriff the 27. of Octob. delivered the land to him c. yet adjudged sufficient for when he said Virtute brevis the mistake of the day afterward is not materiall And at last in the said Term of S. Hillary Judgment all the Court agreed that the Lease continued good against the Survivor and cannot be avoided by him and that the acception to the pleading was not materiall And thereupon Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Rot. 668. Pasch 11. Jacob. Between Thomas Palmer Knight Plaintiff Richard Greenwill and Edward Greenwill Executors of John Greenwill Defendants IN an Action of Debt on a Bond of fifty pound entred into by the Testators the 20. of Novemb. 5. Jac. The Defendant demanded Oyer of the Bond and Condition which was that if the Testator his Heires Executors and Assignes did perform all the Covenants comprised in certain Indentures bearing date with the Obligation made between the Plaintiff on the one part and the Testator of the other part that the Obligation shall be void And the Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff by the said Indenture did let to the Testator a House and the moyety of his land amounting to about thirty Rods of land in Pollicote to have c. from Michaelmas last past for seven years rendring twenty pounds Rent and shewed that the Testator did covenant by the same Indenture for him his Executors and Assignes with the Plaintiff his Heires and Assignes within two years after the beginning of the said Lease to deliver or cause to be delivered to the Plaintiff or his Assigns a Map or Plot made in distinct manner by men of skill as well of all the land in little Pollicot as was then in his occupation and in the occupation of Thomas Cocker and John Crooke parcell of the Demise of the Plaintiff in Pollicot aforesaid as of all the land in the occupation of the Testator by a lease of Lincoln Colledge in Pollicot aforesaid which are all the Covenants c. And pleaded that the Testator in his life time and the Defendants after his death had performed all the Covenants c. Replication The Plaintiff replied that the Testator within two years after the beginning of the Lease did not deliver or cause to be delivered to the Plaintiff or his Assignes a Map or Plot made in distinct manner by Surveyors and men of skill of all the land in little Pollicot aforesaid in his occupation and in the occupation of the said Thomas Cocker and John Crooke parcell of the aforesaid Demise of the Plaintiff in Pollicot aforesaid Secundum formam effectum Indenturae praedict Vpon which Replication the Defendants demurred in Law And I conceive Iudgment ought to be given for them against the Plaintiff First the Plaintiff replies that the Testator did not deliver the Plot and it may be that it was delivered by the Defendants who were his Executors which is a good performance of the Covenant and if so then the Plaintiff has no cause of action and where the matter is left doubtfull in the Replication it shall be taken most strongly by the Plaintiff who pleads it And in the Comment 104. a. Fulmerstone against Steward If a man be bound to pay twenty pounds about Christmas it is no plea for him to say he hath paid it but he must shew when or otherwise it shall be intended that he paid it after the Feast and before the Suit And so in a Dum fuit infra aetatem if the Tenant do plead a Release of the Demandant it is no plea without saying that he was of full age for the plea shall be taken most strong against himself and that is that it was made when he was within age and 3. H. 7. 2. If the Defendant in a Trespasse does plead a release it is not sufficient without shewing that it was made after the Trespasse for otherwise it shall be taken to be done before And 26. H. 8. Pleading 147. If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant does plead Warranty collaterall of the Ancestor of the Demandant and he replies that he entred and so does avoid the Warranty it is not good without saying that he entred in the life of the Ancestor for otherwise it sh●ll be intended that he entred after the descent of the Warranty and in Dyer 89. and 96. The Plaintiff in an Ejectment declared on a Lease for years to begin at Michaelmas after the death of Thomas Boydon and M. his Wife and set forth that they died and he entred and adjudged insufficient for it might be that he entred after this death and before Michaelmas and Dyer 28. H 8. 27. A Covenant that the Lessee and his Assigns shall pay all Rents pleading that the Lessee hath paid them is not sufficient because the Assignes are omitted In his Occupation are words uncertain sc whether they shall be referred to the Plaintiff who i● last named or to the Testator 7 H. 7. 7. Ed. 6. Dyer 84 a. In a Trespasse brought by the Husband and Wife for breaking their Close bona sua capt and pleaded of a Trespasse made to the Woman Dum sola fuit for which the Writ abated The Plaintiff ought to shew that ●ome land was in the possession of Kocker and Crooke for otherwise it is impossible that a Map should be made thereof 12. H. 7. 8. a. 6. H. 7. 6. a. If I am bound to
tenth of August next following at the said City did use the art and trade of Starch-making and that he the 21 of September 15 Jacobi did get into his hands by buying and not by Devise Grant or Lease twenty Quarters of Wheat residue of the said 400 Quarters to the intent to convert the same into Starch and the 20 October in the same year did convert the same into Starch and the 26 of October did sell the same to several persons and that every one of the said Quarters at the 21 of September was of price 36 s. But whether the Defendant were guilty of the Ingrossing aforesaid according to the form of the Statute the Iury knew not and therefore desired the Opinion of the Court but if otherwise c. And this Record was removed into the Kings-Bench by a Certiorare Judicium And Iudgment was given against the King and the Informer Moor against Sir George Reynel Marshal of the Marshalsee IN an Action of the Case wherein the Plaintiff declares That he the 15 Jacobi did recover in the Common-Pleas 240 l. Debt against one Gilbert Alsop and 20 l. damages and that the Plaintiff in execution of the said Debt did prosecute the said Gilbert by several Iudicial Writs issuing out of the said Court. And that he by a Writ of Exigi Facias issuing out of the said Court the next Term after the said Iudgment directed to the Sheriff of the City of Exceter and Returnable before the said Iustices Quindena Martini that the said Gilbert the 28 Octob. 15 Jacobi was Out-lawed in the said City at the Suit of the Plaintiff in the Plea of Debt aforesaid unde tunc convictus fuit c. That Michaelmas 15 Jacobi the Plaintiff took out of the said Court a Capias ut lagatum against the Defendant then to the said Sheriff directed returnable Octabis Purificationis That the 8 Octob. 15 Jacobi the said Writ was delivered to the said Sheriff That the 20 January 15 Jacobi the Sheriff took the said Gilbert and held him in his Custody That the 23 Januarii 15 Jacobi a Habeas Corpus was awarded to have the D●●●nd●nt cum causa c. Lunae proxim post crastinam purificationis At which day he came to the said Court in the Custody of the said Sheriff who returned the said Writ That the twelfth of February the Defendant was committed by the said Court to the Marshalsey the Defendant then and yet being Marshall nevertheless the Defendant the thirteenth of April 18. Jacobi at Westminster did suffer the said Gilbert to escape against the will of the Plaintiff he being unsatisfied his said Debt and damages whereupon the said Plaintiff hath lost his said Debt and damages ad damnum 300 l. The Defendant pleaded that the said Gilbert was committed to him by vertue of the said Writ but said further that he remained in his Custody from the aforesaid twelfth of Febr. untill the twenty seventh of Febr. the 16. Jac. during all which time the Plaintiff never prayed to have the said Gilbert in execution neither was the said Gilbert ever committed at the request of the Plaintiff to the Marshalsey in execution for the said debt and damages And pleaded further that the twenty seventh of Febr. 16. Jac. the said Gilbert did escape against the will of the Defendant which is the same escape whereon the Plaintiff doth declare Upon which Plea the Plaintiff did demur Bridgman for the Plaintiff I conceive Iudgment ought to be given for the Plaintiff for when the Defendant Alsop in the first Action was taken by the Capias utlagatum after Iudgment he was in execution for the Plaintiff Vide Cokes Rep. Vernons Case for in asmuch as the King by the originall Suit of the party is entitled to have all the Goods and Chattels and the Profits of the Land with his body also by reason of the Outlawry it is good reason that if the Defendant be taken at the Suit of the King that as the King shal have benefit by the suit of the party so the party should have some benefit by the suit of the King Resolved by the Court that when he was taken by the Capias utlagatum issuing out of the Kings Bench he shall be in execution for the Plaintiff presently after the Arrest if the Plaintiff will although his body was never brought into the Court and although the Court did not commit him in execution for the party Note that in all Cases when the Defendant may have a Capias ad satisfaciendum and the party Defendant is taken by a Capias pro fine there the Defendant is in execution presently if the Plaintiff wil without any Prayer of the party but when the Plaintiff hath Iudgment and le ts pass his time so that he cannot presently neither by Capias nor by Fieri facias but is driven to his Scire facias there if the Defendant be taken by a Capias pro fine the Plaintiff must pray that he may remain in execution for him but this cannot be done without such Prayer Vide 5. Rep. Frosts Case 22. Assise 74. If one condemned for a Disseisin with force or fees be taken for the Fine yet he shall not go at large if the party prayes that he may remain for his execution and in 11. H. 7. 15 when the party may have execution without a Scire facias the execution for the King shall be prayed for the party and it is not materiall whether there were a Capias in the Originall but otherwise if it be after a year 2. Rich. 3. If one be taken for a fine to the King within the year and the King pardons him yet he may remain for the party And so in this Case I conceive that Gilbert was in execution for the party and if he was not yet the Plaintiff hath proved him in execution from whence he escaped by the default of the Defendant so this Action doth well lye Also the Plaintiff doth charge the Defendant with an escape 13. April 18. Jacobi and the Defendant pleads an escape the 27. Febr. 16. Jacobi which was a year and two daies before the escape alledged by the Plaintiff to which the Defendant hath made no answer and although he concludes that it was the same escape which makes the plea good where the time is not materiall yet it is not in this case for here it is admitted by the Defendant that the Plaintiff might have prayed him in execution so long as he remained in prison but it may be he made his prayer afterwards viz. between the 27. Febr. 16. Jac. and the 13. April 18. Jac. as it may very well be in this case and then the averment of the Defendant is nothing to the purpose Also the Defendant saith that he remained in Prison from the twelfth of February 15. untill the seven and twentieth of February 16. Jacobi during which time the Plaintiff did not pray him in execution in which case
conceive that the request is made in good time enough Answer for two Reasons The Estate here is to be made by the Defendant and although he be not bound to do it without request yet may he do it or at least he may offer to do it without any request and therefore if there be any loss in the not doing of it it is his own fault because he did not offer to make the Estate and is not the Plaintiffs fault and if he had offered to make the Estate and the Plaintiff had refused he had been excused And therefore the rule is given in the Lord Cromwels Case aforesaid that when a woman or a Grantee upon condition is to make an Estate to the Grantor and no time is limited he hath time for his life unless the party who is to have the Estate do hasten it by request but if an advowson be granted on such condition the Regrant ought to to be before the Church becomes voyd so if the condition be to grant Rent payable at certain days the Grant ought to be before any day of payment for otherwise he shall lose the Presentation and the Rent which will incur before the Grant made And in the 14 Ed. 3. Debt 138. In a Debt upon a Bond the Defendant pleaded the Condition viz. That if he granted twelve marks Rent the Bond should be voyd and demanded Iudgment c. because no time was limited so that he might do it when he would and said that he was always ready to grant the twelve marks Rent and because he demurred not issue was joyned c. If this not making request shall be any damage to the Plaintiff it must be because the Defendant suffers loss by it as in the cases above cited but in this case the Defendant hath the same remedy for the 20 l. although no Estate be made as he should have had if the Estate had been made for by the fourth Article it is agreed that if there be no Estate made of the Land the Plaintiff shall enter at the Anunciation 1612. And I conceive that this payment ought to be made at the time limited for the entry for it is a mutual agreement that doth binde both parties and therefore it lies not in the power of the Plaintiff for his want of entry to defeat the Defendant of his 20 l. agreed to be payd to him but when he enters it shall be intended that he entered when it was agreed he should enter viz. at the Anunciation 1612. And if he payd it not then the Defendant might have had his Action of Covenant whether any Lease were made or not And in Sir Andrew Corbets Case Cook Rep. 4. 81. certain Land is devised to A. B. until 800 l. pound be levyed that is until it may be levyed and so in case of a Lease or limitation of a use for otherwise it should be in their power to hold out the Lessor for ever and so in case of an Elegit upon the Statute of Westm the 2d. cap. 18. and of Retinue for the double value of a Marriage by the Statute of Merton cap. 6. Opinion of the Court. And the whole Court was of Opinion that the request came too late whereupon they were of Opinion to give Iudgment against the Plaintiff but I prayed that the Plaintiff might discontinue his Suit which was granted Rot. 609. Michaelmas 13 Jacob. Smalman Plaintiff against John Agborrow and Edmund Agborrow Defendants IN an Action of Trespass for that the Defendants the 13 Maii 13 Iacob six Heifers of the Plaintiff of the price of 20 l. at Dodenham in a place called Well-Marsh did take chase and drive away to the damage of 10 l. c. The Defendants to all except the chasing did plead Not guilty And as to the chasing they said that the place where c. is and at the time wherein c. was the Freehold of one Francis Agborrow and so did justifie as his servants for damage feasant c. Replication The Plaintiff replyed that before the said Francis Agborrow had any thing c. the Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral of St. Mary the Virgin in Worcester were seised in fee of the Mannor of Aukerden and Dodenham whereof the place where c. is and at the time whereof c. was parcel c. And that the 25 of November 10 Elizab. the said Dean and Chapter by their Indenture did Demise the said Mannor to William Agborrow and Jane his Wife and to the said Francis Agborrow for their lives And that the 20 Febru 39 Elizab. William Agborrow dyed seised and that the 21. of Decemb. 39. Eliz. Jane did marry with Robert Hawkins And that the 25. Febr. 40. Eliz. Robert Hawkins and the said Jane by their Indenture did demise the said Mannor to William Hawkins and William Heaven for sixty years from the date c. if the said Jane and Francis Agborrow or either of them should so long live rendring twenty pounds rent and that the 25. of Mar. 13. Jac. William Hawkins and William Heaven did grant their Estate to the Plaintiff whereby he was possessed and put in his Cattel there to grase which were there untill the Defendant took them away c. And did aver the life of Francis Agborrow The Defendants rejoyn and say that the said Jane did die the 14. Rejoynder of Mar. 12. Jac. and that Francis Agborrow did hold himself in c. Per jus accresendi Vpon which the Plaintiff demurred in Law A man and a woman are Ioynt-tenants for life the woman marries The Case the Husband and Wife by Indenture do let their moyety for years rendring Rent and after the woman dies And the question was whether the surviving Ioynt-tenant could avoid this Lease And I conceive he cannot And for the Argument of this Case I shall observe these two things thereof That if the woman who made this Lease had been sole at the time of the making this Lease had been good during her life and the life of her Companion the other Ioynt-tenant That this Lease being made by the Husband and Wife is not void but voidable And as to the first Point Littleton fol. 63. and 64. saies that if two Part. 1 Ioynt-tenants in Fee be and one grants a Rent-charge and dies the Survivor shall hold the Land discharged but if one makes a Lease for years and dies the Lease is good against the Survivor and in Hales Case in the Comment If two Ioynt-tenants be for years and one of them does grant to I.S. that if he payes twenty pounds at Michaelmas he shall have his moyety and the Grantor dies and I. S. does pay the money yet shall not he have the Land because the Condition precedes the Estate but if he make a Lease for yeares to commence at a day to come and dies before the day yet is the Lease good against the Survivor and so in Trin. 37. Eli. Harbury and
this warranty and thereupon they have recovered in value wherefore this Warranty is utterly determined 23 Edw. 3. Recover in value 12. If one upon a warranty vouch and recover in value and then is impleaded of the Land recovered in value he shall not vouch againe because the warranty w●s once executed The warranty is determined by the reverting of the Estate to whom it was annexed for when Katherine died Thomas Lea was to warrant the Land to the Conusees and after his death he had the Entire Fee-simple of the Land 22 of Edward the third 1. In Dower by Nicholas Powes and his wife the Tenant vouched A. who was ready in Court demanded what he had to bind him to warranty who said that the said A. B. his wife had rendred to him the said Tenements by Fine and obliged them and the Heirs of the wife to warranty and said that the wife was dead and had a Son and Heir who was liable to the warranty before him Iudgment of the Voucher and the Court held the Vouchment good Whereby it appears that after the death of Katherine Thomas was bound to this warranty and by his death he had a Fee-simple whereby the warranty is destroyed Littleton 169. If Tenant in Taile enfeoffs his Vncle who enfeoffs A. with warranty A. re-enfeoffs the Vncle in Fee who enfeoffs a stranger in Fee and dies without Issue the Tenant in Taile dies the Issue shall not be barred by the warranty of the Vncle because he does re-take to him as great an Estate of his first Feoffee to whom the warranty was made as the said Feoffee had from him and the cause why the warranty is defeated in this Case is because if the Warranty be in force then the Vncle shall warrant it to himself which cannot be And in one Case the Ter-tenants do claime the Estate which Thomas Lea had and therefore they cannot have a greater advantage by the warranty then he had Nat. B. 135. If one enfeoffs another with warranty and the Feoffee enfeoffs another and re-takes the Estate in Fee the warranty is determined and the 22 H. 6 22. b. accords with this because he is in of another Estate And depending the Writ of Error Viz. Trinit and Michaelm 14 Jacob. One of the Plaintiffs in the Writ of Error did dye which was pleaded by the Defendants Michaelm 14 Jacob. whereupon the Writ of Error was abated Hillar 13 Jacob. Robinson against Matthew Francis Administrator of Alban Francis Rot. 542. IN an Action of Debt on a Bond of 100 l. made the first of August 10 Jacob. The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate 20 November Plea the 11 Jac. was bound to Elizabeth Francis in 100 l. which was unpayd at the death of the Intestate and that Elizabeth marryed John Pennial John and Elizabeth brought a plea of Debt against the Defendant before the Major of London for the said 100 l. and recovered by default and had Execution of 55 l. 8 s. 5 d. and so acknowledged satisfaction c. and did further plead that the Intestate the 12 Janua 7 Jacob. did acknowledg in Chancery that he owed to the Lord Chancellor and to the Master of the Rolls 500 l. which Recovery and Recogni●●nce did amount to 600 l. 8 s. 6 d. And that the Defendant for the said Execution and for payment of divers Debts of the Intestate before this Action plene administravit omnia bona Intestatoris praeterquam bona ad valentiam 100 l. which were lyable for the residue of the said Recovery and for 100 l. parcel of the said 500 l. and that he hath not nor had at the day of the Writ purchased any other goods c. saving to the value of the said 55 l. 8 s. 5 d. and the said 100 l. and did aver that the Debt recovered before the Major c. was a true and a just Debt and that the said Recovery as to 45 l. and 1 d. residue of the said 100 l. 8 s. 6 d. and the said Recovery did remain in force The Plaintiff as to the Recovery said That the said Obligation Replication upon which the said Recovery was had was made for security of the payment of 55 l. and that the said John Pennial and Elizabeth did accept the said 55 l. 8 s. 5 d. in full satisfaction of the said Iudgment and were content therewith and offered therefore to make a Release or to acknowledg satisfaction but the Defendant to defraud the Plaintiff of his just Debt did defer to have satisfaction acknowledged or to have a Release of the residue of the Iudgment and suffered the Iudgment to remain in force by fraud and covin to the intent aforesaid c. The Defendant as to the residue of the Debt Rejoynder and the acceptance of the said 55 l 8 s. 5 d. in satisfaction of the Iudgment and to the offer of Release and acknowledgment of satisfaction did demur in Law And as to the Recognizance he said that a Condition was annexed to it scil That if the Intestate his Executors or Assigns should pay 100 l. with the increase thereof to William Francis an Infant when he shall come to the age of 21 years and in the mean time shall imploy it to the benefit of the Infant according to the Will of William Francis that then the Recognizance shall be voyd and did aver that William Francis was alive and within age and that the said 100 l. was not yet payd And the Plaintiff to this did joyn in Demurrer And to the other Plea did demur in Law and the Defendant did joyn And I conceive that as to the first Demur the Plaintiff ought to have Iudgment for now it is acknowledged by the Defendant that he hath 100 l. in his hands besides the 55 l. 8 s. 5 d. delivered in Execution and he hath not shewed any sufficient cause for retaining it for when those who recovered 100 l. upon the Bond did accept 55 l. 8 s. 5 d. in full satisfaction of the Iudgment and did offer to release and acknowledg satisfaction this Iudgment in truth is discharged and cannot charge the Executor and therefore he cannot return riens en ses maines to satisfie because he is not bound to pay it Cook 8 Rep. Turners Case who brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond of 100 l. against Laurence and others Administrators of Booker The Defendants pleaded in Bar divers former Recoveries against them in Debt had that they had not Assets praeterquam bona catalla quae non attingunt ad valorem of the said Debts recovered The Plaintiff replyed that the Defendants since the Recoveries did pay part of the Debts in full satisfaction wherewith they held themselves content and offered to acknowledg satisfaction but the Defendants did refuse to agree to that to the defrauding of the Plaintiff And adjudged that the Plaintiff should recover for an Executor ought to execute his office truly Object
Leases of the Recusant but the woman here being married hath no Lands or Goods and therefore the King cannot have any thing and the Goods or Lands of her Husband cannot be taken for his wifes offence she being convicted by Indictment only to which the husband is no party Object But it may be objected that the wife may perhaps survive the husband and then she may have Goods and Lands and the King may seise them I answer that first it may be also that the husband may survive and then the King shall never have any thing Answer as it is resolved in Dr. Fosters Case 2. This Objection is upon two possibilities 1. That the husband may first dye 2. That the wife then shall have Lands and Goods And I have alwaies taken it for a Rule that a possibility shall never take away a present Action or Suit as is proved by divers Cases as in 5. Rep. Harisons Case and 9. Rep. fol. 108. 109. And as it is said in Elmers Case 5. Rep. that two possibilities cannot maintain hospitality or repair a Churche so I say in this case that one such possibility to recover this penalty for the King cannot hinder the Informer of his Suit nor oppose the good reformation of Recusants intended by the Statute for then all marryed women addicted to Popery will be Recusants upon confidence that if they be once convicted by Indictment the which they themselves may procure to be done then they shall not be subject to any penalty during the lives of their husbands who peradventure may survive them and as it was well observed in Dr. Fosters Case that married women are the most dangerous Recusants because that they have the education of their Children and the government of their Servants But it may be objected Object that if the Informer may sue and recover against the husband and wife then if the wife does survive the King shall have these Lands and goods according to the 28 Eliz. or may sue the husband and wife according to the 35 Eliz. for these penalties and so shall be two waies punished for the same offence No such inconvenience can happen Answer for as it is resolved in Dr. Fosters Case the recovery of the Informer being legall shall bar the King as in the 19 Ed. 2. where the Testator was bound in a Recognizance for performing of Covenants this was no bar in debt upon an Obligation but that the Plaintiff may recover and if after such recovery the Statute be forfeited and execution thereupon the Executor shall have an Audita Querela for that he had lawfully administred the goods before for payment of the Bonds And after viz. Mich. 17 Jac. I moved the Court that the Plea of the Defendants was insufficient for that the Statute did ordain that upon every Indictment of Recusancy proclamation should be made and that the body of the Offender should be rendred to the Sheriff of the County before the next Assises or Gaol-delivery and if such Offender so proclaimed does not appear but makes default that he shall be convicted c. And the Defendants have pleaded that Proclamation was made that the body of the said Katherine should be rendred at the next Assises or Gaol-delivery c. and therefore she is not convict at all because she was not proclaimed according to the Statute for this Proclamation differs in two materiall circumstances from the form prescribed by the Statute first in omission of the Sheriff to whom the body is to be rendred 2. In the time for the Statute limits it to be done before the next Assises c. but this Proclamation gives a larger time scil at the Assises Whereupon all the Court agreed that the Plea was insufficient for the causes aforesaid and that now the wife was not convicted by proclamation Wherefore Iudgment Judgment was given for the King and the Informer John Mitton Administrator of George Mitton of Goods not Administred by Alice Mitton against John By. IN an Action of Debt for twenty five pounds for that William Marquess of Winchester the twentieth of October 30 Eliz by Indenture did devise to John By the Father of the Defendant three parts of the Mannor of Newnham in the County of Southampton excepting all Fines Reliefs Amerciaments Courts Woods Copies Fishings and Royalties Habendum from Michaelmas next for one and twenty years rendring six shillings ten pence Rent at the Annunciation and Michaelmas The twentieth of January 1. Jac. John By the Father made his Will and made the Defendant his Executor and died possessed The fourteenth of Novemb. 2 Jacob. the Defendant granted the Term to the Intestate The sixteenth of Novemb. 2 Jac. The Intestate did grant all the Term by Indenture to the Defendant rendring fifty nine pounds Rent at the Annunciation and Michaelmas whereby be entred and had possession of the Land and twenty five pounds of the said Rent for half a year ending at Michaelmas 15 Jacob. was behinde to the Plaintiff after the death of the Intestate which yet the Defendant doth not pay ad damnum c. The Defendant says that the Intestate the twenty sixth of June 5 Jac. did release by Deed to the Defendant all Actions Suits Debts Duties from the begining of the world until the day of the date of the said writing Whereupon the Plaintiff demurred in Law And I conceive that Judgment ought to be given against the Plaintiff For that in Littleton 118. If one doth release to another all Demands this is the best Release that may be and shall enure to the most advantage of him to whom it is made For by such Release all Actions Reals and Personals and Appeals and Executions are gone and extinct and if a man hath title to enter into any Land by such Release his title is gone and 20 Assis 5. where in an Assise for Rent a Release of all Demands was pleaded and the common Opinion was that it was good wherefore the Plaintiff was non-suited and 5 Edw. 4.42 by Danby A Release of all Demands by a Lord to his Tenant is a good bar and extinguishment of his Seigniory for although no Rent was behinde at the making of the Release yet is the Rent always in Demand and 6 H. 7. 15. If the King releaseth all Demands yet as to him the Inheritance shall not be included But in case of Rent or right of Entry by a common person and every thing therein implyed is gone by such Release And 14 H. 8. 9. by Pollard By Release of all Demands the Rent is extinct for Rent is to be had by Demand and if one doth determine the means he hath to come by a thing he doth determine the thing it self And Litt. 118. If a man hath a Rent-service or Rent-charge or Common of Pasture by such Release of all Demands all is gone from the Land from whence the Service or Rent is issuing or the Common of Pasture But if one lets Land to another