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A40473 The touchstone of precedents, relating to judicial proceedings at common law by G.F. of Grayes-Inn, Esquire. G. F., of Gray's-Inn. 1682 (1682) Wing F22; ESTC R14229 160,878 378

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abjure the Realm for Felony or be outlawed of Felony the Land shall escheat and the Son shall not inherit and yet both are Attainders in Law But every Custom that is against the Common-Law shall be taken strictly Debt DEbt super obligationem in London the Defendant Pleads Delivery as an Escroul in Midd super Conditionem c. et Issint non est factum by the Issint c. the special matter is weighed and amounts to the general Issue to be tryed in London per distre in Midd. et issint Rien luy doit is a waver of the special matter and tender of the general Issue P. 27 H. 8. Pl. 34. Debt against two Executors one Pleads plene administravit the other Pleads non est factum Testatoris and if they sever and have those several Pleas in Barr multum altercatur Choke they may Moyle they may not Danby Executors may sever but if they shall have these several Pleas doubted vide I' 37 H. 6. one Pleads Misnomer the other that he is Administrator doubted if Pleadable and ibidem the Authorites they are cited and vide 21 E. 3. 10 11 12. Defendants plead not Executors cannot plead severally in dilatories but in Barr they may P. 7 E 4. Pl 19 Debt upon Obligation to perform Covenants all being in the Affirmative he Pleads Performance general and by Inglefield and Fitz he ought to shew how he performed each specialty Sed vide Co. 1 Jnst 303. a. b. In Debt upon an Obligation conditioned to discharge the Sheriff Plea That he discharged the Sheriff without shewing how M. 5 E. 4. Pl. 21. Debt super Obligationem conditioned to pay to the Chamberlain of London and his Successors he Pleads Payment to A. Chamberlain and his Successors he must Plead how he came out of his Office and how the Successor came in Else A. shall be intended to continue in M. 4. E 4. Pl. 30. Debt against three Executors who Plead several Pleas and each goes to the whole per Danby Moy'e and Clark the Plaintiff may elect which he will have Tryed first Needham contra the most peremptory shall be Tryed first Hill 8 E. 4. Pl. 3. Debt against Executors they Plead a Judgment against the Testator by A. for 200 l. and another by B. for 100 l. And that they have not Assets but to satisfie the 200 l. per Bryan the Plea is double having Pleaded 2 Judgments and rely upon one 9 E● 4. 12. a. Bond to pay 20 l. when A. comes into England from Venice Plea That A. was not at Venice not good for where part is to be done within part without the Tryal must be within Tr. 19. El. et B. Hales Case Ow. 6. One bound to save another harmless Pleads that he had saved him harmless and shewed not how 't is not good but non fuit damnificat generally is good et Pop. 297. dictum per Jones If the first be generally demurred on the advantage of it is lost for which I think it not Law for in Mansels Case Co 2. the Demurrer is general upon such a Plea and Judged ill et 2 Cro. 165. 363. One Action against several Defendants for one Debt c. they may sever in Barrs but not in Dilatories Hatton 26 Hob. 245. In Debt upon a Lease for years the Defendant pleads non habuit nec occupavit adjudged no Plea other then Tenant at Will by Fitz Herbert Dy. 14. In Debt upon an Obligation with Condition payment is a good Plea with Acquittance as appears Dyer 15 b. 1 Cro. 55. 2 Cro. 59. 360. 558. but payment on a single Bill Obligatory is no plea without Acquittance nor it seems upon an Indenture to pay so much for a forfeiture Dy. 6. a. 51. a. Co 5. rep 43. 2 Cro. 86. 377. 3 Cro. 157. 3 Cro. 455. Debt upon a Statute of Usury and misrecites the Statute of Usury and sayes in the Action the Defendant lent money usuriously and received the principle and so much for Usury and that is Traversed and found against the Defendant and moved to be a Jeofail but it seems both Surplus and he need not shew the Cause of Action in the Writ And shewing the Receipt was more then received for the very lending usuriously is against the Statute though he never received it Where one has special matter and pleads it and concludes with the general Issue It waves not the matter precedent as in Debt to plead unlettered issint non est factum or a special Payment issint Riens ●uy doit or for one to Plead that he was Joyntenant with his Feoffee at the time of the Feoffment et issint Riens passe per le fait 10 E. 4. 3. b. M. 9 E. 4. Pl. 15. et fo 19 b. Debt on a Bond against an Abbot he pleads Predecessors imprisoned the Prior and threatned the Monks to imprison them if they would not seal it double one the Imprisonment of the Prior the other the threatning of the Monks And if both should be traversed and one found for the other against the Plaintiff the Court should not know for whom to give Judgment M. 15. E 4. Pl. 2. In Debt of 100 l. the Administrator pleads Judgment of 200 l. to another So plene administravit and that he had not goods preterquam non attingen ' ad 200 l. the Plaintiff demurrs generally because he shewed no certain summ whereto the goods amounted according to Co 9. Merriel Treshams Case 109 b. Hob. and Winch held performance the substance Hob 133 Moore vers Andrews The King brought an Action of Debt and averdict upon non est factum pleaded and after pardoned the Debt which Debt he at the day in Bank pleaded and was allowed to do it because he could have no Audita Querela or sei facias against the King Co. 3. J●st 135. Debt and shews that he made a Lease for years Rend c. the Lessee was thereby possessed and devised it to the Defendant and he entred and Null possession c. ill first because he shewed not that any was made Executor or that he entred by his Assent nor 2 that vir●ute legationis he entred and then it might be for another Title Dy 254. b 3. Cro 537. Debt of an Obligation conditioned that he and his Wife should appear he pleads that at the time of the Obligation he was solus and innuptus Rolls held it did not amount to ne unque Loyalment accouple and ruled for Judgment upon Demurrer nisi Causa Yeane vers Skelton H 23 Car. 1. B. R. Sti. 17. Debt to perform an Award made 10 May ready to be delivered the 11 th of May Nul Award pleaded he replyes that the Award was made the 10 th of May to be delivered the same 10 th day of May The Defendant demurred for doubtfulness or departure Resolved not yet being a thing whereof Issue is to be of the Award not of the day of the Award Tyers Case Trin 23. Car.
1. B. R. Sti 4. Debt upon an Obligation he pleads that he pay'd at such a day the Jury find he did not pay at that day the Truth was the●e were two dayes of payment and he payd one part the one day and the other at the other day the Court seemed he is condemned by the Verdict and his own Plea P 24. Car 1. B. R. Sti. 93 94. Debt upon Obligation to perform Articles the Defendant pleads Covenants performed Issue and Verdict for the Plaintiff who moved for a new Tryal to prevent Error because no Issue joyned but the Court said it was a good issue but ill plea whereon he might have demurred and ruled the Defendant shews Cause why a Replication should not be Weights Case M 24. Car 1. B. R. Sti. 139 140. In Debt upon a single Bill the Defendant pleads he had paid and the other accepted part since the Action brought ruled a good Plea in Abatement of the Writ not in Barr of the Action as here 't is Hillingworth versus Whetstone P. 1649. B. R. Sti. 112 163 Co. 9 Jnst 303. 2 Cro. 304. 959. H. 10. H. 7. Pl 3. M. 21. E. 4. Pl. 38. Debt for 40. l. against an Executor he pleads that he received but 10 l. and 40 l. was due to him the Plaintiff replies that he is Executor de tort and has more goods Et hoc parat c. where it should be Et hoc petit c. ill and that discontinues the whole Plea Alexander versus Lane In Debt for Rent Lessee pleads that Lessor nil habet c. he replyes quod habet 't is ill not shewing what estate but cured by Verdict if Issue be joyned and found quod habet Hill versus Glassey Yel 227. 2 Cro. 312. Debt upon two Bonds whereof one is not due the Defendant pleads a Release of that and another Plea to the other both found against him and this shewed in Arrest of Judgment yet shall not be stayed for by his pretending a false Release he passed over that Advantage So in Debt by an Executor the Defendant pleads he has a co-Co-Executor who has released to him and found against him the Plaintiff has Judgment Friths Case 3 Cro. 68 69. 4041. 110. 111. In Debt on an Obligation the Defendant pleads al jour and issue of it puis darr contin he pleads that the money was attached in his hands in London Pel versus Pel 2. Cro. 101. Debt upon two Bonds the Defendant demands Oyer of the Condition one of which was to pay c. after performance of a Will the other was to pay c. within two years after the Devisor's death and performance c. and pleads that the Will was that he should make a Release and alledges the death to be at such a day which is within two years and that he required the Defendant to make a Release and he refused Issue of the death and all found for the Plaintiff moved in Arrest c. one day is not come and damages intire so no Judgment to be but per Cur. 't is only the Allegation of the Defendant that he dyed at such a day which if true the Defendant would have rested on it and not have pleaded a false Plea whereon the Issue is taken and found against him Thurbettle versus Reeve and Tye 3 Cro. 110. 111. 40. 41. 68 69. Debt upon an Obligation the Defendant pleads non est factum 't is found that he Sealed c. and the Seal was torn off after the Plea pleaded but on atthe time of the Plea 't is against the Plaintiff Mirral versus Scebrith 3 Cro. 120 Co. 5 Rep 119. b. Debt for Rent against an Executor he pleads Levy per distress and sans Detinet void find no Levy by distress but that an assignment was made by the Testator and the Rent paid by the Assignee and adjudged for the Defendant for the substance is on the new Detinet and the rest but circumstance S. Tho. Cecil versus Harriot 3 Cro. 140. Debt on a Bond conditioned to save harmless against another Bond of Fifty two pounds And so he saved him harmless but because that he shews not that he was not damnified before ill Denis versus Thomas 3 Cro. 156. In Debt on a Bond by A. and B. the Defendant pleads the Obligation was made to them and B. And that all three have an Action depending against him Judgment is got but because the Bond to three cannot be intended And that the Plea goes in Abatement and he has concluded in Barr ill Isumet Priscot versus Hitchcot 3 Cro. 102. Debt on Obligation conditioned If such Lands be four miles distant c. the Defendant pleads that 't is four thousand paces distant the plea Ruled good for a thousand paces is a mile So it tantamounts the Condition but how a mile or the spaces shall be reckoned per communem viam or strait as a Bird could Fly qu. Mirige versus Eat 3 Cro. 212. 267. Debt super Obligation conditioned to pay 35 l. at Michaelmas and 33 at Lady-day he pleads payment of the 70 l. secundum formam Conditionis good though objected he should have pleaded several payments for the several Conditions do implye it Lox versus Lee 3. Cro 256. In Debt a good plea in Barr replication ill Judgment by nil dicit because the Defendant never rejoyned shall not be reversed for that ill till all be made up herewith agrees Co 5. Rep. 55. a Princ. Boyer versus Jennings 3 Cro. 284. Debt against an Executor the Defendant pleads that pending the Action another brought an Action for a true Debt of the Testator which he confessed and that he has nothing wherewith to satisfie the Judgment the Plaintiff protestando that was a true Debt pro placito replyes that the Recovery was by Covin to deceive him Defendant demurrs and adjudged against him for the Covin is not Issuable but reversed in Error nor could the Recovery be by Covin if the Debt true Greene versus Wilcox 3. Cro 462 463. Obligation conditioned to appear in the Kings-Bench the Defendant pleads that the Court was adjourned to Hartford and that he appeared there ill not saying prout ●atet per Recordum Corbet versus Cooke 3 Cro 466. Debt super Obligation covenanted to appear in the Kings-Bench such a day and there elect two Arbitrators who with two more to be elected by the Plaintiff shall Award c. the Defendant pleads that he appeared there at the day and there elected two the Plaintiff was not there time enough for the Award to be made nor that he had his Arbitrators there Edwards versus Marks 3 Cro 549. Debt upon Obligation conditioned that if he upon request deliver the Plaintiff all the Tallow that shall be made before Michaelmas of all Beasts killed by him or his servants then c. the Defendant pleads generally prout in Condition the plaintiff demurred supposing he ought to set out particularly
adtunc Vicecomites suffered him to This is noo good Plea because there be three Years specified in the Declaration and it shall be hardest taken that it was 2 or 3 H. 8. when they were out of Office and yet it is nearly induced by the adtunc Vicecomites which should leave the Intendment to be of that Year in which the Declaration supposeth them to be Sheriffs but that sufficeth not but the Year must be alleadged in Fait For it may be mislaid by the Plaintiff And therefore the Defendants Meaning to discharge themselves by a former Escape which was not in their time must alleadge it precisely Dyer fo 66. Reg. 5. For uncertainty of Intendment if a Warranty Collateral be pleaded in Bar and the Plaintiff by Replication to avoid the Warranty saith he entred upon the Possession of the Defendant non Constat whether this Entry was in the Life time of the Ancestor or after the Warranty descended and therefore it shall be taken in the strictest Sence that it was after the Warranty descended if it be not otherwise averred 3 H. 7. 2 3 Plo. 46. a. For Improperty of Words If a man plead that his Ancestor died by Protestation serzed and that J. S. abated c. this is no Plea for there cannot be an Abatement unless there be a Dying seized alleadged in Fait and an Abatement shall not be improperly taken for Disseisin in pleading For Words make Pleas 38 H. 6. a. b. 39 H. 6. 5 6. Reg. 6. For Repugnancy in pleading if a Man in Avowry declare that he was seized in his Demesne as of Fee of 10 Acres and being so seized did demise the said 10 Acres to J. S. habend ' the Moiety for twenty one years from the Date of the Deed the other Moiety from the Surrender Expiration or other Determination of the Estate of J. D. qui tenet predict ' medietat ' ad terminum vitae suae Reddend 40 s. Rent This Declaration is insufficient because that the Seisin that he hath alledged in himself in his Demesme as of Fee in the whole and the Estate for Life of the Moyety is repugnant and it shall not be Cured by taking the last which is expressed to controul the former which is but general and formal but the plea is naught and yet the matter in Law had been good to have Intituled him to distrain for the whole Rent Reg. 7. A Bar may be good to a Common Intent tho' not to every Intent As if Debt be brought against Five Executors and Three of them make Default and two appear and plead in Bar● a Recovery had against them two of 300 l. and nothing in their hands over and above that Summ If this Barr should be taken strongest against them it should be intended that they might have abated the first Suit because the other three were not named and so the Recovery not ●uly had against them but according to the Rule the Barr is good For that by Common Intendment it will be supposed that the two did only administer And so the Action well considered rather than to imagine that they would have lost the Benefit and Advantage of abating the first Writ Reg. 8. In pleading a Man shall not disclose that which is against himself and therefore if it be matter that is to be set forth on th' other side Then the plea shall not be taken in the hardest Sence but in the most Beneficial and to be left unto the contrary part to be alledged And therefore if a Man be bound in an Obligation that if the Wife of the Obligee does Decease before the Feast of St. John the Baptist which shall be in the Year of our Lord God 1598 without Issue of her Body by her Husband lawfully begotten then living that then the Bond shall be void And in Debt brought upon this Obligation the Defendant pleads that the Woman died before the said Feast without Issue of her Body then living If this Plea should be taken strongest against the Defendant then should it be taken that the Feme had Issue at the time of her Death but this Issue died before the Feast But this shall not be so understood because it makes against the Defendant and it is to be brought in on the Plaintiff's side and that without Traverse Dyer 16 17. Non dimisit to an Action of Debt upon a Lease in Writing was adjudged an ill Plea and a Repleader awarded thereupon by the Court Mich. 44 and 45 Eliz. Rot. 158. in Banco Reginae If J. S. Covenant to make me an Assurance I paying the Costs and Charges for making thereof he shall not barr my Action of Covenant by saying he was ready to do it unless he bring the Writings Ingrossed and ready to Seal and I refuse to pay the Charges accordingly Debt against an Executor who pleads three Judgments of an 100 l. a piece and that he had paid 40 l. in Satisfaction of two of the Judgments and that he hath not nor had c. praeterquam c. the said 40 l. and 20 l. more which is not sufficient to satisfie the other Judgment upon which the Plaintiff demurred and adjudged for the Defendant for it s but in effect a plene administravit specially Administrator durante minore etate if he wasts the Goods of the Infant he shall be punished as an Executor in his own wrong If an Administrator brings an Action of Debt and averrs in his Declaration how that Administration was granted to him at London and the Letters of Administration bear Date in another place and County the Plaint shall abate Upon a Scire Facias against two Executors the Sheriff returns nulla bona against both and Devastavit to the Value of the Debt against one of them whereupon another Scire Facias issued forth and Judgment was obtained only against him thereupon by Default and after that a Fieri Facias de bonis propriis against him alone If there be two Executors and the one of them confess the Action and the other lets it go by Default or pleads non est factum or plene administravit Judgment shall be against both de bonis Testatoris Divers Executors are but in the Nature of one Person For they all represent the Person of their Testator And if the Action had been brought against him in his Life he should have made but one Answer If Debt and Damages be recovered against one and before Execution he dies upon a Scire Facias against his Executor or Administrator you shall recover only de bonis testatoris and not de bonis propriis because the Prayer of the Scire Facias is only de bonis Testatoris and the Court will not exceed the Prayer of your own Writ Reg. 9. The Defendant may plead an Outlawry in disability of the Plaintiff before Imparlance but after Imparlance he cannot plead in disability of the Person but he may plead it in Barr of the Action 32 H. 6 33.
point of the Action as in Debt upon a Lease he may plead non dimisit In Debt for Arrearages of Account he may plead non computavit but in Debt for Money or Wares sold to him he may plead non debet and traverse that he sold them Dyer 121. b. In Account the Defendant pleads ne unque Receiver and waged Law thereon and had day and at the day would have waved his Law for part and confessed the Action for it and waged Law for the Residue per Curiam he cannot without the Plaintiffs assent Dy. 261. a. 'T is held that at the Common Law he that waged Law in a Court of Record was to bring with him Fideles Testes wherewith Glanvil agrees Lib. 1. C. 9. But in inferiour Courts one might wage Law without Witnesses to prevent which was Magn. Ch. 28. made Nullus Ballivus ponat aliquem ad legem c. sine testibus fidelibus ad hoc inductis Others hold that Ballivus there extends to all Judges Co. 1. Inst 168. b. An Infant cannot wage his Law but the Husband and Wife for the Debt of the Wife may 18. E. 3. 53. a. A Mute wages Law by Signs Co. 1. Inst 172. Wager of Law is not allowed in any case where a Contempt Trespass Deceit or Injury is offered but 't is allowed in some Cases in Debt Detinue and Account 't is not allowed when there is a Specialty Co. 1. Inst 295. a. One Infamous cannot wage Law nor an Infant but a Fem● Covert with her Husband may No Wager lyes where the Suit is for the King or his Benefit by Quo minus no Wager against an Infant An Alien must wage Law in his own Language No Wager against Receipt P●r auter maines on Account unless his Wives or his Companion Bailiff of a Mannor cannot wage Law in Account in Debt for Rent or nue for a Lease no Wager because sounding in the Realty It lyes in Debt for a Fine in a Leet because a Court of Record otherwise for an Amercement No Wager in Debt upon Account before Auditors otherwise if but one Auditor No Wager in Debt by a Goaler for Victuals nor against an Attorney in Debt for his Fees nor against a Servant retained according to the Statute in Debt for his Wages One charged as Executor c. shall not wage no Wager in Debt for a Penalty given by a Statute Co. Ent. 118. Pl. 1. Error of a Judgment against an Executor in Bristol upon a Concessit solvere per Custom there to pay a Debt of the Testator by simple Contract because it takes from the Wager of Law Cur ' advise c. Wigg against Roberts H. 22. C. 1. b. r. Rot. 956. Pascal against Spurning p. 1649. b. r. Rot. 75. Sti. 145. 198. 199. 228. In Debt against Baron and Feme for Beer sold to the Feme dum sola they waged Law So note he waged Law for the Defendant Hucks against Holmes 3 Cro. 161. Debt against an Executor for Money awarded to be paid by the Testator it lyes not for the Testator might have waged his Law which the Executor cannot Hampton against Bower Sed vide Latch 213. Symonds Case no Wager of Law against an award P. 1. H. 7. Pl. 18. 13. H. 3. Noy 96. No Wager against an Award because the third Person cannot 3 Cro. 557. 600. 11. H. 4. 56. b. Wager in Debt for the Son award In Account against A. as Bailiff of his Mannor of D. the Defendant waged Law and had day to make it but at the day 't was ruled that Ley gager lyes not in this Case being a matter tryable per Pais Archees Case 3 Cro. 579. Debt on a Contract against two one pleads Nil debet per Patriam the other waged Law he cannot but must plead per Patriam being joyntly concerned in one Contract 3 Cro. 645. Debt sued by one in Chancery a Servant to the Lord Keeper Defendant as to part waged Law and to the Residue pleaded Nil debet per Patriam And being sent into the King's Bench 't is doubted if he may make his Law good but de bene esse it was done Audley against Franke. 3 Cro. 648. In Debt for Money on sale of Land doubt if the Defendant could wage Law being on a real Contract and resolved he may and he did make his Law Miller against Eastcrowe and so 't is held by Newton 22 H. 6. 11. a. and not denyed 3 Cro. 750. In Account against one as Bailiff he cannot wage his Law but as Receiver he may Sheffeild against Barnefield Note it was Account against him as a Bailiff of Towngoods as Merchandize not a Bailiff of a Mannor 7 Cro. 790. Debt against a Defendant for his Dyet he would wage his Law but could not and pleaded ad Pais Bish against Walford vid. 39. H. 6. The Court divided in this point H. or E. 19 H. 6. 10. a. Per totam Curiam he may wage in Debt for Dyet 3 Cro. 818. In Account upon a Receipt by the hands of the Plaintiff's Wife the Defendant was to wage his Law because that is not a Receipt per auter maines upon a Receipt by the hands of the Plaintiff's Wife they being one Person Goodrick's Case 3 Cro. 919. In Debt against the Abbot of D. on a Contract by the Predecessor for Goods that came to the use of that House the Defendant would to wage Law Et per opinionem Curiae he may and vide there divers Cases where one may wage Law on anothers Contract Prior de Dunstable's Case P. 1. H. 7. Pl. 18. M. 13. H. 7. Pl. 2. H. 22. E. 4. Pl. 39. H. 6. 22. a. In Detinue of a Bailment per auter mains the Defendant may wage Law so in Debt on a Contract per auter mains otherwise on Account on a Receipt per auter mains for there the Receipt is traversable but in the first Bailment 't is not but the Detinue M. 18. H. 8. Pl. 15. In a Writ of Right of Advowson Grand Cape issued for default the Defendants came and offered to wage Law of Non-Summons and because some said the Writ was peremptory so as he could not have another the Ley gager was respited Tr. 27. H. 8. Pl. 2. In Account upon a Receipt at the Plaintiff's hands though by Writ the Defendant shall wage his Law and by Detinue upon a Bailment by deed for he might take them again and 't is that Detinet is the cause of Action not the Bailment Er. 27. H. 8. Pl. 14. Debt against J. S. he waged Law and at the day appeared to make it the Plaintiff said there is J. S. Senior and J. S. Junior and the Action brought against the elder and this is the younger and in tant ' the elder makes default prays Judgment Er. 5. E. 4. Pl. 22. In Debt for dyet the Defendant may wage Law whether the dyet were for himself or another 22. H. 6. 13. b. But on a Lease of a
c. ibid. What Trees are Tithable what not see ibid. Parson makes parol Agreement of Tithes for his Life afterwards grants to another who sues for them Concord is no Plea ibid. Simony to give 10. l. to Patron to present Parson to next Avoidance the Church being full ibid. If Parson in by Simony dyes shall the King present ibid. Pleas and Pleadings Special non est factum to Debt upon Bond delivered as an Es●r●ul whole matter pleaded Judgment on Demurer for Plaintiff p. 185. Solvit ad diem pleaded specially ibid. Recovery pleaded in Barr ill instead of Execution ibid. Bond ill dated how to declare upon it ibid. Acts of Parliament and Records how to be recited in pleading p. 186. Where Villenage no good Plea ibid. Pleading must be certain and why ibid. Where Frankf●e no good Plea ibid. Where Corruption of Blood by Attainder no good Plea ibid. In what case Warranty of Ancestor with Assets no good Plea in Formedon ibid. Of reversing Attainders ibid. 188. Of pleading in Formedon ibid. Attorney may plead not informed if no Order to the contrary ibid. If Defendant in case pleads to issue for part and demurrs to other part Demurrer shall be argued first p. 189. Plea by Manucaptors to Sci. Fa. ill double c. ibid. Plea shall be taken most strictly against him that pleads it ibid. Pleas ill for Ambiguity p. 191. For Incertainty of Intendment ib. Impropriety of words ibid. Repugnancy in pleading p. 192. Barrs may be good to common Intent though not to every Intent ibid. In pleading a man shall not disclose that which is against himself p. 193. Repleader awarded upon non dimisit p. 194. Covenant to make Assurance at my Charge 't is no Plea to say he was ready to do it unless he tender the Writings ready to seal and I refuse to pay the Charges ibid. Pleading of Judgments by Executor adjudged upon Demurrer to amount but to Plene Administravit specially ibid. Administrator durante minoritate c. Wasting Goods shall be punished as Executor in his own Wrong ibid. Administration brings Debt and avers Administration granted at L. when it bears date in another place the Plaintiff shall abate p. 195. Sci. Fa. against two Executors nulla bona retorn'd to both and Devastavit to the value of the Debt against one and another Sci. Fa. and Judgment against him only by default and Fi. Fa. de bonis propriis against him alone ibid. Two Executors one confesseth the Action the other lets it go by default c. or pleads Non est factum or Plene administravit Judgment shall be against both de bonis Testatoris for diverse Executors but as one representing the Person of the Testator who if living should have made but one Answer to the Action ibid. After Imparlance the Tenant cannot plead to the Writ that the Demandant is a Bastard but he may plead it in Barr of the Action p. 196. If Husband and Wife bring Assise and Feoffment or Release of either of them or the Ancestor of one of them be pleaded in Barr both shall be barred p. 197. Excommunication pleaded in disability of the Plaintiff or Demandant p. 198. Action of the Case wherein Legitimo modo acquietatus is set forth makes the Declaration erroneous p. 198. If a man pleads a general Act of Parliament and mis-recite the same yet it shall not prejudice him and why p. 199. Where a thing alledged doth confess and avoid my Plea I may traverse it ibid Departure in pleading what Several Cases of Departures ibid. 200 201 202 203 204. Quare Impedit TO present by Turns in an Advowson in gross the Commencement how it came presentable by Turns ought to be shewed per 3 Justic 2 contra p. 205. Descent of three Mannors to three Sisters Advowson is Appendant to one Partition is made of all except the Advowson the Advowson seems to be in gross pro toto but if not excepted it had been clear p. 209. A Church may be appendant and in gross alterternis vicibus ibid. See the Method of bringing Writs of Quare Impedit of counting thereon and variety of Pleading therein p. 205 to 248. Release OF part of the Money due upon Recognizance if not mentions the Recognizance shall be for so much as is paid only and not destroy the Recognizance p. 248. A man bound to pay 100. l. tenders the same at the day he is not bound to pay the same at another day without Acquittance or Release ibid. Replevin see Avowry Variety of pleading in Replevin p. 248. to 254. Scire Facias HOw to be brought and pleading thereto 254. to 261. Statute Observations on the Statute of 29 Car. 2. for prevention of Frauds and Perjuries p. 266. Trespass WHere it lyes how to declare therein and plead thereto p. 261. Wager of Law IN what Cases Wager of Law doth lye and in what not what persons shall wage Law and the manner of performing it p. 294. to 316. Wast Where an Action of Wast doth properly lye how it is to be brought and the manner of pleading to the same p. 317. to 357. Wills Wills and Testaments originally proved at Common Law 358. They are proved in the Spiritual Court not de Communi Jure but by Courtesie ibid. Prohibition granted to the Spiritual Court to hinder the Probate of a Will quoad Lands and allowing that it may be proved quoad bona ibid. Bond conditioned he permit his Wife to make a Will he is bound to perform it ib. 350. Action upon the Case lyes not for Non-payment of a Legacy 359. Bond conditioned that the Wife shall make a Will of so much in the presence of her Husband if he will be present if not in his Absence she makes it not requesting him to be neither doth it appear that he was present yet good ibid. Memorandum quod A. B. fecit Testamentum suum nuncupativum in hunc modum viz. constituit C. D. fore Executorem Resolved a good Will and he Executor and well able to sue ib. 360. Witnesses Of the Crimes which render Persons incapable of being Witnesses p. 360. One under the Age of Discretion or interessed or a mans Wife for or against her Husband cannot be Witnesses ibid. One out-lawed in personal Actions may be ● Witness ibid. Witnesses are not to prove a Negative ib. Where Tryal is by Witnesses there ought to be two at the least ibid. A Juror may give Evidence publickly not privately to his Fellows p. 361. Bail cannot be Witness for the Defendant ib. A Felon burned in the hand may be a Witness ibid. In Ejectment he that had the Inheritance of the Land was admitted as a Witness ibid. A Councellor at Bar being examined as a Witness for his Clyent was denyed to be examined on the other side and why ibid. Debt for 10 l. brought on 5 Eliz. ca. 9. against the Wife for not appearing being served and Charges tendred held good ibid. Debt for 10. l. against a Witness that being subpened appeared not does not lye without averring that he was damnified by the No●appearance of the Witness p. 362. Judgment staid because the Verdict was had upon the single Testimony of one convict of Perjury in the very same thing ibid. In Deceipt for forging a Will a Legatee allowed as a Witness in a Tryal for the Forgery ibid. A material Witness that lyes dying may be examined by consent of both Parties not otherwise p. 363. A Councellor may be examined as a Witness against his Clyent so far as it is of his own Knowledge not what his Clyent bath reveal'd to him ibid. One shall not justifie what he heard an other say ibid. Witnesses may be sworn against the King in Indictments Battery c. because though Criminal not Capital ibid. Tenant at Will of Lands in Question allowed a Witness in Tryal at Bar. ibid. Person attainted of Felony and afterwards pardoned by the King is uncapable after of being a Witness ibid. Words VVHat Words are actionable and what not see fol. 265. to the end FINIS
not an Action for the whole or for part the Writ shall abate de facto as in Quare Impedit if it appears by the plaintiff's shewing that the Church is full by his own Presentation the Writ shall abate de facto Some Pleas abate the Writ in the whole and some but in part As In Trespass against two one appears and pleads that the other was dead die impetrationis brevis or that there was no such person in rerum natura there the whole Writ shall abate But it is otherwise where one of the Defendants dyes after purchasing the Writ 18 E. 4. 1. 2 H. 7. 16. Rast Entr. 126. Trespass against husband and wife after Verdict and before the day in Bank the husband dyes in Cro. Caroli 509. it is doubted if the writ shall abate but it is agreed there That if the wife dyes it shall not abate against the husband But in case for Slander by the wife the writ shall abate after Verdict Heb. 129. Account against two one dyes after the first Judgment the Writ shall abate only against him In Right of Advowson the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was seised of the sixth part die impetrationis brevis this shall abate the whole Writ 5 H. 7. 7. In Debt upon an Obligation the defendant pleads That after the writ purchased the plaintiff had received parcel and shews an Acquittance the whole writ shall abate and yet it is a good plea in barr for that part 5 H. 7. 41. a. Rast Entr. 160. 7 E. 4. 19. 15 H. 7. 10. 3 H. 7. 3. Quere if in Debt upon simple Contract the plaintiff receives part pendente brevi if it shall abate the writ In Debt upon an Obligation with Condition to deliver 20 Quarters of Barley the defendant pleads in Abatement that pendente billa the plaintiff had accepted 15 parcel of the said 20 and adjudged to be an ill Plea because it is collateral and not parcel of the Sum contained in the Obligation 3 Cro. 253. Where the defendant pleads matter that entitles the plaintiff or demandant to a better writ it shall abate the other as in a Writ of Ayel Seisin of the Father So in Mortd ' ancestor his own Seisin c. But in Formedon or Writ of Right darrein Seisin is no Plea for in Formedon the Gift and not the Seisin is the Title and it is not within the Statute of 32 H 8. of Limitations to be brought within 50 years 12 Eliz. Dyer 290. 4 E. 4. 32. b. If the Tenant brings a Writ of Mesne of two Acres and depending the writ he alieneth one of them the writ shall abate The same Law in an Action of Wast brought of two acres if the plaintiff aliens the Reversion of one of them the writ shall abate Where it appears that the writ was never good in part it shall abate in the whole As in Trespass against 3 if one be dead after the writ purchased the writ shall abate in the whole per 7 E. 4. The same Law if Trespass be brought against three and one saith that there is no such Name in Rerum Natura as the third person's name Judicium de Brevi if it be found the Writ shall abate in the whole because that I have joyned with me such a person who hath no colour or cause of affirmance my affirmance shall abate Where the writ is good for part and for part shall abate As in Debt upon Obligation against two they both deny the deed and it is found the deed of one of them and not of the other yet the Plaintiff shall recover against him whose deed it is 40 E. 3. Praecipe quod reddat against Tenant for life the Reversion descends to him depending the writ the writ shall not abate Misnomer in Trespass shall not abate the writ but only against him who pleads the Plea 5 E. 4 2. 13. 2 H. 7. 16. 33 H. 6. 23. A Praecipe is brought by three joyntly several Tenancy in parcel or in the whole is pleaded by one of the Tenants it shall abate the whole Writ and against all Rast Entr. 248. 270 1 2 3. 364 5. 282. In Right of Advowson against two as Jointenants the death of one shall abate the writ but secus in Assise of Novel disseisin or Mortd ancestor for there it sufficeth if there be any Tenant to the Freehold Cro. Car. 574 583 Rast Entr. 107. In an Appeal against two no such person in Rerum Natura as to one shall abate the whole writ but it is otherwise of the death of one as it seems 29 H. 7. 21. 2 H. 7. 8. But it is otherwise in an Assise or Writ of Dower as in Pollard's Case Com' 89. b. In Trespass in F. and H. the defendant said that there is not any such Vill or Hamlet in the said County and the better Opinion was That this Plea shall abate the whole Writ 4 E. 4. 33. a. Co. Lit. 155. b. Rast Entr. 108 298. Co. Entr. 121. But Quaere how it should have been tryed for it seems by a Jury of the Visne or Neighbourhood of F. Debt against two Executors one said That whereas he is nam'd of S. that he was of D. the day of the Writ purchas'd and prayes Judgment of the Writ and agreed That if the Plea was found for him that the Writ should abate against both and yet the other shall answer but the other plea shall be first tryed 21 H. 6. 4. Rast Entr. 108 295 298 299. 160. In Trespass against two one pleads that the place in question is within his Fee and demands Judgment of this writ quare vi et armis the writ shall abate against him only So where the one is Feme covert Jointenancy in the Demandant or Coparcener shall be pleaded in Abatement 22. E. 4. 4. 2 H. 7. 16. Cro. Eliz. 554. Rast Entr. 615. In a Quare Impedit against two one pleads that there was no such Church as was named in the Writ the other pleaded that there was no such Bishop of Lincoln as was there named and Issue was joyned upon the first Plea but to the second Plea the Plaintiffs demurred and the first being found for the Defendant the whole Writ did abate Hobart 250. In a Writ of Error the death of one of the Plaintiffs shall abate the whole writ Some Pleas in Abatement go only to the person of the plaintiff or defendant others to the Writ or Action As Excommunication in the Plaintiff or Demandant may be pleaded in disability of his person but every Excommunication shall not disable As if a Major or Bailiffs and Communalty or any other Body aggregate of many bring their Action Excommunication in the Major or Bailiffs shall not disable them because they sue and answer by Attorney but it is otherwise of a sole Corporation So if Executors or Administrators be Excommunicated they may be disabled for every one that hath to do with a●person Excommunicated either by commerce
Record Fo● versus Iucks 2 Cro. 13● In Debt against an Executor he pleads a Judgment in Barr and because he did not plead prout patet per Recordum it was resolved to be ill 2 Cro. 226. Defendant in Debt to perform an Award which was to enfeoff or Release or pay 20 s. pleads performance ill not shewing which for performance of any one is good excuse wherefore he must shew what he hath performed 27 H. 6. I. b. In Debt against an Executor or Administrator he pleads a Judgment and that he hath not Goods preterquam que non c. Co. 9. Rep. 109 110. 'T is held ill on general demurrer not shewing what summ he has but Hob. 133. More versus Andrews 't is held but form and good on general demurrer and Vide Co. Entr. 446. a. 148. Pl. 27. 152. a. 269. a. 617. b. It is oftner pleaded in the general then to plead a particular summ c. here the Court held it but a form and cured by General demurrer Davies versus Davies Tr. 16. Car. 2. B. R. Debt on a Bond conditioned to pay all c. Defendant pleads he paid all without shewing what the Plaintiff replied he received some summs and has not paid the replication good for the knowledg is on the Defendants side what he received therefore to have been set out by him and not by the Plaintiff in the Replication and therefore the Barr ill Woodcock versus Cole Tr. 16. Car. 2. B. R. Debt super Obligation conditioned to deliver such Letters by such a day plea that he delivered them secundum Conditionem ill for being to do a particular thing by a particular day he ought to have pleaded particularly and not generally secundum conditionem Brook versus Deane P. 16 Car. 2. B. R. Rot. 451. Debt upon a Bond at London conditioned that if a ship do not miscarry c. Defendant pleads she miscarryed in Cornwall ill for he cannot plead transitory matter in another County then the Action is laid and so altered the Trial and if he have local matter to plead he must shew it Collings versus Sutton Tr. 16 Car. 2 B. R. rot 1666. 11 H. 4. 50. a. b. Debt and counts that one possessed of a Term granted him a Rent by mean Conveyances is come to the Defendants and shews not how yet ruled good aliter if the Term be pleaded to come to himself or any that he is privy to Note This was after Verdict but no advantage taken of the Verdict Cotes versus Wade m. 18. Card. B. R. Debt for an Escape and begins with the Writ of Execution and Arrest ill not shewing the Judgment quod cum recuperasset c. Jones versus Pope M. 18. Car. 2 B. R. Debt on a Bond conditioned to save against another Bond Defendant pleads that he did save not shewing how the Plaintiff sayes he was sued at Law pro eo quod the money was not paid and pleads not the Writ c. as he ought the Defendant rejoynes he had not notice which is a departure and not material the Plaintiff demurrs Resolved the Barr ill but if not to have it specially assigned for cause Secondly the eo quod affirmative and Traversable as well as if said in facto Thirdly the Replication ill not pleading the Writ c. Fourthly because the rejoyner is a departure and admits it being but ill for incertainty and circumstance has cured it Cather versus Peirce Soutbres and Falker M 18. Card. 2. in Sci. Debt against an Executor who pleas three Judgments in debt had against him and sayes nor pro vero debo and concludes prout patet per seperalia recorda et inde exeeution tato it for both Cases no resolution Palmer verses Lawson M. 18. Car. 2. R. R. Rot. 302. Debt on a Bond to perform an Award Ita quod it be made before 25 March pleads nul Award replication that ante 27 May they made an Award good without saying infra tempus limitat they may traverse nullum c. without traversing the day if not before the day the Jury is to find it Skinner versus Andrews Hill 20. Car. 2. B. R. Rot. 292. Debt against two Executors they plead a Judgment had against one as Administrator who ultra to satisfie hath not Assets et bene Parker versus Amy. Hill 20 21. Car. 2. B. R. Debt on a Bond against an Executor who pleads a Judgment and a Bond the Plaintiff replies the Judgment satisfied and satisfaction given Et hoc paratus est verificare And to the Bond assets ultra Et hoc petit quod inquiratur per Patriam Defendant demurrs and adjudged for the Plaintiff though not said to the first per Recordum for but form and cured by the general demurrer also he has not answered the last issuable Plea Hancock versus Proud M. 21. Card. 2. B. R. Debt on a Bond conditioned to do several things Defendant pleads performed generally and demurr adjudged ill he should have answered to all the particulars expressed in the Action aliter where 't is to perform Covenants Winbleton versus Helderup Trin. 22 Car. B. R. rot 704. Debt on a Bond conditioned to perform Covenants which were within two years to deliver a Mapp of all Land in D. in the possession of A. Lessee of B. and B. pleads performance repl Assigns breach that Lessee did not deliver a Mapp within two years of all the Lands in D. in his Occupation and in the occupation of B. and C. and the replication seems ill first because he does not say Lessee nor his Executors Secondly in his occupation is uncertain what is meant by it Thirdly he ought to shew what Lands were in the possession of B. and C. Q. If the recital not an Estopel to say none were Palmer versus Greenhil Executor of Greenhil Pa. 11 Jac. Rot 688 Bridg. 46. Debt by two Barons and their Femes on an Obligation made to their Femes when sole and say the money was not paid them good and though not said vel licaui eorum for payment to one is payment to both Sparmer versus Stone et ux ' vide Pa. 77 et Latch 49 and Pop. 161 ibm 3. Count jointly and severally in Action against one sufficient to say he paid not but if against all that they nec aliquis eorum Noy 69. Executors sue on a Bond Testat plea non est factum after Verdict for the Plaintiff moved yet he had Judgment Noy 79. A. and B. joyntly and severally bound to stand to an Award betwixt them and I. S. Arbitrators awarded A. to pay B. 3 s. B. to pay 10 s. to I. S. in debt on the Bond in Plea for A. to say he had performed the Award without shewing how and how B. had performed it for he is bound to him also Bendlo 5. Debt on a Contract Defendant pleads payment in a Forraign County and on demurrer adjudged ill he might have pleaded in the County and so
So it is of a Lease for years made by a Feme sole reserving Rent and She takes Husband So of an Obligation made to a Feme sole and she takes Husband for otherwise the words of the writ are false But if a Feme sole make a Bailiff of her Mannor of Dale and takes Husband of all the Rent received by the Bailiff after Coverture the Husband shall have an Action of Account in his own name for there the words of the writ are true And when an Action personal is given to the Husband and also to his Wife during the Coverture it is at the Liberty of the Husband to bring the Action in both their names or in his own name if it be so that the Wife may have advantage of it When a thing is given to Husband and Wife by matter of Record then he ought to joyn with her But there is a Diversity when it is of the part of the Plaintiff and when it is on the Defendants part as a Feme sole disseiseth me and takes Husband the Assise lyes against both supposing that they both disseised me So it is of Trespass Note It is at the Election of the Plaintiff to bring his Action of Debt against the Heir or against the Executors A Man marrieth a Wife That hath a Rent Charge out of the Lands of another Rent is arrear before and after marriage The Plaintiff shall recover by Action of Debt against the Grantor or his Heirs Action of Covenant shall not go to the Heir but to the Executors As Action of Debt upon a Bond or a Lease for years the Term goes to the Executors and not the Heir or any thing where damages shall be only recovered for that every Heir may not have Chattels descend and so not this Action A man seized of a House and Goods makes a Lease thereof and after enters and enfeoffs I. S. the Lessee reenters Rent is in arrear I. S. brings his Action of Debt and hath Judgment because the Rent issues out of the House and not out of the goods A man was bound in a Bill Me teneri firmiter obligari in viginti libris solvendum in watches It was questioned whether the Action should be brought for the Watches or the Money But Resolved for the Money Otherwise if the number of Watches had been in the Bill For then it had been for so many Watches to the Value of 20 l. If a man had been indebted to me in a single contract and dyed I could have had no remedy at the Common-Law against his Executors For he might have waged his Law in his Life-time but his Executors could not But now I may have an Action upon the Case against his Executors Assault and Battery and Ejectment will lye both in one Declaration Where two Men are beaten together yet they ought to have several Actions because the Trespass is personal but otherwise it is in real trespasses If you bring your Action for live Cattle it must be Cepit abduxit But if it be dead Goods or Chattels then you must say cepit et asportavit so likewise you say for live Cattle pretii for dead things ad valentiam Divers persons may have an Action of Trespass joyntly for Goods taken or the like But of Battery or such personal Trespass the Action ought to be single unless it be a man and wife And if the man and wife bring an Action of Battery or for Goods taken The writ shall say the Goods of the Husband only For the Wife cannot have property in the Goods during the Coverture An Action lyes against an Executor upon a promise of the Testators upon consideration of forbearing to prosecute but altered since by the late Act to prevent Frauds and Perjuries If there be Three Executors named in the Testament and Two of them refuse the Third may prove the Will alone And yet the other Two may meddle with the Goods when they will and either of them when they will And if an Action be brought it ought to be in all their names notwithstanding such refusal Executors of Executors shall not have an Action of Debt or other Action for any thing due to the first Testator For that they are not Executors to the first Testator or privies to his Will but were Strangers by the Course of the Common-Law But by the Statute of 25 E. 3. Cap. 5. they may Sue and be Sued and shall answer for whatsoever comes to their hands of the first Testator Sr. O. C. seized of an House in Fee and possessed of an other House as Administrator for years Le ts them both for 10 years to the Lady S. who Covenants to keep them in Repair and so Leave them at the end of the Term. Afterwards Sr. O. grants the Reversion of both Houses by several Indentures to I. P. The Lease made to the Lady S. expires and the Houses are left Ruinous Whereupon I. P. brings his Action Nicholls for the Defendant said that the Plaintiff ought to have brought two Writs of Covenant for that the Houses are several and if the Case had been that the Lessor had Covenanted to repair them and had dyed yet the Lessee should have had one Writ against the Heir aad an other Writ against the Executor and when an Action is once severed it can never be joyned again and when Sr. O. hath granted the House of which he was seised in Fee by Deed to P. now the Action is severed and Sr. O. shall have an Action of Covenant for one House and P. for the other And for these Reasons he held the Action not to be well brought Doderidge è contra And first he agreed with the other that two Actions upon this Covenant are maintainable and that if Sr. O. had lett his House the Lessee shall have one Action upon this Covenant and the Lessor another But yet he said this Action will well lye for the Law is excellent in this Point for when the Ground upon which the Action is founded in one notwithstanding the things are several yet all shall be comprised in one Action for frustra fiunt per plura quae fieri possunt per pauciora and with this agrees 14 E. 3. If a man grant a Rent out of his Land to one and sells the same Land and afterwards the vendee grants another Rent-charge out of the same Land to the same person and he is disseised He shall have one Assise for both the Rents So if one distreyn for two Rents and the Tenant rescuos them He shall have but one Writ of Rescous 3 H. 6. 17. 13 H. 7. 12. b. There exception was taken because it supposed a Chasing in two Parks the which ought to have several Punishments Viz. for either Park Imprisonment for 3 years as it is given by the Statute W. 1. and because he joyns the chasing in two Parks together it is not good For a man cannot have a Writ of Ravishment de
c. The same law if an Abbot make a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards is deposed and sometime after is made Abbot now he shall have an Action against his Deed which he himself made when he was Abbot because that now he comes in as Successor and not in the place as he was before The same Law of Warden and Schollars But it would have been otherwise if he had disseised a Parson and made Feoffment in Fee with warranty or without warranty and afterwards is made Parson now if he will use an Action his own Feoffment shall be a Barr against him because that all that he shall recover by this Action is to his own use The same Law if a man disseise a woman and makes a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards he takes the woman to Wife in this case the Husband shall be Barred because that he will have advantage of this Recovery to his own use If a man hath right to have Land where his Entry is tolle and releaseth to the Tenant all manner of Actions and dye his Heir shall have his Action and recover the Land because that by such release no right is extinguished and if the Tenant makes Feoffment in Fee or dyes seised he that made the release shall have his Action against the Heir of the Tenant or his Feoffee against his own release and the cause is because that nothing is released but his Action against the same person and not any right If the Son disseise his Father and make a Feoffment with warranty or without warranty and after his Father dyes he cannot ouste his Feoffee because that it was his own Deed. A man hath good cause of Action sometimes and yet by matter ex post facto and by the Act of a Stranger his Action is destroyed As I am disseisee and he is disseisor and I release to the disseisor Also I bail or lend Goods to one a Stranger takes them the bailor sells them to a Stranger c. Action of Debt upon an obligation brought by an Executor the writ shall be detinet and not debet and for this cause they joyn in the same Action for an Horse delivered by themselves to the same Obligor The same Law if a man recover Lands by default in which I have an Estate for life and he recovers by another writ by default Lands wherein I have an Estate Tail I shall have a Quod ei deforceat because the conclusion of the writ serves me And so a man may joyn two or three things in his Action where the conclusion of his Action is pertinent to the several matters and doth not vary If two or three Acres are given severally in tail and the party discontinue the whole his Heir shall have Formedon for the whole because that the writ is le quel un I. dit S. dona and although the Acres are given severally that is not material forasmuch as the common Writ will serve in this case But if the Acres are given by divers or several men or that the one shall be given to the Heirs Males and the other to the Heirs Females and the third to the Heirs General in this case the Heir shall have several writs and not one writ because that one writ cannot serve for such several Gifts If I deliver Goods to one who is indebted to me and he dyes against his Executors I may have a writ for the Goods and for the Debt because that the writ is against the Executors for the Debt in the Detinet and for the detinue it is in the Detinet and therefore the writ well warrants the count to declare partly for debt and partly for Detinue but such an Action he could not have had against the Testator because that for the debt against him the writ ought to have been in the debet and detinet A Feoffment is made upon condition of payment by the Feoffor he commits Trespass and afterwards enters by force of payment c. yet the Feoffee shall have Trespass because his possession is affirm'd 43 E. 3. Assumpsit If he would relinquish such a debt to pay him 30 l. and sayes he did relinquish it c. and after Verdict for the Plaintiff Judgment stayed because he shews not how he relinquished it and it may be by parol which were void Gregory versus Lovell 3 Cro. 292. Assumpsit in Consideration he would discharge him from an Arrest and sayes that exoneravit ipsum moved in Arrest c. he shews not how he discharged him sed non allocatur for they might be per parol or for a time but in Pleading a discharge of a Rent or bond which must be by Deed and perpetual it must be shewed how King versus Hobs. 2. Cro. 930. 960. Assumpsit the Defendant pleads the discharge of the promise whereof Issue taken and found for the Plaintiff and divers defects in the Declaration moved in Arrest of Judgment but by Wr●y all these defects tending to the Assumpsit are cured by the collateral Plea Manwood v. Buston 2. Leond. 203 204. Assumpsit If he would make it appear c. and sayes he made it appear by the Court-Roll Good without saying what the Court Rolls were for the Infinitly So a Bond to save harmless from all Estreates good without shewing what for the same reason Vide 9 E. 4. 15. a. 22 E. 4. 41. a Mo. Pl. 1175. 3 Cro. 149 Pl 3. 919. Pl. 3. 3 Bulst 31. Latch 130. H. 2. H. 7. Pl 22. H. 6. H. 7. Pl. 8. 8. 22 E. 4. 15. ab 28. b. 29. a. Assumed he would assign Goods to pay c. and sayes he assigned and shews not how but per scriptum yet good Note after verdict Forth v. Yates Tr. 30 Car. 2. B R. Assumpsit against an Executor who Pleads solvit to such a one on a Bond of 100 l. and to another 100 l. on a Bond and so to divers others which he was forced to do the Payment being post exhibitionem Bille and Pleads a Recognizance in force not satisfied the Plaintiff Pleads non solvit to such a one 100 l. nor to such a one 100 l. Et si de ceteris hoc petit c. and to the Recognizance that it was satisfied and kept in force of Fraud the Defendant demurred quià replicatio multiplyed and double consisting of two matters where one goes to the whole but Judgment for the Plaintiff for the first objection to one 100 l. to another 100 l. make several Issues though que de hoc And in case of an Executor one may answer to every thing alledged by him H. 21 22. Car. 2. B. R. Jeffreys v. Dod. Assumpsit to permit Land to descend breach laid quod non permisit well being in the negative but in the affirmative it ought to be shewed how disposed though they could not descend H. 9. Jac. B. R. rot 3 Bulstr 18. Assumpsit to perform an Award and sets it forth the Defendant pleads
off and filed as of Hillary Term Else it would be Error to declare in a Joint Action upon Bail for one in Michaelmas and the other in Hillary Term quod concessum fuit per curiam If a Captas be awarded and Returned non est inventus against the Principal and the Bail bring him not in If the Principle dye although there be no Scire facias against the Bail Yet the Bail is chargeable For though the Court will excuse the Bail Yet the Bail if they bring in the Principle before the Return of the Second scire facias yet this is of grace and not of necessity If the Husband and Wife be Arrested for the Debt of the Wife and the Baron find Bail for himself yet he may be detained until ●e find Bail for his Wife but he shall not be detained until find Bail for her Husband or the Husband for himself Judgment was given against one in the Kings-Bench upon which he was in Execution and had another Judgment against him in the Common-Pleas in which Court his Sureties to save their Bail brought him to the Barr by Habeas Corpus to render his Body but before that he had brought a writ of Error in the Kings-Bench to reverse the Judgment in the Common-Pleas but the Record was not removed In this Case the Court said When a man comes in to save his Bail he shall not be committed if the party do not pray it but when Error is brought before that he be in Execution it is a supersedeas so that they cannot commit him at the Prayer of the party And Waller Prothonatory said That the Bail is to render his Body so that the Party may take it in execution but here he cannot in regard a writ of Error is brought and therefore the Sureties shall be discharged Mith. 14 Jacobi in Banco Communi In the Common-Pleas the Bail is bound in a certain summ but it is not so in the Kings-Bench and when a man enters Bail in the Kings-Bench in a cause they shall be charged in all Suits between the same partyes entred the same Term. The Bail shall answer for all Actions brought the same Term against the Party for whom he is Bail but if a man be bail for another and hath Lands in Fee and he declares and afterwards the Bail sells his Lands and an other commenceth a Suit against the party the same Term he shall not be charged with the other Actions Cro. lib 2. fo 449. Term. no Sci ' Hillarii Anno 15 Jacobi Regis One Gabriel Mihil was indebted to A. B. and put in Bail in the Common-Pleas to pay the same and afterwards A. B. Arrested Mihil in London for the same Debt whereupon Judg Forster the other Judges being in the Chancery awarded an Attachment against A. B. for this Contempt and herewith agrees 2 H. 7. Hill 15 Jac. in C. B. Bankrupt IF Creditors after a Commission of Bankrupt is sued forth although at the first they refused yet within three or four months they come and tender their proportion towards the charges of the Commission They shall be received to have their parts as the other Creditors if no distribution hath been made of the Bankrupts estate before The Commissioners of a Bankrupt may sell the Goods of a Bankrupt altho the Bankry had sold them or disposed of them to his Creditors if the sale or disposal thereof were after he became a Bankrupt The Commissioners may sell the Copy-hold Lands of a Bankrupt for and towards the payment of his Debts by Deed inden●ed and inrolled declaring how he was found a Bankrupt and expressing to the use of the Creditors and at next Court the vendee shall be admitted and have his Copy I. C. and R. C. brought an Action of Debt jointly upon a joint Debt assigned to them by Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupts and it was said by the whole Court that the Commissioners had not pursued their Authority by that joint Assignment for they ought prorata to have assigned to every one but quere if the joint Debt may be divided among the C●ed●tors and the Lord Chief Justice said That a Custom may devide a Debt and then à fortiori an Act of Parliament may Mich. 10 Jacobi in C. B. A Bankrupt cannot make sale of any of his Goods after he becomes Bankrupt but Goods which he hath as Executor or a Legacy before it be invested in him or a Grant of a Reversion before Entry all these shall not be charged within the Statute But if a man sells those Goods which he hath as Executor and afterwards retakes an Estate to himself or converts them to his own use this is within the Statute Per dom Coke et alios justic ' Pasch 9. Jac. in Com Banco A man shall not Forfeit those Goods which he hath as Executor by Outlary ib. Barr. A Man may be Barred pro tempore and yet afterwards he shall have his Action IN Debt against an Executor he Pleads plene administravit and so it is found the Plaintiff shall be Barred and yet if Goods comes to his hands which were the Testators he shall have a Writ of Debt The same law in Debt against an Heir who pleads Riens per discent which is found so and afterwards he hath Lands by discent c. In Formedon the Tenant pleads the warranty of the Ancestor of the Demandant with that that he hath Assets by discent he pleads that he hath nothing and it is found that he hath he is Barred To plead a thing by way of Barr or Estoppel which the Demandant or plaintiff is to defeat or destroy by the Usageof his Action is no good Plea AS in Attaint brought upon a Verdict de nativo habendo Villenage is no Plea Also where Reversion and Rent pleaded for Assets is not Assets there the Heir is to defeat the Assets If a man sues a Prohibition and the Defendant alledgeth Excommunication in the Plaintiff he may say t is for the same cause If a Villein brings a Writ of Error upon Judgment had in nativo habendo Villenage is no Plea Where a man Pleads a Recovery in Barr he ought to add more to it or otherwise the Recovery is no Barr. ANd that is where the Tenant Pleads a Recovery by default against the Demandant he ought to add more to it viz. with that that he will averr that he was Tenant at the time of the Recovery The same Law if Tenant in Precipe quòd reddat will Plead a Recovery in a Writ of Cosinage by default he ought to shew how he was Cosin Also if the Tenant will Plead a Recovery in a Writ of Right against the Demandant by default he ought to shew of what possession his Writ of Right was conceived But otherwise it is if he will Plead a Recovery in Formedon by Action tryed this Recovery is a good Barr without adding any thing more to it where note the Diversity Where a man
demands a Debt or any thing by Deed he shall not be Barred but by deed or a thing of as high a nature AS Trespass for taking of an Apprentice it is no Plea to say he discharged him ●●●●out speciality Mich. 22 H. 6. The same Law in Debt upon an Obligation it is no Plea for the Defendant to say that the Plaintiff hath received parcel at such a place depending the Writ Judgment 7 E. 3. The same Law in Debt upon Arrearages of Account the Defendant Pleaded Arbitrement it is no Barr because that Debt upon Arbitrement is not of so high a nature as Debt upon Arrearages of Account for there he cannot wage Law The same Law in Debt upon an Obligation it is no Plea to say that he hath paid the Summ in demand to the Plaintiff because that he ought if he will avoid the Deed to say that he hath the Plaintiffs Release or Acquittance to shew The Disseisor Levies a Fine with Proclamations the Five years pass the Disseisee is bound afterwards the Disseisor reverseth the Fine by a Writ of Error then the Disseisee may enter and yet he was once Barred Vide Barr pro tempore Where a man shall Plead a Barr which shall comprehend one matter in fait and where it shall comprehend two matters IF a man Pleads in Barr an Arbitrement he ought to say where the Submission was and also where the Award was made and so to make the Plea certain But when he Pleads a Plea which comprehends two matters he ought not to shew the certainty until the Plaintiff hath Traversed one of them Of Barrs perpetual A Woman is bound to me in an Obligation and I afterwards take her to Wife I am once Barred and allwayes Barred Tenant in Tail leaves Assets which is Pleaded against him who is Heir both he and all his Heirs are Barred for ever A man is bound to pay the Abbot of Westminster and his Successors every year Twenty shillings the Abbey being dissolved he is discharged of the Twenty shillings for ever Also if a man be obliged to keep my Court in Dale I purchase all the Copy-holds and Free-holds of the said Mannor he is discharged from keeping the said Court for ever See Pleas and Pleadings Cinque-Ports AN Elegit to extend Lands within the Cinque-Ports was directed to the Constable of Dover But he would not extend so that the Plaintiff was compelled to have a Certiorari to remove the Record out of the Kings-Bench into the Chancery And from thence by Mittimus sent to the Constable to make Execution Custom 's and Prescriptions ALI Customes against Cannon-Law are to be Tryed at Common-Law and not in the Ecclesiastical Courts Customs are payable to the King by the Common-Law the Reasons why they are so paid see in Davies Rep. fo 9. ct 10. Le case del Customs See the difference between Malum in se etmalum prohibitum and how the King may Pardon it but not licence it to be done 11 H. 7. fo 12. et Davies Rep. fo 73. Where Debt or damages are recovered in a Court-Baron the Bailiff ought not to sell the Goods of the Defendant and deliver the money to the Plaintiff But to impound them and keep them as pledges until the Defendant makes his agreement but where it hath been the use of the Court to award a Levari facias it is good by Custome Where the younger son in Burrough-English dyes the Middle Son not the Eldest shall have the Land The same Law for Customary or Copy-hold Lands It was the Custom of the Kings-Bench every Term once or twice to send the Coroner of that place to the Marshal to view the Prisoners that are in the Marshals Custody by Commititur or matter of Record and if any of them are wanting that he could not find them there then to mark their names in his Coroners Book and to inform the Court thereof And thereupon the Court did pose the Marshal who was to inform the Justices what was become of those Prisoners And if he found not sufficient cause of excuse the Court would Record their escape against the Marshal And the abusing of an Office is the escape of Prisoners in the Marshal an abuse of his Office and just cause of Forfeiture If an Alien have a son that is also an Alien and after the Father is made free and then hath another Son and after purchaseth Lands and dyes The second Son born after the Freedom shall be Heir and not the Eldest by the Common-Law and usage of the Realm And also if there be three Brothers and the middlemost purchaseth Lands and dyes without Heir of his Body the Eldest Brother shall inherit and not the Youngest By the Custom of London a Feme Covert that is to say a Sole Merchant may sue and be sued in absence of her Husband Bulstrode part 1. fo 14. where you may read of three sorts of Customs that are void and against Law 1. a Custom against Justice 2. a Custom against the Benefit of the Common-Wealth and 3. a Custom that is to the Prejudice of a third Person Custom and usage in the intendment of the Law is such a usage as hath obtained the force of Law and is binding to such particular place as Gavelkind in Kent and Burrough-Euglish in many Corporations in England When the Custom of the Realm is the Common Law WHen it is the Common-Law a Custom ought not to be alleadged or Pleaded But an Action against a Carrier Hoyman Common Hosteler and for negligently keeping of Fire the Plaintiff may declare upon the General Custom of the Realm or not at his Election And note That a Custom is always Local and to be alleadged in one certain place but a Prescription is personal and ought to be alledged in some persons certain as in such a man his Ancestors or Predecessors or those whose Estate he hath 22 H. 6. 22. A Prescription is always to be of such a thing and in such manner as may be intended to have a lawful and legal commencement or otherwise it is not good but a Custom may be contrary to the Rules and Maxims of the Law as Borough-English Gavelkind Copy-hold Tenures So Lands devisable by Custom So that the Custom be reasonable Co. 6. Gatewards case lib 5. Perimans Case None can prescribe but who hath Fee but all other Estates derived out of the Fee as Lessee for years Life or at Will ought to prescribe in him who hath the Fee Gatewards case ubi supra A Lord prescribed that he and all those whose Estates he hath in the Mannor have hitherto used to have a Herriot after the death of any Tenant for life or for years within the Mannor and good notwithstanding the Estates of the Tenants have no continuance 21 H. 7. 15. Prescription ought not to be in the Negative but if it be in the Negative with an Affirmative it is good 14 H. 6. 3. 22 H. 6. 36. 11 E. 4
was the Opinion of Twisden in the King's-Bench H. 22 23. Car. 2. That if a Forraign plea which is not local be pleaded the Plaintiff may demurr upon it but if it be local he cannot demurr upon it but then the plea must be sworn Debt on a Bond to account he pleads he accounted Plaintiff Assigns breach in 30 l. received not accounted for Defendant rejoynes and saies Robbed of it and gave notice Et hoc paratus c. good and not Et hoc pet it c. for now he leaves the other to traverse the Robbery though it makes a negative and affirmative Vere versus Smith P. 23. Car. 2 B. R. Cook versus Whorewood Debt on a Bond to perform Covenants to enjoy such Land against A. and B. Defendant pleads Covenants performed Plaintiff replyes and sayes A. and B. habentes jus virtute tituli eis inde fect ' ante Burg. predicta ' entred the Defendant demurrs because the breach Assigned too general but per Hall good enough he being a Stranger Twisden doubted Proctor versus Newton Trin. 23. Car. 2. B. R. Rot. 826 Debt on a Bond to save harmless from payment of Legacies and Assigns breach that A. sued in Chacery for a Legacy first not shewing were the Chancery was Secondly saying he sued for a Legacy and saies not in fact a Legacy was given Dainty versus Faire Mich. 10. Jac. B. R. Debt upon an Obligation dated at Hamburgh was brought in London and good for Hamburgh in that sence shall be taken for a place as Antwerp Tavern in London not for the Town of Hamburgh in Germany and it was brought in the Detinet only and yet good because of Forraign Coyne But naught if for English money A man may bring an Action of Debt upon a Statute-Merchant but not on a Statute-Staple Debt against a Prisoner for Debt or for an Attorney for Fees no Wager of Law lyes But a Prisoner for Lodging and Dyet may wage his Law It lyes not for Rent it lyes upon a simple contract if it be brought in Debt But if it brought in Case the Defendant cannot wage his Law A man brings an Action of Debt against two and hath Judgment and two Precipe's against them and Arrests one by Fieri facias and the other by Capias ad satisfaciendum it is vicious per totam Curiam But he may Arrest one by one Capias and the other by another Capias and if one of them satisfies the Judgment the others Body is free and with this agrees 36 H. 6. Hillary's Case and 4 E. 4 it is said that the Plaintiff shall have but unicam executionem i. e. unicam satisfactionem Mich 11 Jacobi in Communi Banco An Action of Debt ought to be brought in the Debet et Detinet against an Heir but against Executors only in the Detinet per Coke Lord Chief Justice ib. A man brings a Writ of Debt upon a Deed and declares de octinginta Libra the Defendant prays oyer of the Deed and hath it and it was octogesima Libra and good per totam Curiam and with this agrees 9 H. 6. et Pasch 12 Jacobi where yginta for viginti was adjudged good Mich. 13 Jacobi in C. B. Detinue IN Detinue of a Box of Writings the Defendant pleads that A. B. and C. have each of them severally brought their Writ of Detinue against him and brought the Writings into Court ready to deliver to whom the Court shall award they shall interplead and the interpleader shall be on the eldest Original viz. A. shall interplead with the Plaintiff to Barr his Title and B. shall plead against them all But vide if there be variance of the Writings c. in the Declaration when no interpleader shall be P. 4. E. 4. Pl. 11. 11. E 4. 11. a. 3 H. 6. 20. a. 32 H. 6. 25. b. 25 H. 6. 20. a. Trin. E. 4. Pl. 2. Detinue and counts of a purchase of an Annuity and the deed the Defendant pleads non Detinet Jury find the sale c. but it is not agreed that the Defendant should detayne the Deed till the money payd which is not before the plea but on the general Issue he ought not to have given that in Evidence but should have pleaded it for upon the general Issue that which would make a special Barr cannot be given in Evidence or if found by the Jury is it material vide Cest Case title Averment 22 H. 6. 37. Detinue of Charters and Counts of a writing Cont ' that I. S. infeoffed c. And though he said but in facto a Deed whereby I. S. infeoffed c. but Cont ' that c. And so for ought appears no Livery might be yet per curiam well for 't is a deed though nothing passed and the Action lyed But Princ. it may work by Confirmation 39 H. 6. 37. b. In Detinue after Verdict 't was moved in Arrest of Judgment that Sattago was not good but Sartago and igneum ferrum anglice a firegrate improper yet the Court adjudged the Declaration good enough Smith versus Warder 13 Car. 2. in B. R. Of Disclaimers and Discontinuances of Actions ONe brought an Action of Covenant and had Judgment and a Writ of Enquiry of damages and afterwards it was discontinued by Rule of Court Trin. 10 Jac. in communi Banco If a man brings an Action of Trespass in 3 Towns and mentions but 2 Towns where the Trespass was committed the whole is discontinued 16 E. 4. 11. So 9 E. 4. 51. A man brought an Action of Debt and demanded by his Writ 10 l. 6 s. 8 d. and his Declaration was but of 10 l. and his Writ did abate An Action of Trespass was brought in the Court of Common-Pleas o● several things one of which was discontinued and by Warberton Justice the whole Action was thereby discontinued adjudged in Sir Fran Pawmes Case If two are bound jointly and severally and an Action of Debt is brought against them both and it was discontinued against one of them it shall abate against both 7 H. 4. Fitzh Tit. Breif 279. 5 E. 4. 107. But by Hobart Chief Justice a man may put more in the Writ than in the Declaration but not more in the Declaration than in the Writ Hill 12. Ja. Pl. 4 in C. B. In Audita quaerela scire facias or Attaint by 2 the Nonsuit of one shall not be Nonsuit of both and his Release shall only Barr himself and the reason is because they are compell'd by the Law to joyn in the Action and the cause of Action accrues not by their deed but by Act in Law and for that the Law is favourable to them So that if one will not sue the other may sue by himself But if a debt be due to two by reason of Contract or by Obligation or two Jointenants have cause to have an Action of Trespass in this case the Nonsuit of the one or the Release of one shall Barr the other because it
two persons having several Interests in Lands acknowledg the note of a Fine before a Judg and then one of them dyes The Conusee may for all that proceed with his Fine against the other alone for the death of the other is no impediment for the Conusans of every one is against himself and shall work for so much as he can pass A man and his Wife acknowledged a note of a Fine before Commissioners the 26 th of March by Dedimus potestatem and the wife dyed 27 th of the same month and the next day being the 28 th Composition was made in the Al●enation-Office upon a Writ of Covenant Retornable in Hillary Term before and the Kings Silver was entred as of the same Hillary Term and so the Fine was past and ingrossed And in Easter Term the Heir of the Wife moves against the Fine But upon debate it was agreed the Fine should stand Tenant in Tail Levies a Fine with Proclamations and 5 years pass in his Life-time Yet this shall not Barr his Issue A man of full age and his Wife being but 19 Levy a the Fine of Inheritance of the Wife whereby an Estate is conveyed to the Husband and Wife in Tail and the Remainder to the right Heirs of the wife and many exceptions taken against the proceedings by the Heir to the Wifes inheritance viz. I. S. as that the said Feme was not of full age at the time of the Fine Levied and other undue means committed in getting out the Son Yet by the whole Court the Fine was held good Law for Facta valent multa que fieri prohibentur If there be Tenant for Life the Remander in Fee to an Infant and they both Levy a Fine and afterwards as to the Infant the Fine is Reversed yet the Conusee shall have the Land for the Life of the Tenant for each may pass and give what he lawfully may If there be two Jointenants and one of them suffer a Recovery declaring the uses of the whole this shall bind but only a Moiety unless the consent of the other Jointenant can be proved Heir IF an Heir be sued upon a Bond and Lands are proved to descend unto him from his Ancestor you must have a special Writ to enquire what those lands are worth to be delivered to the Plaintiff at a reasonable extent and price and if the Heir confess the Action and shew what Lands come to him by descent Then his Body and all other his Lands and Goods and Chattels are free from that Execution but if he deny the Action and plead Riens per descent or it go by default against him then Execution shall be against Body Goods or other Lands And the Declaration shall be in the Debet and Detinet as though it were his proper Debt Outlawries and Outlaws OVtlawry was pleaded in Barr and day given before when the Defendant reversed it the Defendant shall not be condemned for Failer of Record but Respondouster Green against Gascogne vide Title failer of Record Yel 36. Outlawry in the Kings Bench reversed by Error in the same Court but that is for Error in Fact not in Law as if no Outlawry lay in the Case and if Process of Outlawry lie in an Action upon the Case for turning a Water-Course vide P. 10. H. 7. pl. 15. Dy. 195. b. 196. Original in Debt called the Defendant Nuper de Lond. Exig called him de Lond. is erroneous for it must pursue the Original without Variance and the Original was against Lancelot the Exigent was against Lancelot ill 3 Cro. 49. vid. 50 95. 104. 116. 172. Error of a Judgment in Debt and Outlaw'd 2. on it against 2. where the Sheriff return'd quod non habent bona out catalla quod summon ' potuer it should have been per quod c. 2. it should be nec eorum aliquis het ' 3. the Original is against Lancelot A. and the Exigent is against Lancelot A. 4. 't is said in Hastings and it should be in Hustingis de Com. plac revocetur Lancelot vers ' Jones 3. Cro. 50. An Outlawry was reversed because it was against Lewellin with a single l and now the mean Process against Llewellin with a double Ll and it was against two and returned quod non sunt inventi and not nec eorum aliquis Llewellin against Watkins vide M. 2. R. 3 4 13. pl. 16. 3 Cro. 85. 104. 49. 50. 116. 198. 240. 248. 205. M. 21. H. 7. pl. 37. Exigent names no place where the Sheriff is to have the Body and that adjudged Error to reverse the Outlawry For the Sheriff cannot tell in what County to carry him Cesar against Stone 3 Cro. 104. Outlawry reversed because the Party was Indicted in Com. Somerset and supposed to be of London and the Capias awarded to the Sheriff of Somerset where it ought to go to the County where he lives Rorset's Case 3 Cro. 179. vid. Dy. 295. b. vid. M. 1 E. 4. pl. 2. One Outlawed of Felony assigned his Term and then reversed the Outlawry the Grantee shall maintain Trespass for the Profits taken in the mean time between the Assignment and the Reversal of the Outlawry For though it was then the King 's yet it is now as if no Outlawry had been at all Ognell's Case 3 Cro. 270. vide 218. Accord Outlawry is not reversed but by pleading without Writ of Error per tot Cur. though there be apparent Faults in it 3 Cro. 274. vide Co. 1. Inst 259. b. One is Outlawed and has his Term sold and then reversed the Outlawry he shall be restored to the Term it self not the Money Otherwise if sold on a Fieri Facias c. quod vide plus Title Exec. Eyre against Woodfare 3 Cro. 778. Co. 5. Rep. 90. b. 1. Acc. pl. 285. In Debt against an Executor the Defendant pleads that the Testator was Outlawed and doubted if a good Plea because the Testator may have some Goods not forfeited by Outlawry as simple Contract c. but on the other side such special Ass shall not be intended to Com. next he has nothing Wooley against Brade 3 Cro. 575. 851. Outlawry reversed because the Writ was Teste Edmund Anderson so wanting a Title had no Teste which is the Warrant of it Growdy and Juham 3 Cro. 592. Judgment against two in Debt C. and B and Capias only against one and he Outlawed whereupon was brought Error and reversed it because the Capins should have gone against both Also 't was not per Judi● ' Coron ' Beverly against Beverly 3 Cro. 648. Debt against the Sheriff on an Escape where the Case was that the Party was Outlawed after Judgment reversed it by Error within the Year and because he assigned not any Error the Plaintiff took out a Capias utlegatum and the Sheriff took him and let him go and resolved for the Plaintiff and in Co. 1. Report of this Case the difference is taken of an Outlawry
after Judgment where the Plaintiff hath not over-stayed his Time viz. the Year but many have Habeas Corpus or Fieri Facias without Scire Facias If the Prisoner be taken by Capias utlegatum he shall be in Execution for the Party without the Prayer of the Party or Accord of the Court if he will but if it be after the Year not without Prayer 't is the Course upon Outlawry after Judgment if Error be brought to award a Capias utlegatum if he does not assign Error but if it be before Judgment and the Defendant brought in the Plaintiff must declare against him de Novo and if one Outlawed after Judgment bring Error and comes to assign Error he shall be committed to the Marshalsey and find Security to reverse the Outlawry and answer the party Lishton against Garpores 3 Cro. 706 707 850. Co. 5. rep 88. 89. vid. 1 Leon. 51. 263. stat 1 H. 7. pl. 6. Mo● pl. 772. 817. One recovers in Quare impedit against the Kings Presentee and is Outlawed the King shall have a Scire Facias to have the Presentment for the Church was immediately revested in him before any Writ to the Bishop and though the King be not Party to the Judgment he shall maintain the Scire Facias being Intitled by Act in Law but the Scire Facias must mention the whole Record of the Outlawry And so in Debt on a Bond and Judgment to recover the King shall have a Scire Facias Beverley against Cornwall 1 Leo. 63 64. In Debt on a Bond the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was Outlawed by the name of J. S. of D. the Plaintiff replied that at that time he dwelt at S. absque hoc that he dwelt at D. he avoids the Plea of Outlawry for he shall be intended another Person 1 Leo. 87. Upon an Exigent to Lond. it was return'd that he had proclaimed the party de Com' in Com' and for that the Outlawry on Felony was reversed For it should have been de Hustingo in Hustingum Marshes Case 1 Leo. 326. Outlawry of Murder the King seizes Lands and because the Outlawry was ill for the quinto Exact ' and was ad comitat ' omitting meum Wherefore to affirm the King's Title the Attorney General prayed a Certiorari to the Coroner to certifie what County and on such a President shewed granted Fumes Case Latch 210. Where one is Outlawed before the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace on an Indictment of Felony the same Justice may award a Capias utlegatum For they that have Process of Outlawry have power also to award a Capias utlegat ' per omnes Justic ' Co. 1● rep 103. Appeal of the Death of her Husband and because some of the Defendants lived in another County a Capias with a Proclamation issued to that County The King dies and Reattachment sued If it be General then a new Capias and Proclamation must go into the Foreign County if Special not for the Statute has been once satisfied Vid. Co. 7. rep 30. a. b. 1 E. 5. 43. a. In Appeal of Robbery the Defendant was Outlawed and Sued a Pardon and Scire Facias thereupon Dicitur he ought to shew a Release of the Appeal before the Scire Facias be granted then the Pardon to he Special not General but the Appellor not appearing at the day of the Scire Facias returned the Pardon was allowed but at another day came the Appellor and prayed Execution but his Default being Recorded could not have it Note sometimes the Pardon is General sometimes Ita quod stet rectus c. M. 2. R. 3. fol. 8. pl. 17. M. 9 H. 7. pl. 1. One Outlawed of Felony ductus ad Barram to say why Execution c. pleaded that he was in Oxford Castle all the time and because he did not say in what County Oxford is nor did not say he was in any Bodies Custody there the Plea adjudged ill H. 11. H. 7. fo 13. pl. 27. Baron and Feme Outlawed in Debt he brought Error and after a special Pardon Ita quod stet rectus a Scire Facias and prays it may be allowed but the Court would not till his Wife came in also that the Plaintiff may declare against both and then it seems he may declare against them in the Kings Bench within the Equity of the Statute of 5 Ed. 3. tho' it say rendre al Court donec le Exigent fiat sher ' it went out of the Co. B. but now 't is in the Kings Bench by Writ of Error P. 1 H. 7. pl. 7. H. 1. H. 7. pl. 19. One taken by Cap ' utleg ' an Appellee of Felony came in and pleaded that it was against J. S. Gentleman and he is but a Yeoman and the plea allowed and a Scire Facias against the Appellor who not coming in he was discharged so 21 H. 7. pl. 16. Outlawry against J. S. de D. he pleaded that he lived at S. good without Error Vide 21 H. 6. 20 and 23 H. 6. 4. a. Outlawry when reversed by plea when by Writ of Error 37 H. 6. 16. vide M. 21. E. 4. pl. 61. 21 E. 4. 37. H. 5. H. 7. pl. 7. M. 6 H. 7. pl. 2. M. 21 H. 7. pl. 27. Co. Ent. 689. 4 E. 4. pl. 15. A. takes the Goods of B. who was Outlawed if the King may seize the Goods of B. vide M 6 H. 7. pl. 4. vers finem and pl. 5. One that reversed an Outlawry had a Writ de bonis restituend ' to the Bayliff of Westminster who returned that he was not Bayliff not good he must answer to the having the Goods and must deliver them tho' gone out of his Possession or shew Cause M. 6 H. 7. pl. 5. b. H. 4. E. 4. pl. 3. An Outlawry was reversed because the Sheriff said ad Comitat ' tent ' such a day in Comitat ' Midd ' and said not Comitat ' meum seems Error of Outlawry because the Exigent was in R. 3. Time and two Proclamations then and the other three in H. 7. So the Exigent abated but being in Felony he must have Scire Facias against all the Lands tho' dicitur he had no Lands For that must appear Judicially and upon Scire Facias though the Outlawry were reversed for the Default of the Exigent he must answer for the Felony otherwise if at Suit of the party he were discharged against him H. 6. H. 7. pl. 7. M. 11. H. 7. pl. 33. M. 7. H. 7. pl. 7. Writ of Error delivered before the Exigent awarded and the Plaintiff Outlawed yet it is not void but voidable by Error and Issue shall be joyned to try Delivery before the Exigent but not by Jury P. 10. H. 7. pl. 25 31. One may avoid an Outlawry as well by saying he was beyond Sea by the King's Command as that he was a Souldier at Calais under such a Captain and shall not shew the Patent if the party appear upon
Scire Facias it shall be tryed in one Case by the Natives in the other by the Certificate of the Captain M. 11. H. 7. pl. 17. P. 21 E. 4. pl. 4. The Sheriff returns the Exigent thus Ad Comitat ' tent ' apud C. in Comitat ' Somerset 5. Exactus non comperuit because 't is not said ad Comitat ' Somerset nor Somerset set in the Margin 'T is held to be ill because it might be the County Court was not held in the County of Somerset but in another County sed adjornatur M. 11. H. 7. pl. 33. H. 6. H. 7. pl. 7. One taken upon a Capias utlegat ' by the Name of J. S. Gentleman says he is a Yeoman and was c. Scire Facias against the Plaintiff and issue that he is and was a Gentleman and the party was bailed the King dies before the Issue tried the party comes in Court temps the next King and is committed for the Bail was determined and the Cap ' utlegat ' also and a new utlegat ' awarded and returned and then he pleaded the same plea again and issue for before he could not all being determined M 1. E. 4. pl. 7. Original against W. B. Cap ' against J. B. and Outlawry shall be reversed by Moyle Danby contra Et sic per Moyle if all the three Cap ' had been against J. B. for then no Cap ' had been against W. B. quod Danby denied M. 15. E. 4. pl. 17. Trespass and Judgment for the Party and Fine for the King and Exigent at the Suit of the King and after two or three Courtiers of the King send a Supersed ' under the Privy Seal they proceed to Outlawry but shall not prevail for though the King have this Fine by reason of the parties Suit and if the party be taken he shall be Imprisoned and not discharged at the Parties Suit if he will yet till he be taken 't is only the King's Suit and the Parties have no Interest in it and if the Defendant be Outlawed after the Supersedeas 't is Error and shall be reversed P. 4. E. 4. pl. 24 36. Tr. 4. E. 4. pl. 4. M. 4. E. 4. pl. 14. H. 4. E. 4. pl. 3. vid. Co. 5. rep 88 89. The Sheriff returns the Copy of the Exigent and not the Writ it self with Proclamation c. he shall be Amerced for the Imbezlement of the Writ and if the Party render himself to the Chief Justice in Vacation time and get a Supersedeas whether he shewed it to the Sheriff or not it shall be entered in the Term and the utlegat ' discharg'd 1 Inst 128. and idem ibid. 43. b. If Error be brought of an Outlawry and it appear doubtful a Special Supersedeas shall go to the Sheriff quod capiat securitatem que les biens ne serront illoine vide 9 H. 6 44. a. b. utlegat ' after Supersedeas void and 7 H. 4. 1. a. if void and the party shall be restored to his Goods 7 H. 4 5 b. Supersedeas and Exigent rules at the day and a new Exigent and a Supersedeas the Outlawry after void H. 4. E. 4. pl. 3. Tr. 5. E. 4. pl. 13. le Amerciamt ' 37 H. 6 17. vide 3 H. 4 5. a. 8 H. 4. Cas Prin. 8 H. 4 7. a. 11 H. 4 34. a. Audita Quarela by one in Execution and he offered in Mainprize the other ut amicus Curiae surmised that the Plaintiff is Outlawed wherefore he ought to stay in Prison for the King 's Fine wherefore he was put to reverse the Outlawry or sue a Pardon H. 6. E. 4. pl. 1. The Plaintiff had sued three several Executions against the Defendant and brought Supersedeas for every one but there was granted a● Exigent with Precept that if any Supersedeas come to the Sheriff he should not allow it P. 7. E. 4. pl. 20. Error of an Outlawry in Debt after Judgment because no Proclamation went into the County where the party inhabited but being after Judgment resolved it need not but only in Outlawry and Process before App ' but because in all the Proceedings she was named A de B. and in the Exigent she is named nuper de B. and because it was recuperavit versus eum for eam it was reversed Lady Gargrave against Markham 2 Cro. 516. Exigent in London and 't is returned quod ad Husting ' c. and recites a Form which was ad Husting ' de Com' plit ' and that assigned for Error 2. The Exigent is that he non comperuit and 't is returned the same day it bears Teste and that was held Error Archer against Dalby 2 Cro. 660. Outlawry reversed because the Exigent supposes that Robert the Plaintiff did sue the said Robert whereas the Plaintiff's name was Thomas and Defendant being ready in Court it was reversed immediately Jonson against Kite One enters a Judgment and then is Outlawed in a personal Action then makes a Feoffment of the Lands and he that has the Judgment extends the Lands in the Hands of the Feoffee and well For by this Outlawry the King has but a pernancy of the Profits of which he is prevented by the Feoffment before Seisure not if after Seisure and if by Feoffment after Inquisition found before it be returned ibidem Opinio if the Seisure be Virtute Officii Tenant after puts the King out not if seized Virtute Windsor against Savel Outlawry against two reversed because it 's entred ideo Vtlegat ' sunt and not uterque eorum Vtlegat ' P. 15 Caroli Secundi B. R. One Outlawed after Judgment comes and pleads Misnomer and has Fieri Facias against the party and he returned Mort● Another Scire Facias is awarded after against the Executors and Tryal of Misnomer in this Case shall not be by Averment taken for the King but the Executors shall be made parties because it Trenches to the whole Duty but upon mort ' ret ' no Scire Facias goes against the Executors but the Misnomer is tried between the King and the Defendant 21 H. 6 21. a. 22 H. 6 7. a. In detinue of Charters and other Writings As to the other Writings the King waged Law and then as to the Charters he pleaded in Bar by Att ' nolens volens the pl. For of them concerning the Freehold no Process of Outlawry lies but Distress infinite and 8 H. 6. 23 30. Vtlegat ' lies not in Detinue for Charters and other Goods for the Charters draw the other Goods to them 21 H. 6. 42. a. 30 H. 4. b. Upon a Cap ' utlegat ' before Judgment the Sheriff may break open an House but the Plaintiff sending a Process in another Man's Name feigned an Outlawry where his Writ was but a Latitat 't is an abuse of Process and he Fined 50 l. Hob. 263. Waterhouse against Saltmarsh If one that is Outlawed for Treason Peer or Peasant be out of the Realm at the time of the Outlawry yet he cannot
a Scire Facias to present for he cannot present but is to prosecute the Execution of the Judgment sed he is not privy to it Beverleys Case Mo. pl. 378. If one forfeit a Presentation fallen by Outlawry and the King presents and he reverses the Outlawry he shall have a Scire Facias and outs the King's Clerk For by the Reversal he is restored to all that he lost as Principal not Accessaries therefore if the Advowson were appendant and it becomes void whilst the Mannor is in the King's Hand for Outlawry and the King presents he shall not avoid it tho' he reverse by Error nor Rent-Copy-holders put in by the King and if it were an Advowson in Gross and becomes void whilst in the King's Hands and the King presents it seems he shall avoid it after Reversal because the Advowson is the Principal thing and the Presentment but the usage of it Beverly against Cornwall Mo. pl. 421. 3 Cro. 44. The Sheriff ret ' ad Com' Lanc ' tent ' ibidem c. where it should be ad Com' Lanc ' tent ' apud Lanc ' or other place cert ' and for that the Outlawry was reversed though dict' many Presidents that passed subsilenter ' Co. 4. rep 95. a. My Lord Co. says the better Opinion of Books is and so is his that Debts by simple Contract or for which one may wave Law are forfeited by Outlawry and with him his Heirs agree the Judges Pop. And. and others 1 Inst 128. b. he says Debts c. which are cetain are forfeited not Damage c. uncert ' but so 10 22. t is said in Debt on a Contract Outlawry in Plaintiff Abatement because the Defendant not forfeited but on a Bond 't is pleaded in Bar because the Defendant forfeited Co. 4. rep 93. a. 95. a. My Lord Cook says that at Common Law if the Party was Outlawed he was at an end of his Suit and put to his New Original yet he granted no Capias lay in Debt at Common Law so it seems Outlawry lay where no Cap ' lay at Common Law Garner's Case Co. 5. rep 58. a. One Outlawed in Debt after Judgment dies after the General Pardon wherein 't is provided none take Advant ' of the Party that is Outlawed after Judgment without satisfying the Plaintiff and having the Pardon allowed in Scire Facias yet resolved First here the Outlawry was pardoned quoad the King and may make Executors and take Advantage of the Pardon Secondly Here being no Capias ad satisfac ' which he against the Executors nor no Scire Facias therefore the Executors satisfying the Party may plead it without Scire facias Sir Edward Fetton's Case Co. 6. rep 79 80. Outlawry reversed because the Exigent required the Sheriff to Arrest ita quod habeat Corpus in Cro. Trin. and St. is of no signification Dr. Drurie's Case Co. 8. rep 141. a. One Arrested that had Priviledge sues a Supersedeas and after is Outlawed there is a Nullity in all Proceedings and the Outlawry declared void without suing any Writ of Error Co. 8. rep 143. b. Outlawry by Asst ' being avoided by Plea 't is held by Cro. that it s no Determination of the Original but he might have proceeded in the Original suing another but the first Original should have excused within the Statute of Limitations Sir Thomas Finch against Lamb. Citer Just sembl con 1 Cro. 214 215. Exigent against three Men and two Women ret ' non comperuer ' ideo per Judic ' Com' utlegat ' existant ill and reversed because not said nec eorum aliquis comperuit 2. The Women ought to have been waviati Middleton's Case 2 Cro. 358. It seems one cannot assign for Error that he was beyond Sea at the time of the Outlawry pronounced but time of the Exigent For if after Exigent one fly he cannot assign for Error that he was beyond Sea and if he do the Attorney General may reply that he departed after the Exigit Carter's Case 2 Cro. 464. Partition IF two have one Mannor in Common before Partition the one is said to have dimidium Manerii but after Partition he is said to have medietatem Manerii And so after Partition if one of them be ousted by Force the Indictment shall say medietatem not dimidium Manerii Priviledge ONe of the Clerks of the Chancery lost his Priviledge by suing out a Supersedeas in the Common Pleas For by that Writ he submitted to the Court there and then his Priviledge shall not be allowed there Pars●n IF a Parson that hath a Benefice be made Bishop of the same Diocese and he acccepts of the Bishoprick the Parsonage thereby becomes void for that he cannot Visit himself So that a Man cannot have two Benefices with Cure of Souls Simul Semel but the first is void by Acceptation of the Second Tith The Tith of those things which proceed from the Earth as Hay Corn Apples and such like ought to be severed upon the Ground or place where they grow but not so of Sheep Pigs c. because they are of another Nature And if a Man have Sheep in two Parishes the Parsons of both Parishes shall have Tith of them Willows Horn-bane and Sallows are Titheable but Timber-Trees as Oak Ash Elme c. are not nor the Loppings of them contra if they be fell'd or lopp'd before the Growth of Twenty Years per totam Curiam Hill 8. Jacobi in Communi Banco Plea If a Parson makes a Parol Agreement of his Tithes for his Life and afterwards grants the same to another who sues for the Tithes Concord is no Plea in this Case but by Warberton Justice a Parson may grant his Glebe Corn before it be Sowed and good for a Year Trin. 10. Jacobi in C. B. If a Parson gives 10 l. to the Patron to present him to the next Avoidance the Church being full it is Simony So if the other give it to such intent Mich. 14 Jacobi in Communi Banco But if the Parson who is in by Simony dies if the King shall present quaere et vide ibid ' in Quare impedit inter Winscomb et Episcopum Winton ' et alios Of Pleas and Pleading A Bond was made and delivered as the Act and Deed of A. to B. for the use of C. which Bond B. offered to C. but C. refused to accept the same from B. yet B. left the same with C. to take and the Bond being sued A. pleads the whole Matter and so not his Deed And upon a Demurrer Judgment and Quaer ' If the Condition of an Obligation be to pay 20 l. 7. Maii and the Obligor pleads solvit ad diem although he paid the said 20 l. to the Obligee the 8th of April before it 's a good Plea to say he paid it the 7th of May For if it be paid before it 's paid at the day in the Condition mentioned and the Intent and Substance of the Condition is observed
of a Recognizance entred by A. and B. returned Terre-tenants come in and plead that C. hath three Acres of A. Land not summoned c. whereof he was seized in Fee Issue that A. was not seized of three Acres Verdict find that he and E. were joyntly seized and infeoffed C. per Popham and Gaudy 't is against the Defendant for now though the moyety of these Lands are subject to the Extent yet upon the special Plea which is false for A. was not seized alone of them in Fee as the Plea alledges he cannot abate the Writ Fenner con ' Dame Needam against Buning Vide 3 Cro. 524. 52. Scire facias against two for Damages recovered in Assize by three one Defendant pleads that one of the Plaintiffs supposed by the Plaintiff to be dead at the time of the Scire Facias was alive and the other pleaded that one of the Plaintiffs now supposed alive is dead ill for they must joyn in Dilatories though objected they might have severed in their Pleas to the first Vide p. 26 H. 8. pl. 7. One imparls the other demands the view in a Precipe quod reddat quaere of that M. 7. H. 7. pl. 8. m. 10. H. 7. pl. 6. m. 12. H. 7. fo 3. Scire Facias to have Restitution of Money or Reversal of Judgment the Defendant pleads Payment not good against a Record without matter of Record or specialty and 't was long before it was agreed that levyed by the Sheriff in a Scire Facias was a good Plea but at last agreed because grounded on the Scire Facias which he cannot withstand Vrse against Harrison sed vide 2 Cro. 29. Ognel against Randal Per Popham bare payment without Writing is no Plea to barr an Execution by Fieri Facias of Scire Facias vide H. 4. 58. 59. In Debt on a Judgment leavyed Fieri Facias and paid to the Plaintiff no Plea because the Sheriff is to bring the Money into Court not to deliver it to the Plaintiff other if the Lands were extended by Elegit 1 Cro. 239. Scire Facias as Cousin and Heir to D. viz. Fitz A. c. Plea that I had no such Son good and he needs not shew who was the Plaintiff's Mother as if it had been pleaded the Plaintiff was not the Son of A. for then the Birth of A was confessed he must when he takes one Mother from him give him another but here the Birth of the Plaintiff is not at all mentioned admitted or granted Vide talem 11 H. 456. b. 74 75. H. 4. 38. 9. E. 3. 30. 31. Plea that he had no such Son not admitted but he for to plead whose Son he was 8 H. 4. 21. a. 9 E. 3. 30 31. Scire Facias on a Recovery against the Heir and Terre-tenants the Sheriff an Heir and four more Terre-tenants the Heir Nil dicit the other four plead that two of them are Joynt-Tenants of part with J. S. not named and resolved that the Joynt-tenancy is a good Plea in this Action but not for all but for that part wherein the Joynt-tenancy is but because all joyned where but two were Joynt-tennants the Plea was ill for all four Holland against Donitree c. 3 Cro. 739. Scire Facias on a Recognizance Defendant pleads an Acquittance Plantiff replies 't is razed in such and such material places and demands Judgment of the Writ per Curiam this being but a matter tryable by the Court is but a Plea in Abatement whereon a respond ' Ouster shall be and lies not peremptory sic de Margine dict in all In all our Books Matters tryable by the Court go only in Abatement and are not peremptory which seems must be intended either of matters of Fact or with some restraint for every Plea in Law is tryable by the Court 5 E. 3. 32 b. Scire Facias on a Judgment against an Executor he pleads a Judgment to J. S. of 100 l. another to himself of 100 l. and that he has but 100 l. to satisfie J. S. and says not ultra to satisfie himself ill for he may pay himself if he have not ultra to pay J. S. and himself he is not bound to pay the Plaintiff Feltham against Executors of Tourston Tr. 8. Car. 2. in Scaccario In Scire Facias on a Recognizance for the Plaintiff 't is sufficient to assign breach that he beat one contra Pacem without saying vi armis aliter in Battery Hutchins against Perryman M. 14. Jac. B. R. 3. Bulstr ' 220. In Scire Facias of a Judgment against an Executor he pleads Plene administravit Jour de brief ill for he might have paid Bonds before so should he have pleaded Riens tempore mortis nec unquam postea but the Plaintiff taking Issue waved the benefit of the ill Plea Harcourt against Wrenham Mo. pl. 11. 78. Sheriff Bailiff c. ALattitat was delivered to the Under-Sheriff to be executed the Defendant being in Company with the Under-Sheriff and the Under-Sheriff lets the Defendant go and returns non est invent ' Whereupon the Plaintiff brings his Action of the Case against the Under-Sheriff setting forth the whole Frand and Falseness of the Under-Sheriff and Judgment by default But upon Motion in Court in Arrest of Judgment the Action did not lye for the Sheriff is the person alone to answer in Court for all Misdemeanors of the Under-Sheriff and Bailiffs Upon a Fieri Facias if the Sheriff return that he hath levyed the Money and do not pay it to the Plaintiff at the Return of the Writ the Plaintiff may have a Scire Facias against the Sheriff to shew cause wherefore the Sum levyed should not be levied of the Goods of the Sheriff The Sheriff cannot break open any man's House or Close upon a Fieri Facias executing and much less the Landlord shall not break open doors to distrein for Rent but where the King is concern'd as upon an Utlary there the Sheriff may justifie the breaking open the doors if he be resited but he must acquaint them in the House with the Cause of his coming before he force them open If a man be in the hands of the Under-Sheriff in Execution for Debt and the Debtee tell the Sheriff that the Prisoner hath satisfied him if the Sheriff release not the Prisoner it is false Imprisonment A Bailiff having a Warrant to attach the Goods of a Person to answer at the Cou●ty Court doth attach the Goods acc●rdingly and after delivers them to the Defendant and takes Bond of him to appear at the day or redeliver the Goods to the Bailiff this is not within the Statute of 23 H. 6. A Bailiff of a Liberty cannot execute a Capias Vtlegatum and if the party be in the hands of the Bailiff the Sheriff may take him for it is a Non Omittas in it self Per Curiam Hill 13. Ja. in C. B. Observations upon the Statute of 29 Car. 2. Regis for prevention of
House c. he cannot but on a Lease of Goods or Chattels he may No Ley gager in Debt for dyet of a Pentioner P. 9. E. 4. Pl. 1. H. 15. E. 4. Pl. 2. Co. 9 R. 87. 6. 19 H. 6. 10. a. Debt on a Contract the Defendant pleads the Contract was made with him and Br. and abates the Writ yet in another Action he may wage Law though herein he confessed the Contract for he may have pleaded it after per Littleton and not denyed ibidem by him In Debt against Baron and Feme on a contract by the Feme dum sola both shall wage though he a Stranger to the Contract for by the Marriage he hath made himself lyable to it And to this last agrees M. 15. E. 4. Pl. 4 Sed vide 33 H. 6. 43. b. If she make default at the day 't is the Default of both and binds the Husband 9 E. 4. 2. 4. b. Debt and Counts of a Retainer to shape and make such Cloaths In this case the Defendant may wage his Law and in similiter not against a Labourer compel to wage by the Statute 1 H. 6. 23. b. Not wage in debt by a Servant for his Wages H. 16. E. 4. Pl. 3. Mo. Pl. 971. Co. 9. R. 88. a. b. Detinue of a chain of Gold of four ounces weight of the value of twenty pounds though the Defendant have and detain them yet if it be but two ounces weight he may wage Law as if it were a black Horse and the Suit for a white one but if the Count were of a thing certain in the quant or qual as six yards of cloath tho he mistake the Price as ten Shillings for eighteen Shillings yet the Defendant cannot safely wage law Count of a Contract for 500 l. It was for 500 l. to be paid in Jewels Defendant waged law 39 H. 6. 34 35. 3 H. 6. 49. b. Count of a Contract for 40. l. plead that it was for 20 l. and wage law for the rest P. 22. E. 4. Pl. 8. 9. Mo. Pl. 1. 48. Vide 39 H. 6. 34. 35. Debt by a Keeper of the Tower for Manger and Boyer for one committed there for Treason Defendant cannot wage law Et dict for debt by a Priest for his Salary Defendant may wage law 28 H. 6. 4. b. In Account of Receipt per auter maines no Wager lyes because the Receipt is the cause of the Action and that 's notorious al pais being per auter mains but in Detinue on a Delivery per auter mains Wager lyes because not the Livery but the Deteiner which is in a manner the cause of Action but in next Case 't is the Usage which makes the law of Wager therefore in debt it lyes in Trespass it lyes not 33 H. 6. 9. a. Debt on a Judgment in Court-Baron the Defendant pleads Nul tiel Judgment 't is no Record therefore tryable per Pais Defendant not wage Law 34 H. 6. 49. No Wager lyes in debt or Arrearages of Account before Auditors but that was not at the Common Law but is given by the Statute of Westminster 2 Ca. 11. But though the Statute gives it only in Case where the Lord sues for the Arrearages against the Receiver yet it seems by Needham and Prisot the Wager lyes not where the Bailiff or Receiver sues the Lord for Surplus on the Account 38 H. 6. 5. 6. Debt for Wages and on a Reteyner to serve in all Occupations the Master wages law because it may extend to other things besides Husbandry which the Reporter holds to be otherwise for the Service and Wages being entire and no Wager for part he thinks there should be none for the rest for Magis dignum trahit ad se minus 38 H. 6. 13. 14. Party wages Law and day given to make it either of the Parties at that day may be excused by Essoin but if either make default it is adjudged against him or if the Defendant do not bring twelve sufficient men 't is a default as if any of them prove Execution Attachment c. Et ibidem if in Replevin the Plaintiff say that the Defendant kept himself out of the way that he could not tender Amends and bring his Suit of it Defendant may wage law of it but if he bring no Suit he need not wage for against one single Voice he need not wage whereby since moy semble he means Proof and so Selden upon Fortescue expounds it vid. Brit. 60. a. Debt and Counts upon a Lease for three years of certain Sheep the Defendant wages law per Cur ' he may though not in a Lease of Land Vid. 9. E. 4. 1. b. 1. H. 6. 1. a. b. No Wager in Law lyes in debt by a Servant for his Wages sed quaere for that seems such a Servant only as is retained according to the Statute 3 H. 6. 33 B. 34. a. Debt and Counts of Reteyner to scald his Hogs and foul by the Year taking 100 s. The Defendant may wage his Law and so he may upon a Retainer to serve him at Plough a year and to find Ploughs c. for these not Reteyners according to the Statute and so of a Reteyner to be his Counsel for a year c. 3 H. 6. 42. One waged law and brought twelve with him one whereof was challenged for that he was under Age and he was tryed by Inspection of Court to be of full Age whereupon the Party made his Law and went quit 8 H. 6. 15. b. Debt of a Box of Writings and Charters and Counts of one Charter in Special To which the Defendant pleaded non detinet and to the rest wages Law bon for if one Count of a box of Charters and shew not in Special he may wage Law as to all for unless one Charter be certainly set out the Box and all counted Chattels Vid. 14. H. 6. 1. a. Detinue of Goods and Chattels defendant wages Law quoad the Goods and pleads to the Charters 44 or 4 E. 3. 41 b. and 19 H. 6. 9. b. Debt Defendant having answered in Court that he bought c. to the use of the King waged Law and was admitted for notwithstanding he acknowledged the debt it being a Contract and he might have paid or pleaded it in pais the Wager allowed simile 11 H. 4. 28 and 3 H. 4. 40. 7 H. 4. 7. a. Account by the Husband or an Abbot and counts of Receipt per manus de Son feme or de Son Comoine good and needs not count of a Receipt by his own hand yet 't is as a Receipt by his own hand and the Defendant may wage Law And so vice versa in Account against Baron or Abbot Count of Receipt per manus del Feme o● Cemoine le Defendant and so is 2 H. 5. 2. b. vid. 47 E. 3. 16. 13 E. 4. 8. a. Debt against two one makes default the other wages law and at the day makes it The whole Writ is