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A86112 The grounds of the lawes of England; extracted from the fountaines of all other learning: and digested methodically into cases, for the use and benefit of all practicers, and students. With a commixtion of divers scattered grounds concerning the reasonable construction of the law. / By M.H. of the Middle-Temple. Hawke, Michael. 1657 (1657) Wing H1169; Thomason E1569_1; ESTC R209197; ESTC R209200 362,003 535

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Court of Record for albeit the Grantee bringeth a Writ of Annuity he may distrain and discharge the person but if he bring a Writ of Annuity and therupon appeare and Court this is a determination of his election in Court of Records albeit he never proceed any further as if the Wife be endowed ex assensu patris if she after her Husbands death bringeth a Writ of Dower at the Common Law and Count albeit she recover not she shall never claim her Dower ex assensu patris because she hath determined her election So if the Grantee bring an assise for rent and make his Plaint he shall never after bring a Writ of Annuity and if he distrain and avow the prisall of the Distresse in a Court of Record it is a determination of his election before any judgment g●ven according to the rule Electio semel facta placitum testatum non patiter regressum Co. Com. 220. a. But otherwise it is where a man hath election to have severall remedies for a thing is meerly personall or meerly reall from the beginning as if a man may have an action of debt or an action of account at his pleasure and appear to it and after is non-suit yet may he have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person the like Law is an assise and a Writ of Entry in the nature of assise ibidem W. brought an action of the case against F. and declared that the Defendant had sued out a Fieri facias upon a judgment given against him for the Defendant and by virtue thereof took Goods of the Plaintiff to the value of the Damage and so made his return pro def●ctu emptoris and that the Defendant well knowing this to the intent to trouble vex and charge him did afterwards sue out another Fieri facias to the same Sheriff and delivered it to be exexecuted who did thereupon levie the money of other Goods of the Plaintiff and paid it over to the Defendant whereby the now Plaintiff was double charged whereupon the Defendant pleaded not guilty and it was found against him and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff because he was twice vexed and disturbed and that wilfully by the Defendant who had first one execution inchoate which he ought to have followed we all knowing it and not to have taken another but if he had been ignorant and had not known of the Goods first taken he had not been lyable to the other action Hob. 37.3 Waterers case Euilibet in sua arte perito est credendum omnes prudentes eos admittere solent qui probantur ab iis qui in sua arte bene versati sunt Arist 1. Topic. c. 6. Co. l. 7. f. 19. a. The reason of the wisest man which professeth not the Lawes of England in cases which concern the Lawes of England is not to be beleived but the legall and profound reason of such who by diligence study and long experience and observation are so learned in the Lawes of this Realm as out of the reason of the same they can rule the case in question in this sense this rule is to be taken that we are to beleive every one in his art and all wise men are wont to admit those things which are approved by them are well versed in their own Art Coke l. 4. f. 29. a. Agnes was contracted to Bunting and after married Twede Bunting libelleth against Agnes in the Court of Audience upon the said Contract and upon the proceedings of which Libell it was decreed that the said Agnes should undergo marriage with the said Bunting and thereupon it was pronounced decreed and declared the said marriage with Twede to be null And though that Twede being de facto husband of the said Agnes was neither party to the said Suit nor to the sentence in the Spirituall Court which dissolved the marriage between him and the said Agnes but rhe said Agnes only yet the sentence against the Feme onely being onely declaratory was good and shall bind the Baron de facto and in regard that the Cognisance of marriages appertain to the Ecclesiasticall Court and the same Court had given sentence in this case the Judges of our Law ought to give faith and credit to their proceedings and sentence although it be contrary to the reason of our Law and to think that their proceedings are consonant to the Law of the holy Church for we are to beleive every one is skilfull in his art vide ibidem plura Coke l. 5. f. 7. in Caudries case Quod quisque norit in hoc se exerceat Co. l. 9. f. 13. a. Let every one exercise himself in that which he hath knowledge and skill It is the wisdome of the Law to refer things to persons in which they have knowledge and shall be expert and therefore the Law will not constrain the Jurors which have no knowledge in the Law to take upon them Cognisance of the points in Law or in cases which concern Life Member or Inheritance Frank tenements Goods and Chattels but to leave them to the consideration of the Judges nor the Judges to give their opinion of questions and doubts in Law upon a suddain but in all cases to have the truth of the case and upon conference and consideration to adjudge according to the Law Coke l. 8. f. 130. a. The intent of the act of 5 Eliz. c. 4. was that no man should take upon him any Art Mystery or any Occupation but such in whom is science and knowledge and therefore the statute intended that he that used any Art Mystery or any occupation at the time of the act might use the same art or mystery for every one is to exercise himself in that art which he knoweth And it was said that the Brewers should have science and skill in brewing good and wholesome Beer for it greatly conduceth to the health of men Ployd f. 128. b. Alwaies our Predeceossors for the sense of latine words have consulted with the Grammarians and others who have knowledge therein and that sense which the Grammar warranted they have allowed as 9 H. 7. 14. One was bound in an Obligation upon the condition that he should pay five pounds in fine Gold and the Obligation was puri auri and there it appeareth that the Masters of Grammar were sent for to give their counsell what was latine for fine Gold vide ibidem plura Coke l. 11. f. 10. b. Matters in Law shall be put in issue to be tryed by the Country for sicut ad quaestionem facti non respondent judices ita ad quaestion●m Juris non respondent juratores As the Judges do not answer to the question of fact no more do the Jurors answer to the question in Law and if the Jurors take upon them the Cognisance of the Law and find the speciall matter mistake the Law the Judges of the Law shall give judgment upon the speciall matter according to
affectum tribuit delinquendi minatur innocentes qui parcit nocentibus Coke l. 4. f. 45. a. Evil doings ought not to go unpunished because impunity ministreth a continuall affection of offending and he threatneth the innocent who spareth the Delinquent And Aristotle Pol. 7. Actiones justitiae sunt necessariae in civitate licet non eligibiles Though the actions of Justice that is the sentences and punishments of evill and condemned persons are not secundum se of their own nature eligible yet are they necessary in a City that the City may be the better ruled and saved for as Solon there are two things and tyes by which a Common-wealth is contained and preserved praemium poena reward and punishment and it is truly said Etsi meliores sunt quos ducit amor tamen plures sunt quos corrigit timor Though● they be the better persons whom the Love of goodness vertue draweth yet there are more whom the fear of punishment doth deter and correct and therefore the wisdome of our Law doth abhor that greater offences should pass unpunished So as that if a man be convict either of verdict or by confession upon an insufficient Indictment and no Judgment upon it given he may again be indicted and arraigned because his life was never in jeopardy and the Law wanteth his end which provideth that no evill Deeds should pass unpunished Coke l. 4. f. 45. a. for as Coke saith l. 5. f. 53 b. Oderunt peccare mali formidine penae The wicked to offend themselves refrain And from the same are scar'd for feare of pain And therefore by the Common Law is the offence of felony so severely punished and though the Judgment against such a Malefactor in that he shal be hanged by the neck untill he be dead yet implicitively he is punished First in his wife that she shall lose her Dower Secondly in his Children that they shall become base and ignoble Thirdly that he shall lose his Posterity for his blood is stained and corrupted that they cannot inherit to him or to any other Ancestor Fourthly that he shall forfeit all his Lands and Tenements which he hath in fee or in tail or for term of his life And fifthly all his Goods and Chattels And the reason was that men should fear to commit Felo●y ut poena ad paucos metus ad omnes perveniat that the punishment might be inflicted on few and the feare may come to all But some Acts of Parliament have altered the common Law in some of these points as by the Statute De donis conditionalibus lands in tail were not forfeited neither for Felony nor for Treason but for the life of Tenant in tail And this Law continued in force from the thirteenth year of Edward the first untill the twenty sixth year of Henry the eighth when by Act of Parliament Estates in tail are forfeited by attainder of high Treason but as for Felons the Statute De donis Conditionalibus doth still remain in force so as for attainder of Felony Lands and Tenements in tail are not forfeited but onely during the life of Tenant in tail but the Inheritance is preserved for the Issues but being attainted of high Treason or Petit treason the wife shall not be received to demand her Dower but in certain cases specially provided for Ployd f. 195. Coke com f. 392. a. b. And now the wife of a person attainted of misprision of Treason Murth●r or Felony is dowable by the Statute of 5 E. 6. c. 〈◊〉 c. in that case made and provided which is more favourable to the women then the Common Law was Coke ibidem Receditur a placitis Juris potius quam inju●iae delicta maneant impunita Bac. Max. f. 51. The Law will dispence with some grounds of the Law rather then crimes and wrongs should be unpunished quia salus populi suprema lex the safety of the people is the supream Law and the safety of the people is contained in the repressing of offences by punishment It is a positive ground that the accessory in Felony cannot be proceeded against untill the principall be tried yet if a man by subtility and malice set a mad man by some device to kill one and he doth so now forasmuch as the mad man is excused because he cannot have any will or malice the Law accounteth the Incitor as principall though he be absent rather then the Crime shall go unpunished 13 Eliz 1. So it is a ground in the Law that the appeal of Murther goeth not to the Heire where the party murthered hath a wife nor the younger brother where there is an elder yet if the wife murther the husband because she is the party Offendor the appeal leapeth over to the heire and so if the Son and Heir murther his Father it goeth to the second brother Ed. 4 M 28. 6. Stanf. l. 2 f. 60. But if the Rule be one of the higher sort of Maximes that are regulae rationales and not positivae then the Law will endure rather a particular Offence to escape without punishment then violate such a Rule As it is a Rule that penall Statutes shall not be taken by equity And the Statute of 1 E. 6. enacteth that those that are attainted for stealing of Horses shall not have their Clergy The Judge conceived that this should not extend to him that should steal but one horse and therefore procured a new act for it in 2 E. 6. c. 33. for it is not like the case upon the Statute of Gloucester that g●●●●h an action of waste against him for term of life or years and yet if a man hold for a year he is within the Statute for penall Lawes are taken strictly and litterally onely in the point of defining and setting down the fact and punishment and in those clauses that concern them and not in generall words which are but circumstances and conveyances in the putting of the case and so note the diversity for if the Law be that for such an offence a man shall lose his right hand and the Offendor hath his right hand cut off in the Wars he shall not lose his left hand but the crime shall rather pass unpunished vide ibidem plura Nemo punitur pro alieno delicto Coke com f. 145. b. No man is punished for another mans fault And therefore the Defendant in a Replevin cannot claim property by his Bayliff or Servant and the reason is for that if the claim fall out to be false he shall be fined for his contempt which the Lord cannot be unless he maketh claim himself for no man shall be punished for anothers fault Dyer f. 66. pl. 14. It is the Law of God that every one shall bear his own burthen and receive judgment according to his proper fact and merit whether it be good or evill As whereas the Plaintiff chargeth the Defendants with an escape made and suffered by them they ought not to accuse
for the punishment of fine and imprisonment c. but that it specially shall be limitted to such onely as did offend only in not well executing and using the said faculty of Physike for a generall cl●●●● is not to bee extended to those things are specially comprehended so 34. Eliz. f. 120. ubi A. seised of the mannor of Stable in O. in the county of S in fee and also of other lands in the said O. in fee suffereth a common recovery of all and declareth the uses by Indenture that the recoveror shall stand seised of all the lands and tenements in O. to the use of him and his wife and the heires of his body and dieth and after his death the wife entreth into the said Mannor by form of the said generall wordes but it was adjudged that those generall word● did not extend to the Mannor which was specially named Coke l. 4. f. 8● b. Nokes case clausula generalis non refertur ad expressa a generall clause is not referred to those things are expressed as where the Assignee of a Lease shall have a Writ of Covenant upon those wordes demise and grant yet if there be an expresse covenant that the Lessee shall enjoy it without eviction of the Lessor or any claiming under him this expresse Covenant qualifieth the generallity of the covenant in Law and restraineth it by mutuall consent of both parties that it shall not extend to the assignee Clausula generalis non porrigitur ad ea quae antea sunt specialiter comprehensa Coke l. 4 131. l. 4. when the deed at the first containeth speciall wordes and then concludeth in words generall both the wordes as well generall as speciall shall stand as Lands given to one and the heires of his body Habendum to him and his heires hee hath an estate taile and a fee simple expectant for as Dier f. 56. b A deed by wordes subsequent may bee qualified and abridged but not destroyed Dolosus versatur in universalibus generalibus Coke l. 3. f. 8. a. Twins case it is one of the Ensignes of fraude in a Deed of gift if the gift is generall without the exceptions of his apparell or any thing of necessity for it is commonly said that the fraudulent is conversant in generalls Coke l. 3. f. 57. b. Specots case A Bishop ought not to shew a generall cause for the refusall of a Clark as that he is criminosus or non idoneus for they are too generall and the fraudulent is exercised in generalls and therefore so incertaine that no issue can be taken of them as 2. E. 3. f. 6. The heire ought to alledge some certaine cause of refusall whence issue may be taken Generalia sunt praeponenda singularibus it is a rule in the Register that in a Writ the generall shall bee put in demand or plaint before the speciall as the Mesuage before lands the Land before Meadow Meadow before Pasture and Pasture before Wood and Wood before Juncary F. a. b. f. 2. E. Ex verbo generali aliquid excipitur Coke com f. 47. a. An exception is part of the thing granted and in esse as exceptis salvo praeter and out of a generall a part may be excepted as out of a Mannor an acre but not a part out of a certainty as out of 20 Acres one Ployd f. 361. a. A Lease of all my Lands in D. except white acre is void for white acre and a gift of all my horses except my black horse is void for my black horse Coke l. 10. f. 101. b. quando verba statuti sunt specialia ratio autem generalis generaliter flatutum est intelligendum where the words of a statute are speciall and the reason generall the statute is generally to be understood as the reason of the statute of 23 H. 6. whereby it was ordeined that no Sheriff should take any obligation by colour of their office but onely to themselves and upon condition that the Prisoners appeare at the day contained in the writ was for the avoyding of extortion and oppression and therefore is to receive a benigne and favourable construction and that in equity not only a bond but an assumpsit is within the reason of that statute and so was it adjudged 27. Eliz. Trin. in the Kings Bench betweene Danhigh and Hothcot that if a Sheriff or Goaler for ease or enlargement of any who is in his custody doth take a promise of him to save him harmelesse that though the statute doth onely speake of an obligation yet it is in equall mischiefe otherwise as Wray chiefe Justice said the statute should serve for little or nothing Multa transeunt cum universitate quae per se non transeunt Coke com f. 142. a. If a man seised of land as heire of the part of his mother make a gift in taile or a Lease for life reserving a rent the heire of the part of the Mother shall have the reversion and the rent also as incident thereunto for many things passe with the generallity which by themselves doe not pass so if a man hath a rent-seck of the part of his mother and the Tenant of the Land grant a distresse to him and his heires and the Grantee dieth the distresse shall goe with the rent to the heire of part of the Mother as incident and appertenant to the rent for now is the rent-seck become a rent charge Singulare distributive sumptum e aquat plurali Dier 328. b. a singular distributively taken equalleth a plurall as in an assise the Plaint is of two Acres of Land the Tenant pleads two barrs severall for the two Acres at large and the Plaintiffe makes two severall titles at large to wit for every acre one the Tenant pleades let the assise come upon the title in the singular number and the assise found one title for the Plaintiff and the other for the Defendant against the Plaintiff and judgement was given that the Plaintiffe should recover for one Acre and be barred for the other Coke l. 10. Br. Lifiels case A Lease is for one yeare and that if they agree the Lessee shall have the Land for three yeares rendring during the said terme ten pounds yearely this reservation goeth to both termes Propria res est quae solius est sive uni soli convenit Tholoss Syntag. lib. 5. c. 1. A propriety is that which is one mans onely and appertaineth onely to one man Ploid f. 308. b God made man the Soveraigne over all living creatures and gave the rule of them all to man Terram d●dit filiis hominum and so men by the endowment of God were made Lords of the earth and possessors of all things in the earth but how much land or things upon the earth one man shall have and how much another God hath leased to man by lawes by them to bee made and provided and by such lawes in every Realme and Country they are provided and divided and every man
Laborne in his house being one of the Seriants of the City of London Frost cometh to Laborne with a Warrant from the Sheriffs to arrest the said ● upon the Capias Utlegatum which he utterly refuseth but suffereth him to goe at large upon an action of the case brought against the Sheriffs supposing that the Sheriffs arrested him and suffered him to goe at large the Defendants pleaded that they did not suffer him to goe at large and judgment was given for the Plaintiff and the verdict warranted well the count for in judgement of Law the Sheriff and his Serjeants are words equipollent amount to so much and is all one as if the Sheriffs had arrested the said B. vide ibidem plura A Writ is to the Sheriff and he returneth virtute praecepti he hath done well for it is equipollent virtute brevis 11. H 6. 16. In a Writ it is said quam clamat esse jus this equipolleth with a Fee-simple and therefore in the subsequent part of the Writ if he instanceth in a lesser estate as ex dono for life the Writ shall abare 39. H. 5. 38. Upon an Enditement for celebrating Masse contra formam Statuti 1. El I was holden that under this terme Minister a Preist was included because a Preist is bound to celebrate and minister the holy communion c. and also it was holden by all that the terme Clerk is sufficient to prove him a Preist or a Minister Dyer f. 203. b. Coke l. 5. f. 4. b. Verus antiquus redituus the true and antient rent is not to be understood of the quality incident to it but of the quantity of the rent for that is the effect and substance of the thing reserved as if the antient reservation was of rent to be paid in Gold and the novell reservation was to be paid in Silver or if a quarter of Corne was antiently reserved and now the lease is made rendring eight bushells of Corne it is all one for the Law respecteth not the formes of words or their quality but the substance and effect of the matter parum differunt qui re concordant and they differ little which agree and equipoll in substance If one maketh his Will and committeth the Administration to one by it he shall be Executor because it is all one in substance 3. H. 6. so by the grant of a Church the advowson shal passe 7. E. 3. 15. One granteth the nomination of an Advowson Habendum the advowson the Habendum is good for it is the same thing so one granteth the remainder whereas he had a reversion it is good enough to make the thing passe 6. E. 6. Ante 134. vide Ployd 157. b. If a man lease to one an acre of Land for life reserving to himselfe the herbage the reservation is void because he hath leased the same thing in substance and the profits of the Land and the Land it selfe are all one 38. H 6. 34. Words of substance and not usuall are equivalent to words of substance and usuall Ployd 140. b. As if tenant for life and his Lessor make a Feoffment in fee it is the Feoffment of the Lessee for life and the confirmation of the Lessor though there be not a word of a confirmation in it and if tenant for yeares and the Lessor make a Feoffment in fee it shall be the livery and Feoffment of the Lessor and the surrender of the Lessee and yet there was not one word of surrender And if a commoner maketh a deed to the tenant of the Land by which he renounceth the common unto him it shall enure as a release because the words are equivalent to a release So if Land be leased by Indenture for yeares and Covenants made to render and pay for the tenements such a summ it is all one as a reservation of a rent and if the Lessor say I wil have twenty pound rent and the Lessee agree or if the Lessee say I will give twenty shillings rent and the Lessor agree it is a good reservation of a rent so if a man be bound by Obligation to en feoffe I. S. and he maketh a lease for years and a release in fee he hath performed the condition because they are all one vide ibidem Yet words of art may not be supplyed by equivalent and equipollent words though they beare the same sense and substance as in an Enditement of murder voluntarie ex mulitia praecogitata interfecit is not sufficient but the word murder avit must be so in an Enditement quod quoddam tormentum in H. L. exoneravit dans eidem H.L. cum pelletto plumbeo predicto vulnus mortale Dans ei vulnus mortale c. is not sufficient but it should have been percussit which is the word of art Coke l. 5. f. 222. b. Longes case And the reason of this is given by Coke in his Preface to Littleton that words of art are so apt and significant to expresse the true sense of the Laws and so woven into the Laws themselves as it is in a manner impossible to change them neither ought legall termes to be changed SECT 4. From naturall Philosophy NExt to Logick by whose principles as by many hands we are conducted to the knowledge of the Lawes and other Sciences naturall philosophy is to be placed which is the prime and principall part of other Sciences for by the knowledge of naturall things we are instructed to observe the diversity of the actions and manners of men according to the difference of climats and various conditions of them of which any one ignorant wil be altogether unable to judge of civill and aeconomicall affaires and therefore as Mr Ployden Have the Philosophers searched so deeply into the law of nature in their lawes and writings and for the government of the people by them given precepts to follow the rule of nature and have taken nature to be as it were a foundation to all lawes Neither have the Founders of our lawes been remisse in searching out the law of nature neither were they void of the understanding of it for their lawes argue the contrary and shew that those who made them were of more great and profound judgement and as well learned in the law of nature as in all reason and in the Law of God also for nothing in our Law is ordeined contrary to nature or contrary to reason or contrary to the Law of God but according to them all Ployd 304. a. and b. And according to it hath the law established diverse grounds and maxims 1. Quae rerum natura prohibentur nulla lege confirmata sunt Reg. I. C. Marcellus Lawes which are contrary to the Law of nature lose their force and are no lawes at all Finch Nom. f. 75. Such was that of the Egyptians to turne women to Merchandise and Common wealth affaires and men to keep within doores and of the Thracians who counted idlenesse an honest thing and stealing
disseisin the law is removed from land to land beyond these degrees which writ is given by the statute of Marlebridge c. 18. though before at the common law in respect of such long possession the demandant was driven to his writ of right vide ibidem plura Vis unita fortior Ployd f. 307. a. united force is more strong as in Sharingtons case There are three causes premised to make and raise uses in lands the first is his affection for the provision of his males the second is his affection that the lands he had should remaine in his blood the third is his Brotherly love he bore to his brother whereas every one of them had beene sufficient to raise uses yet when all are put together they are of the greater force for forces united are more strong Conjunctio maris feminae est de jure naturae Coke l. 7. f. 13. Arist 1. Polit. Nuptias non concubitus sed consensus facit Vlpian consensus non concubitus facit matrimonium Coke com f. 33. a. In matrimony there is a conjunction both of the bodies and the mindes and in contracting matrimony the consent of the mind obtaineth the chiefe and substantiall parts and corporall copulation the second and therefore is it said that the consent and not the copulation maketh the marriage for every denomination is from the greater and a woman by the common law cannot consent before she is of the age of twelve yeares nor a Man untill the age of fourteen yeares and these are called annos nubiles because at that age either of them may disagree from a former marriage Coke ibidem for a marriage infra annos nubiles underneath the marriageable yeares is inchoate and imperfect to all purposes except her dower and accordingly was it resolved in Ambrosa Gorges case Coke l. 6. f. 40. a. Who being married and her husband dying before she was of the age of ten yeares was notwithstanding the former marriage adjudged to be in ward to the Queen because the former marriage was no marriage before consent and they could not consent ante annos nubiles for the consent and not the copulation maketh the marriage And therefore is matrimony defined by Britton to be assemblee del home feme alieur deux volunts a conjunction of a man and woman according to both their wils f. 246. And which as Bracton saith l. 1. c. 5. fit per mutuam voluntatem for their mutuall consent is the efficient and necessary cause of marriage and therefore a marriage enforced contrary to the will of either party is unnaturall and illegall as Kelway 19. H. 7. 52. b. Where the case is that Margaret the now wife of Keble brought an action of trespasse against Vernon to which the defendant said that he heretofore at the Church of S. in the said county tooke the Plaintiff to wife and there were married according to the lawes of the Church and demanded judgement if action to which the Plaintiff said that those espousalls were made by menaces and duresse of imprisonment and against the will of the said Plaintiff in another county and prayed her damages and after great debate whether the espousalls were avoidable by duresse or no Frowick said that he had seen the bookes and that it seemed cleerely that the espousals were well avoided by duresse and the replication vide ibidem plura And which also seemeth to be the resolve and determination of all nations for for it Romulus himselfe was upbraided to wit for forcing the Sabine Virgins against their wils to marry the Romans and was declared by his successors the Roman Authors to be a barbarous act and a crime equivalent to a rape as Propertius l. 2. El. 6. Tu criminis author Nutritus duro Romule lacte lupae Tu rapere intactas docuisti impune Sabinas Thou hardy Romulus nurs'd by brutish care And Wolvish milk was so fierce to dare To snatch the Sabine Virgins from their Sires And force them to the nuptiall of their friendes desires A Savage crime unpunisht And by Virgill more fully Raptas sine more Sabinas That is ravished contrary to the custome of all nations for in that age when Rome most flourished the customes of the Romans were the lawes of all nations as Claudian l. 4. Stil Armorum legumque parens quae fundit in omnes Imperium primique dedit cunabula juris Rome by the power of Armes and lawes doth sway The spacious universe and did wisely lay The Plat-forme and the grounds of law and right And therefore not long after by the Romane civill law the consent of the espoused parties was ratified by an oath which being but a contract was called sponsalia de futuro which also in our law at this day is of great force for by it a precontract is a sufficient cause of divorce a vinculo matrimonii Coke com f. 285. a. Vir uxor sunt quasi unica persona quia caro una sanguis unus Cok com f. 187. b. The husband and wire are but one person in law Littleton because they are one flesh and one blood as the Scripture saith and as the Philosopher are by nature conjoyned As if a joynt estate be made to the husband and wife and to a third person the husband and wife shall have one moiety and the third person the other moiety because the husband and wife are but one person in law so if an estate be made to the husband and wife and to two others the husband and wife shall have but the third part Lit. If an estate be made to a villaine and his wife being free and to their heires they have severall capacities the villaine to purchase for the benefit of the Lord and the wife for her owne yet if the Lord of the Villaine enter and the wife survive she shall have the whole land because there was no moieties between them 40. Ass Pl. 7. If a woman marry with her obligor the debt is extinct and she shall never have action against the Obligor because the suit against her husband by inter marriage was suspended and therefore being a personall action and suspended against one it is discharged against both 21. H. 7. 29. h. So is it If a feme sole baile goods to one and marry with the bailee they are the bailees good so it is if the wife buy goods of one 33. E. 3. If husband and wife purchase lands to them and their heires and the hsband alien the land c. she shall recover the whole in a cui in vita after his death and the warranty of one of them or his Ancestors is a bar of the whole against them both 39. H. 6. 45. 21. R. 2. Judg. 63. And for the same reason the husband cannnot enfeoff the wife but upon a feoffment made unto her by a stranger he may deliver seisin unto her by a letter of attorney for thereby he giveth nothing himselfe Perk. 40. If a
remotissime vana which by the intendement of the Law never cometh into act Coke l. 2. f. 5. 2. n. b. in Sir Hugh Chomleys case vide ibidem plura And hereby the way may pertinently be observed that a possibility cannot be released as if before judgement the Plaintiff in an action of debt releaseth to the baile in the Kings Bench all demands and after judgement is given this shall not bar thee to have execution against the baile because at the time of the release he had but a meere possibility and neither jus in re or jus ad rem but the duty is to commence after upon a contingent and therefore could not be released presently So if the Conusee of a Statute release to the Conusor all his right in the Land yet afterward he may sue execution for he hath no right to the Land till execution but onely a● possibility and so have I known it adjudged Coke com f. 265. b. So if A. grant to B. that if he doe such an act he shall have an annuity of twenty pounds during his life before the Act done he cannot release the annuity Coke l. 1. in Albanys case Lex semper dabit remedium the law so favoreth right that it will suffer things against the principles of Law rather then a man to be without his remedy As a man who is outlawed may bring an action to reverse it an outlawry there is no Plea 4. H. 7. 40. The Tenant shall have a replevin against the Lord that did wrongfully distraine though the beasts be come back to himself because he can have no action of trespasse against him for that prisall and shall recover damages for the tortious prisall F. n. b. f. 69. H. A man after judgement is passed against him shall plead against the King a Charter of pardon or any such thing done in the meane betwixt the verdict and the judgement because against the King he can have no Audita querela 11. H. 7.10 otherwise it is against a common person And therefore is it a principle in Law cuicumque aliquis quid concedit concedere videtur id sine quo res ipsa esse non potest Coke l. 11. f. 52. a. Which Ploydon thus expresseth that it is held as a maxime in 2. R. 2. in trespasse that if any man hath interest to any thing by the grant and assent of another and the party who hath such interest cannot have the principall thing without doing the other thing that he may doe the said other thing and justify it because it is a meanes to come to his profit for there it is holden That if one grant to me all his Trees growing in his Woods I may cut them down and carry them through all his Land and though his Grasse be spoiled with the carriage he shall not have a Writ of trespasse of it for Trees are such things that if they be not carryed by Carts he cannot have them nor make his profit of them But if one sell all his Fish in his Pond and the Vendee dig a trench so as the water may run out that by such meanes he may take the Fish an action of trespasse will lye against the Vendee because he might take the Fish by Nets or other Engines but if there had been no other meanes to take them it had been otherwise and to come to the banks to fish he may well justify it for without it he cannot take them by any meanes so as a man shall alwayes justify the necessary circumstance where he hath title to the principall thing Ployd f. 15. 16. a. vide ibidem plura in Renigers case So when a Lessor in the Lease except the Trees and after hath an intention to sell them the Law giveth to him and to those who will buy them power as incident to the exception to enter and shew the Trees to those who will have them for without entry they cannot view and without view they cannot buy Coke l. 11. f 52. in Lisords case So 19. H. 6.29 A man seised of a mese in a Burrough c. devisable deviseth it to his wife in taile and that if his wife dye without issue that his Executor may sell it and it dispose for his soule in this case the Executor may by the Law enter into the house to see whether it be well repaired or no to the intent to know at what valew he may sell the reversion And the Law giveth power to him who will repaire a Bridge to enter in the Land and to him who hath a Conduit within the Land of another to enter into the Land for it to mend as cause shall require as it is resolved in 9. E. 4.35 Coke ibidem vide plura And Coke l. 5. f. 12. a. If a man hath Mines hidden within his Land and leaseth his Lands and all his Mines in it there the Lessor may dig for them for quando aliquis quid concedit c. and this accordeth with 9. E. 4.8 that if a man lease his Land to another in which there is a Mine to wit an hidden Mine he cannot dig for it and if he doe it is wast but if he lease his Lands and all the Mines in it it is otherwise for the reason aforesaid vide ibidem plura in Saunders case If tenant at will soweth Corne on the ground and the Lessor out him he shall have free entry egresse and regresse to carry it away for when the Law giveth any thing to any one it giveth implicitly whatsoever is necessary for the taking and enjoying of the same and the Law driveth him not to an action for the Corne but giveth him a speedy remedy to enter into the Land and to take and carry it away and compelleth not him to carry it at one time or to carry it before it be ready to be carryed and if the Lessee be disturbed of this way the Law doth give unto him he shal have his action upon the case and recover his damages for whensoever the Law giveth any thing it giveth a remedy for the same Coke com f. 56. a. If there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Lord purchaseth the tenancy in fee the mesnalty is extinct but whereas the tenant held of the meane by five shillings and the mesne of the Lord by twelve pence so as he hath more in advantage by foure shillings he shall have the foure shillings as a rent-seck yearly of the Lord and yet he shall distraine for it for seeing the mesnalty is extinct the Law reserveth the distresse to the rent for quando lex aliquid concedit c. And therefore if a man maketh a Lease for life reserving a rent and bindeth himselfe in a Statute and hath the rent extended and delivered unto him he shall distraine for the rent because it cometh to him by course of Law Multa constituuntur in lege ne curia Domini Regis deficeret in Justitia
tenant of the Land to be summoned whereas he was not summoned and the tenant looseth by default upon the grand Cape returned the tenant may have a writ of deceit against the recoverer and against the Sheriff for his false returne F. N. B. 97. C. and may defeate the judgement and no damages shall be recovered against the Sheriff in such case onely he shall be fined 5. E. 4 4● And if he dye his heire may have an action of deceite and restitution of the Land 8. H. 6.5 If a man bargaine with another and assume upon consideration to enfeoff him of ceraine Land and he enfeoffeth another he to whom the assumpsit was made may have an action of deceite or an action upon the case at his pleasure 3. H. 7.14 If one selleth to another a horse which he knoweth to have a secret disease in his body or selleth Corne which is full of gravell an action of deceite lyeth 20. H. 6.36 without warranty but F.N.B. 94. C. is of the contrary opinion If the Sheriff arrest the body by a Capias ad respondendum and returneth not the Writ the party shall have an action of false imprisonment Kell way f. 3. b. The Law ordaineth that he who will be sure of his goods shall buy them in Market overt and that sale shall bind all strangers as well as vendors and yet it is agreed in 33. H. 6. That sale in open Market shall not bind him who hath right to the goods if the sale be by fraud or the Vendee hath notice that the property of the goods appertaineth to another So the Law hath ordained the Court of the common Pleas as Market-overt for the assurances of Lands by fine so as he that will be assured of Land not onely against the Vendor but against all strangers it is good for him to passe it in this Market-overt by fine yet Covin and deceite shall avoid it overt by fine yet Covin and deceite shall avoid it 〈…〉 a Feoffment by Covin which amounteth to a wrong and disseisin Fine levyed by him who is particeps criminis and who had not nor pretended to have any right to the land shall not be a bar to the Lessor Coke l. 3. f. 78. Fermors Case A resignation made by an Abbot by covin shall not abate the Writ 4 E. 2. 22. A covenous Conveyance that assets shall not descend is not of force 34 E. 3. 19. 19 E. 2. 3. And 17 E. 3.59 That an estate made to the King and Letters patents granted over and all it by covin between him that granted to the King and the Patentee to make an evasion out of the Statute of Mortmaine shall not bind but shall be repealed A presentation obtained by fraud and deceit is voyd Dyer 339. b. Letters of administration obtained by fraud and covin are voyd and shall not repeale the former administration Dyer 339. a. vide Dyer 295. many Cases there put concerning covin If I sell to one cloath and warrant it to be of such a length and it is not of such a length the buyer may have an action of the case against me by vertue of the warranty although the warranty be by word and not written but if the warranty be made at some other time after the bargaine he may not have a Writ of deceit unlesse it be made by writing F. N. B. 98. k. If a man sell to one Seeds and warranteth them to be of another Countrey if they be not a Writ of deceit lyeth but if he warrant that the Horse which he selleth should go fifty miles in a day or that the Seeds shall grow it is otherwise And a Writ of deceit lyeth for selling of corrupt Victuall without warranty but not for selling of rotten Sheep though it be with warranty but to warrant a thing which is evident to sense as to be black which is blew is voyd unlesse the buyer be blind or the thing which is bought be absent 11 E. 4 7. 3 H. 4. 1. If I sell one certaine Pipes of Wine and warrant them to be good and they be corrupt the Vendee may have an action of the case against the Vendor F.N.B. 99. b. Yet according to the opinion of some an action will lye without warranty 7 H. 4. 14. But Master Fitzherbert saith that there ought to be a warranty and his taste ought to be his judge in such case and where it is with warranty the Writ must say that the Defendant at the time of the warranty made knew that the Wine which he sold was corrupt A Writ of deceit was brought for selling a certain quantity of Wooll and warranting it to be fifty sacks whereas it wanted of that measure the Defendant pleaded in bar that it was weighed before the sale and the servants of the Plaintiffe being his Factors did accept of it and carryed it beyond the Sea whereupon the Plaintiff demurred 13 H. 4. 1. Semper qui dolo fecit quominus haberet pro eo habendus est ac si habet Reg. J. C. Alwayes whosoever shall give or grant any thing by fraud whereby he may seem not to have it he is to be esteemed as if he hath it And therefore if a man by fraud make a Deed of gift of all his goods to one of his Creditors to deceive the rest the gift by the Statute of 13 Eliz. is voyd Twins case l. 3. f. 81 quod vide where you shall finde the signes and marks of fraud accurately and fully discovered And Coke l. 5. f. 60. a. b. debt against the heire upon an obligation the Defendant pleaded Riens per descent the Plaintiff replyed that he had Assets in D. c. and the Plaintiff giveth in evidence that the father dyed seised of lands in fee the Defendant sayd that he aliened before the Writ the Plaintif averred by covin and proved that it was done by fraud to defraud the Plaintiff and therefore it was resolved to be voyd by the Statute of 13 Eliz. c. 5. and that the fraud might be wel given in evidence because the Statute saith that the estate as to the Creditors shall be voyd and therefore shall be taken by favourable interpretation for to suppresse fraud and that it shall be mischeivous to the Creditors and increase maintenance and covin if the Plaintif should be driven to plead that the Feoffment was by fraud because it is comm●nly hatched in arbore cava and so artificially covered and concealed that the party grieved hath no meanes to find and know it and therefore j●dgment was given for the Plaintiff vi●●e ibidem And Burrels case l. 6. f. 730. a. and l. 8. f 133. in Turners case So Hobart f. 72. Humbertons Case Humberton recovered a debt against T H. and dyed and upon a Scire facias against the Ter tenants the Sheriff returned J. H. Tenant of an house that was his at the time of the judgement and J. H. came in and pleaded that T. H.
enfeoffed him long before the judgment in fee absque hoc that he was seised at the time of the judgement or any time after whereupon issue was taken and the Jury found the Feoffment and further sayd That it was made by covin to defraud the Plaintiff and other Creditors and it was judged for the Plaintif vide ibidem plura and fol. 166. Fraus praesumitur si insolitae clausulae apponantur Reg. J. C. and Coke l. 3. f. 81. Clausulae insuetae semper inducunt suspicionem As there in Twins case A Deed of gift was in part adjudged fraudulent because an unusuall clause was inserted in it and for that the Deed contained that the gift was made honestly truely and bona fide vide ibidem plura Dona clandestina sunt semper suspiciosa Coke l. 3. f. 81. Gifts in secret are alwayes subject to the suspition of fraud which there in Twins Case was one of the reasons alledged to prove a Deed of gift fraudulent to wit that it was made in secret And so in Burrels case l. 6. f. 72. the assignment of a Lease was taken to be fraudulent because it was delivered in a secret manner to a person of meane quality And for the same reason by livery and seisin in one County the Lands in another County will not passe Noys Max f. 3. Jus fraus nunquam cohabitant simul Coke l. 10 f. 49. a. Right and fraud never cohabit or dwell together As a Recovery cannot be sayd to be by collusion where tenant in taile is in the Recovery whether he be tenant in Deed or tenant in Law as a Vouchee For the Law hath made all the reversions and remainders as incidents to his estate subject to his pleasure and he hath right and power to bar them all ibidem And Coke l. 8 f 132 b. Covin cannot be alledged in doing of a lawfull act As in a Writ of Dower against a disseisor if the Tenant plead in abatement of the Writ entry by the disseisee the demandant shall not be received to aver the entry to be by covin to abate the writ because the entry is congeable and lawfull and mixed with no wrong as it is holden in 15. E. 4. f. 4. and if a disseisor or an abator endow a feme who hath title of dower it is good because it is a lawfull act Coke l. 5. f. 30. b. Fraus meretur fraudem Ployd f. 100. and the Poet Fraus est concessa repellere fraud●m Fraud and subtilty deserveth fraud and subtilty and it is a lawfull deceit to repell a deceit As in 19 E. 4. f. 27. In appeale of many who pleaded not guilty a Venire facias was awarded against them all and the Court perceiving that the prisoners were in opinion to sever in the challenge of the whole pannell of subtilty to stay the tryall at that time and that every prisoner would challenge as many as they might without danger to wit twenty and that every of them shall have his entire number of twenty so that one shall not be excluded of his number by the challenge of the other and that there was but a small number of men of sufficiency then in the City to be sworne so as by that subtilty the tryall should be stayed for the present The Court agreed that the first pannell and the Tales should be divided and made severall for every one of the prisoners And accordingly said to the prisoners We perceive your subtilty well enough which deserveth little favour of the Court and therefore tell us whether you will agree in your challenges for if you will not the Clarke shall sever the pannell and then they all agreed in their challenges and after the inquest was full evidence was given and there found and one subtilty prevented and repelled by another And this fraud by the Canonists is called Benus dolus of which they have this rule Frangenti fidem fides frangetur eidem To him who breaks his faith no faith is to be shewne And instance in the example of Salomon who did use such cunning betweene the two Harlots in searching out who was the true and naturall Mother of the childe Fulb. 2. l. f. 23. Vendens eandem rem duobus falsarius est Reg. I.C. Coke l. 1. f. 45. a. A man selling the same thing to two is a falfe dealer and therefore in the grant of the King it is dishonourable for him to grant the same possession to one that he or his Progenitors had granted to another for he that selleth the same thing to two persons is a deceiver Fraudis interpretatio non semper ex mente duntaxat sed ex consilio quoque desideratur Reg. I. C. Dolus circuitu non tollitur Coke l. 11. f. 74. a. nec purgatur Bacon Max. f. 3. The interpretation of fraude is not allwayes to be gathered out of the mind but also from the councell and consent and crafty dealing and deceite is not taken away nor purged by the circuity of shifting it from one to another and though covenous acts be conveyed through many hands and mediations yet the Law taketh hold of the corrupt beginning and proceeding As if I make a Feoffment of Lands held in Knights service to I. S. upon condition that within a certaine time he shall enfeoff I.D. which Feoffment of I. D. shall be to the use of the wife of the first feoffor for her joynture c. this Feoffment is within the Statute of 32. H. 8. Bacon ibidem So if one who hath an intention to sell his Land by fraud conveyeth it by deed enrolled to the Queen with an intent to deceive the purchasor and after selleth that Land to another for a valuable consideration and maketh a conveyance accordingly in this case the purchasor shall enjoy the Land against the Queene by the Statute of 27. Eliz. c. 4. For though the Queene be not excepted yet the act being generall and made for the suppression of fraud sh●ll bind the Queen and whosoever maketh the Queen who is the Fountaine of Justice to be an Instrument of covin and fraud and upon it obtaineth Letters Patents such Letters Patents are void or if the Queen be indeavored to take away another mans right and to that end a man obtaineth Letters Patents they shall be repealed though such covin and fraud be not contained in the grant made to the Queen but appeareth onely by averrement dehors for fraud and deceite is not taken away or diminished by the subtility of alienations Coke ibidem in Magdalens Colledge case Non facies malum ut inde fiat bonum it is the Law of God thou shall not doe evill that good may come thereof Coke l. 5. f. 30. b. lib. 11. f 7. 4 a. What hath been said of truth and falsity may be said of good and evill and are so semblable that an apparent good is often mistaken for that which is reall Jun. s 14. Fallit enim vitium
consisteth in idlenesse for idlenesse is the mother of all vices and as Coke there saith principally in young men who ought in their youth to learne profitable sciences and trades which are profitable to the weale publick of which they may reape the fruites in their old age for jeunesse oisense vilesse disettense if in our youth we be idle in our old age we shall be indigent and for that reason the common Law detesteth all Monopolies which prohibit any one to work in any Lawfull trade and that appeareth in 2. H. 5. b. A Dyer was bound that he shall not use his Diers craft for two yeares and there Hull said that the obligation was against the common Law and that by God if the Plaintiff were here he should goe to prison untill he had made fine to the King and so for the same cause if an husbandman be bound that he shall not till and sow the ground the obligation is against the common Law And therefore the act of 5. Eliz. c. 4. that prohibited any person to use or exercise any craft mistery or occupation unlesse he had been an Apprentice for seven yeares doth not make provision onely to the intent that the artificers may be skilfull but that young men shall not be idle in their youth but trained and brought up in lawfull sciences and trades and so by the same reason the common Law doth not prohibit any person to use many Arts and Misteries at his pleasure for nemo prohibitur plures negotiationes sive Artes exercere untill it was prohibited by the Act of Parliament 37. E. 3. 6. That all Artificers c. are bound every one to one mistery and that none use other mistery but that he hath chosen but because that restraint of free trade was prejudiciall to the weale publick at the next Parliament it was enacted that all people should be so free as they were before that Ordinance by which it appeareth that without Act of Parliament no man can be in any manner restrained to worke in any lawfull trade Non negligentibus sed impotentibus succurrendum Reg. I. C. Vigilantibus non dormientibus jura subveniant Ployd f. 357. b. The Law helpeth and releiveth those are impotent not those are negligent As if you disseise me of my Land and then A. bringeth a Writ of right against you and you joyn the mise upon the meer right and you make default after the mise joyned he shall recover to him and his Heires for ever quit of you and your Heires for ever and if I doe not lay my claime within a yeare a day I am barred for ever for the Law succoureth those that are watchfull and not sleepy so as non-claime by a yeare and a day upon a recovery by default where finall judgement is given was a good Bar by the common Law 5. E. 3.222 by Hor. A descent cast during the Coverture where the wife is disseised barreth her not of her entry after her husbands death but if a feme-sole be disseised and then taketh an husband there a descent during the coverture taketh away her entry for it was her folly to take such an husband that entred not in time Littleton 95. Negligentia semper habet comitem infortunium Coke l. 8. f. 133. a. Sa. Turnors case An Executor of an Administrator ought to execute his office and administereth the goods of the dead lawfully truly and diligently Lawfully in the payment of all dueties debts and legacies in such precedency and order as they ought to be paid by the Law truly to convert nothing to his own use and ought not by any practise or devise to bar or hinder any creditor of his debt but ought truly to execute his office according to the trust reposed in him And diligently as in the case at bar for when the Administrators which had judgement for one hundred pounds for sixty pounds and the Plaintiff offered a release or to acknowledge satisfaction and he deferreth it to the intent that the Judgement shall stand in force by which the Plaintiff shall be defrauded of his due debt and the Administrators to convert the goods of the debt to their private use let the agreement be precedent before the recovery or subsequent since the recovery it is all one as to the creditor who is a third person for he is defrauded as well by the one as the other and the creditor who is a stranger shall loose his debt which is by the Law due to him and if any prejudice accreweth to the Administrators in this case it is in his own default for the Plaintiff would have released to them or acknowledged satisfaction but they defer it to the intent to bar the Plaintiff of his just and true debt and negligence hath allwayes misfortune or ill luck for her companion Ibidem Coke l. 2. f. 26. b. If a creditor upon a commission upon a Statute of Bankrupt either by obstinacy doe refuse or by carelessnesse neglect to come before the Commissioners within the time limited and to crave the benefit of the Act he looseth the benefit thereof for the Law releiveth those which are vigilant and not dormant for otherwise a debt may be concealed or a creditor may absent himselfe and void the proceedings of the Commissioners and every creditor ought to take notice of the commission it being a matter of record Coke l. 4. f. 10. b. in Bevills case it was said that the Act of 32. H. 8. c. 2. by expresse words extendeth onely to actuall possession and seisin and not to releive those which for so long time had neglected to have actuall seisin of their services and namely of suite which ought to be made twice every yeare and it was said that it was crassa supina negligentia which that Law did not intend to releive for as it is commonly said vigilantibus c. Ibidem Coke l. 4. f. 82. b. in Sir Andrew Corbets case who deviseth Lands to R. C. and others to have and to hold to them and the survivor of them untill such time that the summ of eight hundred pounds c. was received out of the issues rents c. for the preferment of his Daughters it was resolved though the Devisee had notice of the devise yet if a stranger had occupied the Land the Devisee ought to take notice at his perill for vigilantibus c. and none by the Law in such case is bound to give him notice as in the case of arbitrement 1. H. 7.5.8 E. 4.1 ibidem And this is the reason of a lapse incurring for want of presentment or of a warranty barring for lack of entry or of descents barring for want of claime and a title to tenant in courtesy is lost for lack of entry and that Statutes of limitation do bar actions One seised of Lands devisable deviseth that his Executors shall sell his Land and distribute the profits for the use of the poore and dyeth If a