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A87798 Jurisdictions or, The lawful authority of courts leet, courts baron, court of marshallseys, court of pypowder, and ancient demesne : together with the most necessary learning of tenures, and all their incidents, of essoynes, imparlance, view; of all manner of pleadings, of contracts, of the nature of all sorts of actions, of maintenance; of diverse other things, very profitable for all students of innes of court and chancery : and a most perfect directory for all stewards of any the sayd courts. / Heretofore writ in French by the methodically learned, John Kitchin of Grays-Inne, Esq; and now most exactly rendred to more ample advantage in the English tongue; with a demonstrative table, pointing out all matter of consequence, throughout the whole work. Whereunto is added the authentick formes of all manner of writs, with their severall returnes in English, very usefull for all men in this Common-wealth, as they be now used.; Court leete et court baron. English Kitchin, John. 1651 (1651) Wing K656; Thomason E1225_1; ESTC R211060 481,896 637

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so high and not upon bare matter DEbt upon arrearages of Annuity the Defendant saith that he let the Mannour of D. to him in recompence and it is no Plea for it is not so high 19 H. 8. fol. 9. Trespasse upon the Statute of Rich. The Defendant pleads in Barre warranty of the Ancestor of the Plaintiffe and demands Judgement if against the warranty c. and it is no Plea for Damages is onely to berecovered 10 H. 7. fol. 12. Trespasse the Defendant may plead Fine with Proclamation Judgement if Action but not to relie upon the estoppell 27 H. 8. fol. 27. 14 H. 4. fol. 27. Debt upon a Lease by Indenture the Defendant saith that he hath bestowed the Rent upon reparations by commandement of the Plaintiffe and it is not good for it is not so high 10 H. 7. fol 4 Debt upon arrearages of a Lease for years the Defendant pleads agreement and it is not so high 1 H. 7. fol. 14. The Defendant cannot avoid specialty by bare matter as to say the specialty was delivered to him in place of an acquittance for it is not so high 10 Ed. 4. fol. 18 Debt upon an Obligation endorsed with condition that if the Defendant serve him in all his lawfull commands c. the Defendant may plead that he discharged him and it is good without specialty for the condition is matter in deed 18 Ed. 4. fol. 9 If one covenant by Indenture to make me a house before such a day and he plead that I discharged him before the day it is good without specialty for I cannot come upon his Land after discharge 19. Ed. 4. fol. 2 the same 21 H. 6. fol. 36. Trespasse of taking his Apprentice the Defendant saith that the Plaintiffe discharged him before the Trespasse of taking and it seems no Plea for that he is an Apprentice by Indenture and the discharge without specialty and to another person 9 Ed. 4. fol. 57. Annuity the Defendant pleads levied by distresse in another County and so that he owes him nothing and it is good but that he owes him nothing onely is no Plea against specialty 3 H. 6. fol. 41. Scire facias upon recovery of arrerages of annuity Defendant pleads that the Deed of annuity was delivered to him in lieu of an Acquittance and it is no Plea against a recovery 11 H. 4. fol. Debt upon arrerages before Auditors the Defendant pleads that he hath an obligation for the same and it is no Plea for it is not so high 11 H. 7. fol. 13. VVaste Defendant pleads an agreement between him and the Plaintiff and it is no Plea for the Inheritance is to be recovered in this writ and for that it is no Plea Scire facias upon a Recognisance to have one here at a certaine day to appeare it is no Plea to say I have been there without shewing his appearance of Record for it is not so high 7 H. 6. fol. 26. B. Debt upon arrerages of account before Auditors the the Defendant pleads Abitrement and it is no Plea against matter of Record before Auditors 3 H. 6. f. 55. 8 H. 5. f. 3. the same 10 H. 6. tit 44. 4 H. 6. fol. 17. and 3 H. 4. f. 7. H. 4. f. 6. adjudged Debt upon an obligation the Defendant cannot plead payment for it is not so high 1 H. 7. fol. 14. Debt upon an obligation endorced upon condition the Defendant may plead that the Plaintiff hath retained parcell of the smaller summ hanging the VVrit and it is good in abatement without specialty 5 H. 7. f. 4. Action upon the Statute of Rich. If the Defendant plead Act of Parliament by force of which he was seised till the Plaintiff entered upon him upon which he re-entered the which is the same Trespasse c. and concludes Judgement if action it is good 3 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Annnity by grant the Defendant saith in abatement that after the action brought that the Plaintiff hath retained part of the arrerages and it is no Plea without specialty for it is not so high 22 Ed. 4. fol. 51. Debt upon an obligation the Defendant pleads receit of parcell hanging the VVrit Judgment of the writ and it is not good without specialty 7 Ed. 4. fol. 15. 15 H. 7. fol. 10. Debt upon a single obligation of twenty pound the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff hath received parcell hanging the VVrit and demands Judgment of the VVrit and it is no Plea without shewing Acquittance for it is not so high VVaste the Defendant pleads agreement to make fludgates only and agreement is no Plea in this action for it is not so high for Land is to be recovered 13 H. 7. f. 20. 11 H. 7. f. 13. Covenant upon specialty the Defendant pleads arbitrement and it is not good for it is not so high 3 H. 4. fol. 2. Debt upon obligation the Defendant cannot plead that the Plaintiff delivered this obligation again to him in place of an Acquittance and took it again from him for it is not so high 5 H. 4. fol 2. Debt for Rent upon a Lease by Indenture the Defendant cannot plead payment for it is not so high but payment and so he owes him nothing is good but where a Lease is by word payment in Debt upon that is good 1 H. 5 fol. 6 See 46 E. 3. f. 1. See 10 H. 7.24 b. 11 H 7.4 b. 20 H. 6.20 b. 9 Ed. 4.27 Debt upon obligation upon condition the Defendant may plead payment according to the condition without specialty 5 H 7 fol. 41. 5 Edw. 4 fol 5. the same Debt for Rent upon a Lease payment is no Plea without saying and so he owes him nothing but payment in another County is good without concluding and so he oweth him nothing 33 H 6 fol 4. 10 H 7 fol 4.3 H 7 fol 3. Debt upon a bargaine where the Defendant may wage his Law he cannot plead payment in another County 18. H 6 fol 13. 10 H 7 f 4. 11 H 74 b. Count. Count shall be more certaine then a Barr and yet sometimes it is good by intendment that is if Common reason do not imply contrary to the Count it is good by intendment DEbt upon obligation without date yet the Plaintiff ought to count when it was made But otherwise it is if the Defendant plead an Acquittance without date 3 H. 4. f. 5. 6 Ed. 4. f. 11. Debt or annuity without date the same 5 H. 7.24 B. of annuity Quare impedit If the Plaintiff counts that foure persons were seised of a Mannour to which the Advowson is appendant whose Estate he hath it is not good without counting how he hath it otherwise it is in Barr 2 H 6. fol. 10. Action upon the case of borrowing a Horse to ride to York and counts that he rode him further he ought to count in what County York is 21 Ed 4. fol 79 b Debt and counts that if the Defendant make voluntary wast
iustifie by command of him to whose use he ought to say that at the time of the commandement they were seised to the use c. the same Law if one plead a Lease and Release he ought to say that he was possessed at the time of the Release made 10 H. 7. f. 26. 7 H. 7 f. 3. the same That which is Issuable ought to be pleaded certainly ONe avows for that that the Plaintiffe held of him by a Knights Fee and this is not good for that he doth not shew by what Knights Fee 12 H. 8. fol. 13. 3 H. 7. f. 2. One traverses the Office found after the death of the Lord Greystock the Kings Tenant which was found that he died seised and he said that the Dean of York recovered against the Lord G. in a Writ of Right long before the finding of the Office and it may be he recovered against him long before the finding the office and it might be after the death of the Lord Greystock and for that it is not good for it is uncertain So if one plead that he entred for that that his Tenant aliened in Mortmain he ought to shew that he entered within the year otherwise it is not good 26 H. 8. fol. 2. Debt upon Obligation indorsed with condition if he make an Estate as it shall be devised by the Plaintiffe Defendant saith that he hath made an Estate and it is not good without shewing what Estate 1 H. 7. fol. 13. One comes to reverse an Outlawry of Felonie and pleads that he was in the Castle of Oxford at the time of the Outlawry published and for that he doth not shew in what County the Castle is nor under whose custody it is uncertain and not good for these are Issuable 2 H. 7. f. 6. Dower against the Heire he saith that he was ready to render Dower if she would deliver to him the Writings concerning his Land and for that he doth not shew what Writings incertain it is nor good for it is Issuable Affirmative and Negative Issue shall be upon the Affirmative and Negative and it shall not be answered by Argument DEbt against the Administrators of J.S. Defendant saith that J. S. made him Executor Judgement of the VVrit he shall say without that that he died intestate for this is alledged by the Plaintiffe 9 H. 6. fol. 7. 11 H. 4. fol. 88 Trespasse of taking six beasts the Defendant iustifies the taking of them by agreement the Plaintiffe saith they were other six and ought to traverse without that that he took those six in the Negative 11 H. 6. f. 1. VVrit upon the Statute of Labourers and counts that the Defendant was a Vagrant and he required him to serve and he refused Defendant saith that he was in the Service of J. S. and shall say without that that he was a Vagrant 1 H. 6. f. 15. Formedon in Reverter and counts of a gift in Tail the Defendant saith that the Donor gave in Fee and it is not good but he shall say without that that he gave in Tail 10 H. 6. f. 7. Account for the Heire against a VVoman Guardian in Socage Defendant saith that the father of the Insant held of her in Knights Service and died and Defendant seised him and he ought to say without that that he held by Knights Service 14 H. 8. fol. 4. The Avowant saith that W. the tenth day of February year twenty five granted his Interest to him and avowed doing damage Plaintiffe saith that W. the first day of Feb. year twenty five granted his Interest to him and he put in his beasts without that that he granted that to the Avowant before he granted that to him and good 38 H. 6. f. 17. Action upon the Case of that that he hath Leet and Fines and Amerciaments of the same Defendant saith true it is that the Plaintiffe hath Leet but that he the Defendant hath Fines and Amerciaments he ought to say without that that the Plaintiffe hath the F●nes and Amerciaments 18 H. 6. f. 8. Debt upon an Obligation dated the twentieth of Aprill and first delivered the second of May the Defendant pleads Release the last day of April and that the Obligation was delivered when it bore date and for that that he hath not traversed in the Negative that is to say without that that it was first delivered the second day of May it is not good 32 H. 6. f. 4. Debt and Counts of a Lease of a House rendering twenty shillings Defendant saith that he let the House and four Acres rendering twenty shillings and ought to traverse otherwise it is but an Answer by Argument 32 H. 8. f. 8. Debt against Executors Defendant saith that the Testator died intestate that the Administration was granted to him he ought to say without that that he is Executor or administred as Executor 1 H. 7. f. 13. Debt upon a simple Contract Defendant saith it was upon Condition and shall say without that that he sold in manner and form 4 H. 7. f. 9. Partition Defendant saith that he was onely seised and shall say without that that he held as undivided 6 H. 7. f. 5. 4 H. 6. fol. 4. Debt against J. S. of D. Defendant saith that he is dwelling at S. and shall say and not at D. 19 H. 6. f. 1. the same 7 Ed. 4. f. 16. Scire facias against a Parson for Arrerages of an Annuity Defendant saith that before the Writ purchased he resigned to the Bishop of L. and so that remaines in his hands Judgement of the Writ and it is no Plea for it is but an Answer by Argument and for that he shall say without that that he was Parson day of the Writ purchased or afterwards 11 Ed. 4. fol. 4. Action upon the Statute of Rich. by J. Freestone Defendant saith that the Master of the Colledge of Maidstone and his fellow-brethren let c. Plaintiff saith at the time of the making of the Lease there were not any fellow-brethren of the said Colledge and this is but an Argument and for that he shall say without that that the Master and his fellow-brethren let 14 H. 8. f. 29. Issue shall be upon Affirmative and Negative 9 H. 7. fol. 13. Trespasse Defendant justifies for Fealty not made the Plaintiff saith it was not unmade and good in the Negative Material Let us see what things are material in pleading Evidence and Verdict and otherwise and what not ACtion upon the Case in London and counts that he was possessed of Wine and Stuff and shews that certain in such a Ship and the Defendant at London assumed for ten pounds that if the Ship and Goods did not come safe to London and are put upon the Land there that then he shall satisfie one hundred pounds to the Plaintiff and counts that aftewards the Ship was ●obbed upon the Trade in the Sea and for not satisfying Action did accrue and though that the Plaintiff doth not shew where
Affraies and blood-shed but not if one hath broken my Close or if one hath beaten me but if any Affray were so that the Kings People were disturbed for that is more then particuler 1 R. 3 fol. 1. If one come to make a Boothe and doth it not and yet one maketh a Fray upon him and upon him draw blood with his Sword or Dagger it is punishable by presentment in Leet 11 H. 6. fol. 29. If one assault to beat you and you fly and he inclose you or if you be at Hedge or Ditch and then you beat him and wound him this is not punishable in a Leet 34 H. 6. fol. 8. and 33. H. 6. fol. 20. If J. S. makes an Assault upon a Stranger and J. D. draws his Sword and beats and wounds J. S. in defence of the Stranger this is punishable by a presentment in a Leet But if a Servant beat and wound one which maketh an assault upon his Master in defence of his Master he is not punishable by presentment in Leet 12 H. 8. fol. 3. and 9 Ed. 4. fol. 51. If one lay his hands unlawfully upon any unlesse that he arrest him or part two that fight he is a trespassor but that is not punishable by presentment in Leet 9 Ed 4. fo 3. If one beat one in defence of his Goods this is not punishable in a presentment in Leet Booke of Entries fol. 553. and 19. H. 6. fol 21. Trespss of Assaults and Fraies TRespass by a Chaplain of Grayes Inne the Defendant pleads of his own Assault and it was held if he upon whom the Assault is made can escape with his life it is not lawfull for him to beate the other which made the Assault but it is held that I ought not to stay till the other hath given me a blow for paradventure he commeth too short 2 H. 4. fol. 9.10 Ed. 4. fol. 7. Trespasse of Grassetrod and threatning of life and member a man cannot justifie the menace of death and for that to that he pleads not guilty 21 H. 6. tit 26. the same 33 H. 6. fol. 20. Trespasse of Threatning by Prisot I cannot threaten one of Life and Member but if he upon whom the Assault is made fly and the other followeth him so neere that he cannot escape or hath him under him upon the Ground or hath chased him to a Wall Hedge Water or Ditch there it is lawfull for him to say if you will not depart that he to save his Life will kill him 3 H. 4. fol. 8 Trespasse of Assault Imprisonment and Battery Defendant plead to the Battery not guilty and to the Assault that the Plantiff came to such a River where the Defendant had a Mill and would have stopt the River and the Defendant took him by the Arme without that that he made other Assault and to the Imprisonment the Defendant pleads that the Plantiff Assaulted him and would have beate him by which he prayed the Constable to arrest him and he came in aid of him judgment if action and good 22 H. 6. fol. 48. Trespasse of a Servant beaten and Entry into his House yeare 7 H. 6. Defendant saith that yeare 8 H. 6. he served a Subpena upon the Plaintiff and that the Plaintiff and the Servant took him and carried him to his House and there deteined him half a day which is the same Trespasse and to any Trespasse before not guilty to the Battety of his Servant which was of his Assault at another day and to any Assault before not guilty Bracton saith he is not worthy of Peace which will not keep it Stamford fol. 30 a. 40 Ed. 3. fol. 40. Trespasse of Assault and Battery and found the Assault only and Plaintiff recover but shall not have action of Assault only 42 Ed 3 fol 7 the same and see 22 Assise 60. 9 Ed 4 fol 30 Trespasse of Battery it was held that if a man will take my goods I may lay my hands upon him and rather beate him then suffer him to carry them away 19 H. 6. fol. 33 the same that he may beat one in defence of his Goods 19 Ed 4 fol 189 Trespasse of Battery a man may Justifie the beating of another in his defence but by Catesby a man cannot beat another in defence of his Son but a Servant may beat one in defence of his Master or Mistris 21 H 7 fol 39. the same Mortmaine Mortmaine is inquirable in a Leet for that it is for the benefit of the King and in the Kings Court What is Mortmaine within the Statute and what not WHere one Abbot aliens to another Abbor or Bishop to another Bishop and his Successor it is Mortmaine Fitzh fol 222 D. 16 Assise 1. VVhere Land is divised to one to pay twelve pound to finde two Chaplaines for ever to sing in the Church of Saint Albanes in Wood street for ever if it be behinde that the Chaplaine may distraine that is Mortmaine see 32 Ed 3 10 and 40. Assise 29. J. S. deviseth certaine Land to his Executors that they should provide a fit Chaplaine in the Church of D. to celebrate for ever which Chaplaine shall receive yearly out of the aforesaid Lands six markes that is no Mortmaine for nothing is divised to the Chaplaine 4 Assise 27.43 Assise 27. Foure Acres were devised to one in Fee so that he and his Heires should pay yearly six pound for the maintaining of one Chaplaine to celebrate yearly for ever in the Church of Saint Leonards in Estcheape and that the Rector for the time may levie it for ever that is Mortmaine 43 Assise 33. J. S. deviseth Land and two shillings Rent for the maintaining of a Chaplaine in the Church of D. yearly to celebrate and I will that my Executors should ordaine the aforesaid Chaplaine and the Executors do nothing therefore no Mortmaine 43 Assise 34. If a Villain of a Bishop purchase Lands in Fee and the Bishop enter without license it is Mortmaine 41 of Assises 4 Fitzh 224 B. 41 Ed. 3. fol 16. If a Feoffment be made to the use of a Bishop and his Successors it is within the Statute De religiosis and so it is where he takes profits 8 Ed 4. fol. 18. A Bishop cannot appropriate an Advowson of which he is seised in Fee without the Kings license and if he doth it is Mortmaine Fitzh 223 H. see 21 Ed. 3. fol 5. seemeth contrary If one let to a religious man for a hundred yeares and so from a hundred to a hundred during eight hundred yeares this is Mortmaine but it seemeth that a lease to a Religious man for eighty years or for a hundred yeares is no Mortmaine but in the first case it is by colour of a Tearme and Mortmaine 29 H 8 Mortmaine 39. Lease for eighty years to an Abbot by Martin is Mortmain Quere 4 H. 6. fol. 9. The Tenant lets for life to J. S. the Remainder to a Religious and his Successors the Lord need
six English men otherwise the Jury shall not be taken and so shall be Tales of that 4 Mar. b. Tit. Jurors 8. Jury tooke a Writing of the Plaintiff which was not delivered to them in Court and passed for the Plaintiff and for that that this matter appeared to the Court by examination therefore the Plaintiff shall have no Judgment 35 H. 8. B. Tit. Replead 54. It was in use in the Kings bench though that the Jury was ready to passe there if there be a Jeofaile apparent in the Record the Jury shall be discharged 26 H. 8. f. 6. Jurors after they are in the House return to heare evidence again upon matter which they were in doubt of and may 14 H. 7. f. 1. The Jury eate and drink before the Evidence finished or after they are agreed depart and drink before Verdict they shall be Fined and the Verdict is good but if he eat and drink after evidence given and before they agree the Verdict is void And it seems that this matter shall be shewed when the Jury comes in to give their Verdict and shall be examined and not after And it seems that the Jurors may depart asunder by cause of great tempest of a House falling or fire where they are Execution For that that execution is used in many Court-Barons by Levari facias let us see what Goods upon that may be taken in Execution and what not and the order of execution GOods pawned shall not be taken in execution for the Debt of him which pawned them during the time they are pawned 34 H. 8 Pledge 28. and 4 Ed. 6. Distresse 75. Where A. lets Oxen for time and after A. is condemned these Oxen during the tearme shall not be taken in execution 22 Ed. 4. f. 10. Debt in Court-Baron the Plaintiff recovers by Judgment and shall have execution and the Beasts of the Defendant were taken and delivered to him in Execution 33 Ed. 3. Tit. Execution 133. In Debt where three are bonnd joyntly and severally and hath of those three severall Judgments and if Execution be against one the other shall have a supersedeas but in trespasse against three Execution against one doth not suffice and the same Law is in a ioynt Debt 4 Ed. 4. fol. 39. By Fieri facias or Levari facias the Officer cannot break the Doore nor Chest to take Goods in Execution for if he do trespasse lies against him for the breaking only 18 Ed. 4. f. 4. 13 Ed. 4. fol. 9. by Choke notwitstanding 8 Ed. 2. Tit. Executors 152. contrary If one recovers in Court-Baron he shall not have execution by Eierifacias nor otherwise but may distrain the Defendant after Judgement and detaine the distresse in their hands in safegard till the Defendant hath satisfied the Plaintiff of the condemnation 22 Ass 72 Statham 11 Ed. fol. 93. Nat. Bre. fol. 165 and 4 H. 6. fol. 17 action Bailiff in Court Baron cannot sell the Goods in execution but shall restraine them as distresse notwithstanding where it is used to make Levari facias it is a good custome and note that it is used in many Mannors that the goods are praised and execution made of them by Levari facias 22 Book of Ass 72. A Writ of Execution Judicii lieth where Judgement is given in a Court-Baron upon a Writ of right patent or in debt or trespasse and the Bailiff will not make execution this Writ lieth as well as it lieth where Judgement is given in a Court of Record and the Sheriff will not make execution and if he will not levy the execution upon the Goods it was in vaine to award this Writ Fitzh f. 20. A. Capias doth not lye in Court-Baron and for that the Capias to satisfie doth not lye to have execution and Elegit doth not lye there c. for this is given by the Statute of Westm 2. chap. 18. 29 H. 8. Tit. Execution B. 132. Two are bound in an obligation joyntly and severally if he sue one and takes his Body by a Capias to satisfie yet he may take the other but if one satisfie him the other may plead that 37 H. 8. Tit. condition B. 16. One taken by a Capias to satisfie is in execution though that be not returned 13. H. 4. Tit. Avowris 237. One avowes for that that J. S. was seised of a place where c. And let that to the Plaintiff for life rendring Rent and after J.S. grants the reversion to B. who was bound in a recognsance to the Avowant and that the Avowant hath that Rent delivered in execution and good 15 Ed. 3. Tit. Execution 93. Rent was delivered in execution upon a Recognisance time of Ed. 1. Title Audita querela 402. If the Father be bound in a Recognisance and dies and his Issue within age the Execution shall not be against him for if it be he shall have an Assise Time of Ed. 1 Tit. 417. If a man takes a Wife and after be bound and dyes the VVife is indowed if she be outed by extent she shall have Assise 29 H. 8. Tit. Stat. Merchant 40. If one sue Execution upon a Statute and he accept part of the Land in name of all he shall not have extent of the residue but it seems upon a Nihil returned upon the Testatum he may have processe into another County 2 R. 3. f. 8. Statute Staple was certified by the Maior of the Staple and the Conisee upon that sues a VVrit to take the Body and to extend his Land in Suff. and Middlesex only and this VVrit was not returned and by Certiorare he caused the Maior to certifie the Statute again and upon that he hath a VVrit of extent in ten Counties but not in Suff. and Middlesex and this VVrit is not returned and he hath the third Certificate and the third VVrit of Extent into six Counties but not in Suff. and Middle and now hath his Extent and hath Land that the Cognifor hath in right of his VVife which died and for threats durst not take the profits of the residue and by all the Justices the Cognisee shall have a Capias into the County where he took his first Writ and not otherwise that is into the County of Suff. and Middlesex only upon the fourth Certificate and upon that the Conisor found suerties to the King and party according to the Statute 11 H. 6. chap. 10. He shall have a Scire facias against the Conisee to prove the matter in his VVrit and to be at the Judgment in the Court and if he faile of any he shall forfeit his Recognisance 2 R. 3. fol. 9. If the Conisee of a Statute dies his Executors or Administrators if he dye Intestate shall have execution upon it without suing Scire facias or that the Conisor cannot have any Plea although he have a deed of Release but if he have a Release he shall have an Audita querela or a Scire facias and so it is where one
which is no Executor sues an Execution the Conisor shall have this VVrit but upon recovery by the Statute of West 2. One may have a fieri facias within the yeare to have Execution and after the yeare may have Scire facias and if a man be bound in two Statutes one after the other and he which hath the last Statute hath first Execution the other shall have a Scire facias and have execution and if the Sheriff upon a VVrit to have execution returns the Conisor dead the Conisee shall have a Scire facias against the Heire of the Coniser and the Land Tenants 25 H. 7. fol. 17. VVhere the Conisee to whom a Statute is made dyes his Executors shall have Execution without suing Scire facias for that it is given by the Statute but where one hath a Judgment and dies it is otherwise West 2. chap. 45. gives Scire facias upon Judgment and upon Fine 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Husband is bound in a Statute and Lands of his VVife were extended and after the VVife dies and the Heire of the VVife enters now may the Conisee have a Capias for the Body of the Conisor though he had not that at the first for that that the Statute gives the Lands Goods and Body and if execution be defeated by lawfull entry he shall not have a Re-extent but if the Conisor himselfe take the profits of the Conisee or that the profit be destroyed by wild-fire or water the Conisee may hold over his Tearm and the Conisor cannot enter during the Tearme of extent but shall have a Scire facias and shall not have that before the Tearme ended without aquittance or that he leave Money in the Court and where the Conisee is satisfied within the tearm by casuall profit the Conisor shall have upon that a Venire facias and upon that a Scire facias And if it be extended too low the Conisor may lay the Money in Court and recover his Land and if it be found too high the Conisee may pray that the Extenders may take the Land c. 11 H. 6. fol. 8. If the Land extended be drowned by water within the Tearm the Conisee may hold over the Tearm and the same Law where he is outed by a Guardian in Knights service 15 Ed. 4. f. 5. 22 H. 8. chap. 5. VVhere Lands delivered by reasonable extent in Execution have been recovered or lawfully diversted from the Conisee of the Satute Merchants Statute Staple or Recognisances before they have been fully satisfied and paid there Debts without fraud or covin remedy given by Scire facias against the Recognisors to levy the residue VVhere a VVoman recovers dammages in Dower in the Bench she cannot have execution there of those dammages recovered by capias ad satisfaciendum for that that the Capias doth not lye in the Originall 11 H. 7. f. 15. 2 H. 4. f. 7. The Statute of Westm 2 chap. 18. gives Elegit that is to say That the Sheriffe shall deliver all the Chattells of the Debtor except the Oxen and Beasts of the Plow and the half of his Land that doth not extend to a Court-Baron but to Courts where Process is directed to the Sherift and the Statute is also when a Debt is recovered in a Court of the Kings and Court-Baron cannot award the halfe of the Land in Execution for it is no Court of the Kings but of the Lords and he cannot meddle with Lands without the Kings Command but in other Courts Execution shall be of Lands which hath a day of Judgement given and of Goods in this Court and Beasts which the party hath day of the Execution awarded and see also execution of Recognisances and of Statutes for your Learning Execution shall be of Land which hath day of recovery 7 Ed. 3. f. 93. and 21. Ass 2. A man shall have Execution of Lands which he had day of the Judgement and not before Abridgment Ass fol. 93. 19. Ed. 2. Fitzh Execution 249. Natura brevium fol. 168. A man shall have execution in Debt of no Land but of of that which the Defendant had day of the Judgement given and of Chattels which he had day of the Execution sued Natura brevium fol. 107. and 2 H. 4. fol. 15. It seems that all the halfe of the Lands which a Recognisor hath which enters into a Recognisance day of that or after are liable in execution by Elegit 24 Ed. 3. fol. 27. tit Execution 90. Fitzh 267. D. 2 H. 4. fol. 9. Note where one is bound in a Statute Execution shall be of all his Lands which he had day of the Statute acknowledged or after in whose hands they come by Feoffment or otherwise but it is not said so of Goods and Chattells And for that they shall not have them in whose hands they come but those only which he had in his hands day of the execution awarded But if the Cognisor after the Statute acknowledged lets his Land for yeares the Cognisee may out the Lessee for the words are in whose hands they come by Feoffment or in other manner Statute of Merchants fol 48. To have execution of a Statute Merchant first you shall have a Writ of Certificate in the Chancery and there upon Certificate shall goe a Capias returnable in the Common Bench or Kings Bench and then within one quarter of a yeare that it shall be taken shall goe an Extent of all his Goods and Lands See the Statute of Merchants 37 H. 6. fol. 6. Fitzh 130. G. Statute Staple shall be certified as the Statute Merchant is and upon that shall goe a Writ of execution to take him and to extend his Lands and this shall be returned in the Chancery and not into the Common Bench or Kings Bench as the VVrit of execution upon a statute Merchant shall be and upon this shall goe a Liberate Fitz. fol. 131. D. 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Upon a statute Staple he shall have the body lands and goods by a VVrit and upon a statute Merchant First a Capias by a quarter of a yeare c. and upon the returne of that Non est inventus shall have a VVrit to have execution of his Goods and Lands Upon a statute Staple after a Certificate shall goe out a VVrit to take his body and to extend his lands in what County he will and if that be returned he cannot have Extent in another County that is to say a Liberate 2 R. 3. fol. 7. Upon a statute Staple shall goe a Capias out of the Chancery returnable in the Chancery to take his body and to seife his lands into the Kings hands and at the day of returne of that Liberate 37 H. 6. fol. 6. Note that the Statute of Merchants fol. 79. is That an execution upon a Recognizance shall not be made as it is upon a Statute Merchant but as it was used by the Law before the making of this Statute and this was to
If Sommons in Precipe be not served fifteen days before the first day of the return of the Writ the Tenant may wage his Law of not sommoned 42 Ed. 3. fol. 7. Precipe at the great Cape returned the Tenant tenders his Law of not sommoned and at the day comes to wage his Law And the Demandant offers to waive the default and prays that the Tenant may plead in cheif But cannot if the Tenant will not assent by which he made his Law and the Demandant takes nothing by his Writ But at the first day that the Tenant offered his Law the Demandant might have released the default 27 H. 8. fol. 17. the same 2 H. 5. fol 1. Formedon at the great Cape returned the Demandant is essoined and for that the Tenant need not wage his Law for the default is saved 18 H. 6. fol 6.3 H. 6. fol. 50. the same 8 Ed 4. fol 2 Precipe If the Demandant be essoined the day that the Tenant tenders his Law the default is saved he need not wage his Law of not summoned But if it be at the day that he hath waged his Law it is otherwise for he cannot release the default 33 H. 6. fol. 49. the same 7 Ed. 3. tit 51. Saving default Fitzh at the Petty Cape returned the Demandant was essoined and had day over at which day he took him to the default and the Tenant was put to answer at the default notwithstanding the said Essoine 5 Book of Ass 11. the same 4 Ed. 3. tit 62. F. At the great Cape returned the Demandant was essoined and day given over at which day the Demandant took him at default by which it was awarded that he take nothing by his Writ 3 H. 6. fol. 48. Precipe at the great Cape returned the Defendant saith that he was imprisoned by J. S. upon a Statute Merchant by vertue of a Statute acknowledged to him that he could not come and notwithstanding that this was his own act that is to say the acknowledging the Statute and not paying it yet the Imprisonment was by the act of the Law and his default and by that Plea his default was saved The same Law of encrease of water 12 Ed. 4. fol. 44. Saving default F. 42 Ed 3. fol 7. Precipe at the Petty Cape ret●●●ed the Tenant saith that he was in Prison at the time of the default made ready c. And the Demandant to the contrary that he was at large and the Enquest taken sound that he was in prison by which the Demandant took nothing by his Writ 13 Ed. 3. Tit. 49. F. 18 Ed. 3. tit 35. F. At the great Cape returned the Tenant saith that he was in prison c. The demandant saith that he was in prison by his own consent and by fraud to save his default And the Tenant was driven to aver that he was in prison against his will and upon this Issue taken 14 Ed 3 tit 39. F. 13 Ed 3. tit 49. At the petty Cape returned the Tenant saith that he was in prison upon a Statute c. and the demandant saith that that was by covin and so Issue taken that he was in prison against his will taken and others to the contrary 39 H. 6. fol 17. The Attorney may save the default where his Master came and for that both may save the default by encrease of water and by Imprisonment and not by weakness neither of the one nor of the other for that cannot be tryed if he may come without unavoidable perill of death or not 38 H 6. fol 12. Weaknesse of an Attorney is not sufficient to save a default but encrease of water and Imprisonment is a cause See 50 Ed. 3. fol. 9. And the Tenant plead in abatement matter for mischeif of war and death which proves the Writ abated without saving his default 40 Ed 3. fol. 2. Precipe against H. son of W. Osmond the Tenant at the great Cape comes without saving his default and saith that his Father is named Edmond and not Osmond and for mischeif of the war he shall have that plea before default saved by waging of Law 40 Ed. 3. fol. 42. Formedon at the day of the Petty Cape the Tenant cometh and saith that the Demandant hath entred hanging the Writ and cannot have that Plea in abatement before the default saved 40 Ed. 3. fol. 18. Precipe against the Husband and Isabel his wife they come before the default saved that the wife is named Elizabeth and had for the mischeif of the war 14 H 4. tit 15. Precipe the Tenant saith that the Demandant is out-lawed and shall not have this before default saved 38 Ed. 3. tit 17. At the great Cape against three they alledge severall Te●ancie and the Writ abate if he do not maintain And they shall not wage the Law of not summoned for then they admit the Writ and that they are Tenants as the Writ supposeth 12 Ed. 4. fol. 1. 14 H. 6. f. 4. Precipe at the great Cape the Tenant would plead Joyntenancy and could not before his default saved for this comes upon the view 42 Ed. 3. fol. 11. the same 21 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Precipe against two at the great Cape one Tenant pleads that the other is dead after the day of the default and for that this Plea proves the Writ abated he shall have this Plea before his default saved 20 H. 6. fol. 2. the same 42 Ed 3. fol 3. Precipe against two one Tenant may plead that in the conclusion of the Writ the one is left out and the Writ for that is abated before the default saved Pleas after Continuance and Imparlance and what not ASsise where they are adjourned upon Plea in Bar it seems that he shall not have but one Plea after the last continuance for otherwise he may delay the party Infinitely 28 H. 6. fol 1.9 H. 7. fol 9.9 H. 6. fol 22. Quare impedit cleerly agreed that a man shall have but one Plea after the last continuance upon matter in Deed And by some the same Law is where it is by matter of Record 1 Ed 4. fol 3. Ass It seems that one cannot have divers Pleas after the last Continuance 2 H. 6. fol 13. Entrie in the Post If the Demandant enter and after there is a Continuance yet he may plead that for that that it is abated And it is folly of the Demandant to abate his own Writ 7 H. 6. fol 15. The same 7 H. 6. f 16. Quare Impedit It was pleaded in abatement Plaintiffe was made knight after the last continuance Judgment of the Writ and he had it 20 H. 6. fol 17. Trespasse after Imparlance the Defendant saith that the Plaintiffe was made knight day of the Writ not named knight Judgement of the Writ and had that Plea 35 H. 6. fol 5. Where a man is sued by the name of J. Prior of the Church of St. Peter of D. and imparles by an Attorney he shall not
plead in person afterwards that he is Prior of the Church of St. Peter and Paul for that is parcell of the name which cannot be pleaded after Imparlance for that doth notstand with c. 35 H. 6. fol 37. Trespasse against J.S. of D. after Imparlance he demands Judgment of the Writ for day of the Writ purchased he was dwelling at S. and not at D. and shall not have it for it is contrary to the name which the hath affirmed by the Imparlance 32 H. 6. fol 35. After Imparlance the Defendant cannot plead that he is dwelling in another place then is in the Count 19 H. 6. fol 1. 35 H. 6. fol 43. Debt against J. S. as Executor of J. D. and he imparles he shall not say after that he is Administrator and nor Executor 32 H. 6. fol 32. The same 36 H. 6. fol 17. 37 H. 6. fol 32. If the Defendant in personall action imparle and at the day makes default Judgment shall be given and in a reall action shall be awarded a Pettie Cape 7 H 6. fol 30. The same 11 H 7 fol 5.38 H. 6. fol 36.39 H. 6. fol 17. 4 H. 7. fol 12. If a man in debt upon an Obligation imparle before he demands hearing of the Obligation and Condition and hath that entred he cannot plead the Condition afterward for he shall not have hearing of that if he do not alledge variance 13 H. 7. fol 17. Precipe of Lands in D. the Tenant imparles and at the day he may say no such Town 9 Ed 4. fol 33. the same 7 Ed 4. fol 1. Trespas 16 H. 7. fol 17. Debt by Prior the Defendant imparles and at the day saith that the Plaintiffe is deposed for that goes in Bar. 7 Ed. 4. fol 1. Trespas against J.S. de D. in the County of Middlesex after Imparlance the Defendant cannot say no such Town D. within the said County but he may say there is over D. and nether D and none without addition 22 Ed 4. fol 1. the same 9 Ed. 4. fol 38. Precipe after Imparlance one may plead Non-tenure and Joyntenancie But in Precipe of Lands in D. and S. the Tenant Imparles and at the day saith That D. is an Hamlet of S. without that that there is any Town or place known out of the Town named D. in the same County Judgment of the Writ and hath the Plea by the whole Court 9 Ed. 4. fol. 42. Debt against Executors after Imparlance he cannot say that the Testator dyes intestate and that the Administration was committed to him Judgment of the Writ for he is estopped by the Imparlance but he may plead never Executor nor ever administred as an Executor for that is with the c. 32 H. 6. fol. 32. the same 18 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Writ is abated by death and abateable by Joyntenancie and severall tenancie and where a man is made knight or a woman takes an husband and such like and saith where a Writ is abateable if he Imparle or take continuance he cannot plead in abatement But otherwise it is if it were abated See 7 H. 6. fol. 16. and 20 H. 6. fo 17. And note that it pleaded there that the Plaintiffe is a knight 44 Ed. 3. fol. 4. After Imparlance the Defendant may plead to the Action as to say that the Plaintiffe is a Channon professed c. But he cannot plead to the Writ unlesse he come after the Continuance unlesse it were for that that the Writ is abated as death c. 20 Ed. 4. fol. 9. Debt upon a Lease of a Corodie the Defendant imparles and after that shall not have hearing of the Deed. See 4 H. 7. fol 12. 4 H 7. fol. 17. Replegeare against three which imparle joyntly and one makes default the other cannot plead no such in being as one is which makes default 11 H. 7. fol. 5. Debt for Corn the Defendant imparles and at the day makes default there shall go a Writ to inquire of the value See 37 H. 6. fol. 32. 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Attorney for Corporation after Imparlance he cannot plead that they are corporate by another name 32 H. 6. fol 12. Where a Writ is abated he may plead that though there be a Continuance as to say that the Plaintiffe is dead or hath an Husband day of the Writ but if it be abateable it is otherwise he may say that after the last continuance is made knight Judgment of the Writ c. where it is abateable 34 H. 6. fol 49. Debt upon Obligation by three the Defendant pleads not his Deed yet he may plead that after the last continuance one Plaintiffe is dead 22 Ed 4. fol 36. Trespasse The Defendant after Imparlance may say that the Plaintiffe is his wife Judgment if Action or that the Plaintiffe is a Monk professed And in Mordancester that the Demandant is a Bastard And in Debt against Executors after Imparlance he may say he was never Executor nor ever administred as Executor for these are disabilities which go in Bar. 32 H. 6. fol 32. It seems a man may plead after a Continuance that the Plaintiffe is a stranger born or Monk professed Judgment if Action and not to the person 36 H. 6. fol 7. 7 H. 6. fol. 39. It seems that after Imparlance one cannot plead to the Jurisdiction unlesse it be after speciall Imparlance saving all advantages as well to the Jurisdiction of the Courts as to the Writ and Declaration 19 H. 6. fol. 7. Debt by Executor which shews the Will as it behoveth and after the Defendant imparles there he shall not have reading of the Will again 38 H. 6. fol. 2. But if he plead variance he shall have Reading and so in Debt upon Obligation 16 Ed. 4. fol. 4. Debt upon specialtie the Defendant may plead Out-lawrie in the Plaintiffe though he hath parled for that is a Bar and intitles the King 4 Ed. 4. fol. 15. Debt after Imparlance one space in the Count cannot be amended in another tearm 39 H. 6. fol. 22. Debt upon arrerages of annuitie after Imparlance the Defendant cannot have hearing of the Deed But if the Defendant plead that it was made in another County then where the Writ was brought and then he shall shew 39 H. 6. fol. 17. the same Pleas after day given IF the Defendant imparle and make default he shall be condemned and upon day given shall issue Processe 7 H. 6. fol. 42. 19 H. 8. fol. 6. Note by all the Prothonotaries that day given is ever before the Count and Imparlance is after the Count and therefore where three Capias and Exigent is awarded and the Defendant appear upon the Exigent and hath day given and after makes default Distringas shall go and upon that returned Nihil other 3 Capias and Exigent and upon default in pers●r all action he shall be condemned See 7 H. 6. fol 42. 20 H. 6. fol 17. Trespas the Defendant at the day which he hath by
Imparlance saith that the Plaintiffe was knight day of the Writ purchased not named knight Judgment of the Writ and had plea by Judgment Otherwise it is said after continuance by day given 42 Ed 3. fol 1. Debt the Defendant came at the Exigent by Reddidit se and was bayled and the Plaintiffe came and prayed day by Prece partium and had it notwithstanding that the Defendant was by Bayl for that is by agreement of the parties 8 H. 5. fol 8. After day given and after speciall Imparlance the Defendant may plead in abatement and not after generall Imparlance 14 H. 4. fol 14. If the parties be at Issue and the Demandant releases to the Tenant and he takes continuance by request of the parties he shall not plead the release 22 Ed 3. fol 8. The Tenant after the request of the parties was received to plead Joyntenancie by Fine Pleas after Issue and at the Nisi prius day in Bench and after Verdict DOwer by Thorpe the day of the Nisi prius and the day in Bench is not all one to all respects for a Writ purchased mean between the Nisi prius and day in Bench shall abate for the first Writ is hanging till Judgment be given notwithstanding the Plaintiffe was non-suited at the Nisi prius But when to plead any Pleas which come mean between them there shall be one same day 40 Ed 3. fol 38. 28 H. 6. fol 1. A man may plead a Plea after last continuance at the Nisi prius Inquire what Pleas. 34 H. 6. fol 45. At the day of the Nisi prius the Defennant pleads to the Writ that one of the Plaintiffes was dead after the last continuance at D. in the County of Darby Judgment of the Writ and had it 47 Ed 3. fol 2. If it be found against the Plaintiffe at the Nisi prius and the Plaintiffe makes default at the day in Bench yet Judgment shall be upon the Verdict for that is all one day and the day of the Nisi prius 10 H. 7. fol 21. Debt upon a Lease for yeers and the Issue was levyed by distresse or not And now at the Nisi prius he could not plead a Release made after the last continuance 19 H. 6. fol 36. Forging of false Deeds against many they were at Issue Processe continued against the Enquest till the Jury appeared at which day the Defendant pleads arbitrement after the last continuance and upon this the Jury was discharged 21 H. 6. fol. 10. Nisi prius was returned Octa Mich that is the day in Bench and one Plaintiffe dyed after Octa Mich and before Judgment given upon the Verdict And the Defendant may plead that for Judgment shall have relation to Octa Mich and then the Defendant cannot have remedie by Writ of Error Audita querela nor otherwise therefore he shall have the Plea again But it seems that the Defendant cannot plead Release made to him by the Plaintiffe after Verdict for he shall have an Audita querela contrary of his death the day of Nisi prius and the day in Bench were all one self same day and no mean time and therefore Release made mean between these two cannot be pleaded at the day in Bench notwithstanding it seems at the day of Nisi prius before the Jury taken The Release which is made mean between the Award of the Writ of Nisi prius and the day of the Nisi prius may be pleaded at the Nisi prius See 10 H. 6. tit 53 and tit 55. Br. 22 H. 6. fol 1. Dower It seems if the Plaintiffe release to the Defendant mean between the award of the Nisi prius and the day of the Nisi prius there if the Jury remain for default of Jurors the Defendant may plead this Release at the day in Bench after the last continuance though he did not offer it at the day of Nisi prius and contrary it seems if the Jury had been ready at the Nisi prius 36 H. 6. fol 24. At the Nisi prius the Enquest past for the Plaintiffe and he released before the day in Bench the Defendant shall have an Audita querela and of this it follows that the Defendant cannot plead that at the day in Bench after the last Continuance 34 H. 6. fol 3. 21 H. 7. fol 33. After the Enquest taken by default the Defendant cometh before Judgment and pleads that he and the Plaintiffe have put themselves to Arbitrement after the last Continuance c. And by the opinion of the Court he hath no day in Court to plead that Plea And it was said that he shall plead no plea in such case but as a freind to the Court But of matter apparent he shall be received but in the Kings case he shall have that by plea for he hath no other remedie But in the case between common persons he shall have Audita querela contrary against the King 11 H. 7. fol 10. tit B. 61. 38 H. 6. fol 33. Debt by Moyle the Defendant after that he was at Issue might once plead plea after the last Continuance as release or such like notwithstanding no oftner then once 41 Book of Ass 19. If Verdict passe for the Plaintiffe and the Defendant get a release before Judgment yet he cannot plead that 21 Ed 4. fol 52. Adjudge that the Defendant cannot plead Release made mean between the Nisi prius and the day in Bench. 16 Ed 4. fol 5. A man may plead a Plea after the last Continuance after Issue joyned and in another Tearm And therfore it seems that the parties have day in Court as well after Issue joyned till Verdict as before 50 Ed 3. fol 4. Imparlance at a day in the same Tearm and at a day and Tearm between and Imparlance of the Plaintiffe COntinuance by Capias ought to be made from Tearm to Tearm and cannot have other Tearm between for that that the party shall not stay so long in prison but continuance by distresse may be made by a Tearm between as from Michaelmasse Tearm to Easter 8 Ed 4. fol. 13. 12 H. 7. fol Common recoveries for assurance the Tenant tenders Issue the Demandant may Imparle to a day in the same Tearm 44 Ed 3. fol 16. If a man Imparle to another day in the same Tearm or till the next day yet that is a new day at which the parties are demandable 37 H. 6. fol 27. Debt Defendant pleads misnaming of himself and the Plaintiffe Imparles and had it 22 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Where the Defendant in appeal of Robbery by which he put his life in jeopardie the Plaintiffe shall not Imparle to that and therefore ruled that he should answer the Court sitting What Pleas he shall have after the last Continuance WHere the parties and Jury appear at the fourth day in the Common Bench and are adjourned at another day a man may plead a Plea after the last Continuance 28 H. 6. fol. 1. 8 Ed. 4. fol. 9. Where
75 Admeasurement of Pasture he shall have the View of the Land out of which c. but not in personal Action not in Waste where Jurors have the View 9 H. 6. f. 41 the same 3 H. 4. f. 10 Dower of Rent the Tenant hath the View of the Land out of which it is issuing and said that he shall have it though the Husband died seised of the Rent but see 44 E. 3. f. 31 if the Husband die seised of the Land she shall not have the View 22 H. 6. fol. 12 Assise of Profits of an Office the place where he holds his Office shall be put in View 13 H. 7. f. 10 Cui in vita the Tenant shall have View and yet the Statute is if a Dismission be made to the Tenant and not to his Ancestor the View is not to be granted but she claimes from her Husband and not by the Demandant or his Ancestor Pleas after the View in Abatement FOrmedon one cannot plead in Abatement after the View unlesse it be a thing which cometh upon the View but where it appears to the Court that it wants form or is false Latine the Court Ex officio will abate it 41 Ed. 3. f. 29.40 Ed. 3. f. 35. 44 Ed. 3. f. 14. Formedon of a House and in the perclose of the Writ there is a House and Meadow and after View the Tenant cannot shew that in Abatement for that it is but a Surplusage 49 Ed. 3. f. 20. Formedon after View the Tenant cannot plead in Abatement that any of the Degrees were omitted for it is not apparant to the Court. 50 Ed. 3. f. 9. Formedon the Tenant may plead ancient Demesne after the View for it may be that parcell in the Town is ancient Demesne and parcell frank fee and that cometh upon the View to know that 11 H. 4. fol. 70. Formedon where is matter apparant in a Writ to abate that he may plead that after the View 7 H. 6. fol. 39. After the View one cannot plead no such Town but he may say that the Tenements are in another County for that cometh upon the View but after the View he cannot plead to the Jurisdiction yet he may plead that they are in C. and that they are impleadable there and demand Judgement of the Writ and not Judgement if the Court will acknowledge 19 H. 6. fol. 10. Dower of a Free-hold in D. S. after View one cannot plead no such Town of D. for he is estopped of that for that he hath knowledge of the Town before the View but he may plead Joint-tenancy and non-tenure which comes upon the View 5 H. 7. f. 8. If the View be denied where it is grantable it is Error otherwise it is if it be granted where it is not grantable 8 H. 7. f. 11. the same 36 H. 6. fol. 17. Right of Advowson the Defendant demands the View for that there are two Churches in the same Town and to out him of the View Plaintiff saith that there is but one Church there Ready c. 3 H. 6. fol. 57. Dower by Husband and Wife the Tenant pleads that the Wife is an Alien born in Portugal out of the Allegiance of the king Judgement if he shall be answered the Plaintiff saith that by Parliament she was made personable and now the Tenant demands the View and had it for though his Plea before was as a Barr he pleaded that as to the Person and not to the Action and for that shall have the View otherwise it is if he had pleaded a Barr. 14 H. 6. fol. 8. Precipe against two where one acknowledgeth the Action the other shall not have view 26 H. 8. f. 2. Precipe against two one imparles and the other hath the View by Fitzh The third Part of this Book cheifly for Pleading Abatement Something of Pleadings for the Instruction of the Steward shall be said here following TRespasse upon the Statute of Richard the Defendant saith that J. F. let to him and the Plaintiff made Title and that J. F. abated and let to the Defendant the Defendant maintains his Barr and traverses the Abatement and that is not good for Issue shall not be upon the Abatement 3 H. 7. f. 7. 18 Ed. 4. f. 1. Entry upon Disseisin Issue cannot be taken upon Abatement the same Law is of Intrusion 14 H. 6. f. 6. Issue shall be upon the Affirmative and Negative and not upon Plea by Argument but upon traverse the Affirmative COnspiracy he is alive without that that he is dead 7 H. 7. f. 6.14 H. 6. f. 9.19 H. 6. f. 4. 35 H. 6. f. 60. Trespasse the Defendant iustifies for Fealty not made the Plaintiff saith it was not unmade and good 9 H. 7. fol. 12. Debt against J. S. of D. the Defendant saith that he is dwelling at S. and shall say and not at D. in the Negative 4 H. 6. fol. 4. 2 Ed. 4. fol. 1.4 Ed. 4. fol. 44. 10 Ed. 4. fol. 12. Trespasse the Defendant saith that the Free-hold was to J.S. which let to him at will the Plaintiff saith that the Free-hold was to him and not to J. S. in the Negative 11 H. 4. f. 90. Where the Defendant saith that the Plaintiff is a Bastard and the Plaintiff saith he is Legitimate he shall say and not a Bastard 19 H. 6. f. 17 11 H. 6. f. 53 Trespasse against J. S. of Fenton the Defendant saith that he was dwelling at E. and shall say negatively and not at Fenton 19 H. 6. f. 1. Action upon the Statute of Laborers the Defendant saith that he was in the Service of J. S. and shall say and not Vagrant in the Negative 11 H. 6. f. 1. 52. Action upon the Case for that he hath a Leet and Fines and Amerciaments of the same the Defendant saith that well and true it is that the Plaintiff hath a Leet but he saith that he hath not the Fines and Amerciaments and ought to say without that that the Plaintiff hath the Fines and Amerci aments 38 H. 6. f. 16 False Judgement Issue was that one saith that he was dead and the other saith that he is alive 14 H. 6. fol. 9.19 H. 6. f. 4. the same Where one pleads out of his Fee the other saith within without that that it was out in manner and forme 11 H. 4. fol. 10 Formedon in reverter and counts of a Gift in Tail c. the Defendant saith that the Donor gave in Fee and it is not good for it is but an Answer by Argument and for that he ought to traverse the Gift in Tail which is supposed by the Plaintiff 2 H. 6. f. 15. Scire facias against the Parson of D. of Arrerages of Annuity the Defendant saith that before the Writ he resigned to the Bishop of L. and so that remained in his hands Judgement of the Writ and it is but a Plea by Argument that is that he is not Parson and for that it is
not good without concluding and so not Parson 7 E. 4. fol. 16. Assise and Trespass Diversity between pleadings in Assise and Trespass for in Trespass need not make Title under Possession otherwise in Assise TRespasse the Defendant ought to convey to him an Estate immediate and for that to say that J. S. was seised till by J. D. disseised which infeoffed the Plaintiff upon whom J. S. entered whose Estate he hath it is not good but if the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised upon whom he entered it is good but not in Assise 5 H. 7. f. 11. Trespasse the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised and he entered and it is good and he need not to convey to him a Title and the Plaintiff saith that he was seised till by the Defendant disseised without that that he disseised the Defendant for if the Defendant had first Possession it is good in Trespasse 26 H. 8. f. 6. Trepasse the Defendant may plead Fine with Proclamation Judgement if Action but not relie upon Estoppell 17 H. 8. f. 27. Trespasse the Defendant pleads his Free-hold the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee till disseised by the Defendant and he re-entered and the Trespasse in the mean time the Defendant maintains his Barr without that that he disseised the Plaintiff 1 Ed. 4. f. 3. Trespasse the Defendant pleads Gift in Tail to his Ancestor and conveys to him by divers Discents the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee and traversed the Gift and it is good and need not make Title beyond his Possession otherwise of Assise 3 Ed. 4. f. 19. Trespasse to plead a Feoffment of the Plaintiff it seems to be good or he may say that he himself was seised but in Assise Feoffment of the Plaintiff is no Plea for that amounts to no wrong no Disseisin 15 Ed. 4. f. 31. 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse if the Defendant plead that he was infeoffed the Plaintiff may traverse the Feoffment without making to him Title otherwise it is in an Assise 18 Ed. 4. f. 10.10 Ed. 4. f. 3.27 H. 6. f. 1. 40 Ed. 3. f. 5. Trespasse the Defendant saith that H. his Tenant at will infeoffed the Plaintiff and he entered the Plaintiff saith that J. S. infeoffed H. and he died seised and his Issue infeoffed me the Defendant cannot traverse the Feoffment but the Discent otherwise it is in Assise 10 H. 4. f. 1. Assise by Littleton the Tenant may plead let to him for years or for life the Reversion to the Plaintiff and it is good and so is it of a Feoffment with Warranty of the Plaintiff and relie upon Warranty 18 Ed. 4. fol. 10. 8 Ed. 2. Tit. Ass 391. 18 Ed. 3 f. 13. the same Assise the Tenant pleads that the Plaintiff let to him for life and is good but a Feoffment of the Plaintiff is not good in Assise but in Trespasse it is good 6 H. 7. f. 14.27 Book of Ass 31. the same 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse at Compton over C. and neither C. it is no Plea in Trespasse but it is good in Assise 8 H. 6. f. 18. Trespasse at D. there are two Dd. within the County and none without addition it is no Plea for the Visne shall be of the Body of the County 3 Ed. 4. f. 26. and 9 H. 6. Tit. 5. the same Assise of Lands in Osgodby the Tenant saith there are two Osgodbyes within the County none without addition and it is no Plea for the Plaintiff shall recover by view of the Jurors 5 Book of Assises 9 and 27 Ed. 3. f. 2 Trespasse in Otterton and H. which H. is a Hamlet of Otterton it is a good Plea in Precipe and not in Trespasse where Damages onely are recovered 7 E. 4. f. 18 4 E. 4 Tit Breif 155 179. Trespasse may be in a Hamlet but not in a place onely known 11 H. 7 fol. 24 2 R. 3. fol. 1 43 E. 3. fol. 30 the same Precipe in D. is a good Plea in Abatement that D. is a Hamlet and not a Town but otherwise it is in Assise 8 E. 4. f. 6 Pleas in Barr. Barr is good at the first shew or by common reason and intent such intent is a Plea which hath not more vehement presumption then to intend contrary but if the intent be indifferent it is not good at the first shew by Intendment FOrmedon in Discender that he gave not is good and yet it may be that he did recover in value but the most pressing Intendment is to the contrary but if in Debt I plead Release bearing Date after the Obligation it is not good at the first face unlesse he saith that it was delivered after the Obligation Plowd Com. f 32 Forging of Deeds the Defendant saith that he himself was seised at the time of the Forgery and it might be by Disseisin but it shall not be intended and for that it is good at the first shew 8 H. 6. f. 34 Trespasse that he entered into a Warren the Defendant pleads his Free-hold and it is good and yet one may have the Warren and another the Free-hold 44 E. 3. f. 12 17 E. 4. f. 6 10 H. 7. f. 24 34 H. 6. f. 28 Trespasse in a severall fishing the Defendant pleads that the place is his Free-hold and is good as above at the first face 18 H. 6. f. 29 10 H. 7. f. 24 20 H. 6. f. 4 17 E. 4. f. 6 18 E. 4. f. 4 Assise of Mortdancester because his Mother took the habit of Religion the Defendant saith that your Mother had a Husband alive when she entered into Religion and it is not good for it is indifferent whether he be alive or not and for that he ought to aver that the Husband is yet alive 5 E. 4. f. 3 Trespasse of Goods c. the Defendant justifies that the property was to J. S. which gave them to him at D. and though he do not say where the property was in him it shall be intended at D. and good 1 E. 5. f. 3 It is said there though the Barr be good to common intent yet it shall not be good where parcell of the substance is left out but where such things are left out which by special intendment and not by general intendment are omitted the Law shall keep such a barr Plowd Com fol 27. Accounts the Defendant saith that he hath accounted before the Plaintiffe himself and it is good yet he doth not say that he was before Auditors before him c. 4 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Trespasse the Defendant pleads that he to whose use enfeoffed him and doth not say if he were out of Prison and of full age according to the Statute and yet being in Barre it was said that it shall be so intended 6. H. 7. fol. 6. Where Count is upon matter of Reords or of Specialty the Barre shall be
in Maintenance if he justifie he shall say he shall say without that that he maintained in other manner 32 H. 6. f. 1 Trespasse of Assault and threatning the Defendant saith that the Plaintiff called him Traitor and he said thou lyest in thy throat it is no Plea for he doth not confesse any threatning 37 H. 6. f. 3 Conclude Order and form how one ought to conclude in his Plea WHere to a Bar there ought to be a Reply the Conclusion of his Plea shall be and this he is ready to prove c. and where but ready that so there it is otherwise 33 H. 6. f. 21 12 Ed. 4. f. 13 the same As in Dower the Tenant pleaded not ever seised that Dower he ought to conclude and of this he puts himself upon the Country for no Reply shall be but ready that so Where the Defendant pleads to the Issue the conclusion shall be and of this he puts himself upon the Countrey and where the Plaintiffe pleads to the Issue he shall say and he desires that this may be inquired by the Countrey 26 H. 8. f. 4. If one plead a Plea which is not traversable as no wrong or generall Issue or Record as Outlawry he need not in his conclusion averr his Plea that is and this he is ready to prove c. 36. H. 6. fol. 17. When the Defendant justifies he ought to conclude and this he is ready to prove c. and when he pleads the generall Issue he need not 6 H. 4. fol. 18. and the Book of Entries fol. 152. the same Quare impedit If the Defendant plead that it is incorporated by another name Judgement if Action this conclusion is not good but he ought to conclude Judgement of the Writ 26 H. 8. fol. 1. ●nd 4 H. 6. fol. 27. Where the Defendant saith that the Parties to the Fine have nothing but one such a one whose estate he hath he ought to conclude and this he desires may be inquired by the Countrey and the aforesaid Plaintiffe likewise it shall be entered for here needs no Reply but ready that so as above 12 Ed. 4. fol. 13. Debt upon Obligation the Defendant saith that it was endorsed upon Condition to perform Covenants of an Indenture and that part was read and part not and that he was a man unlearned there he ought to conclude Judgement if Action the same Law is where he saith it was made by constraint or that he was under age or that it was delivered as an Eserow 7 Ed. 4.3 B. he ought to say Judgement if Action 14 H. 8. fol. 30. Debt upon obligation to plead payment and delivery of that in place of an Acquittance he ought to conclude judgement if action but if he avoid that for that it is raced or interlined there it shall be concluded not his deed for where a Deed is void he ought to conclude not his Deed and where voidable or matter in Law judgment if action 1 H. 7 f. 14. Debt upon Obligation to say he is a man unlearned and this was read to him to be with Condition and so this Obligation being single is not his Deed 7 Ed. 4. fol. 5. 15 Ed. 4. fol. 17. 16 Ed. 4. f. 1. the same 9 H. 5. f. 15. and 3 H. 6. fol. 52. Debt upon a Lease to plead payment in another County or levyed by Distresse without concluding and so he ows him nothing is good 9 Ed. 4. fol. 57.3 H. 7. fol. 3. and 33 H. 6. f. 4. the same but levied by Distresse or payment in the same County is not good without concluding and so he owes him nothing Debt for Wages upon a Bargain to plead payment in the same County and conclude and so he oweth him nothing is good 40 Ed. 3. fol. 24. Debt upon a Lease by Indenture for the defendant to plead payment in the same County it is no Plea without concluding and so he oweth him nothing to the point of the Writ 1 H. 5. fol. 6. Where he ought to conclude and so not his Deed. DEbt upon a single Obligation the Defendant saith that he is a man unlearned and this was read to him with a Condition and so not his deed 1 H. 6. fol. 3 H. 6. fol. 38. Debt by a Husband and his Wife of an Obligation made to them the defendant being Executor J.S. pleads Release of the Husband made to him and the Release was of all actions and demands as Executor and all actions personalls and other demands and the Plaintiffe saith that he is a man not learned and it was read for Actions as Executor and so not his deed and good See 3 H. 7. fol. 5. and 19 H. 8. 1 H. 7. fol. 14. If the defendant confesse that once by his own Plea his deed he cannot afterwards conclude and so not his deed As if an Infant makes a deed or a man by constraint if he plead these matters to avoid that he cannot conclude and so not his deed but where an Obligation is void he ought to conclude and so not his deed as where an Obligation is made by a married Wife or a deed raced or interlined 1 Ed. 3. fol. 5. the same Where he ought to conclude according to his matter pleaded LIttleton f. 39 Six manner of men are against which if they sue Actions Judgement may be demanded if they shall be answered in the Conclusion of his Plea and first if he say that the Plaintiff is his Villain he shall say Judgement if he shall be answered second is outlawed third is a stranger born fourth is one attaint in a Premunire fifth is professed in Religion sixth is excommunicated the Defendant may plead these and demand Judgement if the Plaintiff shall be answered 34 H. 6. fol. 9 If the Tenant plead Joint-tenancy or other Plea in Abatement he ought to conclude Judgement of the Writ and where one pleads in Barr he ought there to conclude Judgement if Action 49 Ed. 3. f. 24 Account of Receit in C. the Defendant saith that C. is within the five Ports Judgement if the Court will acknowledge it and so alwayes to the Jurisdiction that is Conclusion as Parson sue for Tithes c. In divers Cases they ought to conclude in the Negative where so to the Affirmative pleads that his Plea is but as an Argument and not full Answer and also to make the matter in Law plain SCire facias against a Parson of Ar●erages of an Annuity the Defendant pleads that before the Writ purchased he resigned and so not Parson and it is good 7 Ed. 4. fol. 16 10 H. 7. f. 4 Said in Debt upon a Lease for the Rent behinde if the Defendant pleads Payment in another County this is good without concluding and so he owes him nothing c. But if he plead Payment in the same County it is no Plea without concluding and so he owes him nothing 9 Ed. 4. f. the last 9 Ed. 4. fol. 15 Debt
Steward and that in a Leet was presented that the Plaintif is a Felon and that he shewed his Rolls to the Justices at the Session which commanded him to shew that to the Jurors which inquired for the King which he did and saith that that is the same for by Englefield when the Defendant pleads a Conspiracy which is iustifiable he ought to shew that it is the same Conspiracy 27 H. 8. fol. 2. Annuity is brought of six and twenty shillings and eight pence the Defendant saith that he held of the Plaintif by six and twenty and eight pence of Rent which is the same Rent and is not good for it cannot be the same 33 H. 6. f. 38. Debt upon Obligation the Defendant saith it was made by threats the Plaintif saith that he let the Land to the Defendant rendering Rent and saith if he would not seal the Obligation to him for the Rent behinde he would sue him at the Common Law which is the same threatning and it is no good Plea for this is lawfull and not a threatning 16 Ed. 4. f. 7. Br. Tit. Duresse 23. Maintenance the Defendant saith that he carried the Money of him which the Plaintif supposed he maintained to his Counsel which is the same Maintenance and this is no plea for this is no Maintenance 34 H. 〈◊〉 fol. 19. Replication Where a faulty Barr is made good by Replication and where not TRespasse the Defendant pleads an Agreement to pay Money and to make Windows and said that he paid the Moneys and nothing of the Windows and the Plaintiff replied and said no such Agreement and yet the Plaintiff in Barr pleaded an Agreement and that not executed is not made good by the Replication for the Barr is not good to no intent and the Replication cannot make that good 6 H. 7. f. 10. But count where a Barr may be made good by a Plea of the other party where the Count or the Barr is uncertain as where the Plaintiff counts of an Obligation in Debt and doth not count where it was made and the Defendant pleads Release and acknowledge it and the Conisee where the place should be in is now outed and need not to have that the same Law in Trespasse where a man pleads Arbitrement and doth not shew the place where the Submission was that is not good but if the Plaintiff reply and saith that he discharged the Arbitrators before the Award now it is good for that which was ill is now confessed 10 H. 7. f. 24. 20 H. 7. f. 12. By Hussey if one plead Joint-tenancy day of the Writ purchased it is not good for that he might be sole Tenant after if the Demandant saith sole Tenant and doth not demurr it is made good by Replication 5 H. 7. f. 14. The same Law if in Debt against Executors they plead nothing in their hands day of the Writ purchased and do not say nor ever after the plea is not good but if the Plaintiff reply and say that they have Assets and that is found he shall have Judgement 3 H. 7. fol. 8. accordingly False Imprisonment the tenth day of May the Defendant saith that the Plaintiff made an affault in the Court before the Steward and for his disturbance of the Peace in the Court he was committed to ward the Plaintiff saith of his own wrong without such cause and now though the Defendant hath not shewed what day the Court was yet by the replication it is made good for now the day is not materiall 21 H. 7. f. 32. If double Plea be pleaded and the Plaintiff replies and rakes Issue of one matter and that is found he cannot after plead in arrest of Judgment for by the Replication it is made good 18 Ed. 4. fol. 17. Debt upon in Obligation the Defendant pleads a defeasance which is that if the Defendant deliver to the Plaintif in London certaine Clothes of Kersey of as good Stuff and of as good making as before these times have been made in the Town of D. in the County of Darby that then the Obligation should be void and saith that he hath delivered to the Plaintif in London the Clothes of as good c. According to the condition and this Plea is not good for that that it cannot be tried for those of London cannot try if they were as good c. But the Plaintif replied and said that the Plaintif did not deliver to us any manner of Cloth in London ready c. and now by the Replication it is good 22 Ed. 4. fol. 2. Debt the Plaintif counts upon a Lease for terme of yeares and doth not shew where it was made and the Defendant traverses the Lease and the Plaintif replies and joynes Issue and after acknowledges the action and after pleads in arrest of Judgment for that the Plaintiff hath not declared in what place the Lease was made and yet he had Judgment for when the Defendant hath in Barr gainsaid the Lease he hath admitted the count good 18 Ed. 4. fol. 17. And in Debt if I Plead the Release of the Plaintif and do not shew where it was made and the Plaintif replies and pleads not his Deed the Plea of the Defendant is made good by his Replication Br. title Repleader 38. Annuity for Counsell given and to be given and counts that he hath given to him Councell in doing his businesses and though he do not shew in what businesses it is good for if the Defendant saith that he doth not give to him Councell against the Plaintif in his replication he may shew in what things he gave Councell and so the replication hath made all good and the Count was good generally 39 H. 6. fol. 33. By Vanisor Replication may make an ill Barr good as I plead in Barr grant of Reversion and omit attornement if the Plaintif reply and confess and avoid the grant by speciall matter then is the Barr good 11 H. 7.24 By Read in Debt against one as Executor which pleads nothing in their hands day of the Writ purchased which is no Plea for that that he may have assets afterwards But if the Plaintif reply that he hath assets and that found by Verdict is good 6 H. 7. fol. 6. The same Law if the Tenant in Precipe plead non-Tenure day of the Writ and the Plaintif replies that he was Tenant And now though by the statute of 32 H. 8. chap. 30. It was enacted that if any Issue be tryed by the Oath of 12. in any of the Kings Courts of Record that Judgment shal he given any mispleading not having colour insufficient pleading or Jeofaile not worrant of Attorney put in any mis-construction or discontinuance misjoyning of Issue or other default or negligence of parties their Councellours or Attorneys had or made to the contrary notwithstanding and that the Judgement shall be in force and shall not be reversed by Writ of Errour And yet at this day one may plead in arrest
paid that he should have all the remainder and saith that such and such are paid which are all the Defendant saith that such a Legacy was not paid without that that the Plaintif alleadgeth were all and he ought to traverse for that that it is a matter in deed Trespasse of Trees cut the Defendant pleads that J. S. was seised of an Acre whereof the Trespasse is parcell in Fee and let to him at will and that he by his commandement cut the said Trees and demands Judgement if Action and this is no Plea without Traverse that is without that that it is the Soil of the Plaintif 5 H. 5. fol. 8. Trespasse the Defendant conveys that his Father was seised in Fee and that descended to him the Plaintif pleads that J. D. infeoffed him and ought to traverse without that that the Father of the Defendant was seised in Fee 27 H. 8. f. 9. Trespasse the Defendant pleads that the place where c. was his Free-hold the Plaintif saith that J. S. was seised in Fee and let to him at will and that the Defendant outed him and disseised J. S. and that the Plaintif at the command of J. S. re-entered and the Trespasse mean between the re-entry and the disseisin and the Defendant maintains his Barr and he ought to traverse the Lease for that is most material 11 Ed. 4. f. 3. Trespasse the most material matter shall be traversed and for that if a Gift in Tail and dying seised be pleaded in Barr in Trespasse the Gift is traversable and not the dying seised so in Trespasse if the Defendant saith that a stranger was seised and infeoffed the Father of the Defendant and that his father died seised and that the Defendant entered as Sonne and Heire nothing is traversable but the last dying seised for that is the effect of his Barr by Neale 15 Ed. 4. f. 2. Trespasse The Defendant saith that I was seised and protesting died seised and conveyed the discent to the Defendant the Plaintiffe saith that M. enfeoffed him by force of which he was seised till the Defendant made a Trespasse and the Defendant saith as above without that that the Plaintiffe was seised at the time of the Trespasse but it is not good for he ought to traverse and to say without that that M. enfeoffed him for that is the effect of the Replication 19 H. 8. f. 7. Trespasse the Defendant pleads his Freehold the Plaintiffe saith that the Defendant let to A. for years which granted his estate to B. which granted to him the Defendant maintained his Barr without that that B. granted to the Plaintiffe and is not good for he conveys from the Defendant himself and that is traversable and saith without that that the Defendant let to A. But where an estate is conveyed all by strangers he may traverse one conveyance or other 10 H. 7. f. 8. Assise the Defendant pleads Barr and the Plaintiffe makes Title by a gift in Tail to his father and dying seised of his father the gift is traversable but if it be by Feoffement of J. S. to his father and dying seised of his Father the dying seised is traversable 9 H. 6.22 and 10 H. 4.1 accordingly Mesne and counts that he held a hundred Acres by Fealty of the Defendant and he over c. the Defendant saith that the Plaintiffe held of him by Homage and Fealty and ought to traverse the acquittal not the Tenure 2 H. 5. f. 2. Trespasse of close broken the Defendant faith that J. S. and J. D. were seised in Fee that J. S. enfeoffed the Ancestor of the Plaintiffe and J. D. enfeoffed the Defendant and so they hold as undivided and the Plaintiffe saith that his Ancestor died sole seised of all and this descended to him without that he held as undivided and it is no Plea but he ought to traverse the Feoffement made by J.D. to the Defendant for the Plea is as good without So and for that in this Case that which comes after the So is not materiall but whre it is materiall it is traversable and for that by Choke Debt upon an Obligation the Defendant saith that he was a lay man and not learned and this Writing was read to him in place of an Acquittance and so this Obligation is not his Deed now this which cometh after the So is materiall 32 H. 6. f. 16. Tit. Issue 9. Debt upon a Lease of four Acres for four pounds of Rent the Defendant demands Judgement of the Count for that that the Plaintiffe let the four Acres and a Rectorie for the four pounds and ought to traverse without that that he let the four Acres onely c. 35 H. 6. f. 38. and 18 Ed. 4. fol. 17. One avowes for that that the Plaintiffe held an Acre of him by twelve pence the Plaintif saith that he held the same Acre and another by six pence without that that he held of him by the same Services onely and it is not good but he shall say without that that he held the said Acres in Manner and Form 13 H. 7.25 One avows for that that he held two acres by twenty shillings of him the Plaintif saith that he held the two Acres and two others in the same Town by the Services of twelve shillings without that that he held the two Acres onely by the Services of twenty shillings in Manner and Form as c. this seems good 8 H. 7. f. 5. Where one justifies at another day then the Plaintiffe alledges and ought to traverse onely before the day of his iustification and where before and after where onely after TRespasse against the Sherif of a Cow taken the Desendant justifies at the day after by a Precept he attached the Cow and took her with him without that that he is guilty before that Precept to him directed and this seems good 9 H. 7. f. 6. Trespasse of imprisonment second day of May the fourth year the Defendant iustifies the fourth day of August Anno fourth aforesaid by force of a Warrant of the Peace c. which is the same Imprisonment without that that he is guilty before that day and it is doubted if he ought to traverse before and after and there it seems if one plead his Freehold such a day after without that that he was guilty before it seems good 5 Ed. 4. fol 12. Trespas in Wood 1. day of August the Defendant justifies by prescription to have yeerly twenty cart load there betwixt Michaelmasse and Christmas and that such a day in November he took them without that that he is guilty before Michaelmasse and after Christmasse and good And the Plaintiffe saith that he knowledgeth the day that he counted and traverseth the prescription and good notwithstanding he doth not maintain the day that he traverseth for it is in the election of the Plaintiffe to maintain the traverse of the time or to traverse the speciall matter as in trespas Anno 7. The Defendant
Guardians of Churches Shall have Account against the old VVardens and Trespass of Goods taken 382. Shall have Indictment Appeal of Robbery and are a Corporation for Chattels 383. Church-yard and Church Free-hold of them seems are in the Parson 383. Church-yard and Church not inclosed shall be for that Complaint to the Ordinary 383 Grant of the King See mis-recitall false consideration and false svrmise 60. VVhat is good and what not where the King is deceived 61 General Issue In what Actions he shall have it and what it is 446 Hares TRacing of hares 309 Hawkers and Hunters VVhat is lawfull and what not 115 Hariot Custome is of every Estate aliened and Death 262. Service is properly by reason of Tenure and of every Discent 262. Custome esloigned the Lord shall have Detinue and distrain for hariot service 263. Lord where he may seise and where not and always for hariot custome seise 263. Of Copy-holder Surrender in extremes or aver 265. Hats and Caps 35. High-wayes 34. Hemp. 35. Homage 259. It shall be made to him that hath Inheritance and who shall make it 259. Horses 37 Hue and cry 33 Inmates WHo are and who not and who shall not have Common 90 Incidents VVhat they are and what Incidents may be severed and what not 70 Justice Justice should be made to every one 5. Justice should be ministred 5. And Letters to Justices 5. Judge Steward in Leet and Iustices of Peace are Iudges of Record 81. Iudge in Leet and Court Baron and how there 82 Imparlance Imparlance and day given 394. Imparlance generall and speciall 394. Pleas after Imparlance and last continuance 395. Hee shall have Plea which proves a writ abated or Barr 398. Pleas after the last continuance and day in Bench 399 After Issue matter for last continuance 399 Leet THE precept to warne that and the order to hold that 11. 12. It is ordained to be held twice in the yeare Scilicet within c. 14 The anthority of that inlarged by 18 Ed. 2. c. 13. The charge here begins in that 15. The Breviate of the Change begins 40. Cases argued and agreed to be inquirable there 42. Presentment there which toucheth free-hold traversable and otherwise not 24. Things there not presented shall be presented in Torne and if not in Eyre and if not in the Kings bench 84. It shall be held within a moneth unlesse by prescription and place 88. Form of entring the presentment there 88. The Steward there is Judge of Record 83. Record and his authority there Liberties VVhat the Lord shall have by Charter and what he shall have by prescription 59. Not using and misusing of that is a cause of seisure 58 Livery and Seisin 267 Delivering the Deed within the view in name of Seisin 268. Where give and grant is confirmed and good without Livery 269. Two infeoffed and Livery to one 270. Lex Law Law is ordained to the King for Government 4 The necessity of that and of charity 4 Mannor How that began 7 Materiall What in pleading and what not 456 Maintenance Not by Letters nor otherwise 460 To imbrace Iurors and suborn VVitnesses is 400. To say he will maeintain and doth not is no maintenance but to say that he will spend 20. l. c. is 400. To give money before Suit and covenant to have part of an Obligation for travelling with a stranger born is not 401. VVhere he hath an Obligation delivered for his Debt or Interest as Reversion or Remainder may 401. Servant arrested Master may give of his wages and lend him money 402. It is said that one learned may be of Counsel without Fee and give Evidence for his Fee but not labour the Iury. 404 406. VVho may pray a learned man to be of Counsel with one and who not 404. The Father may his Son Cozen and Kindred in action real and poor but not promise to a Iuror 402. For Burials in Church-yard all Inhabitants may 405 Manucaptor cannot retain Counsel and do nothing but see him appear 402 VVhat an Attorney may do and maintain 404 Modo forma VVhere it is material and where not 460 Mortmain VVhat is Mortmain and what not 36 75 273 Mortdancester Issue upon one point shall not inquire of more 271 Resummons and Process upon that 272. VVhere that lieth and where not and where it is devisable 273. Musters Non-tenure IN what action it shall be pleaded and non-tenure of parcell is not abatement for all 276 Nuper obiit VVhere it lieth between Sisters of halfe blood 277 Negativa preignans VVhere Issue shall be of that and where ntt 462 Obligations How the Conditions of them shall be pleaded 464 Office Grant to one which doth not know to execute void and where to two 282. Assignee and Deputy and where mis-using is Forfeiture 282 Officer How he ought to demean himself in executing Process 278. Executing erroneous Process he excuses and where it is out of their Jurisdiction and where not 279. Arrest in a Church and Bailiff errant without warrant 279 Plaints IN Assise 137 Of Mortdancester and Barr Of entry in the per and cui and Precipe of Summons In Formedon Precipe of Summons and the Count. 8 Pleadings Issue shall not be if he abated or not 422 Issue shall not be upon Affirmative and Negative 423 Diversity between pleading in Trespass and Assise 424 Barr good to common intent and First Face good 426 Barr shall be as high as the matter which is counted 427 Where the Defendants confess and avoids he need not traverse and where he ought 431 Detinue or Trespass the Defendant saith that they were delivered in pawn or by Replegiare and good without Traverse 431 VVhere the Defendant justifies in special manner he ought to traverse 432 Count and Barr good by intendment 445 VVhere the place shall be shewed certain and where not 447 Plea incertain for the year and day and what not 449 A thing issuable ought to be shewed certain 449 What is material pleading and what not 456 Pleading by name and grant and Evidence by name 457 In pleadings where he shall say that is the same 418 Where the Defendant shall say that it is the same Trespass or the same Imprisonment or the same maintenance 471 Conclude in pleading Where the Defendant shall say Judgement if the Plaintiff shall be answered and where Iudgement of the Writ and where to the Iurisdiction and were which so c 433 Order and form how one ought to conclude 433. Where to the Bar there shall be Replication the Defendant ought to conclude and this he is ready c. 433 Where the Defendant pleads to the Issue he ought to conclude and of this he puts himself c. 444 Where the Defendant pleads to the Issue and of this he desireth that c. 434 Where the Defendant pleads general Issue he ought not to conclude and this he is ready c. 434 Pleadings of his own wrong without such cause Where
Assises 1. accordingly The Bailiff shall have any Challenge to an array and to the heads 9 H. 7. fol. 24. and Abridgment book of Assises fol. 48. the same The Bailiff may plead non-tenure or mis-naming of the Plaintiff but not of his Master and conclude if c. 22 H. 6. f. 44.9 H. 7. f. 24.26 As 61 Bailiff may plead that the Tenements are in another Town for that is an abatement 9. H. 7. fol. 24 Abridgment Assise f. 47. and 6 H. 7. f. 15. accordingly but 22 H. 6. fol. 50. seems contrary but a Bailiff cannot disclaim but an Atturney may 13 Ed. 3. Tit. 8. Bailiff pleads out of his Fee Judgment if without specialty c. and he cannot have that at this day but in 2 Ed. 3. Tit. 10. he hath this Plea for the Bailiff cannot have any Pleas but where he may conclude over and if it be not found no wrong no disseisin c. see the Abridgment book of Assises fol. 47. and 2. Assise 4. Bailiff may plead ancient Demesne and conclude if it be not found c. and conclude to Assise otherwise Bailiff cannot plead ancient Demesne for that that it is triable by the book of Doomes-day and for that he cannot conclude Judgment if the Court will acknowledge Abridgment booke of As f. 48. and 9. book As 2 see 6 H. 7. fol. 15. Bailiffe may plead that the Plaintiffe is seised the day of the Writ purchased and every other exception tryable by Assise 9 As 4. Bailiffe cannot plead that the Writ is purchased hanging another Assise nor not attached by fifteene dayes for it is tryable by the Record Abridgment of Assise fol. 48. 8 As 2. and 8 Ed. 3. As 40. Bailiffe may plead that his Master is Parson of D. not naming Parson and if it be not found no wrong c. 12. As 4. Bailiffe may plead misnaming and joynt-tenancy without Deed 6 H. 4. fol. 15. and 8 H. 6. fol. 56. Bailiffe cannot plead Excommunication or outlawry in the Plaintiffe for he cannot plead a Dilatory Plea unlesse it be tryable by the Assise and that he may conclude and if it be not found no wrong no disseisin 5 Ed. 4. fol 113. Bailiffe may plead not attached by fifteen dayes Abridgment of Assise fol. 47. Pleas of the Disseisor THe Disseisor may plead release of actions personalls in barr but not release of actions realls for none shall plead that but the Tenant Litt. fol. 115. The Disseisor may plead that the Demandant hath entred hanging the Writ notwithstanding that he goes to the Tenancy and the reason which is there made is for that that such Plea goes to excuse him of damages And note that there it appeares also that the Disseisor shall plead every barr unlesse sach a Barr which goes to the Tenancy or to extinguish the right of the Plaintiffe in the Land as if he pleads release of all actions personals or that the Plaintiffe hath entred hanging the Writt that he may plead but he cannot plead release of right made to the Tenant of the Land nor other plea which goeth to the Land but he shall plead every plea to the Writ which doth not extend to the tenancy as if he had no Tenant named in the Writ or no such in Rerum natura and misnaming of the Plaintiffe or of himselfe 35 H. 6. fol. 13. Contrary 37 H. 6.3 by Choke Therefore inquire The Disseisor shall not plead any plea to the Tenancy which the Tenant by his admittance hath made good 26 Book of Assises 49. Disseisor cannot plead in abatement that the Plaintiffe hath a Writ of an older date hanging against him 45 Ed. 3. fol. 25. and 23. Ass 14. Disseisor cannot plead ancient Demesne without taking the tenancy upon him 21 Ass 2. Disseisor cannot plead Record or Estoppell for by the sayling of the Record he cannot loose the Land 20 Ed. 3. Brook Assise 403. Disseisor shall plead misnaming of the Plaintiffe and also that the Plaintiffe is covert of Baron and if he alleadge outlawry in the Plaintiffe he ought to have the Record in hand and note that the Disseisor in proper person or by Attourney and not by Bailiffe pleads that the Plaintiffe hath another Assise hanging against him as it appeares 8 Ed. 3. Ass 140. See 28 Ass 38.24 Ass 91. and this seemes by the Statute of Westm 2. chap. 15.19 Ass 10. and 20 Ed. 3. Ass 20. Disseisor may plead entry of the Plaintiffe after the last continuance and joynt-tenancy for he may plead all Pleas which excuse him of damages or which are in barr which doe not extinct the right of the Land 35 H. 6. fol. 16. Disseisor may plead outlawry in the Plaintiffe that is where the Tenant hath not pleaded and admitted the Writ 29 Ass 61. and 20 Ed. 3. Ass 20. It is sayd by Babington That a Disseisor can not plead any plea in barr but no wrong or that it ariseth to so much 2 H. 6. fol. 1. Pleas by Tenant Where after a Bailiffe hath pleaded or the Tenant himselfe and the Assise upon that adjourned or award or hath imparled the Tenant cannot plead new matter unlesse it be matter of a later time or a matter following or a matter upon which may have Certificate or the generall Issue THe Tenant pleads to Assise by Bailiffe and the Assise awarded the Tenant can plead no plea in barr afterwards but such upon which he may have Certificate of Assise 10 H. 7. fol. 12. 8 Ass 17. The Tenant pleads by a Bailiffe and the Assise remaines for default of Jurors and now the Tenant comes in proper person and saith The Plaintiffe hath received the Tenements of him hanging the Writ and hath let to him for yeares and hath for that he cometh in of later time 10 Ass 24.18 Ed. 3. fol. 33. If a plea be pleaded and the Justices dye all shall be pleaded anew but if they be at Issue that shall stand 5 H. 7. fol. 7. b. by Hussey After adjournment upon the Plea of the Bailiffe the Tenant may plead matter which comes of later time 18 Ed 3. tit 33. The Tenant himselfe after the Assise awarded may leave his barr and plead the generall Issue but he cannot plead a new barr after Issue 34 H. 6. fol. 10. and 29. 40 Ed. 3. fol. 48. b. The Tenant pleads in Barre and after the Jury hath the view and he leaves his Barr and pleads to the Assise 34. H. 6. fol. 29. abridg Assis fol. 138. Where they are adjourned upon a point certaine he cannot plead new plea afterwards unlesse pursuing as if the Tenant himselfe before adjournment had pleaded speciall Bastardy he may plead afterwards generall Bastardy 42 Ed. 3. fol. 12. After adjournment upon a Plea in barr certaine he cannot plead new plea in barr but onely the generall issue 8 As 10. and 10 Ed. 3. tit 157. and 44 Book of Ass 1. Where they are adjourned upon a Plea in abatement and after the
Writ is awarded good he may afterwards plead in barr 6 Book of Ass 1. Infant in Assise pleads Ontlawry of Felony in Barr and at another day was suffered to plead Release of the Plaintiffe in Barr 14 Ass 15. Assise the Tenant pleads in Barr and the Plaintiffe joynes Issue and the Court doe not take the Assise the same day and the next day the Tenant cannot change his Plea 11 H. 4. fol. 2. b. Where the Tenant pleads to the Assise by a Bailiffe if his Master have a Release or a Writing of which the Jury cannot have notice then if the Assise passe against the Bailiffe yet the Master shall have Certificate upon this Writing the same Law is if the Verdict be not well examined by the Justices and see more there Fitzherbart fol. 181. b. The Tenant pleads in Barr a Deed of the Ancester of the Plaintiffe with warranty and the Plaintiffe makes Title and afterwards he cannot plead in abatement that the Lands were in another Towne for that that the Assise was awarded 10 Edw. 3. tit 157. and 1 Ass 17. The Tenant pleads in Barr and the next day pleads by a Bailiff to the Assise and may for that the Assise was not awarded Abridg. As f. 47. Where the Assise was awarded upon the Plea of the Bailiff at another day after the Tenant comes and pleads Release and hath it for that he may have Certificate Abridgment As fol. 138. The Tenant may relinquish his Barr and plead the generall Issue otherwise it is in Cosenage Grand-Father and great Grand-Father but he cannot plead a new Barr 40 Ed. 3. fol. 49. Ass Assise the Tenant pleads in Barr the Deed of the Ancester of the Plaintiff with warranty and the Plaintiff makes Title and after the Tenant waives the Barr and pleads in abatement that the Lands are in another Town and cannot 1 Book of Assises 17. Assise If a Plea be pleaded and the Justices dye all shall be pleaded a new but if they are at Issue they shall stand 4 H. 7. fol. 7. Where in 〈◊〉 Assise a man shall have diverse Pleas to the writ and conclude over no wrong no Disseisin and where not NOte that the party himself or his Bailiff may have diverse Pleas where one is not contrary to the other concluding over no wrong as if he plead mis-naming of the Plaintiff if it be not found no Tenant of the Free-hold named in the Writ and if it be found no such Town and such like and notwithstanding and if it be not found no wrong for one is not contrary to the other but if he will say that the Tenements are in another Town and if it be not found no Tenant of the Free-hold named in the Writ and if it be not found no wrong these Pleas he shall not have for he shall not plead no Tenant of the Freehold named in the Writ c. And after say the Tenements are in another Town Note though the book at large be if it be found leaving out this word Ne yet the book of Entryes is if it be not found and so it seems in reason that it shall be as above if it be not found c. 36 H. 6. fol. 1. Where one pleads to a Writ and also in Barr what Barr is that which doth not go to the point of Assise scilicet no wrong but it is a Barr out of the point of Assise in such a case he shall not have both the Pleas for by such Barr the Plea to the Writ is waived as in an Assise of Rent the Tenant pleads wrong naming of himself and if it be not found out of his Foe he shall not have these two Pleas 3 Ed. 3.15 Tit. 172. Tit. 223. It seems if the Tenant plead in abatement of the Writ he shall not plead over to the Assise if his Plea to the Writ be not triable by the Assise 22 Book of Assises 14. In an Assise of Rent the Bailiff pleads mis-naming of the Town and if found not so c. That another is Tenant of the Rent not named for this is not contrary and it seems that in an Assise of Rent the Tenant of the Land may say that the Land whereout c. is in another Town and if found it be not that he hath a taker of the Rent not named contrary it is in an Assise of Land 15 Ed. 3. Tit. 55. In Assise by a Master and his Brethren of the fraternity of nine orders of Angells in he County Middlesex Defendant plead no such corporation by this name in this County and if it be not found not wrong he shall not have them both for the first Plea is in Barr and shall not have Barr and generall Issue 22 Ed. 4 fol. 34. Assise of Lands in Woxbridge the Tenant pleads that they are in Collam and not in Woxbridge and if it be not found no wrong and he hath 11 H. 4. fol. 2. b. It is said that in an Assise the Tenant or his Bailiff may plead tewnty severall matters in abatement or to an Assise and conclude if it be not found c. and is good 1 Ed. 4. fol. 4. and 8 H. 6. fol. 9. Where the Assise shall be awarded at large that is to say in point of Assise that is to say to inquire of Seisin and Disseisin and where in Right of Dammages and where not ASsise the Tenant pleads in abatement that the Plaintiff hath received the Land of him hanging the Assise and that he hath let to him for yeares again and the Plaintiff saith that he hath continued his Estate which he had by Disseisin without that that any Estate present of him he take and the Assise was charged upon the point and over upon the Seisin and Disseisin 10 book of Assises 24. If the Tenant plead in Barr and the Plaintiff makes title and the Tenant doth not traverse that the Assise shall be awarded at large 45 Ed. 3. fol. 24. Where there is a good Barr pleaded and an outing is confessed and the Barr is traversed or if the Plaintiff make Title and that is found for the Plaintiff or if there be an ill Barr pleaded that the Plaintiff need not answer but say come the Assise upon the Title and it is found for the Plaintif in all these cases the Plaintif shall have judgment without inquiring of Seisin and Disseisin 6 H. 7. fol. 2. Where the Plaintiff makes Title at large without answering to the Barr and the Tenant do not traverse this Title he shall not answer to that as that confessed and avoided or without saying let the Assise come upon the Title but let the Assise run without any thing saying to the Title there the Assise shall be taken at large and not upon the Title as in the Assise the Plaintif makes Title at large and in the end saith and this he is ready to aver by Assise and the foresaid tenant likewise the Assise shall be taken at large the reason
action shall be sued in a Court Baron by plaint and what not WHere one sues several plaints for five marks the other shall have a prohibition And Detinue of writings shall not be sued there and if he doth the other shall have a prohibition 5. Ed. 4. fol. 128. Where 20 l. is parted in severall plaints under 40 s. Prohibition lies Note there it is said Supersedeas lies and the Defendant there with safe conscience may wage his Law But see 48 Ed. 3. Fitzherbart fol. 46. A. The Lord himself shall have debt in his Court Baron for that that the suitors are Judges time of Ed. 1. Tit. debt in Fitzh 177. 6 Ed. 4. fol. 3. Suitors are Judges there Debt or trespalle may be sued in Court Baron by plaint but that is where the debt or dammage is under forty shillings that the Defendant in Trespasse plead his Freehold or that the Plaintif is his Villaine the Court shall cease otherwise a VVrit of false Judgement lieth and also it is good exception to the Jurisdiction of a Court Baron to say that the contract was made out of the Mannor in another Town 34 H. 6. fol. 53. A man shall not have account in Court-Baron nor in County 43 Ed. 3. fol. 19. Plea ought not to be removed in debt or trespasse from this Court but where a Debt or Dammages amount above forty shillings or in replegiare but I intend there shal not be a plaint in Replegiare in every Mannor but in this Mannor where the Lord hath ancient authority by Charter to make Replegiare yet diverse seem the contrary see Fitzh Na. Bre. 14 H. 8. fol. 17. Trespasse Damages found eight pence in the common Bench and the Plaintif recovers but he cannot there count under forty shillings and in Court-Baron he can-count above forty shillings but under that 19 H. 6. fol. 8. That Debt and Trespasse shall be sued in Court-Baron Britton fol. 61. Detinue of Goods may be sued in a Court-Baron 6 ● 2. Every stranger which comes within the Mannour may be sued there in Debt or Trespasse under forty shillings so that Debt Detinue of Goods and such actions personalls except account where the Debt or Dammages is under forty shillings it is determinable in a Court-Baron by plaint there 34 H. 6. fol. 53. Trespasse by force of Armes doth not lye in a Court Baron note that the contrary is used 7 Ed. 4. fol. 23. Sherif in the County may hold Plea by Justicies of the great Summons but Justicies shall not be in a Court-Baron for Justicies shall not be directed to the Steward but to the Sherif and the Sherif is Judge in a Justicies and Officer to the Court but so is not the Steward 21 Ed. 4. fol. 79. Fitzh fol. 139. F. Note that Court-Baron hath no authority to hold Plea of Free-hold and of that to give Judgment for execution thereof that is a Dissesin to the Tenant 22 Ass 64. Glanvile 94. saith No man is tied to answer in the Court of his Lord of a Free-hold without the command of the Lord the King Right patent may be directed to the Lord to be tried in a Court-Baron but it cannot be tried there by great Assise but it seems it may be tried by Battell and if the Tenant ioyne Battell the Lord may give day to try it but Fitzh fol. 4. E. saith if the Lord will proceed or Issue is ioyned upon the great Assise prohibition lies and if Bastardy or any forrain Plea be pleaded then they have no Jurisdiction in Court Baron and if they proceed Prohibition lies Time of Ed. 1. Tit. Droit 45. 1 H. 6. fol. 7. If plaint of Debt or Trespasse be sued there and forrain matter is pleaded it shall not be tried in Court-Baron 1 H. 5. fol. 12. If in a VVrit of Right patent in Court-Baron for Charter Land the Lord will not proceed to do right the Demandant may go to the Sherif and have a Tolt which is a command to his Bailif that he take out the complaint and remove the Plea into the County and after that also by a Pone in the common Bench but the Tenant shall not have a Tolt but he shall have a Recordare with the cause and the Demandant may have a Pone without cause Fitzh fol. 3. F. Note that a VVrit of Right patent ought to be sued in the Lords Court and not otherwhere without the license of the Lord Testimony of the King by Letter or otherwise that he hath given license and then he shall have his Writ because the Lord hath remitted his Court in the Common Bench Nat. Brevium fol. 15. None may distraine Free Tenants to answer of a Freehold nor of any thing belonging to the Free-hold without the Kings Writ Marleb chap. 22. Coppy-holders shall not be impleaded by the Kings Writ but shall be impleaded in the Court of their Lord by plaint in nature of what Writ they will Lit. fol. 16. Debt upon a Bill obligatory under forty shillings lieth in a Court-Baron Fitzh 2. E. If a Right parent be sued there in Court-Baron and forrain matter be pleaded there or Issue joyned to be triod by great Assise there shall go a Prohibition Fitzh 39.6 The Tenant may have prohibition directed to the Sherif to prohibit Bailiffs of the Court where the Mise is joyned in a Writ of Right upon the Grand Assise unlesse Battaile were there offered Marleb chap. 20. None except the Lord the King shal hold Pleas in his Court of false Judgement given in the Court of his Tenants because these Pleas especially belong to the Crown Fitzh 4. E. If a Plea be held there which ought not a Prohibition lieth Fitzh 47. b. Detaining of writings shall not be sued in a Court-Baron Fitzh 139. D. If a man hold plea in County of Trespasse by force of Armes the Defendant may sue a Supersedeas out of the Chancery The same Law seems in a Court-Baron 8 Ed. 4. Tit. Jurisdiction B. 215. See Fitzh 85. G. That trespasse shall be brought in Court-Baron and there see the forme of the Writ but it is not by force of armes there Britton fol. 61. That Debt and Trespasse shall be sued in a Court-Baron Fitzh 85. G. Trespasse Viscountile there shall not be by force of armes in the Writ 8 Ed. 4. Tit. 115. Trespasse doth not lie in a Court-Baron by force of armes for a Fine shal not be set but in a Court of Record and for that it shall not be there by force of armes see Glocester chap. 8. 22 Ass 64. If one implead more in a Court-Baron without a Writ and recover dammages where I plead to the Jurisdiction and the Court ought to be outed yet if the Bailif make execution of these dammages by command of the Steward he shall not be punished in trespasse for he doth that which he ought to do till it be defeated by false Judgment but if it were before not a Judge it is void and otherwise
shall have that Fitzh fol. 11. The King shall have yeare day and wast of Lands in ancient Demesne if it be so that the Tenant have sold them against his Lords will and yet not the Lands past by surrender Stam. fol. 50. Note this is where the copy-holders in ancient Demesne have used time out of minde to sue for them by petty Writ of Right close and so is 14 H. 4. fol. 1. by Hank and 14. H. 4 fol. 34. and see 3 Ed. 3. Br. tit copy-hold 22. And in these surrenders of Lands in ancient Demesne of frank tenure it is not used to say to hold at the will of the Lord in these copies but to hold according to the custome of the Mannor by the Services before due and is not said there at the Will of the Lord. Ancient Demesne is Socage Tenure for they are called Sokemaines Fitzh 14. C. By what Writ Execution shall be in ancient Demesne and by what not and shall be free of Toll c. EXecution of Writs in ancient Demesne cannot be for that Execution is given by Westm 2. chap. 18. and that the Statute is if they be ejected of those Tenements they have to recover by a VVrit of new Disseisin 22 Book of Ass 45. Upon a Statute Merchant execution was awarded of Lands in ancient Demesne Br. Tit. 37. Debt against Heire if he hath Lands in ancient Demesne they shall be charged as Assets 7 H. 4. fol. 15. Those Tenants of ancient Demesne are quit of Toll and passages for Goods sold and bought in Faires and Markets and to be quit of Taxe and Tallage of Parliament unlesse they be taxed by the Parliament and to be quit of expences of Knights of Parliament and shall not be put upon Juries and Inquests out of ancient Demesne for Lands of ancient Demesne Eitzh 14. Court of Pipowders Let us see the nature and authority of Court of Pipowders COurt of Pipowders is a Court of Record and the Steward is Judge for that that there are no Suitors there and for that error lieth there upon erronious judgment given and not a VVrit of false judgment 6 Ed. 4. fol. 3.7 Ed. 4. fol. 23. That errour lieth there It was held that a Court of Pipowders may be by custome in a City without Faire or Market and therefore where it was assigned for error upon a Record given in a Court of Pipowders according to the custome of the City held c. And though it be not in full Market or Faire it was adiudged no errour 13 Ed. 4. f. 8. Trespasse of Goods taken the Defendant iustifies as Bailif of the Town of Rippon by vertue of a command of execution of a iudgment given against the Plaintif in Debt in Court of the said Faire at Rippon and for that that the Plaintif did not make agreement for the Debt recovered against him within ten daies after iudgment given he makes price of the Goods by Merchants of the Town of Rippon and for that makes agreement with the party and this Justification was good 20 Book of Assise 90. It was enacted that no Steward shall hold Plea in this Court unlesse the Plaintif or his Attorney makes Oath that the fact or contract was made within the Faire and if it were the contrary he should forfeit 100 s. 17 Ed. 4. chap. 2. tit Faires the fourth In Court of Pipowders the Plaintif or his Attorney shall be examined by Oath if the matter rose within the Faire and the Defendant also may pleade that this arose in a forrain place 1 R. 3. chap. 6. Debt in the common Bench against Mawd and counts that he had recovered ten Markes against the said Mawd in Court of Pipowders at Everwick and the Plaintif by Certiorare removes the Tenor of the Record in the Chancery and from thence by Mittimus into the common Bench to have execution and attachment was made upon the Originall at the ninth houre and he appears and pleaded and a Venire facias went out returnable at the third houre after the ninth and so in Court of Pipowders the processe is from houre to houre 7 H. 6. fol. 19. The book of Entries fol. 167. See there the form of the Count and Precipe of summoning in this Court and the Processe of Capias and proceeding in Debt in this Court and Debt against a Jaylor for escape in Title Debt The book of Entries fol. 18. See Scire facias to have execution upon iudgment given in a Court of Pipowders in an action of account brought there and removed into the common Bench to have execution of that iudgment And it seems breifly that nothing shall be sued here unlesse the contract or deed were made within the Precinct of the Faire or Market as it appeares above and for that Informations of penall Statutes ought not to be sued in this Court of things and Offences made out of Faires and Markets as insufficient tanned Leather carryed to be sold in Faires against the Statutes also this Court is ordained only for hasty redresse of things there during the Faire Court of Marshalsey FIRST In the booke called the Diversity of Courts fol. 110. It is said that the Court called the Marshelsey is an ancient Court of Record and made to have good government and order within the Kings House for preservation of the King and his Servants and to this Court are certaine bounds limited by 13 R. 2. chap. 3. that in all places where the King in his own person shall come and make stay there within the Verge limited to his Graces Court that it shall not passe the space of twelve Miles to be accounted from his Lodging Fitzh 141. B. And in diversity of Courts it is said that this Court hath power to inquire of Treason Murder and Felony and to take appeales of them and also of Maymes if they be made within the Verge and between persons of the Kings House And said there also that if one of the House of the King sue another which is not of the House he shall plead to the Jurisdiction of the Court and if they will not this exception allow he shall have a VVrit of Errour and that shall be reversed in the Kings Bench Fitzh 242. A. Seek in trespasse And the Judges in this Court are the Steward and Marshall of the Kings House for in these is the order of the Kings House Note that by the Statute Articuli super chartas c. 3. that the Steward and the Marshall shall hold no Plea of Freehold nor of Debt Covenant nor of any bargain made between any of the Kings People but only of trespas made within the Kings House or other trespasse made within the Verge and of Contracts and Covenants which one of the Kings House made with another in the same House and not otherwhere And they shall plead no Plea of trespasse except the parties were arrested by them before the King departed the Verge where the trespasse was committed and
23 H. 8. chap. 15. If any be troubled by attachment or arrested by Latitat or in London or in a Court which hath liberty to hold Plea and no Count be put in within three daies after the Baile put in otherwise appeares unlesse the Court of discretion gives longer day the Defendant shall recover costs and dammages the same Law is if a Suite be discontinued after Count or that the Plaintiff be non-suited then the Defendant forthwith by discretion of the Court shall recover costs and the Statute gives Debt for the costs 8 Eliz. Chap. 2. But one arrested by Bill of Middlesex shall not recover costs though the Plaintiff do not count to be nonsuited If a matter passe against an Informer by Verdict or Judgment the party shall have costs and shall have execution by a Capias to satisfie fieri facias or Elegit but these two last Statutes do not extend to a Court-Baron 18 Eliz. C. 5. 22 H. 8. B. Tit. Costs 25. in quare impedit the Plaintiff shall not recover costs for that the dammages are great 35 H. 8. Tit. 258. 2 Ma. Tit. Costs 23. Debt by Lessor if he be non-suted or bar'd the Defendant shall recover costs by the Statute for it is upon a contract for Rent 2 H. 7. f. 13. Account the Plaintiff shall not recover costs but where the Defendant is adjudged to account and pleads Barr c. It is otherwise 9 H. 6. fol. 66. He shall not recover costs for that the dammages are tremble by the Statute 14 H. 6. fol. 13. forcible entry the same In London by act of common Councell in trespasse by force of Armes and in all other Actions personalls if the Plaintiff be non-suited or a Verdict against him and Judgment upon it or Judgement upon demur against him the Defendant shall recover his costs by discretion of the Court but if the Plaintiff sue as Executor or Administrator which is not upon his own act the Defendant there shall not recover costs and yet trespasse by force of Armes is not within the Statute 23 H. 8. chap. 14. to have costs Damages IT seems if one take my Beasts and after they return to me again I shall have trespasse for taking but upon the evidence I shall not recover the value though the value be in the Writ 11 H. 4. fol. 23. 1 H. 6. fol. 8. 19 H. 6. fol. 34. In what plaints Damages shall be recovered in Court-Barons and in what cases in Court-Barons and other Courts and in what not In plaint in nature of Assise of novell disseisin Grandfather and Great Grandfather Entry by disseisin Dower Nuper obiit Mortdancester Cozenage Replegiare Covenant Debt Action upon the Case Deceit and trespasse Damages and costs shall be recovered by the Plaintiffe Eight Marks were given in plaint of Land in Court-Baron Plowdens Commentaries f. 394. B. If any avow for Rent or doing damage custome or service if the Plaintiffe be non-suited or otherwise barred then the Avowant shall recover damages and costs as the Plaintiffe ought See 19 H. 8. fol. 8. 12 H. 8. chap. 19. Rast tit Avowry 1. Discent THen for that that the second Article is to inquire who is Tenant and what advantage the Lord shall have by the death of his Tenant It behoveth to know who is in by discent to be your Tenant that you may know of whom to have releife and who to be in Ward and who not and who shall be sayd in by discent and where by purchase and where hee shall not be in by discent Gift to one in taile remainder to the right heires of J. S. which was dead T. S. hath that as right heire and is in by purchase and shall not pay releife nor be in ward 40 Ed. 3.9 32 Ed. 3. Fitzh Discent 8. Lord and Tenant the Tenant aliens in Mortmain and the Alience is disseised and the Disseisor dyeth seised his Heire is in by discent yet the Lord may enter within the yeare for he hath only a Title to enter and cannot have an action but contrary of him that hath right of entry and may have action 1 Ed. 6. Tit. Mortmaine 6. Bro. Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. the Tenant for life dies living J.S. the remainder is void and J.S. nor his Heires shall not be said in by discent to pay releife nor otherwise shall have the Land as purchasor 9 H. 6. f. 24. Perkins f. 12. the same Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. and J.S. dies Tenant for life hath aid of T.S. Son and Heire of J.S. and though he were within age he shall not have his age and shall not pay releife nor be in ward if they hold by Knight service and be within age for that he is in as a Purchasor 11 H. 4. f. 74. Lease for life the remainder to another in taile which dies his Issue within age and after the Tenant for life dies the Issue is in by discent and if he be within age and hold by Knight service he shall be in ward to the Donor 33 H. 6. f. 5. And for that that in the said second Article of Charge you ought to inquire if any Tenant be dead who is his next Heire Let us now see where a Woman is with child at the time of the death of her Husband Tenant and by whom she shall be Judged with child and who shall be said in after the death of the Husband as Heire and shall be Tenant to the Lord and who not IF the Husband Tenant dye seised and his Wife with Child and a Brother of the Husband enter as Heire as he may and after Issue is born this Issue is Heire to the Husband and Tenant to the Lord and not the Brother though he were Tenant and Heire before the Issue was borne 41 Ed. 3. fol. 11. A man Tenant hath a Daughter his Wife with child with a Son and makes a Feoffment upon condition and dies and the Daughter enters for the condition c. and after the Son is born this Son shall not be Heire nor Tenant of this Land the same Law is where there is a Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. Tenant for life dies the Daughter enters and after the Son is born he shall not be Heire and Tenant of that Land 9 H. 7. f. 25. Plow f 56. Daughter enters after the Death of her Father Tenant and takes profits and after the Son with which the Wife was with child is borne he may enter and have that as Heire and shall be in by discent and Tenant but hath no remedy for the profits taken by the Daughter before he was born 9 H. 6 fol. 26. If a Woman Tenant seised in Fee hath a Daughter and being with Child with a Son the Husband dies and after the Wife is ravished and consents to the Ravishor and the Daughter enters by the Statute as next of blood as
our Law and if he sue for that ten pounds in Court Christian Prohibition lies but if he promise one with his Daughter in Marriage ten pounds he shall sue for that in Court Christian 17 Ed. 4. fol. 4. If a man promise a certain summ of Money to another to marry his Daughter or Servant which he marries accordingly Debt doth not lie for it is Spiritual contrary Rogers and Sulyard for it is one for another though it were said contrary and the reason was it shall be sued in the Spiritual Court for this Cause 22. Book of Assises 70. If one promise that if he will marry his Daughter he shall have ten pounds this is a Contract this is a Promise in our Law and he shall have Debt but if he say he will give with his Daughter ten pounds he ought to demand that before the Ordinary 45 Ed. 3. f. 24. Where Covenant was by Deed between the Plaintiff and Defendant that if the Plaintiff took to Wife the Daughter of the Defendant that then he shall be bound to him in a hundred pounds and if he takes her to Wife Action of Debt lies and the Court shall not be out of Jurisdiction though that touch Matrimony for that that this was by Deed but otherwise it is if it were without Deed. 37 H. 6. f. 9. By Prisot if an Agreement be made that A. shall take the Daughter of B. in Marriage and if he marries her there it is said that he shall not have Debt for it seems it is not Quid pro quo Inquire for if one sels a Horse for ten pounds and hath no Horse yet he shall have Debt for that and yet it is not one for another and where I sell my Land in D. for ten pounds Debt lies and yet he hath not the Land before Livery 27 Book of Assises 29. Where a man sels all the Trees in his VVood and agrees that the same Buyer shall not cut them before Michaelmas next if Hauks in the mean time are in the Trees it seems that the Seller shall have them 14 H. 8. fol. 1. If a man let Land except the VVood and under-wood and Hernes and Shovelers make their Nests in the Trees the Lessor shall have them for the Trees are excepted and the Nests in the Trees and the same Law of Akorns which come by reason of the Trees 7 H. 7. fol. 5. If a man sell a Lease of Land and certain Cloth for ten pounds the Contract is intire and cannot be severed and if one of them were by defeasible Title and devested from the Vendee yet the Seller shall have the whole summ for the Contract is intire and cannot be severed See 12 H. 8. f. 13. 9 Ed. 4. fol. 1. 9 H. 7. f. 22. If a man sell stuff for forty pounds and deliver the stuff and no Money paid nor Day appointed yet it is a good Bargain and he shall have Debt for the forty pounds but 11 H. 4. f. 33. If one assume to make the Plaintiff a House before such a Day and doth not unlesse it be for such a summ of Money Action upon the Case doth not lie for it is a naked Bargain 9 Ed. 4. f. 54. By Littleton if a man recovers in Debt upon a Contract and doth not take Execution yet he cannot have new Action of Debt upon the Contract for the Contract is determined by the Judgement and the nature of the Duty changed to a Record And by Danby and Moyle in Account Debt Trespasse and such like it is no Plea that the Plaintiff at another time recovered in them unlesse he said that he had Execution also contrary Littleton and Choke See there in Debt upon an Obligation seems contrary 2 R. 3. f. 14. Where one brings Detinue and is barrd by Law waging he shall not have an Account afterwards for Detinue affirmes property in him and Account disaffirmes that 12 Ed. 4. fol. 13. Where is a Barr by waging of Law in Detinue one shall not have after an Action upon the Case for negligent keeping the thing as it seems 40 E. 3. fol 27. Where in Trespasse one recovers in London and be brought in the thing judged he cannot refuse this Judgement and sue for the Trespasse in a higher Court. 20 H. 6. fol. 12. Trespasse of Goods taken it is a good Plea that you at another time brought Trespasse against me and J. S. and that J. S. appeared and pleaded not guilty and it was found against him and that the Plaintiff had Judgement for it is carried in Damages and reduced into the thing judged and may have Execution at his pleasure but otherwise it is in Debt for there it is not a good Barr unlesse he pleads that he had Judgement and Execution against one 23 H. 8. Tit. 105. Action upon the Case Debt of twenty pounds if the Defendant hath waged his Law in this Action and the Plaintiff brings an Action upon the Case it is a good Plea for the Defendant to say that at another time he was barred in Debt for the same by waging of Law 2 R. f. Trespasse if in Debt or other Action in the common Bench the Defendant pleads Recovery of that in a Court of Franchise or that the Plaintiff is barred in a Court of Franchise though it be not of Record here yet it seems that the Defendant shall have advantage of Record and otherwise shall be a mischeif 46 Ed. 3. f. 17. 17 Ed. 3. Tit. Barr 246. Debt upon an Obligation it is no Plea that at another time before the Mayor of London the Plaintiff recovered upon the same Obligation against the Defendant and had Execution it is no Plea for that that the Obligation was not Damnum nor the Defendant doth not shew Acquittance and the Plaintiff by Award of the Court recovered 4 H. 7. f. 8. Three bound in an Obligation joyntly and severally it is no Barr for one to say that he recovered against another but that he recovered and had Execution is good and he ought to shew Acquittance of the Payment or otherwise he shall be charged 5 Ed. 4. fol. 5. Debt by severall Precipes against two by Choke where he hath Execution against one he shall not have against the other afterwards 22 Ed. 4. fol. 7. Two are bound in an Obligation joynty and severally if I have Execution against one this is a Barr against the other but not Judgement onely Husband and Wife What Contract and Act of a married Wife Bailiff and Servant shall binde the Husband or Master and what not A Married Wife hath no Will but the Will of her Husband and for that if a married Wife sell or give Goods and the Husband agree before or after it is good and it is his Will and his Sale and if the Bargain be advantage or disadvantage to the Husband Agreement of the Husband makes it good the same Law of an Assumpsit made to a married Wife to deliver one out
a man pleads death of the Defenfendant hanging the Writ he shall not plead that after the last Continuance for that by this the Writ is abated in deed contrary of a Plea which proves the Writ abateable 34. H. 6. fol 49. At the day of Nisi prius the Defendant pleads to the Writ that one of the Plaintiffes was dead after the last continuance at D. in the County of Darby Judgment of the Writ and the Plea recorded and the matter adjourned and had that Plea 14 H. 6. fol 9. 38. Ed 3. fol 5. Precipe by a Woman the Tenant tenders his Law of not summoned and at the day was essoyned and at the day saith that the Demandant took a Husband after the Law tendered and for that that he did not say after the last continuance that is after the essoyn it was held no Plea 4. H. 7. fol 8. A man shall have but one Plea after the last continuance 38. H 6. fol 33. the same 16 Ed 4. fol 5. A man may plead a Plea after the last continuance after Issue joyned and in another Tearm till Verdict but not mean between Nisi prius and the day in Bench. ● H. 7. fol 8. A man shall not have a Plea after the last continuance unlesse such Pleas which were not in being at the time of the first Plea for otherwise it is not after the last continuance Maintenance In so much that Maintenance may be the better avoided let us see what maintenance is forbidden by the Law THat no Clark of a Justice or Sheriffe shall not maintain parties in quarrels nor in businesses which are in the Kings Court West 2. chap 28. That none of the Kings Counsellors nor none of his house nor none of his other servants nor no great ones of the Land by sending of their Letters nor in other manner nor no other of the Realm shall not undertake to maintain quarrels nor parties in the Country in disturbance of the Common Law 1 Ed 3. chap 14. See 20 Ed 3. chap 3. That no Counsellor Officer or Servant nor any other persons shall not uphold or maintain any quarrels by maintenance in the Country nor elsewhere first of R. 2. chap 4. That henceforth none buy or sell or take promise grant or Covenant to have Mannors Lands Tenements or hereditaments But if such person which sells their Heirs or they by whom they claim have been in possession of the same or of the reversion or remainder of that or hath taken Rents or profits of that by the space of one whole year next before that bargain Covenant Grant or promise made upon pain of him that bargains to forfeit the value of the Lands And the Buyer also knowing that to forfeit also the value of the Land the one half to the King the other to him which will sue for the same within one year after the same offence And it is also Enacted that none from henceforth unlawfully maintain or cause or procure any unlawfull maintenance in any action or complaint in any of the Courts of the King of the Chancery Starr-Chamber White-Hall or otherwhere within the Kings Dominions where they have power to hold Plea of Land by Commission Patent or Writ And also that none shall instruct Jurors or subborn Witnesses by Letters Promises or by any other sinister labour or means to maintain any matter or cause or to hinder Justice or to procure or occasion any manner of perjury upon pain of forfeiture for every such offence 10 l. one half to the King and the other to him that will sue for the same within one year after the same offence 32. H. 8. chap 9. If one will say he will maintain and doth it not he shall not be punished for maintenance And Champerty lies where one purchases hanging the Suit 9. H. 7. fol 18. See 3 H. 6. fol 53. It seems it is no maintenance to give money before a Suit begins but hanging the Suit Maintenance the Writ was in Plea which was hanging he maintains and it is good and it seems it is better to say in Plea which was hanging 10. H. 7. f. 27. It seems one may covenant to have part of an Obligation when it is recovered for travelling with an Alien which cannot speak English nor Latine to his Counsell so one may covenant with one indebted to him and deliver him the Obligation of another in satisfaction of his Debt to sue in his name and notwithstanding that he paid Counsell it is no Champerty Every Champerty implies in it Maintenance but not of the contrary and he to whose use and every one that hath lawfull Interest in the Land may maintain 15 H. 7. f. 2.34 H. 6. fol. 33. the same By Fineux If a Servant be arrested for Debt or other thing in London or other Franchise the Master may maintain him and spend of his proper money for losse of his Service Inquire But otherwise it is in Precipe 21 H. 7. fol. 40. B. See 21 H. 6. fol. 19. by Newton By Newton and Paston Servant may pray one skilled in the Law to be of Counsell with his Master but a stranger cannot pray one to be of Counsell with my Adversary for he hath nothing to do 21 H. 6. fol. 19. If a man be at the Barre and another informs the Court that this man can declare the truth and pray that he be sworn and by the commandement of the Court he swears this is Maintenance iustifiable but if he had said for one or the other of his own head this is Maintenance punishable the same Law if he informe a Jury sworn of his own head it is Maintenance punishable 28 H. 6. f. 6. The Master may pray one skilled in the Law to be Counsell with his Servant and this is Maintenance iustifiable but he cannot give of his own proper goods to distribute to men of the Countrey for maintaining his quarrell for then he meddles with a thing forbidden by the Law and by Prisot he may iustifie giving money to Lawyers to be of Counsell with his Servant but not to give money to others not learned in the Law 28. H. 6. fol. 12. By Fortescue Master may pray one learned in Law to be of Counsell with his Servant but not to give to them money unless it be of his Wages and he saith one skilled in the Law may be of Counsell without a Fee Inquire 31. H. 6. f. 2.36 H. 6. fol. 29.3 H. 6. f. 55. Maintenance one may iustifie for that he is his Servant but he cannot give money Maintenance Defendant iustifies that he is a Bail and that he came to the Defendants Attorney and prayed him to be carefull the which is the same Maintetenance by Priso● it is not good to say it is the same maintenance for this is no Maintenance for every stranger may pray the Attorney for it is the part of an Attorny to attend to that and for that it is no Maintenance 32 H. 6. f.
29. It is iustifiable to speak to a Lawyer for him that he cannot speak English and by Laken Master may pay money of his Servants Wages to the Counsell by the consent of his Servant but a Bail cannot pray a man learned in the Law to be of Counsell but may come and see if his appearance be recorded and it seems that the Father may give of his own money for his Sonne and Heir for he is bound to find him contrary of another Cozine 34 H. 6. fol. 27. B. If one be retained to ride to London and when he comes there to maintain him this is not instifiable but it seems otherwise if he were hired for the iourney that is iustifiable and the same of a Servant 39 H. 6. fol. 6.19 H. 6. fol. 31. Where one hath property in the thing demanded he may maintain by Moyle as goods or writings are delivered to J.S. and Detinue is brought against him by a stranger the Deliverer may maintain and in Precipe quod reddat or Ass against a Farmer the Lessor may maintain 39 H. 6. f. 21. See 9 H. 6. f. 64 the same Where one hath Rent out of Land in Fee and hath the Writings granted unto him by R. the Grantee may maintain R. in Detinue of writings of the same Rent and it seems that a Master may maintain his Servant and a man may maintain his blood and his kindred and give money to the poore and that Maintenance is iustifiable and he in Reversion may maintain his Tenant for life after Attournment and not before and this is seen in giving his own proper money 9 H. 6. f. 64. See 14 H. 7. f. 2. by Reade In attaint it seems that one may aid and maintaine his Cozen in aiding and councelling him at the bar 12 H. 6. f. 2. R. Maintenance in Assise of Fresh force Defendant Justifies for that he was of his aliance and shews how cozen and it seemed good by which the Plaintif saith that he promised ten shillings peice to two of the Jury to passe for him 20 H. 6. f. 1.21 H. 6. f. 19. By Paston a man may maintaine his Kinn and his Allies Maintenance Defendant justifie that the party was his Chapleine ●etained with him and he gave him notice who he should have of his Councell which is the same maintenance and it seems that is no maintenance And for that the Defendant saith that he was at the Barr to aid him and that is a good Justification to say that is the same maintenance 19 H. 6 f 30. In maintenance Defendant cannot plead not-guilty but he ought to answer to the point of the VVrit that is to say he did not maintaine ready to Justifie and others to the contrary 8 H. 6. fol. 36. But by 2 Ed. 4 fol. 16 In maintenance not guilty is pleaded and allowed By Choke if my Brother or Cozen hath a Suit in the Law and praies me to aid him to learned councell and I pray a man to be of his Councell this is a good Plea in maintenance contrary if a stranger do it but if he gives his own Money for his Brother or Cozen this is speciall maintenance 9 Ed. 4. fal 34. In action upon the Statute of Laborers Where Tenant in taile or for life is impleaded he in remainder or Reversion may maintaine and give of his proper Money for safegard of his Interest for he which hath Interest in the land may maintaine to save that 1 Ed. 6. tit 53. Maintenance It is held a difference between action reall where land may come to him and an action personall for he to whom lands may come as by Remainder Reversion Discent and such like may maintaine in action reall And by Brian a man may shew to another who is a man learned in the law for the party to retaine but he may not give Money to the Counsellor and one Neighbour may go with another to seek Councell and a man may maintaine his Servan● and give of his wages behinde and otherwise not to give Money but he may lend to him or another Money and and that is no maintenance but he in Reversion or Remainder may give money where the land is in question And the Servant may maintaine his Master as to go and labour for him but he cannot give of his proper money for him And so it seems that he who hath marryed the Daughter of one party may maintain him in an action Reall but not in an Action personall 19 Ed. 4. fol. 3. Br. Upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. chap. 9. That a man shall not buy land unlesse the Seller hath been in possession by a year before it was agreed in Sergeants Inne that if a man Mortgage his Land and redeeme it and he sells it within a yeare after the redemption that he may doe it without danger of the Statute for the Statute is to be intended of pretenced title and not of a cleere title And the ancient Statutes are that none shall maintaine yet one may maintaine his Cozen as above for they are to be intended of unlawfull maintenance that is that unlawfully one cannot maintaine 6 Ed. 6. tit 38. maintenance One skilled in the Law may give evidence for his Fee to the Jury and t is no Imbracery But is Imbracery in another unlesse he be sworn 6 Ed. 4. f. 5. If Precipe be brought against me and hanging that I infeoff J.S. and the Demandant recovers by default after default and I bring Writ of deceit it seems J.S. cannot maintaine for that that the possession which he hath is Champerty and against the Law 8 Ed. 4. fol. 13. Maintenance the Defendant justifies that he is his Neighbour and knew no man skild in the Law and he informed him of one and a good Justification by which the Plaintiff shewed speciall maintenance that is giving Money to the Jurors 12 Edw. 4. fol. 14. See 19 Edw. 4. fol. 3 Maintenance the Defendant may plead that he was a Juror and that is good without saying that he gave Verdict but if after Verdict given the Juror praies Judgment this is maintenance 18 Ed. 4. fol. 2. If a Juror give Money to his Companion to passe this is maintenance notwithstanding that it be for truth But to perswade him to passe is no maintenance 17 Edw. 4. fol. 5. One may be baile and that is no maintenance so that he do not meddle more in the matter 18 Ed 4. fol. 13. Trespas of digging land the Defendant justifies for that that the place where is their Church-yard and that the Inhabitants have used there to be buried and for making grave there justifies and field that all the Inhabitants may maintaine in this action though they were not parties 18 Ed. 4. fol. 2. See before 15 H. 7. fol. 2. That every one that hath lawfull interest may maintaine Maintenance supposing that the Defendant maintained A. in Assise The Defendant saith that A. held of him by which he
came with him to the Assise staid with him pray'd the Sheriff to make an indifferent pannell which is the same maintenance and it is a good Plea 11 H. 6. f. 39. Generall Attorney which sues and is not skilled in the Law may well meddle but he cannot proffer Money to a Jury but may pray them to appeare 34 H. 6. fol. 27. By Choke Maintenance he cannot justifie for that that he was an Attorney retained with him and that by commandement of his Master he retained Councell and gave to them forty pence of his Masters Money and good Inquire if an Attorney cannot retaine Councell without the commandement of his Clyent and if he may not disburse of his proper Moneys for the time But Attorney cannot give of his proper Money nor of his Masters money to Jurors 36 H. 6. fol. 29.11 H. 6. fol. 13. the same Maintenance the Defendant saith that he was an Attorney in the action Judgment if action and good But he cannot give any thing to the Jury but as an Attorney and give Evidence to the Jury for his Clyent he may 13 H. 4. f. 19. If a man maintaine a quarrell by his Attorney action of maintenance lies against the Master 22 H. 6. f. 24. And by Newton If a man of great power in the Countrey will say in the presence of the people that he will spend twenty pound for one party or will give twenty pound to labour for the party though he give nothing is maintenance see before 9 H. 7. fol. 18. Maintenance against a Servant of one by Fortescue if he meance Jurors to out them of their Tenures if they do not pa●e with his Master this is special Maintenance in the Servant 19 H. 6. f. 30. A man skilled in Law may do his endeavour for his Client and it is no maintenance if the Plaintiff cannot alleadge other special matter forbidden by the Law 8 H. 4. f. 6. B. Embraceor is he which comes to the Barr with the party and speaks in the matter or is there to overlook the Jury or to put them in feare but men skilled in Law may speak in the Cause for their Money but they cannot labour the Jury and if they take money to do that they are Embraceors Fitzh f. 71. A. Tenures and Services It is expedient to know the Services and Tenures which your Tenants shall do and first of the Tenure in cheif and other Tenures of the King and then of other Lords FIrst Tenure in cheif is called where one holds of the King meerly as of his Crown which is a Signiory ingrosse for that it is held of him which is alwayes King and not of the King as of his Mannour of D. c. Fuzh. 3. D. If any Land be held of the King as of the Honour Castle or Mannour such Lands are not held of the King in cheif and this is proved by the Writ of Right which shall be directed in such a Case to the Bailiffs of the Honour Castle or Mannour Also the Statute of Magna Charta chap. 31. is if any hold of any Escheat as of his Honour of Wallingford Nottingham Bullo gne Lanca●●er and of other Escheats which are in Our hand and are of Baronies and dies his Heir shall not give other releif nor make to us other Service then the Barons should make if that Barony were in the hands of the Baron and we in the same manner will hold it as the Baron held it 1 Ed. 6. chap. 4. also is that where a King hath or after shall have any Dukedomes Baronies Castles Mannours Land Tenements Fees or Signiories by Attainder Conviction Outlary or by Dissolution of Monasteries which Lands held of them by Knights Service Socage or otherwise shall not be construed to hold in chief nor as Tenure in cheif See in Br. Tit. Tenures 100. Littleton fol. 31. Tenure of the King in Burgage is where an ancient Town is of which the King is Lord and those which have Tenements within the Borough hold of the King their Tenements that every Tenant by his Tenure ought to pay to the King a certain Rent by the year and such Tenure is but Tenure in Socage Fitzh 6. D. Lands and Tenements within Cities and Townes are held of the King in Burgage Tenure and it behoveth that a Writ of Right Patent of them shall be directed to Mayors Sheriffs and Bailiffs as Bailiffs and Officers of the King as if Lands were held of the King as of any Honour Castle or Mannour by which it appears Tenure in Burgage is Socage Tenure and not Socage in cheif Fitzh fol. 1. J. the same Stamford 13. If one hold of the King in Burgage the King shall not have first Seisin but otherwise it is where he holds of the King by Knights Service in cheif or by Socage in cheif for the Statute of the Kings Prerogative chap. 3. is the King shall have the first Seisin after the Death of them which of him held in cheif of all Lands and Tenements of which they were seised in their Demesn as of Fee whatsoever age their Heirs were of and that is taken as well of Socage in cheif as otherwise in cheif 7 H. 6. fol. 3. The King shall have first Seisin where his Tenant dies seised in his Demesne as of Reversion 47 Ed. 3. fol. 21. If the King purchase Lands which is held of others by this all the Services are extinguished and if he infcoff others to hold of him he shall hold of his Crown in cheif by Finchden and also when an Honour is seised into the Kings hands and a Mannour is held of that Honour which escheats unto him as of common Escheat if he alien to hold of him he shall hold as he held before of the Honour and by the same Services but if he come in as by Forfeiture by Warr or Escheat which is because of his own person and he seise and infeoff others they shall hold in cheif if the King do not expresse other Tenure 33 H. 6 fol 7. By Prisot if the King seise Land by Forfeiture of Treason and grant that over to hold of the cheif Lord by the Service due c. that in this case he shall hold of the cheif Lord as it hath been adjudged 44 Ed. 3. f. 45. The King gives Lands to one to hold to him and his Heirs by the Services due c. and by all the Justices that is Tenure by Knights Service 11 H. 4. fol. 71. It was recorded in the Exchequer that such a one holdeth so much Land of our Lord the King by Serjeanty to finde one Man for the Warr wheresoever within the four Seas and by Hank it is great Serieanty to be made by the Body of a Man 13 H. 7. fol. 16. If one hold of the Dutchy of Cornwall it is in cheif for it was ancient Lands of the Crown Fitzh 165. A. To hold Land to pay certain Rent to the Keeper of the Castle of
good 8 H. 6 fol. 34 Trespasse of Grasse cut the Defendant saith that the place where c. was the Free-hold of his Master by which by his commandement he entered and made the Trespasse the Plaintiff saith of his own wrong without such cause and is good but if the Master himself had been party and had pleaded his Free-hold of his own wrong c. had been no Plea 28 Ed. 3. fol. 58. Trespasse of goods taken the defendant justifies by the commandement of his Master for that that the Plaintiffe is his Villain the Plaintif saith of his own wrong and is no Plea without answering to the Villainage 10 H. 6. f. 3. Trespasse of two Horses taken the defendant saith that he let to the Plaintif Land rendring the Rent of twenty Shillings and for this Rent behind he entered and took the horses and the Plaintif saith of his own wrong without such cause and by Cotesmore it is no Plea but he ought to answer to the speciall matter as to say of his own wrong without that that any Rent was behind 21 Ed. 4. f. 64. 42 Ed. 3. f. 2. Trespasse for chasing in his free Chase the defendant pleads license of the Plaintif to hunt there the Plaintif saith of his own wrong without such cause Inquire of this Issue 16 H. 7. fol. 3. Trespasse of goods taken where the defendant conveys his title from the Plaintif there the Plaintif by replication may say of his own wrong without such cause 9 Ed. 4. fol. 41. the same 9 Ed. 4. fol. 43. Trespasse of a bag with money the defendant saith that the Plaintif was indebted to him in a certain summe and delivered that unto him to content him the Plaintif saith of his own wrong without such cause and it is no Plea for that that he conveys from the Plaintif himself 10 H. 6. fol. 9. Trespasse for entring into his Pigeon-house and taking of Pigeons the defendant pleads that the Plaintif gave him leave to take them the plaintif may say of his own wrong without that he gave him leave 20 Ed. 4. fol. 4. 21 Ed. 4. fol. 76. Where the defendant conveys from the Plaintiffe or his Ancestor or that it is his Freehold these shall be answered and there of his own wrong without such cause generall is no good replication 44 Ed. 3. f. 13. Trespasse the defendant justifies for Harriot the Plaintiffe saith of his own wrong without such cause the Issue was taken upon that 38 Ed. 3. fol. 7. the same 44 Ed. 3. fol. 18. Trespasse the defendant justifies for that that the Plaintiffe was in VVard to the Prince and he seised him and granted the VVard to him by which he entered and occupied the Plaintiffe saith of his own wrong without such cause and it is no Plea by the Court but he ought to answer to the speciall matter by which the Issue was taken that he held in Socage and not in Knights Service See 22 Book of Assises 56. 41. Book of Assises 21. and 12 Ed. 4. fol. 10. 14 H. 4. fol. 32. Trespasse of his Servant taken the defendant justifies for that the father of him which is said to be Servant held of J.S. in Knights Service and that he died and the Land discended to the Infant called Servant being within age and that the defendant by the commandement of the said J.S. seised him the plaintif saith of his own wrong without such cause and by Cheney and Hull for that that the defendant hath alledged speciall matter that is Tenure in Knights Service the plaintif ought to answer to the speciall matter and this is no plea See 22 Book of Assises 85. 33 H. 6. fol. 29 Trespasse where the defendant justifies by the Kings patent of of his own wrong c. is no plea. 9 Ed. 4. fol. 22. Trespasse where the defendant justifies by wreck by prescription the plaintif saith of his own wrong without that that it was a wreck and good 5 H. 7. fol. 9. Trespasse the defendant justifies by custome of foldage by prescription of all Sheep which pasture in such a Common the plaintif there saith of his own wrong without such cause Where a double Plea shall not be suffered and where it shall PRior brought a Quare impedit and counts that his predecessor was seised and presented and the King seised his temporalties because of VVarre and presented and now it is void and it belongeth to him to present and it is not double 40 Ed. 3. f. 10. But in Quare impedit and counts of divers presentments in his Ancestors this is double 1 H. 5. fol. 1. Quare Impedit by Tenant in Tail and alledgeth a Presentment in the Donor and another in the Donee this is not double for the Gift is traversable but if he alleadge Presentment in the Feoffor and another in the Feoffee this is double 4 Ed. 4. f. 3 Debt against Executors to plead fully administred and so nothing in their hands is not double for one Answer makes an end of all that is that they have Assets 3 H. 6. f. 3 Debt upon Obligation and pleads Payment and Delivery of the Obligation in place of an Acquittance it is not double for one Answer shall be for all 1 H. 7. fol. 15 and also it is no Plea Trespasse the Defendant pleads Gift in Tail and divers Discents and it is not double for the Gift is onely traversable 19 Ed. 4. f. 4 Bastardy is pleaded to ten Acres and Release of all Actions and that is double 10 H. 6. f. 20 Non-tenure is pleaded to part and Bastardy to the rest and this is double 43 E. 3. fol. 29 B. Inquire 33 H. 6. f. 20 40 E. 3. f. 21 Dower the Tenant may plead Joint-tenancy of part and that she detains Writings for the rest which goes to all and it is not double 33 H. 6. f. 57 40 E. 3. f. 31 Assise of a Mannour the Defendant pleads a Fine of one halfe to J. S. whose Estate he hath and to the other halfe pleads a Release of the Father of the Demandant with Warranty and demands Judgement if against Warranty Assise ought to have been of that Moity and it is not double for this goes but to the Moity and is not c. 37 H. 6. f. 24 Debt upon an Obligation that he was a Lay man unlearned and the Day of Payment was read to be at another Day and that it was delivered as an Escrow upon condition that if others sealed c. and the others did not seal and so not his Deed this Conclusion hath made that single 38 H. 6. f. 26 Intendments Pleas good by Intendment and how INformation for Liveries it is shewed that Cloth was given at D. but not how it was used and it shall be intended there and good and Trespasse he broke his Close at D. and made an Entry and shall be intended to be there 5 H. 7. f. 18 Appeal of Rape is Rapuit and though it
he grants where he was never in the Warrs it is a good grant for the recitall is matter in deed not materiall 9 H. 7. fol. 7. If the King make a Denizen and recite that where he was borne in France where indeed he was borne in Spain this grant and making him Denizen is a good grant and the recitall is not materiall 3 H. 6. fol. 9. Where processe is miscontinued and Judgment given by default this Judgment upon miscontinuance is errour and may be assigned for errour but where it is miscontinuance of processe and the party appear and pleads and Judgment upon Verdict is given this cannot be assigned for errour See 3 H. 7. f. 8. 1 H. 7. f. 12. Errour was assigned for that it was contained in the Record that in base Court the Entry was that the Court was held upon Tuesday that is the third day of March where Munday was the third day of March and this was adjudged errour and the Videlicet c. materiall 4 H. 7. f. 6. Where one is named Executor where that name Executor is not materiall the Writ shall not abate 17 Ed. 4. f. 2. Where the Defendant in trespasse pleads that the plaintiff bargained and sold to him ten acres of Corn though he do not say ten Acres sowne with corn it is not materiall for it is usually so called and a good Plea 1 H. 7. f. 21. A certaine Memorandum was entred that is to say Memorandum that Simon Wiseman came this 31 day of November this Tearme of S. Michaell 2 H. 7. f. 11. If processe be miscontinued and the party appear and pleads to the Issue and Judgment is given there the miscontinuance is not materiall and is no Errour 9 Ed. 4. f. 42. Trespasse of a Bagg taken with Money the Defendant saith that the Plaintif was indebted to him in a certain summ and delivered that unto him for discharge and is good though he do not shew for what cause he was indebted for this is not traversable and for that is not materiall Manner and Form Manner and Form where it is materiall and where not MAaintenance The Defendant iustifies for that that he is his Neighbour and informed him of a man learned in the Law The Plaintiffe saith that he gave money the Defendant saith that he did not maintain in manner and Form and it is no Plea without answering to the speciall matter 13 Ed. 4.14 Trespasse The Defendant saith that the Plaintiffe is Villain regardant to the Mannour of D. the Plaintiffe saith he is free and not Villain in Manner and Form and Manner and Form is not material but if he be a Villain or not 13 Ed. 4. f. 4. Debt of the sale of a Horse for sorry Shillings where the Bargain was for two Horses the Defendant pleads that he oweth him nothing in Manner and Form the Jury ought to find for the Defendant for that that the Bargain was for two Horses 40. s. and Manner and Form there is materiall and parcell of their Charge and so it is in every Case where the Action varies from the Bargain 21. Ed. 4. f. 22. Debt upon sale simply the Defendant saith that the Sale was upon condition without that that the Plaintiffe sold that in Manner and Form and is good 1 H. 7. f. 13. Trespasse the Defendant justifies for that the Plaintiffe held of him by Homage Fealty Suit of Court and ten Shillings four pence the Plaintiffe saith that he held by Fealty and ten shillings without that that he held in Manner and Form and found by Verdict that he held by ten Shillings four pence and not by Homage and the Plaintiffe had Judgement for that that part is found against the Defendant and Manner and Form is not materiall 31 H. 6. f. 12. 9 H. 7. fol. 12. Entrie in Casupro viso and Counts of alienation in Fee the Defendant saith that he did not alien in Manner and Form as the Plaintiffe hath counted and found that he aliened in Tail the Demandant shall recover for Manner and Form are but words of Form here but whether he aliened or not is the substance Littleton fol. 113. Lord and Tenant and the Tenant brings Trespasse against his Lord and Justifies for that that he held of him by Fealty and Rent and for the Rent behind that he took his beasts and demands Judgement of the Wri● by force of Arms against him the Plaintiffe saith that he doth not hold of him in Manner and Form and though it be found that he holds by Fealty onely yet the Writ shall abate for Manner and Form is not materiall Littleton f. 113. Trespasse of Batterie or of goods taken the Defendant pleads not guilty in Manner and Form as the Plaintiffe supposeth and is found guilty in another ●own or at another day yet the Plaintiffe shall recover Littleton fol. 114. Action upon the Case by a Husband alone upon an Ass●●●●t to him by Tatam the Defendant saith he did not allume in Manner and Form and the Plaintiffe gives in evidence of an Assampsit made to his Wife and his agreement afterwards and it is good and Manner and Form is not materiall 27 H. 8. f. 29. Cessavit That the Defendant held divers Lands by intire Service he may plead that he held not in Manner and Form and give in evidence that he held by severall Service and it is good 10 H. 7. f. 24. An Array of a Pannell was challenged for that it was made by the Sheriffe Cozen to the Plaintiffe and shews how he is Cozen the other saith he is not Cozen in Manner and Form as c. and he is found Cozen but this is found to be in another Manner and yet good for Manner and Form is not materiall 19 H. 8. fol. 7. Assise the Tenant pleads a Feofment of J.S. by Deed the Plaintif intitles him without that that J.S. enfeofed him in Manner and Form and could not give in evidence a Feofment without Deed and traverse that with Manner and Form is good to avoid a Negative pregnant and in Sine assensu Cantuli the Defendant shall not say that he did not alien without the consent of the Chapter but that he did not alien in Manner and Form to avoid a pregnant Negative 22 Ed. 4. f. 4. Negative Pregnant Where a Negative pregnant may be and where not WAste The Defendant saith that he did not let to him for years it is no Plea for it is a pregnant Negative but he shall say that he did not let at all 43 Ed. 3. f. 13. Action upon the Statute of Rich. he did not enter against the Form of the Statute is good though it be a pregnant Negative for that that it traverseth the point of the Writ 31 H. 6. f. 12. Consimili Casu Issue was if he aliened in Fee or not aliened in Fee which is a pregnant Negative and allowed the reason is plain 38 H. 6 f. 3. Lord and Tenant the Tenant pleads a Feoffement
made before the Statute of quia em tores terrarum after the time of memorie and the Lord said that he did not give after the time of memorie and is good notwithstanding it be a pregnant Negative 39 H. 6. f. 8. Debt upon Obligation the Condition to repair a House and saith that A. disturbed him by the Plaintiffes command the Plaintiffe saith that he did not disturb him by his commandement and it is a pregnant Negative and double and for that saith that he did not command him and took the other by Protestation 9 H. 6. f. 44. Debt upon Obligation the Defendant saith it is indorsed upon condition to be at the arbitrement of B. so that it be delivered to the parties before such a day the Defendant saith that the Arbitrators made no such Award and delivered to the parties and it is good notwithstanding that it be a pregnant Negative for that it is Condition and is the whole Condition 10 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Debt upon the statute against a Vicar for taking Farmes he had not nor held not against the forme of the statute is good though it be a pregnant Negative for that it is to the point of the statute 27 H. 8. f. 25. Action upon the Case against a common Inholder of his Goods taken where they were laid the Defendant saith that they were not taken in default of him nor of his Servants and it is not good for it is a pregnant Negative the same Law is where the Defendant saith that he delivered to the Plaintiff the Key of his Chamber and he carried A. and B. with him which carried out the Goods the Plaintiff saith that A. and B. which he brought in with him did not carry out his Goods and it is not good for it is a pregnant Negative 22 H. 6. fol. 22. Waste of ten Oakes the Defendant saith that the Plaintriff gave them to J. S. and commanded the Defendant to cut them and to give them to J. S. which he did 〈◊〉 the Plaintiff saith he did not cut them by his dommandement and it is not good for it is a pregnant Negative and for that he saith that he did not command 21 H. 6. fol. 49. Action upon the Case of his House burnt in dosa●●● of good keeping the Fine of the Defendant the Defendant saith that the House was not burnt in default of his good keeping of his fire in manner and forme and it is a p●egnant Negative and was pleaded in Ariest of Judgement for that that in this are comprised two Sentences one that the House was not burnt the other that it was not in default of the Defendant 28 H. 6. f. 8. Obligation Here I intend to shew to you how the Condition of Obligations ought to be pleaded performed WHere one pleads Conditions performed and his Plea is in the Affirmative he ought to plead in certain as where the Condition is to discharge the Obligee it is no plea to say that he hath discharged him but he ought to plead now he hath discharged certainly 5 H. 7. f. 8. 6 H. 7. f. 5. But if the Condition be to save him without damage to pleade in the Negative he was not ●amnified is good 7 H. 4. f. 13.38 H. 6. f. 14. 10 H. 7. f. 13. By Hussey if Condition be to save the Plaintiff harmlesse to plead he was not damnified is good but it the Condition be to discharge or acqui● him he ought to plead how specially he hath acquitted and discharged him 22 Ed. 4. f. 43.35 H. 6. f. 13. 40 Ed. 3. f. 20. If the Condition be that if the Defendant acquit the Plaintiff against J. S. and he pleads that J. S. released to the Plaintiff at his request and this is a good Acquittall 1. H. 7. f. 30. Condition was to discharge a Sheriff it was held clear that the Defendant shall say generally that he hath discharged him without shewing how for he cannot shew speciall discharge where there was no Charge I suppose this was for that it was infinito● 〈◊〉 Ed. 〈◊〉 f. 10. 21 H. 7. fol. 30. Condition that if he keep J.S. discharged of all Escapes of all Felone in such a Prison the Defendant saith there were but two Prisoners that is J.S. and R.K. and that he was not damnified and a good Plea If the Condition be to gather all the green Wax of the County the Defendant may plead generally that he gathered all without shewing specially what that is for that that it is infinite 2 H. 7. fol. 15. If Condition be that if the Defendant serve the Plaintiffe without absence for seven yeares speciall license excepted the Defendant may plead that he hath served the Plaintiff this seven yeares and not absented himselfe speciall license excepted and it is good for it may be he hath licensed him diverse times and he need not shew all 6 Ed. 4. fol. 2. If the condition be that if the Defendant finde sufficient Meat Drink and Apparrell to one till he be of the age of twenty foure yeares it is a good Plea to say that he hath found him Meat Drink and Apparrell sushcient at D. for all the time aforesaid without shewing in speciall what Meat and what apparrell and the Plaintif takes Issue that he did not finde to him sufficient Apparrell And took not Issue upon all for doublenesse 12 H. 7. f. 14. If condition be that if the Defendant shall not prove that J.S. was not presented and instituted to the Church of D. that then c. The Defendant may say that J.S. was not instituted and it seems good for the condition is negative and therefore it sufficeth to say as above in the negative The same Law is if the condition were that if the Defendant prove that he oweth nothing to the Plaintif it sufficeth to say he owes nothing The same Law is if the condition be that if I prove my Wife not guilty of such a Trespasse it sufficeth to say that she is not guilty 15 Ed. 4. fol. 25. If the condition were that if he prove within one year that it was the will of J.S. to say that J.S. made this Will which he brought to the Plaintif within one year written is not good But by 3. Justices proof of that by two Witnesses to plead that is good though it be not by Jury 10 Ed. 4. fol. 11. If the condition be that if he do not enter and claime the House the Defendant may plead that he did not enter nor claime that and the Plaintiff shall say that he claimed and shew the manner of that 4 H. 7. f. 13. Condition if the Defendant make an estate to the Plaintif before P. as it shall be demised by the Councell of the Plaintif The Defendant may plead that the Councell gave no advise or no advise was given by Councell and good in the negative and the Plaintif then in the affirmative cannot say that the Councell did give advise
shall be entred 34 H. 6. fol. 5. Trespas of a bagge with money taken at C. the Defendant saith that the Plaintife delivered that to him at L. and it is not good but that he delivered that to him at L. to deliver to J.S. which he did without that that he is guilty at C is good 34 H. 6.9 and 19 H. 6. fol. 43. Trespas of an Horse taken at D. in the County of M. the Defendant justifies the taking for a Waife at S. in another County without that that he is guilty at D. and it seems nothing shall be entred but not guilty Inquier 19 H. 7.27 and 22 Ed. 4.38 this was entred and not the generall Issue Action upon the Case for that that the Defendant sold Woad to him at J. and there shewed to him a peice which is march●ntable and warranted the rest to be as good as the example where it is defective The Defendant saith that he sold to him Woad at B. and warranted that c. without that that he sold at I. and is good 14 H. 6. fol 24. Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit at London to cure his Horse the Defendant saith at Oxford he assumed to cure c. without that that he assumed at London and it is good 19 H. 6. fol 49. Trespas of beating at D. in the County of D. If the Defendant justifies at S. in the County of N. he ought to traverse the County 9 H. 6.62 and 11 H. 6.20 the same Trespas of goods taken at E. the Defendant pleads that they were delivered to him at S. in the County of M. to deliver to the Plaintiffe which he did without that that he was guilty at E. 19 H. 6.48 In Trespas transitorie where the Defendant justifies in another County he onght to take traverse 29 H. 6.72 and 5 H. 4. fol 3. the same 22 Ed. 4. fol 38.7 H. 6. fol. 37.10 H. 7. fol 27. Yet ready Where he shall say Yet ready and where not DEtinue of a Chest with Writings against Executors it is no plea for them to say that the Writings came to them sealed and that they were readie to deliver them and yet are readie unlesse that they offer them to the Court or to say that the thing is of so great weight that they cannot bring them hither 9 H. 6.65 and 22 Ed. 3. B●ook Alwayes ready 6 Ed. 4. fol. 11. 44 Ed. 3. tit 40. Dower the Tenant saith that he hath been alwayes ready to render Dower and yet is The Demandant avers the contrary upon which the Demandant shall recover her Dower But she shall not have a Writ to inquire of her dammages now for that is the Issue which shall be tryed 14 H. 8. fol 28. Dower if the Tenant come in at the first day and will aver that he was alwayes readie and yet is if the Demandant will not aver the contrary that the Demandant shall not recover dammages 5 Ed. 4. Dower 2. Where the Tenant imparles to another Tearm he shall not say yet readie to render Dower 21 Ed. 3. tit 24. Dower the Tenant alledges that the Demandant deteins a Hamper of Evidences of that Land and it c. the Demandant saith That she is and alwayes hath been readie to deliver the Hamper c. and for that she shall have judgement for thwith 8 H. 6. fol. 15. Trespas the Defendant pleads an Arbitrement which was to pay 10 li. if the day be past he shall say that he hath been alwayes readie and yet is and bring the money into the Court. 22 H. 6. fol 45. Debt upon an Obligation endorsed upon Condition to perform an award to pay 20 s. before Christmas last past if he tendered before the day and the other refused he shall not say yet ready afterwards Injuire Dower where the Tenant casts an Essoyn he is not estopped to say yet readie to render Dower 14 H. 6. 4. See in Debt by Hank 11 H. 4.60 and 7 H. 4. fol 16. Debt where the Defendant comes inupon the distresse he may say yet readie 7 H. 4.11 and 8 Ed. 4. fol 11. the same Debt after Imparlance the Defendant cannot plead yet readie 36 H. 6. 14. Annuitie where the Defendant comes in at the distresse he cannot say yet readie 2 H. 4. fol 4. Debt Processe continued till the distresse return Nihil and proceeds to the Capias pluries and the Defendant cometh in and saith that he was alwayes ready and yet is 11 H. 4. fol 6. Debt upon an Obligation to stand to the award and the award was to pay at such a place the Defendant may say that he was alwayes readie at the place without saying yet readie and without tendring the money in Court 11 H. 6.27 See 22 H. 6. fol 39. the reason in this case Debt upon an Obligation to pay a lesser summe at such a day for the Defendant to say that he was ready at the place and offered and the Plaintiffe refused it is no plea but shall say that he hath been alwayes readie and yet is and tender the money in Court for otherwise the Plaintiffe shall not have remedie 7 Ed 4.3 But see 7 H. 4.19 and 2 Ed 4.3 by Choke Detinue of Deeds against Executors they ought to say that they were readie and yet are for otherwise they shal pay dammages 22 Ed 3. tit 37. Alwayes ready Debt upon an Obligation condition to pay 10 li. such a day and place and the Defendant tenders that at the day and place and the Plaintiffe receives there part and respits the rest untill an agreement be made between them and after the Plaintiffe requires it and the Defendant refuseth to pay it yet he shall not forfeit the penalty for this is saved by the first tender But now by the Court he ought to tender it in Court And where one is bound in 10 l. upon condition to pay five pound at such a day and place and though that he were ready at the day and place and none comes to receive it yet by the Court he shall have the money in Court ready 7 Ed 4. fol 3. See 5. H. 4. Debt upon an obligation the condition to pay so much money as B. shall appoint for the taking of the beasts of the Plaintiffe and the Defendant saith that B. appointed 10 l. which he tendered and the Plaintiffe refused it judgment if action and it is a good plea without saying yet ready for the condition is to do a collatterall act and this 10 l. is collatteral and for that he shal not say yet ready But if one be bound in 20 l. and the condition to pay 10 l. there if he say that he offered the 10 l. at the day and the Plaintiffe refused it yet he shall say yet ready for the 10 l. are parcell of 20 l. and for the 10 l. he cannot have action 19 H. 8. fol 12. and 22 H 6. fol 45. Debt upon an obligation the condition that J. S. should
and uniustly detained according to the form of this VVrit as within I am commanded And the within named T. and R. are attached by a hundred sheep price 6 pounds by T. F. Bailifte by the Plea of J.T. R.M. and the within named R. B. is attached by my said Bailiffe by three Kine price three pounds by the Plea of the aforesaid J. T. and R.M. and no other command of our Lady Queen besides this VVrit of the beasts aforesaid to be replevied before the coming of this writ was ever delivered to me By vertue c. I certifie our Lady the Queen Otherwise in Chancery in her Chancery that the beasts and Chattels by the within named A.B. first taken are driven far out of the County within written to places unknown to me by the within named T.R. by which means the beasts and Chattells aforesaid cannot be returned by me as within further I am commanded Before the coming of this writ Beasts driven far upon the second deliverance the beasts within written were driven far off by the within named J. M. to places unknown to me so that the Beasts within written of J.M. I cannot return according to the Form of this writ Pledges to prosecute and having Return c. J. D. R.R. By vertue c. I W. A. Precept upon the second deliverance in the County one of the Bailiffes within named requested of J.T. and R.N. within written the delivery of the beasts of T.B. within written that is to say of three Oxen price each Ox twenty Shillings and of two Horses price each Horse twenty Shillings and they refused thereof to make Delivery and the aforesaid beasts are driven far off to places to me unknown by which thereof I can make no Delivery as within I am commanded and the aforesaid J.T. is attached by one of Silver to the value of twenty Shillings By vertue of this Otherwise of replevying a man c. I certifie our Lady the Queen within named that no other VVrit or command of our said Lady the Queens of Replevin the within written J.C. whom W.S. within named took and taken keeps as within is specified till that VVrit of Pluris Repleg the aforesaid J. came to my hand neither was it delivered to me nevertheless I do further certifie the Justices of our said Lady the Queen that forthwith after the receit of the said VVrit I came to the aforesaid W.S. to make replevin of the aforesaid J. which the said W. would not shew me but the aforesaid J. before the coming of this VVrit had conveyed to places unknown to me And after the receit of the said VVrit the said I. was not to be found in my Bailiwick so that I could make no Replevin of the said I. by any meanes according to the command of this VVrit as within I am commanded No other Writ besides that of Repleving the within named D.G. to my hands as yet came Otherwise And further I certifie the Justices within written that the aforesaid D. is conveied away to places to me unknown by the within named J.T.E.B. and T.R. By which means I cannot replevy the said D. as within I am commanded By vertue Pluries Repleg c. I certifie our Lady the Queen that after the receit of this Writ I diligently inquired throughout all my Baliwick and I can by no meanes understand that any of the beasts of the within named W.P. were taken and unjustly detained by the within named J.N. as in the VVrit is supposed So that the execution of this Writ according to the Tenor and Effect of the same could not be done by me as within I am commanded and further I certifie our Lady the Queen that no other Writ of Pluries Replegeare besides this VVrit was ever delivered to me Condition Cond Repleg c. That if the above bounden A.B. and C.D. shall redeliver to the above named Sheriff all those goods and chattells and every parcell thereof by H. P. taken and by reason of a certain Replevin by the aforesaid Sheriffe made to the aforesaid A.B. and C.D. Repleg if Return thereof should be adjudged and the said Sheriffe and his Executors saved harmlesse that then c. The within written J.H. Withernam hath no beasts in my Bailiwick that I can take in Withernam according to the exigent of this Writ By vertue c. I have taken two brasen Pots Otherwise c. of the Goods and Chattells of T. H. in the writ nominated in Withernam and I have caused them to be delivered to W.F. to hold to the said VV.F. till the said I.H. the Chattells of the aforesaid W.F. he do deliver as this VVrit c. By vertue Otherwise c. I have taken in Withernam at D. in the County within written two cowes c. of the Beasts of the aforesaid I.D. and two cowes of R.T. within named which truly Beasts aforesaid fled from hence and I caused them to be put in a certain place at S. in the foresaid County safe and securely there to be kept according to the Exigent of this VVrit VVhere the beasts aforesaid lie Otherwise and the aforesaid I.H. and R.T. have no more or any other beasts at this time in my Bailiwick that by any meanes I can take in VVithernam as within I am commanded By vertue of this writ I have taken two cowes and two Steeres of the beasts of the within named R.D. and two cowes and two Steeres of the beasts of T.L. which I caused to be delivered to I.C. within named to be safe and secuerly kept untill the other Beasts of the within named I.C. First taken and conveyed to places unknown to me I can deliver as within I am commanded By vertue of this Writ to me directed Exigent at my County Court kept at W. in the County of W. the within written Tuesday that is to say the twentieth day of Ianuary the year of the Reigne of our Lady the Queen within written the twentieth I.C. and other Defendants within named First were called and did not appeare and at my County Court c. as before the second time called and did not appeare and at my County Court held and so forth The third time called and did not appeare and at my County Court held c. The fourth time called and did not appeare and at my County Court held c. The fifth time called and did not appear Therefore the aforesaid I.C. and the rest of the Defendants within named by the judgment of the Coroners of the said Lady the Queen of the County aforesaid according to the Law and custome of the Realme of England are out-Lawed and every one of them is out-Lawed By vertue of this Writ to me directed Between two Sheriffs at my County Court held at W. in the County of W within written on Teusday that is to say the tenth day of Ianuary the year of the
you that you make A. B. lately of C. in the County of C. Gent. to be required from husting to husting untill according to the Law and custome of England he be out-lawed if he shall not appear And if he shall appear then you take and cause him safely to be kept so that you may have his Body before us in the Upper Bench in the fifth week after Easter wheresoever we shall then be in England to answer C. D. in a Plea that whereas the said C. D. and A. B. at London had accounted together of divers sums of money being before that time due to the said C. D. from the said A. B. and being then behind and unpaid And upon that account the said A. B. was then and there found in arrerages to the said C. D. in a hundred pounds of lawfull English money the said A. B. in consideration thereof did assume and to the said C D. there faithfully promised that he the said A. B. would pay that men 〈…〉 the said C. D. yet t●● said A. B. hath not yet paid the said money to the said C. D. although he hath been therunto required to pay the same to the damage of the said C. D. one hundred and twenty pounds as he saith and whereupon you your selves have sent to us that the said A. B. is not found in your Bayliwick and you have here this Writ Witnes c. Proclamation sur ' Exigent THe Keepers of the Liberty c. To the Sheriffe of Cornwell Greeting Whereas by our Writ we have lately commanded the Sheriffe of London that he should cause A.B. of C. in your County Gent. to be required from husting to husting untill he be out-lawed according to the Law and custome of England if he should not appear and if he should appear then they should cause him safely to be kept so that they should have his body before us in the fifth week after Easter wheresoever we should then be in England to answer C. D. in a Plea that whereas the said C. D. c. And so recite as is in the exegent till you are past these words as he saith then write on we command you according to the statute made provided in the one and thirtieth year of the Lady E●izabeth lately Queen you cause to be proclaimed the said A. B. at three several dayes according to the form of that statute whereof one Proclamation thereof shall be made at or neer the most usuall door of the Church of C. in your County so that he may render himself to the Sheriffes of London to answer the said C. D. of the said Plea And you have here this Writ Witnes c. C●●ias utlegat ' THe Keeper c. To the Sheriffes of C. Greeting We command you that you do not omit from any liberty within your County but take A. B. of c. And him safely keep so that you have his body before u● in the Upper Bench in c. Reciting the return wheresoever we shall then be in England to stand right in Court before us in the Upper Bench upon a certain Outlawry against him the said A. B. at the suit of C. D. in a Plea of debt at the hustings of the Common Pleas holden in London on Munday c. In the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and fifty in the Court of London pronounced And you have there this Writ Witnes c. Capias ad satisfaciendum in a Plea of Debt THe Keepers of the Liberty c. Greeting We command you that you take A. B. if he be found in your Bayliwick And him safely to keep so that you have his body before us in the Upper Bench at Westm on Wednesday next after the five weeks of Easter to satisfie C. D. of 100 li. of Debt and also 21 s. for his dammages which he sustained as well by occasion of detaining of that Debt as for his Costs and charges by him about his Suit in that behalf disbursed whereof he is convicted as it doth appear to Us upon Record And then you have here this Writ Witnes H. Roll at Westm the 17th day of April in the yeer of our Lord 1651. Wightwicke Testat Inde THe Keepers of the Liberty c. to the Sheriffe of H. Greeting Whereas we have lately commanded the Sheriffs of London that they should take A. B. if he might be found in their Bayliwick And him safely keep so that they should have his body before Us in the Upper Bench at Westminster at a certain day now past to satisfie C. D. of a hundred pounds of Debt and also one twenty shillings for his damages which he sustained as well by occasion of detaining of that Debt as for his Costs and charges by him about his Suit in that behalf disbursed whereof he is convicted as it doth appear to us upon Record And the said Sheriffs of London at that day returned to Us that the said A B. is not found in their Bayliwick Wherupon on the behalf of the said C. D. in the Court before Us is sufficiently testified that the said A. B. doth lurk and sculk in your County therefore we command you that you take him if he be found in your Bayliwick and him safely keep so that you may have his body before Us in the Upper Bench at Westminster on Wednesday next after the three weeks of Easter to satisfie the said C. D. of the Debt and damages aforesaid And then you have here this Writ Witnes c. Capias ad satisfaciendum after judgement affirmed in a Writ of Error and for damages for the Plaintiffe being the Defendant did thereby delay Execution THe Keeper c. as above in the Capias ad satisfaciend till these words to satisfie C. D. of a hundred pounds of Debt also 40 s. which were adjudged to the said C.D. in the Court of the Common Pleas at Westminster before Oliver St. John and the other Justices his Associates for his damages which he had by reason of detaining of that Debt whereof he is convicted as by the inspection of the Record and Processe thereupon which we lately for certain causes have caused to come in the Court before Us in the Upper Bench at Westminster And which in the same Court now remaining doth appear to us upon Record And also five pounds which in the same Court before us in the Upper Bench at Westminster according to the form of the Statute in such case thereupon lately made and provided were adjudged to the said C. D for his damages costs and expences which he had by reason of the delay of execution of the Judgment aforesaid by reason of prosecut●●● of a certain Writ of Error by him the said A. B. in the same Court before us in the Upper Bench at Westminster prosecuted in and upon the Premises as it doth also appear to us upon Record And you have there this Writ Witnes c. Capias ad satisfaciendum
doth not deny his Service it shall be amerced and is no Forfeiture the same Law if his Rent be behinde and he doth not deny to pay it that is no Forfeiture but the Lord may distrain but by Littleton fol. 51. If the Tenant upon demand be not ready to pay Rent Seck or if the Tenant nor none for him be dwelling upon the Land to pay the Rent Seck when it is demanded this denying is Disseisin yet in the case aforesaid I conceive that where a copy-holder makes Default and doth not deny his Services or is not upon the Land ready to pay upon demand this is no deniall which shall make a Forfeiture for Forfeitures are not favoured in Law but to be taken strictly according to the words and that is to be intended upon denying in deed by the Tenant 42 Ed. 3. fol. 25. And it seems that the Lord cannot enter for forfeiture before that that be found by Homage but if a Copy-holder alien by Charter or commits Felony or Treason and be attaint these are Forfeitures without Presentment and the Lords may enter for these are notorious and apparent to be against the Custome but otherwise it seems where a Copy-holder makes waste 12. Eliz. It was said that if a copy-holder will not be sworn of a Jury● or alien and make copy-hold Free-hold this is forfeiture for that that the Lord may enter without presentment but for negligent acts as for not doing of service or Suite of Court the Lord cannot seise without presentment by the Homagers and then agree if an Infant do not come within a yeare and day after Proclamation made yet he hath not forfeited his copy-hold and this case was between Hautree and his copy-holder If copy-holder lets by Indenture which is forfeiture and after surrenders to the use of J. S. and he is admitted in the Lord after shall not take advantage of forfeiture for the Homage are not to inquire of any forfeiture but of forfeiture made by the Tenants and he which commits the forfeiture is not now Tenant and admittance to pay his Fine is agreement of the Lord that he admitted shall have that according to the custome that is to say he doing his services shall have that to him and his Heires according to the custome of the Mannour It is said that a copy-holder cannot alien by Deed for if he do so the Lord may enter for forfeiture and so it is the like if he alien without Deed in such manner that the Land may passe as if he lets for life without Deed and makes livery the Lord may enter but if he do not make Livery otherwise it is the same Law it is if a copy-holder bargain and sell his Land by Indenture and do not inroll it nothing passeth by this bargain and for that it is no forfeiture Lit. f. 14. If Tenant by copy of Court-Roll make a feoffment the Lord may enter for forfeiture but this is to be intended if he make a feoffment and makes Livery it is a forfeiture but if he make no Livery the Feoffee is but Tenant at will and it is no forfeiture 11 H. 4. fol. 161. Challenge For that that you try Issues joyned in Court-Baron by assent by inquest of the Homage as you may and not by wager of Law as it is and also in triall of Copy-holds shall be by Oath of the Jury and also for that some Challenges are principals and some are but for favour first let us see what is a principal Challenge PRincipall Challenge is said where it is evident favour as kindred 21 Ed. 4. fol. 11. and 63. Juror is of aliance servant or beares mallice that is to say hath trespasse against him or a Juror is cozen to the Executor which brings the action and yet he shall not recover to his own use and this is a principal challenge c. 20 Ass 11. Where a Juror is Gossip of the Plaintiff it is a principall challenge and he shall be drawn off by the challenge 2 H. 4. fol. 16.4 Ed. 4. fol. 1. the same 19 H. 6 fol. 66. Contr. 6 H. 6. fol. 40.40 Ass 20. That the Plaintif was retained with a Juror that is that the Juror was master of the party is a principal challenge 2 H. 4. fol. 14. That the Jury hath past before for parcell of the same gift in Formedon is a principal challenge if he shew record of that otherwise it is but favour 8 H. 5. fol. 11. and 7 H. 4. fol. 11. the same If a Juror after he is impannelled eate at the Plaintifs costs or take Money for his charges it is a principal challenge 13 H. 4. fol. 14. 22. R. 2. Chal. 177. 8. Ed. 3. fol. 69. Where Land is demanded and the Juror is cozen within the ninth degree it is a principal challenge 41 Ed. 3. fol. 9.14 15 Eliz. Plowd 426. It is a principal challenge that the Juror held of J. S. that holds over of the Plaintiff 13 H. 6. Statham Where a Juror hath a Lease of one party and though he hath granted his Interest to another yet he is within the Distress of his Lessor to the using an Action of Debt for the Arrearages and for that is a principal challenge 44 Ed. 3. fol. 5.44 Ass 23. Trespass the Defendant saith it was the Free-hold of J.S. and justifies as Servant of J. S. it a principal challonge that the Juror was within the distresse of J. S. to E. 4. fol. 11. B. Trespasse where the Defendant justifies as Servant to the Lord Dacres it was a principal challenge that the Juror was within the distresse of one which held of the Lord Dacres 15 Ed. 4. fol. 18. It is a principal challenge that the Juror is cozen to the Wife of the Defendant for that that the Issue of the Wife may be Heire to the Juror 8 H. 6. fol. 15. That the juror at another time had past against him in the same Issue if he shew the Record it is a principal challenge and otherwise but for favour 11 R. 2. Tit. 106.21 Ed. 4. fol. 74. before 7 H. 4. Juror was challenged for that that at another time he past against the Plaintiff for the same Debt which was reversed by Errour and for that that he did not shew the Record it is no principal challenge 33 H. 6. f. 1. It is a principal challenge that the Juror was chosen arbitrator for one party but otherwise it is where he was chosen indifferent for them 3 H. 6 fol. 24. That the juror held of a Mannour whereof the reversion is in the Plaintiff is a principal challenge 10 H. 7. fol. 20.49 Ass 1. That the juror was of Councel with the Plaintiff and hath taken his fee this was the challenge and 7 H. 7. f. 10. that it is no principal challenge It is a principal challenge the Sherif or Bailif which makes the Pannell is son in Law to the Defendant 9 Ed. 4 f. 49. Those which have
been attaint of salse Oath or were seen in the Pillory or Tumbrill or against whom there was Judgement of life and member shall be outed by challenge and these are principal challenges Britton fol. 134. Those which pretend to have some right in the thing demanded shall be outed by challenge and this is a principal challenge the same Law that the juror is a Villaine 9 Ed. 4. fol. 17. Villaine is principal challenge 26 Book of Ass 28. That a juror was outlawed is a principal challenge if he shew the Record 11 H. 4. fol. 40. Abridg. Book of Ass 6. and 21 H. 6. fol. 30. The same Law that a juror was attaint of conspiracy 33 H. 6. fol. 55. 18. H. 8. f. 2. Writ of entry they are at issue and the Plaintif saith that the Sherif and two of the Coroners are his cozens and the other two cozens of the Defendant and praies a Venire facias to others and shall not unlesse all were his cozens for if it were made by the cozen of the Plaintif the array shal be quasht but the Defendant cannot quash the array by that that it is made by his cozens 15 H. 7. fol. 9. Plaintif cannot quash the array for that that it is made by his cozen but may shew that and pray a Venire facias to the Coroners but because it doth not lye in his knowledge the Plaintif may quash the array though the Sherif is of consanguinity or affinity of the Defendant but otherwise it is of his own part 19 H. 8. fol. 7. Defendant challenge the array for that it was made by J.S. cozen of the Plaintif and this found and the Array quasht 10 H. 7. fol. 7. The Array was quasht for that that the Plaintif was Gossip to the Son of the Sherif or for any other cause of the Plaintif 15 Edw. 4. fol. 23. Trespasse by the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and they were at Issue and the Plaintiff saith that the Sheriffe is his Steward and some of the Coroners are of his Robes and the rest within his distresse and the Defendant confest it and for that Processe issued out to choosers and the array by choosers shall not be quasht but the heads 18 Edw. 4. fol. 8. Where the Array is made by choosers this shall not be challenged but the heads shall be challenged 8 H. 6. fol. 60. The Array in Assise was quasht for that it was made by the Sheriffe himselfe being Plaintiffe and it was also quasht for that it was made by the Coroners at the denomination of the Plaintiffe for that the Court of Office awarded Venire facias to Electors The challenge is principall Cozen of one party Servant of one Master of one Party At other times Brings trespasse against one Eats at the costs of one Is Lord to one Challenges Is within the distresse of one Arbitrater of one Convict of horrible crime Hath right in the thing demanded Now let us see what is challenge for favour WHere one challenges for diverse causes and concludes for favour it is not double otherwise it is of principall challenge 7 H. 6. fol. 44. That the Defendant is Steward of a Mannor of the Juror or that he is within the distresse of the Juror it is a challenge for favour and not a principall challenge but that the Juror is within the distresse of the Defendant is a principall challenge but that the Juror hath marryed the Mother of the Defendant if she be dead and he had no Issue by her it is no principall challenge 14 H. 7. Tit. Brook 71. The same Law where a Juror hath marryed a Cozen of the Defendant which might be heire to him during their lives it is a principall but contrary if the Wife be dead without Issue 14 H. 7. fol. 1. 15 H. 7. fol. 9. It is no principall challenge that a Son of a Juror hath marryed a Daughter of the Plaintiffe 3 Edw. 4. fol. 12. Juror is a Keeper of the Forrest by the Kings Grant and the Plaintiffe is Master of the Game is no principall challenge 16 Ed. 4. fol. 1. It seemes it is no principall challenge if the Juror say he will passe with the Plaintiffe before he be sworne or that hee was laboured 21 H. 7. fol. 32. 7 H. 6. fol. 25. the same That the Defendant hath Trespasse against the Juror depending if it were after the action brought it was suspicious and is no principall challenge 20 Booke of Assise 11. If a Juror be challenged for that that one party hath an action hanging against him if he doe not shew Record of that it is no principall Statham 25 Ed. 3. That the Wife of the Sheriffe or of him which makes the Pannell is Sister of the Plaintiffe ought to conclude of favour 20 Ass 21.26 Ass 21. 22. Where a Juror is returned by name Chamberlaine and Chambers appears it is a challenge for favour and shall be inquired if he be knowne by both names or not 32 H. 6. fol. 23. It is no challenge that the Juror is Parishoner with the Defendant 22 Ass 25. Attaint It is no principall challenge that one of the Grand Jury and one of the Petty Jury have marryed two Sisters 43 Ass 46. In Attaint It is no principall challenge that one of the Grand Jury and one of the Petty Jury are at debate 50 Book of Ass 4. Juror was challenged for malice which he had to the Plaintiffe and tryed and found indifferent 27 H. 8. fol. 25. It is no challenge that a Iuror appeared where he was not summoned if he were impannelled 8 Ed. 3. 69 Fitzh Challenge 4. It is no principall challenge to say that the Defendant is Tenant to the Sheriffe or Bailiffe which makes the Array unlesse it be for favour 26 Ed. 3. Statham Common is the seventh Article which is inquirable ANd for that I intend that when the Statutes ensuing were made for Improvements immediately the Lords have improved their Wafts as much as they could or otherwise they were so moved with charity and pitty to the Poore that more they would not improve for Charity I pray God that that may continue Because many great ones which infeoffed Freeholders of small Tenements in great Mannours of extent c. may improve when they that are infeoffed have sufficient Pasture belonging to their Tenements c. Merton chap. 4. Westmin 2. chap. 46. Recites Merton and gives rate between Neighbour and Neighbour and it is Where it is belonging to their Tenements But if one claime Common for a certaine number by Grant the Lord cannot improve 16 Ed. 3. tit 9. If the Lord improve not leaving sufficient Common the Commonner may break way to use his Common See 17 H. 7. fol. 11. for breaking way 22 H. 7. fol. ult Fitzherbart 179. L. Where one hath a Common belonging or appertaining and is distrained hee shall have an Assise of Common of pasture Seventh Book of Assise 16. 8 Book of Ass 18. Assise
said that Scandulum is a Greek word which goes to the overthrowe of one and for that it hath been thought that if the words intend to the destruction of the Plaintiff that he shall have an action upon the case and for that where the Defendant saith that the Plaintiff was infected with the robbery of Jerom H. and smels of it the opinion was that action upon the case for those words doth not lie Adjudged in London that an action upon the case lies brought by Huson Inholder for that the Defendant said falsely that he had buryed divers which died of the Plague in his house in his Garden when the plague was not in his house by which his guests refused to come to his house Also it was the opinion of the Kings Bench that an action upon the case doth not lie for calling the Plaintiff false knave Essex in the Kings Bench Roll. 149. Hill Terme 26. Eliz. Rich. Kerby Gentlemen brought his action upon the case against John Waller for saying these words that is thou Kirby art a false cozening knave and hath falsely cozened my two Kinsmen William Walker and Thomas Walker Brothers of the said William of Lands worth 6000 l. the manner of Py●on in Rameshold and I will bring thee to stand upon the Pillory for that And adjudgad that the action doth not lie and the Jury taxed damages to a 100 l. and upon that adjudged that the action did not lie London Thomas Gittens Carpenter Anno 26. brought his action upon the case against James Redforne in the Exchequer for saying these words Thomas Gittens is a cozening knave and I have proved him a cozening knave before my Lord Maior of London for selling a Saphir for a Diamond and adjudged that it doth not lie Action upon the case upon a warrant ●f a thing sold and upon knowledge without wairant ACtion upon the case lies for selling corrupt wine and the writ is knowing it to be corrupt and warrant is not to purpose for it is ordained that none shall sell corrupt victual if he know it and so the Issue was whether it were good and not corrupt An action upon the case lies for selling corrupt victual if he know it and so the issue was whether it were good and not corrupt an action upon the case lies for selling so much Cloth and not well fulled where he warrants it 11. H. 6. fol. 22. Note the use where Measel Porks are fold at Rumford to have restitution of his money if they prove Measel 9 H. 6. fol. 53. 7 H. 4. fol. 16. Action upon the case lies for selling corrupt wine knowing c. the Defendant saith that he tasted it and accepted it for good the Plaintiff saith he accepted it for good upon condition if he liked it after it came to his house c. 19 H. 6. fol. 49. If one sell wine without warranty if that be corrupt action upon the case lies for it is prohibited by law 7. H. 4. fol. 76. 13 H. 4. fol. 2. If one sell to me a Horse apparent blind and warrant him sound of all his Members and I see him I shall have no deceit for that I might see it otherwise it is of a disease within his body there upon the warrant I shall have deceit But if one sell a blind horse and warrant him to one that doth not see him deceit lies If one sells to me wine and I bid my Servant to taste it deceit doth not lie if it be corrupt for that he hath tasted it Fitzh 94. C. If a man sell a horse to another and warrant him to be sound and good c. If the horse be lame or diseased that he cannot work action upon the case lies And so if one bargain and sel to one certain Pipes of wine and warrant them to be good and they are corrupt action upon the case lies against him and by Fitzh it behoveth that he warrant the horse and also the wine otherwise action upon the case doth not lie inquire of the wine Fitzh 98. K. If a man sell Clothes and warrant them to be of a certaine length if they be not of such a length he he which buyes them shall have a Writ of Deceit against him but if the warranty be made after the bargain is otherwise 11 Ed. 4. fol. 7. Where one sells Clothes and warrants them to be of such a length and they are not deceit lies for he could not know but by measure and he beleeved him but it is said if he warrant Seeds to grow that is in Cod or that a Horse shall carry one ten miles in two houres which is to come or warrant Cloth to be murrey where it is blue and see it deceit doth not lye but if he warrant Cloth to be of such a Country when it is not deceit lies 11 R. 2. Statham If one sell a Horse knowing him to be lame and warrant him to be sound the Defendant saith that he sold him sound without that that he warranted him 31 H. 6. fol. 11. Statham If one sell a Horse knowing him to be lame and do not warrant him action upon the case doth not lye 20 H. 6. fol. 37. By Paston and not denied if a man sell a horse which hath a disease the Buyer may have action upon the case that the Defendant knowing his Horse to be diseased sold him though he do not warrant him to be sound notwithstanding it seems otherwise where the Buyer may see the disease by looking upon him as a splint a spavin or an eye 9 H. 7. f. 22. If one sell a thing and warrant that at the same time he may have deceit notwithstanding that he hath not paid the Money for that that he might have debt at his pleasure for the Money Action upon the case for cosenage and deceiving of one ACtion upon the case was brought against W. C. for that the Defendant took eight Oxen of J.S. and offered to sell them to the Plaintiff as his proper Goods and by this salsity the Plaintiff trusting to the honesty of the Defendant bought them and paid seven pound and after the owner tooke the Oxen by which the Plaintiffe lost the Oxen by this falsity to his wrong and damages c. Book of Ass 8. 20 H. 6 fol. 25. Deceit was brought for that the Defendant was his Attorney and ought to have taken an Obligation of J.S. for a hundred pound to the Plaintiff and he took it to himselfe and it is sayd he ought to declare that he took a Fee of him And so lyeth an Action upon the Case for such Cosenage and Deceits VVhich note 9 E. 4. fol. 12. By Littleton Debt against two as Executors and one is no Executor nor never administred c. Yet he acknowledged the Action and the other made default the Plaintiffe recovers the other hath no remedy but an Action of Deceit that is Upon the Case for he is party to the Judgement 42
Ed. 3. f. 14. Conspiracy in the nature of an Action upon the case was brought against three which conspired to make one of them Attorney for the Plaintiff and to plead as they pleased and so to cause the Plaintiff to be found a Villain to one of the Defendants and it lies 26. Book of Assises 62. 47 Ed. 3. f. 15. Action upon the case lies in nature of a Conspiracy for that the Defendant procured and caused a false Office to be found by which the Mannour of the Plaintiff was seised into the Kings hands Tit. Conspiracy 8. B. See 27. Book of Assises 73. Fitzh 114. D. 43 Ed. 3. f. 20. Deceit for that the Defendant procure J. S. to bring a Formedon against the Plaintiff by Collusion by which he was travell by the Suit and brought a Writ of Warrantia Chartae in defence of that and it lies Where an Action upon the Case lies for a thing pawned and for a thing borrowed and where not ACtion upon the Case doth not lie for riding his Horse which he had hired of the Plaintiff which was weary so that he had no service of him by six Dayes for wearinesse is natural after labor and for that he ought to shew some Fault in the Defendant if he will have that Action Fitzh 86. C. If one borrow certain Money and deliver certain of his Goods in pawn for it and he offers the Money to the party again and prayes Delivery of his Pawn and the other refuse it he shall have an Action upon the Case for the Pawn 40 Ed. 3. f. 6. If I borrow a Horse and he dies suddenly and not by my default I shall not be charged to restore a dead Horse Doct. Student f. 29. If one use the thing borrowed in other manner then to what it was borrowed he shall be charged if they perish in any manner but if he use them as they were lent if they perish not through his default which borrowed them the Owner shall bear the losse Doct. Student fol. 128. If a man borrow a Horse and puts him in a house which fals upon him if it were strong and not feeble to fall he shall be discharged otherwise it is if it were weak 21 Ed. 4. Tit. 42. Detinue of Goods Br. Detinue of a Horse it is a good Plea that at the time of the Delivery the Horse was sick of divers Diseases as Botts Glanders and such like by which he died at D. such a day and year before request made by the Plaintiff to re-deliver him and it is a good Plea contrary if he do not say it was before request for if it were after request that had been the folly of the Defendant Where Action upon the Case lies or Detinue and where Trespass and where not IF the Lessor will not discharge his Farmer of a Tenth or of a Fifteenth or of Quit-rent which are due by the Lessor and the Farmer pay it yet he cannot keep that back in the payment of his Rent but shall have an Action upon the Case 21 H. 7. f. 12. 7 H. 4. fol. 3. If the Testator hath my Goods amongst his Goods and dies Trespasse by force and Arms doth not lie against his Executors for these Goods but Detinue in an Action upon the Case and if one finde my Goods Trespasse doth not lie against him but Detinue or an Action upon the Case 12 Ed. 4. f. 10. If one take my Beasts and another take them from him I shall not have Trespasse against the second but Action upon the Case 21 Ed. 4. fol. 89. the same 13 Ed. 4. fol. 9. If Goods be delivered to one he cannot be a Trespassor of them but a Detinue lies of them 18 Ed. 4. f. 28. VVhere one hath Goods by my Delivery I shall not have Trespasse but Action upon the Case and Count of mis-using of them 46 Ed. 3. fol. 15 Trespasse if the Defendant saith that the Goods were thrown into the Sea by a Tempest for safeguard of the Ship and he took them and Trespasse doth not lie against him for that they were not taken out of the possession of the Plaintiff 21 H. 7. f. 39. By Fineux and Tremail if I deliver Goods to a man and he gives them or sels them to a stranger if the stranger takes them without Delivery I shall have a VVrit of Trespasse but if he makes Delivery to the stranger of them I shall have no Trespasse Littleton fol. 14. If I deliver to one my Sheep to dung his Land or my Oxen to plow his Land and he kils my Beasts I shall have Trespasse that is to be intended Trespasse upon the Case and not Trespasse by force of Armes See 2 Ed. 4. f. 5. in Parco fracto 18 Ed. 4. fol. 23. In Action upon the Case where he counts of mis-using of a thing delivered to the Defendant or converting it to his own use is to recover Damages for the thing and where one will recover the thing it self he shall have Detinue 7 Ed. 4. f. 4. Where one comes to Goods lawfully as by Delivery Trespasse doth not lie against him but Detinue 12 E. 4. f. 8. A man shall not have trespasse general that is by force of Armes against him that mis-uses a License in Deed as to ride a Horse twenty Miles where he borrowed the Horse but for ten Mile but he shall have an Action upon the case contrary if one mis-use a License in Law as to enter into a Tavern there he shall have Trespasse by force of Armes 21 Ed. 4. f. 76. the same 18 Ed. 4. f. 2. If my Bailiff kill my Kine Trespasse by force of Armes doth not lie but an Action upon the Case 21 Ed. 4. fol. 22. Action upon the Case lies against J. S. Officer of the Kings Bench for that that the Plaintiff affirmed a Plaint of Debt against J. D. in London the said J. S. purchased a Supersedeas of Priviledge for J. D. supposing that he was his Servant 2 H. 4. f. 19. Action upon the Case by the Neighbour of a fire lies that according to the Law and custome of the Realm of England c. that every one shall keep his fire least by his fire any losse should come to his Neighbours 42 Ed. 3. fol. 11. Action upon the case lies where throughout the whole Realm of England it was a custome that the Host should keep the Goods that their Guests brought into their House if it be a common Inn and should be charged though they were not delivered and though that the key of his Chamber were delivered to the Guest 22 H. 6. f. 24. 2 H. 4. f. 8. 14 H. 4. f. 43. Fitzh f. 94. B. 11 H. 4. f. 43. 28 H. 6. f. 7. Action upon the case lies for that that the Dog of the Defendant worried the Sheep of the Plaintiff he knowing his Dog to be accustomed to worry Sheep and it is no Plea for the Defendant that he did