Selected quad for the lemma: judgement_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
judgement_n defendant_n plaintiff_n writ_n 4,414 5 9.5649 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A38736 Tryals per pais, or, The law concerning juries by nisi-prius &c. by G.D. of the Inner Temple, Esquire. G. D. 1685 (1685) Wing E3413A; ESTC R36204 212,735 464

There are 28 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

shall not be tryed by Certificat but per pais Rolls tit Tryal 583. Concerning Certificates of Spiritual persons vide Rolls ibidem 591 592. 7. A Record shall be tryed by the Record it Records self and not per pais But matter of fact concerning a Record is tryable by a Jury as whether a plaint c. was levied according to the Custom non prosecutus est ullum breve is tryable by the Country Mixt with fact Hob. 244. Hutt 20. So if a Statute hath two Seals or but one 1 Leon. 229. 2 Cro. 375. 1 Inst 125. b. so in a per quae servitia if the Tenant say he held not of the Conusor Jour del note levie shall be tryed per pais In Escape upon a Cepi returned ne unques in son gard shall be tryed per Record but upon Rolls tit Tryal 574. a Capias not returned the prisal shall be tryed per pais So shall an action brought by Covin for the Covin is not of Record In a scire facias per Roy to have execution of a Iudgment in a Quare impedit if the Def. say that after the Recovery the King presented issint Judgement execute and the issue be whether the King presented per cause del Judgement or of an avoydance after the death of J. S. who was presented by a stranger after the avoidance upon which the King had Iudgment This shall be tryed per pais And Why there needs no visne where Letters Patents were made otherwise in pleading Deeds 4 Rep. 71. for this Reason in pleading of Letters Patents the place need not be alledged where the Letters Patents were made because the D●fendant cannot plead nul tiel Record but must plead non concessit and then the Jury shall come from the place where the Lands lie Vide li. 6. fo 15. 1 Inst 117. 260. Plo. Com 231. But upon a Non est factum pleaded to a Deed there must be a place alledged where the Deed was made because though the Deed as to the matter of Law be tryable by the Court yet the sealing and delivery thereof Dee● and other matter of fact must be tryed by the Jury so that in this case of a Deed there is a Tryal per Pais and by the Court. 1 Inst fol. 35. vide apres 18. The issue upon an Indictment or acquittal What issues shall be tryed per Record upon this shall be tryed by the Record So shall the allowance of a Protection in Bank The imprisonment upon the execution and not for other cause in escape The justification of an imprisonment because he is a Iustice of Peace A Statute-Merchant Count or not Count Baron of the Parliament or Vicount or not Whether a place be within the Ligeance of the King of England or in Scotland A Fine sur release Rendring his body in discharge of his Baile shall be tryed by the Record Rolls tit Tryal 574. But in escape against the Mayor of Astaple What per Pais for suffering J. S. in execution upon a Statute Staple to go at large if the Defendant say he was not in Prison upon the execution but upon a Plaint there this shall be tryed per pais and not per Record because 't would be unreasonable that the Defendant should certifie a Record where he himself was concerned ibid. The time of inrolliing Letters Patents shall be tryed per pais Co. Lib. 4. 71. 9 H. 7. 2. Disseisin of an Office in any Court or Office Raseing a Record rasing a Record in any Court by the Filizers and Attorneys of the Court. 8. A Peer of the Realm i. e. a Lord of Peers the Parliament shall upon an Indictment of Treason or Felony misprision of Treason and misprision of Felony be tryed by his Peers without Oath 1 H. 4. 2. But in an Appeal at the Suit of the Party he shall be tryed per probos legales homines Juratores 10 E. 4. 6. c. because that is not the Kings Suit but the Parties Vide li. 9. 31. Le case del Abbot de Strata Mercella And in a Praemunire his Tryal shall be per pais 12 Bep 93. Lamb. In●t 520. 3. Inst 30. Bolstr 1. part 198. Dutchesses Countesses or Baronesses although married shall be tryed as Peers of the Realm are but so shall not Bishops and Abbots Stam. 153. 20 H. 6. 9. 2. Inst 48 49 50. 156. b. 294. 9. The Customs and usages of every Court shall be tryed by the Judges of the Customs of Courts c. tryed by the Judges same Court if they are pleaded in the same Court ib. and many other things are tryed by the Judges as the reasonableness of a fine of an offender or upon surrender of a Copy-hold Estate and so it is of Customes services and also of the time that a Tenant at will shall have to carry away his Goods And these Cases come under the Rule which makes matter of Law to be tryed by the Judges Vide 1 Inst fol. 56. And in some Cases matter of fact shall be tryed by the Judges as if the Plaintiff appear by Attorney in Court and then the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff is dead If one appears and saith that he is the Plaintiff whether he is or not shall be tryed by Inspection the Judges li. 9. 30. So the non-age of an Infant generally by inspection of the Court But in many Cases Infancy shall be tryed per Pais as if an Infant appear by Attorney v. Bulst 1 part 131. Rolls tit Tryals 573. in Error this shall be tryed per Pais li. 9. 31. and so it is in an Aetate probanda Maihim in an Appeal of Maihim the Maihim Court may adjudge this upon the view at the prayer of the Defendant and this Tryal is peremptory to the Parties by a Jury of Chirurgeons Vide Rolls tit Tryal 578. Maihim may be tryed again by the Court by inspection for increase of Damages but then these things are to be considered First it must be a Maihim and not a bare wounding Secondly The Maihim must be ascertained in the declaration so as that it Maihim may appear that the Maihim inspected and the Maihim in the declaration be all one as was resolved Mich. 21 Car. 2. B. R. in the Case of Badwel and Burford the principal Case of which was that the Defendant whip'd the Plaintiffs Horse which made him throw her and another Horse trod on her and maim'd her hand and adjudged no increase of Damages in that Case being a Consequential and not a direct Maihim Nonage in a Writ of Error to reverse a Inspection Iudgement or a fine of the Tenant by resceit of one vouched come deins age issint praie le paroll à demurrer Nonage sur aid praier in Appeal Audita querela to avoid a Statute Accompt and in all actions where 't is prayed that the paroll demurroit Nonage shall be tryed per
but by one of the Coroners or for affinity in one c. Yet the Process shall still go to the Coroners Ita quod the Coroner se non intromittat If Default be in the Sheriff and To whom Process shall be directed for default in the Sheriff and Coroners Coroners the Court may choose two Esliors and if the parties can say nothing against them they shall make the Pannel But the Distringas shall not be directed to Esliers for the Court cannot make Officers to distreyn the Kings Liege people but the King may 8 H. 6. 12. dubitatur Process may be directed to the Justices of Assise by assent of parties not without When a Pannel is made by the Esliors they shall afterwards serve all Process that comes upon this as the Sheriff should 15 E. 4. 24. 18 E. 4. 3 8. Rolls tit Tryal 670. For it may be the Sheriff will distreyn only those who are his friends and be partial When the Process is once awarded Venire facias once directed to the Coroners shall not be to the Sheriff afterwards to the Coroners for a default in the Sheriff if there be a new Sheriff made afterwards who is indifferent yet the Process shall not revert but continue to the Coroners pendant le plea. 14 H. 7. 31. Bro. tit Venire facias 17. So the Entry is Ita quod Vicecomes se non intromittat 18 E. 4. 3. 8 H. 6. 12. And therefore where the Sheriff ought Sheriff shall not return the Tales where he cannot the Venire facias not to retorn the Venire he cannot retorn the Tales For in Error in the Exchequer Chamber of a Iudgement in the Queen's Bench the Error assigned was because the Venire facias was awarded to the Coroners for Consanguinity in the Sheriff and it was retorned by the Coroner and afterwards a Tales was awarded and it was retorned by the Sheriff and it was tryed and a Verdict given and Iudgement And for this cause held to be Erroneous and not aided by the Statute of 32 H. 8. or 18 Eliz. Wherefore the Iudgement was reversed Cro. 3. par 574. Bro. tit Octo. Tales 9. I will instance one Case more in the same Reports fo 586. because it is very full in the point After issue in Trespass the Plaintiff for his expedition surmised that he was Servant to the Sheriff which being confessed by the Defendant the process was awarded to the Coroners and Where the Coroner returns the Venire facias he ought to return the Tales after Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Iudgement that the Tales de Circumstantibus was awarded and returned by the Sheriff which was held by the whole Court to be good cause for Staying the Iudgement For it is a mis-tryal not aided by any of the Statutes for process being once awarded to the Coroners the Sheriff afterwards is not the Officer to return the Jury no more than any other man And process ought always to be returned by him who is an Officer by Law to return it otherwise it is meerly void But afterwards upon view of the Record it appeared that the Tales was returned by the Coroners and their names annexed thereto wherefore it was without further question But the Court said if their names had not been annexed No name to the Return to the Tales yet it had been well enough for they be annexed to the first Pannel And it shall be intended that the right Officer return'd it and the usual course is That to such Tales there is not any officers name subscribed and yet it is good enough for it is not within the Statute of York which appoints that the name of the Sheriff should be subscribed but it was moved that the Record of the Postea is that the Tales were returned by the Sheriff But the Court held that it was amendable and it was done accordingly and the Plaintiff had Iudgement But if the Venire be awarded to the Coroners Venire facias to the Sheriff after one awarded to the Coroners for default in the Sheriff and they do nothing upon the Writ then I suppose upon a default discovered in the Coroners de puisne temps the party may shew this to the Court and have a Venire awarded to the Sheriff if there be an indifferent one made in the mean time or else to Esliors sice converso In Error of a Iudgement in Chester Venire facias to the Coroners after one to the Sheriff the parties being at issue a Venire was awarded to the Sheriff And at the day of the Return it was entred Quod Vicecomes non misit breve And then the Plaintiff prayed a Venire facias to the Coroners for Cozenage betwixt him and the Sheriff which was awarded accordingly and at the day of tryal the Defendant made default and there upon Iudgement Error was assigned because that after the Plaintiff had admitted the Sheriff to execute the Writ he could not pray a Venire facias to the Coroners without some cause de puisne Temps sed non allocatur because there was nothing done upon the first Writ And the Defendant having made default it was not material Cro. 3. part 853. But the Defendant might have demurred No Venire facias to the Coroners after one to the Sheriff to this prayer For if the Plaintiff pray a Venire facias to the Sheriff he shall not challenge the Array nor have a Venire afterwards to the Coroners because the Sheriff is his Cousin or for any other principal challenge whereof he might by common intendment have Conusance when he so prayed the Venire facias for upon shewing this Cause at first he might have prayed Process to the Coroners but for a principal challenge of which by common intendment the Plaintiff could not know at the first as that the Defendant is of kindred to the Sheriff c. he may afterwards challenge the Array when they appear or if the Sheriff doth nothing upon the Writ he may pray a new Venire to the Coroners 15 H. 7. 9. If the Plaintiff prayes a Venire facias to If the Defendant denies the Planitiffs suggestion he shall have no benefit of it by Challenge the Coroner because he is of kindred to the Sheriff if the Defendant will not confess this but denies it this shall be entred and the Defendant shall not challenge the Array for this cause afterwards Br. tit Venire facias 21. and 23. If a Venire facias be awarded to the Coroners By Consent the Venire facias may be directed to a wrong Officer where it ought to be to the Sheriff or the Visne cometh out of a wrong place yet if it be per assensum partium and so entred of Record it shall stand for omnis consensus tollit errorem 1 Inst 126. li. 5. Mistryal without such consent 36. But if it be directed to the Coroners where it ought to be to the Sheriff
without such consent of parties This is an insufficient Tryal not remedied by any Statute except it be upon an insuff●ient suggestion and then the Statute of 21 Jac. 13. helps it Vpon suggestion that the Plaintiff and Venire facias to some of the Coroners the Sheriff and one of the Coroners are of kindred to the Plaintiff or Defendant or upon any other suggestion which contains a Principal challenge the Venire facias may be directed to the other Coroners Dier 367. Error of a Iudgement in Northampton Bayliffs because in Northampton the Court being held before the Mayor and two Bayliffs the Venire facias upon the Issue was awarded to the two Bayliffs to return a Jury before the Mayor and Bayliffs secundum Consuetudinem which being returned and Iudgement given the Error assigned was because the Bayliffs being Iudges of the Court could not also be Officers to whom Process should be directed there being no Custome that can maintain any to be both Officer and Iudge But all the Court absente Hide conceived it might be good by Custome And that it is not any Error for the Iudges be not the Bayliffs only but the Mayor and Bayliffs and it is a common course in many of the Antient Corporations where the Bayliffs are Judge and Officer to return Writs Judges or the Mayor and they be Judges yet in respect of executing Process they be the Officers also And one may be Iudge and Officer diversis respectibus as in Redisseisin the Sheriff is Judge and Officer Whereupon Iudgement was affirmed Cro. 1 part 138. In Trespass and Assault laid in the Venire facias to the Garden of the Palace of Westminster Rolls tit Tryal 667. Court to be at the Palace of Westminster It was adjudged that the Venire facias shall issue al Garden del Palace and not to the Sheriff of Middlesex Bro. tit Ven. fac 31. In Trespass against two if one plead Award of Venire facias and two issues are joyned upon his Plea and two other issues are also joyned and the Court award a Venire ad triandum extitum illum quam praedictum alium exitum inter the Plaintiff and the other Defendant c. This is a good award although there be several issues betwixt the Plaintiff and both Defendants because that this word Exitus may be for all reddendo singula singulis Hob. 91. If an Inquest remain for default of Rapers and a Decem Tales is awarded and the Defendant saith for his deliverance that he is Lord of the Rape where c. and that all there are within his distress and prays a Writ to the next Hundred The Court may try this by Prochein Hundred Tryors presently without a return of the Sheriff and if it be true may award to the next Hundred otherwise if it be false 3 H. 6. 39. CAP. IV. What faults in the Venire facias shall vitiate the Tryal what not When a Venire facias de novo shall be awarded when several Venire facias's When the Venire facias shall be betwixt the party and a stranger to the Issue Who may have a Venire facias by Proviso and when WE have now shewed you to what Officer the Venire facias shall be directed The next step in the Writ is Praecipimus tibi quod Venire facias Which words Venire facias are Venire facias why the Writ so called the most effectual words in the Writ and therefore they give the denomination to the whole Writ And here opportunity is offered us to speak something of a Venire facias in general I am not ignorant how our Books swarm with Cases which arise from the defects in this Process and how that Verdicts have been set aside Iudgements stayed and reversed for want of sufficicient Returns misawarding disagreement with the Rolls discontinuance and many other faults in this Writ But the Statutes of Jeofailes especially the Statute 21 Jacob. cap. 13. have pardoned as I Statute of Jeofailes 21 Jac. 13. may so say these enormities As the awarding this Writ hab Corpora or Distringas to a wrong Officer upon any insufficient suggestion or by reason the Visne is in some part misawarded or sued out of more places or of fewer places than it ouhgt to be so as some place be right named The misnaming of any of the Jury either in Sir-name or addition in any of the said Writs or in any return thereupon so that upon examination it be proved to be the same man that was meant to be returned or if no Return be upon any of the said Writs so as a Pannel of the names of the Jurors be returned or annexed to the said Writ or if the Sheriff or Officers name having the Return thereof is not set to the Return of any such Writ so as upon Examination it be proved that the said Writ was returned by the Sheriff or Undersheriff or such other Officer In all these Cases the Iudgment shall not be stayed nor reversed for these defects But this Act doth not extend to any Writ Declaration or Suit of Appeal of Felony or Murther nor to any Indictment or Presentment of Felony or Murther or Treason nor to any Process upon any of them nor to any Writ Bill Action or Information upon any popular or penal Statute Wherefore since Informations and popular Actions are grown so frequent Popular Action c. the Attorneys c. herein had best beware of these Jeofailes By this Statute many defects are remedied which were not by the Statutes of 32 H. 8. Cap. 30. and 18 Eliz. Cap. 14. yet all are not for this Act only helps the mis-naming of a Juror in Sir-name or addition and saith nothing of his Christian name wherefore I conceive the Law in Christian name mistaken in the Venire facias incurable Codwels Case in the fifth Report remains as it was then which is that if a Juror be mis-named in his Christian name on the Venire though he be named right in the Distringas and Postea yet this is ill and not amendable and with this agrées Goddards Case Cro. 2. part 458. And since the Court Cro. 1. part so 203. doubted thereof I may well put the Christian name right in the Venine facias wrong in the Distringas Question if a Juror be right named upon the Venire and mis-named in his Christian Name in the Distringas c. whether this is amendable or not without dispute it is not by the Statute of 21 Jacob. for that only helps the Sir-name But with Reverence to the Courts doubt I conceive clearly it is holpen by the Statutes of 32 H. 8. and 18 Eliz. as a discontinuance of Process and I may with the more confidence believe it because in Codwels Case aforesaid where in the Pannel of the Venire a Juror was named Palus Cheale and in the Distringas c. he was right named Paulus Cheale and so because he
if it be alledged in a Ward in the City of Bristol c. the Venue shall be of the Ward not de Civitate A Venire facias was awarded from T. Ward and not de vicinet de T. and for this cause resolved to be ill and not amendable Cro. 2. part 399. Bro. tit Ven. fa. 8. If the issue be Si rex concessit per literas De vicinet left out ill patentes The Tryal shall be as hath been said where the Land lies and not where the Patent was made because the Patent is of Record and if it be traversed Where the Land lies it shall be tryed by the Record and therefore the issue being upon non concessit the issue is not upon the Patent but where the issue is upon non concessit or non dimisit of a thing which passeth by Deed the Tryal shall be where the Grant or Demise is alledged But of a Feoffment or Lease for life pleaded the issue being non Feoffavit or non dimisit Livery ought to be made and therefore the Tryal shall be where the Land lies Cro. 2. part 376. 3. part 259. Where the offence is laid in the Count Where the Action is laid in one County and the Justification in another the Tryal shall be where the Justification is to be in one County and the Iustification in another County and the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria c. The Visne shall be where the Iustification is alledged As one Example for all to illustrate In an Action upon the Case for words supposed to be spoken at Bridg-North in the County of Salop the Defendant pleads that he spake them as a Witness upon his Oath upon an issue tryed at Chard in the County of Somerset The Plaintiff replies de son tort demesne c And thereupon it was tryed by a Venire facias of Bridg-North And Error thereof assigned because it ought to have been by a Visne of Chard where the Iustification arose and it was held clearly to be a mis-tryal and not aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes wherefore the Iudgment was reversed Cro. 3. part 468. 261. 870. More 410. Replevin taking 2 Horses at such a place in Denford in Com. Northampton the Defendant makes Con●sans as Bayliff to the Lord Mountague of his Mannor of S. which Mannor is holden of the Honour of Gloucester and that the place in which c. is within the said Honour and alledges a Custome within the said Honour on which Custome the parties were at issue and the Venire facias was from Denford the place of taking which was moved after Verdict for that the Venue was not so large as the issue which was the Honour and of this opinion was the whole Court of C. B. Pasch 13 Car. 2. Hull vers B●nning But the great question was whence the Venue should arise in this Case and per Bridgman Ch. Just and Just Hide in no Case can a Venue arise from an Honour and Ch. Just said he had caused the Prothonotaries to search for Precedents and they Honours could not find that ever a Venue did arise from an Honour which is but a bundle of services and an incorporeal thing from which no Venue can come and yet an Honour may have demesns as the Honours of Grafton and Hampton have but Gloucester not Ch. Just and Just Hide seemed that the Venue should be de Corpore Comitat. Hob. 266. 249. But when the Court was after moved for their opinion they bad them take a Venire facias at their peril and would give no opinion An action of Debt was brought on a Bond to perform Covenants in an Indenture wherely the Defendant had granted to the Plaintiff a walk called shrob-walk in the Forest of in Com Northampton and Covenanted for peaceable in joyment c. and he was ousted per Earl of Northampton who had right on which Right issue was joyned and the Venire facias was from Shrob-walk Per Cur. It 's not good for it appears by the Record that Shrob-walk is not a Vill but if the Obligation had been laid to be made at Shrob-walk the Venue should arise from thence as a Vill. Inter. Stirt Bales Pasch 19 Car. 2. B. R. The Venue shall follow and be according Out of what County to the issue As for words in Warwick-shire Thou art a Vide ●ic ante postea Thief and stolest my Iron The Defendant justifies says the Plaintiff stole the Iron in Leicester-shire and brought it into Warwick-shire and therefore he spake the words in Warwick-shire If the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria absque tali causa the Jury shall come from Leicestershire to which the absque tali causa refers for the words are acknowledged See Rolls tit Tryal 598. 623. When part of the matter to be inquired of is in one County or place and part in another the Tryal shall be there where the best Conusans of the matter may be As in an action upon the Case the Plaintiff declares that the Defendant took the From the place best known Horse of A. at S. and sold him at D. to the Plaintiff as his proper Horse and afterwards A. retook the Horse If the Defendant plead that the property was in him at the sale upon which issue is ioyned The Venue shall be de S. where the taking is supposed for there the property may be best known which is only in question 42. Ass 8. see several cases in Rolls ib. 603. under this head If the issue be whether L. did ride from London to York and from York to London Where the Counties cannot joyn 5 times in six days this may be tryed by London only Although part of the matter to be inquired of was done in each County In an action of Battery in London if the Defendant justifies in defence of his posses●on in D. in Essex and the Plaintiff says de son tort demesn s●ns tiel cause this ought to be tryed by both Counties if they might joyn because he may be found guilty at another day and therefore because they may not joyn this may be tryed in Essex Of Assises in confinio Com. See 1 Inst 154. In case for words in one County if the Defendant justifie in another County and the Plaintiff reply de son tort demesn c. although the Counties ought to joyn if they could and the Iustification is principally put in issue yet the Tryal may be in either County at the Election of the Plaintiff In Ejectment in London upon a Lease Rolls tit Tryal 620. made there of Land in Mid. if the Defendant plead not guilty this may be tryed in London because the Counties cannot joyn although London cannot joyn with another County 49 E. 3. 20. the Jury ought to enquire of the Ejectment in Mid. and judgement affirmed in a Writ of Error See Rolls tit Tryal 602. Two Counties may
eadem c. The Plaintiff replies de injuriâ suâ propriâ c. The evidence was that the Plaintiff as Lady of the Mannor took the Horse as an Estray and it was Cryed and Marked c. that the Defendants refused to pay for the meat and took him away before the year and a day was out 1. Per Wadh. Wyndham Just d'assize A Lord may detain an Estray for meat yet no Trespass lies if the owner takes him but an action of the Case lies for the meat 2. If the action had been brought against the servant only he must justifie c. But being brought against Master and Servant this joynt-justification is good Cambr. Summer Assises 1667. Lady Hatton against Cotes and al. In Trespass the evidence for the Defendant was that the Defendant had a Barn and purschased a way over the Plaintiffs Land to that Barn after the Defendant bought other Lands lying contiguous to that Barn on the one side and to a Haven on the other side and carried Carriages by that way to the Barn and through it over his own new purchased Land to the Haven Per Hale Ch. Baron If I purchase a general way to such a place I may go from thence on my own ground whither I please though I purchase the ground after the way purchased Summer Assises Norf. 1665. Heynsworth vers Bird. Trespass was brought against many by a School-mistress for taking away a child her Scholar with a Scarfe of the Mistresses per Keeling Ch. Just In Trespass for taking things all are principals that are present and consenting Contra in taking persons and this action lies not by the Mistress for the child but for the Scarfe only Lent Norf. Ass 1663. Mary Coopers case Trespass lies for Lessee in Ejectment on a fictitious Lease to recover mean profits during the continuance of that Lease mentioned on Record And the Recovery shall maintain it Otherwise if brought by the Lessor for he is no party to the action Trespass lies not for pulling down a Pew in a Church fastned to a pillar with a Chain Contra had it been fixed by nails driven into the pillar per Glyn Ch. Just Trevors case Trespass quare fregit liberam Warrenam suam and took his Conies In evidence it appeared that the Plaintiff had liberty of chase in the place which though it includes Warren yet a general Trespass lies not but an action of the case E. of Arundels case Pasch 1658. B. R. Per Earl Sergeant if Beasts be impounded and the Key lost the Officer by Replevin may break the pound and deliver the Cattle per Stat. Marlebridge 52 H. 3. 21. Tenants in Common must joyn in Trespass done against them so Avowry Lead and Lamsteads case 7 Car. B. R. cited by Finch in Argument Or Tenant in Common surviving shall have Trespass In Trespass the Defendant sets forth a conditional Feoffment for payment of money at such a day and place and that he paid it accordingly issue joyned on the payment at the day and place evidence of payment before the day is not good Contra had the special matter been pleaded with acceptance More 47. In Trespass with Continuando to recover mean profits an Entry and possession of the Land before the Trespass must be proved and also another Entry after the Trespass In Trespass the Defendant prescribes to dig in the Common for Clay to repair antient houses holden of that Mannor and good Berney vers Stafford Norf. Lent Assises 1667. In Trespass they were at issue on Not Guilty and at the Assises the Defendant left his former plea and pleaded an accord with satisfaction the Iudge would have had it replied to and tryed presently but the Councel refused whereupon the Jury was sworn and the Plaintiff nonsuited Bedford Assises Lent 1667. Green vers Reynolds But this was contrary to the opinion of Sir Orlando Bridgeman at the same Assises and Contr. to 10 H. 7. 21. and 1 Bul. 92. Trespass lies by Recoveror in Erroneous Iudgement for a mean Trespass because the Plaintiff in Writ of Error recovers all mean profits and the Law by fiction of relation will not make a wrong doer dispunishable 13. rep Co. 22. but Contra where Act of Parliament restores c. Trespass for assault and wounding in Suff. the Defendant as to vi armis non Cul. As to the other justification of molliter Manus c. in Norf. and several Tryals Per Hale Ch. Baron Suff. Ass Summer 1668. the vi armis can't be tryed till the other be tryed Contr. If the first issue of non Cul. was as to the wounding and by him evidence of Livery of seisin generally shall be intended for life only The Hogs of B. were put into the yard of A. and broke into the Land of C. and did Trespass action lies against A. though the servant of B. did look to them and serve them by which the owner had the special possession of them So if Agisted Cattle do Trespass the Agistor shall answer Dawtry vers Huggins Clayton 33. per Barkley 11 Car. York A. by Indent of uses raised an Estate to B. in Fee who regrants Turbary to A. by another Deed and after A. levies a fine to confirm the Estate and uses abovesaid declared this doth not touch the Turbary per Vernon 11 Car. York Clayton 42. Any one imployed by an Officer is an Officer within 7 Jac. 5. to plead general issue and give the special matter in evidence Clayton 54. Prescription to tether Equos Boves upon such a balk c. Mares and Cowes good evidence within that prescription Per Barkley Clayton 54. Per Hale A Corporation may bargain and sell though it has been thought an use upon use they being seised to the use of their house But I think it rather a trust than an use If a Just of P. send his Warrant to I. S. who is no Officer to bring one before him if I. S. be no Officer he is not bound to execute it yet if he does execute it it 's good and he may execute it in any part of the County And so a Constable of one Town may execute a Warrant in any other Town in the same County and any such Warrant is as large as the Justices Commission is per Hale Norf. Summer Assises 1668. Wrongries case In Trespass against one for Gleaning on his ground per Hale Norf. Sum. Assises 1668. The Law gives licence to the poor to glean c. by the general Custom of England but the licence must be pleaded specially and can't be given in evidence on non Cul. Trover The Citizens of London gave in evidence their Custom to take Toll Jones 240. In Trover for an Horse proved of 15 l. value the Jury gave but 3 l. damages upon mistake they thinking that the Plaintiff had his Horse again Per Wadh. Wyndham if the Jury had not been gone they should have mended their Verdict but a new action of
the Plaintiff was seized in his Demesn as of Fréehold and that afterwards the Rent was behind at such a Feast c. By which the Lessor entred into the Land upon the possession of the Lessée And pray the discretion of the Iustices if this be a Disseisin done to the Plaintiff or not Then for that it appeareth to the Iustices that this was no Disseisin to the Plaintiff insomuch as the Entry of the Lessor was congeable on him The Iustices ought to give Iudgment that the Plaintiff shall not take any thing by his Writ of Assize and so in such case the Lessor shall be ayded and yet no Writing was ever made of the Condition For as well as the Iurors may have Conusance of the Lease they also as well may have Conusance of the Condition which was declared and rehearsed upon the Lease In the same manner it is of a Feoffment in Fée or a guift in tail upon Condition although no Writing were ever made of it And as it is said of a Verdict at large in an Assize c. In the same manner it is of a Writ of Entry founded upon a Disseisin and in all other Actions where the Iustices will take the Verdict at large there where such Verdict at large is made the manner of the whole Entry is put in Issue But in Assise of Rent it cannot be found to be upon Condition unless they also find the Deed of the Condition So of a Confirmation in Fee to Lessée for years Per Hale Ch. Just Guild-hall Hill 1671. A Special Verdict may be found as to Damag●s in an Action of the Case as the Case was there viz. Pro Quer ' and if so c. then such Damages if so c. then Damages such and he said he had known it so done in Debt and the Damages three ways Also in such case where the Enquest may General Verdict give their Verdict at large if they will take upon them the knowledge of the Law upon the matter they may give their Verdict generally as is put in their charge as in the case aforesaid they may well say that the Lessor did not disseize the Lessée if they will c. The Iury may likewise find Estoppel Estoppels which cannot be pleaded as in the 2 d Report fol. 4. it well appears where one Goddard Administrator of James Newton brought an Action of debt against John Denton upon an Obligation made to the Intestate bearing date the 4th day of April Anno 24 Eliz. The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate dyed before the Date of the Obligation and so concluded that the said Escript was not his Deed upon which they were at Issue And the Iury found that the Defendant delivered it as his Déed 30 July Anno 23. Eliz. and found the Tenor of the Déed in haec verba Noveriat universi c. Dat. 4. Aprilis Anno 24 Eliz. And that the Defendant was alive 30 July Anno 23. Eliz. And that he dyed before the said date of the Obligation and prayed consideration of the Court if this was the Defendants Deed And it was adjudged by Anderson Chief Justice Windham Periam and Walmesley that this was his Deed And the Reason of the Iudgment was That although the Obligèe in Note that a Deed may be pl●aded to be delivered after the dare but nor before because it shall not be intended written before the date which may be after the date 12 H. 6. 1. pleading cannot alledge the delivery before the date as it is adjudged in 12 H. 6. 1. which case was affirmed to be good Law because he is estopped to take an averment against any thing expressed in the Deed yet the Jurors who are sworn ad veritatem dic●nd shall not be estopped For an Estoppel is to be concluded to speak the truth and therefore Jurors cannot be estopped because they are sworn to speak the truth But if the Estoppel or Admittance be As in Wast supposed in A. to plead that A is a hamlet in B. and not a Town of it self admitteth the Wast c. 9 H. 6. 66. and the Jury cannot find no Wast for that would be against the Record Estoppel within the same Record in which the Issue is joyned upon which the Jurors give their Verdict there they cannot find any thing against this which the parties have affirmed and admitted of Record although it be not true For the Court may give Iudgement upon a thing confessed by the parties and the Jurors are not to be charged with any such thing but only with things in which the parties vary Ib. li. 5. 30. So Estoppels which bind the Interest of the Land as the taking of a Lease of a mans own La●d by Déed indented and the like Cro. 1. part 110. Lib. 4. 53. being specially found by the Iury the Court ought to judge according to the special matter for albeit Estoppels regularly must be pleaded and relyed upon by apt conclusion and the Iury is sworn ad veritatem dicend yet when they find veritatem facti they persue well their Oath and the Court ought to adjudge according to Law So may the Iury find a Warranty being given in Evidence though it be not pleaded because it bindeth the right unless it be in a Writ of Right Warranty not pleaded when the Mise is joyned upon the méer right 1 Inst 227. Verdicts ought to be such that the Court Uncertain Verdicts may go clearly to Indgment thereon and therefore Verdicts finding matter incertainly or ambiguously are insufficient and void and no Iudgment shall be given thereupon As if an Executor plead Plene Administravit and Issue is joyned thereon and the Jury find that the Defendant hath Goods within his hands to be administred but find not to what value this is an uncertainty and therefore an insufficient Verdict li. 9. 74. 1 Inst 227. It is the Office of the Jurors to shew the The Office of the Jury verity of the fact and leave the Iudgment of the Law to the Court. And therefore upon an Indictment of Murder quod felonice per cussit c. If the Iury find per cussit tantum yet the Verdict is good for the Iudges of the Court are to resolve upon ●he special matter whether it was felonice and so Murder or not li. 9. 69. And if the Court adjudge it Murder then the Jurors in the conclusion of their Verdict find the Felon guilty of the murther contained in the Indictment A Verdict that finds part of the Issue and Verdict finding part of the Issue finding nothing for the rest is insufficient for the whole because they have not tryed the whole Issue wherewith they are charged As if an Information of intrusion be brought More 406. against one for intruding into a Messuage and 100 Acres of Land upon the general Issue the Iury find against the Defendant for the Land but say nothing for the House this
it may be supplied by matter ex post facto and how And for this know that if damages be left out of a Vide hic cap. 6. Verdict this omission cannot be supplied by Writ of Inquiry of damages for this would prevent the Defendant of his Remedy by Attaint which would be very mischievous for then such omission might be on purpose to deprive the Plaintiff of his Attaint li. 10. 119. And the Rule is That when the Court ex officio ought to inquire of any thing upon which no Attaint lies There the omission of this may be supplyed by ● Writ of Inquiry of damages as in a Quar impedit if the Jury omit to enquire of these 4 things that is to say de plenitudine ex cujus presentatione si tempus semestre transierit and the value of the Church per annum there the Plaintiff may have a Writ to inquire of these points Dyer 241. 260. because of these no Attaint lies as it is holden in 11 H. 4. 80. because that as to these the Inquest is but of Office But in all cases where any point is omitted whereof on Attaint lyeth there this shall not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry upon which no Attaint lyeth And therefore in Detinue if the Jury find Damages and Cost and no value as they ought this shall not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry of damages for the Reason aforesaid Ib. Et sic in similibus But how then What shall the Plaintiff Verdict set aside because the damages not well assessed loose the benefit of his Verdict because the Jury assessed no damages or did insufficiently assess them Certes in such Cases where damages only are to be recovered he must loose the whole benefit of his Verdict but where any thing else is to be recovered besides damages as in Debt Ejectment c. he may release his damages and have Iudgment Release Damages upon his Verdict as to the rest And so where damages are to be recovered if part of them are assessed insufficiently and part well he may have Iudgment for those damages well assessed And oftentimes the insufficienc● Verdict set aside in part of the Declaration shall set aside the Verdict as if an Action upon the Case be brought upon two promises and one of For insufficiency in the Declaration them be insufficiently laid and the Verdict give intire damages this is naught for the whole But if the Damages had been severally assessed upon the several promises then the Verdict as to the promise well laid should have stood In the 11th Report fo 56. Marsh brought a Writ of Annuity against Bentham and the parties discended to issue which was tryed for the Plaintiff and the Arrerages found c. But the Iurors did not assess any damages or Cost which Verdict was insufficient and could not be supplyed by Writ of Inquiry of damages wherefore Release of damages where none were assessed the Plaintiff released his damages and costs and upon this had Iudgment upon which the Defendant brought a Writ of Error and assigned the Error aforesaid scil the insufficiency of the Verdict fed Judicium affirmatur because the Plaintiff had released his damages and costs which is for the benefit of the Defendant In Detinue of Charters or non detinet Verdict for the Plaintiff and Damages but the Iury did not find the value of the Déeds and a Writ of Inquiry was awarded to that purpose and returned and ruled good and by Twisden Just Debt against Executor who pleads plenè c. and it 's fou●d against him and the Iury give no damages that can't be aided by Writ of Inquiry Burton versus Robinson Pasch 17 Car. 2. B. R. In Dyer 22 Eliz. 369. 370. In a Wri Release of damages where they were not well assessed of Ejectione Custodiae terrae haeredis the Iurors assessed damages intirely which was insufficient for it lay not for the Heir yet the Plaintiff released his damages and had Iudgment for the Land And Note that insufficient assessment of damages and no assessing is all one The Iury ought to assess no more damages Damages and Costs pro injdria illata than the Plaintiff declares for But they may assess so much and moreover give cost which is called Expensae litis though in the proper and general signification Dampnum also comprehends Costs of Suit as the Entry reciting both damages and costs well affirms scil Quae dampna in toto se attingunt cum c. But if the Iury do assess more damages More damages than the Plaintiff declares for then the Plaintiff declares for the Plaintiff may remit the overplus and pray Iudgment for the residue as in the 10th Report fol. 115. in Trespass the Plaintiff declared ad dampnum c. 40 l. at the tryal the Iury assessed damages occasione transgressionis pr●dict ad 49 l. and for costs of Suit 20 s. upon which Verdict the Plaintiff at the day in Bank remitted 9 l. parcel of the said 49 l. assessed for damages and prayed Iudgement for 40 l. Damages remitted to which damage he had counted with increase of costs of suit and had 9 l. de Incremento added by the Court which in all amounted to 50 l. and had his Iudgment accordingly upon which a Writ of Error was brought and the Iudgment affirmed For as in real Actions the Demandant shall not count to Damages c. because it is incertain to what sum the damages will amount by reason he is to recover damages pendant le briefe so in the ease of Costs he shall recover for the expences depending the suit which being uncertain cannot be comprehended in the Count because the Count extends to damages past and not to expences of Suit For in personal Actions he counts Damages in real and personal Actions to damages because he shall recover damages only for the wrong done before the Writ brought and shall not recover damages for any thing pendant le briefe But in real Actions the Demandant never counts to damages because he is to recover damages also pendant le briefe which are incertain The Iury may if they will assess the damages Damages and Costs intirely assessed and costs intirely together without making any distinction 18 E. 4. 23. But then they must not assess more damages and costs than the damages are which the Plaintiff counts to for if they do the Plaintiff shall recover only so much as he hath declared for without any increase of cost because the Court cannot distinguish how much they intended for cost and how much for damages As in 13 H. 7. 16. 17. One Darrel brought a Writ of Trespass and counted to his damage 20 marks the Defendant pleaded not guilty and the Iury taxed the damages and costs of suit joyntly to 22 marks and the Verdict was held to be good for 20 marks and void for the residue because it doth not appear how much
for the Battery of the Baron by its self and for the Battery of the Feme by its self and Iudgment was given for the damages for the bat●ery of the feme and the Writ abated for the residue And of that Opinion was Lea Chief Justice and Doderidge al. contra And the same Law I conceive if the Iury had found the Defendant Not guilty of the battery to the Palmer's Reports 338. Husband but guilty to the Wife Cro. 2. part 655. Rochel and his Wife brought an Action of Trespass and Assault in the Exchequer Rochel and his Wife against Steel Hill 1659. against Steel and others who pleaded Not guilty and the Verdict found Steel guilty of the Battery to the Wife but found nothing concerning the Husband Wherefore Iudgment was stayd but the Barons held That if the Iury had found the Defendants not guilty as to the Husband then the Verdict had helped the Declaration and the Plaintiff should have had Iudgment for the Damages for the Battery of the Wife The Iury may find any thing that may be Of what a Verdict may be given in Evidence to them as Records either Patent Statute or Iudgment Things Plo. Com 411. done in another County or Country for which sée Evidence before Hob. 227. And of those things they ought to have Conusance they are to have Conusance also of all Incidents and dependants thereupon for an Incident is a thing necessarily depending Incidents upon another Co. Littleton 227. b. If the Verdict may by any ways be construed How construed good a construction to destroy it ought not to be made If one of the Iury be Outlawed when the Verdict is found the Verdict is not good but Outlaw may be reversed by Error In a special Verdict the case in Fact must be found clear to a Common intent without Equivocation Vaughan's Reports 78. If the Iury collect the Contents of a Contents of a Deed. Deed and also find the Déed in haec verba the Court is not to Iudge upon their Collection but upon the Déed it self The Iury may find the Contents of a Déed or Will proved by Witnesses Ibidem Trespass for disturbing him of his Common Common belonging to 100 Acres and the Iury find Common for 50. this is for the Plaintiff otherwise upon an Avoury or Quod permittat which are founded upon the right but the Trespass is for Damages Palmer's Rep. 289. If the matter and substance of the Issue The Verdict may be against the Letters of the Issue so the substance is found be found it is sufficient though it be against the Letter of the Issue As in the first Institutes fo 114. b. A Modus decimandi was alledged by prescription time out of mind for Tythes of Lambs And thereupon Issue joyned And the Iury found that before twenty years then last past there was such a prescription and that for these twenty Prescription years he had payd Tythe Lamb in specie And it was objected first That the Issue was found against the Plaintiff for that the prescription was general for all the time of the prescription and 20 years fail thereof 2. That the party by payment of Tythes in specie had waved the prescription or custom But it was adjudged for the Plaintiff for albeit the modus decimandi had not been paid by the space of twenty years yet the prescription being found the substance of the Issue is found for the Plaintiff In Assiise of Darrein Presentment if the Avoydance Plaintiff alledge the avoydance of the Church by privation and the Jury find the voydance by death the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for the manner of voydance is not the title of the Plaintiff but the voydance is the matter 1 Instit 282. If a Gardein of an Hospital bring an Assise against the Ordinary he pleadeth that Deprivation in his Visitation he deprived him as Ordinary whereupon Issue is taken and it is found that he deprived him as Patron the Ordinary shall have judgment for the deprivation is the substance of the matter Ib. The Lessee Covenants with the Lessor not to cut down any Trées c. and binds himself in a Bond of 40 pounds for the performance of Covenants The Lessee cut down 10 Trees the Lessor bringeth an Action Breach of 20 Trees cut down for 10. of Debt upon the Bond and assigneth a breach that the Lessée cut down 20 Trées whereupon Issue is joyned and the Jury find that the Lessée cut down ten Iudgment shall be given for the Plaintiff for sufficient matter of Issue is found for the Plaintiff to forfeit the Bond. Ib. And this Rule holds in Criminal Causes For if A. be appealed or indicted of Murder viz. that he of malice prepensed killed J. A. pleadeth that he is not guilty Modo forma yet the Jury may find the Defendant Indictment of Murder and Verdict finds Manslaughter guilty of Man-slaughter without malice prepensed because the killing of J. is the matter and m●lice prepensed is but a Circumstance Plo. Com. 101. And generally where modo forma are Modo forma not of the substance of the Issue but words of form there it sufficeth though the Verdict doth not find the precise Issue As if a man bring a Writ of Entry in c●su proviso of the Alienation made by the Tenant in Dower to his disinheritance and counteth of the Alienation made in Fee and the Tenant saith that he did not Alien in Manner as the Demandant hath declared Alienation and upon this they are at Issue and it is found by Verdict that the Tenant aliened in tail or for term of another mans life The Demandant shall recover yet the Alienation was not in manner as the Demandant hath declared Littleton Sect. 483. Also if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant hold of the Lord by fealty only and the Lord distrain the Tenant for Rent and the Tenant bringeth a Writ of Trespass against his Lord for his Cattel so taken Trespass by the Tenant against the Lord. and the Lord plead that the Tenant holds of him by fealty and certain Rent and for that Rent behind he came to distrain c. And demand Iudgment of the Writ brought against him Quare vi armis c. And the other saith That he doth not hold of him in manner as he supposed and upon this they are at Issue And it is found by V●rdict that he holdeth of him by fealty only in this case the Writ shall abate and yet he doth not hold of him in manner as the Lord hath said For the matter of the Issue is Whether the Tenant holdeth of him or no for if he holdeth of him although that the Lord distrain the Tenant for other services which he ought not to have yet such Writ of Trespass Quare vi armis c. doth not lye against the Lord but shall
assisas in Com̄ N. Capiend assign̄ ꝑ formam statuti c. ven̄tam infra nominat̄ J. A. quā infra script̄ H. C. ꝑ atturnat̄ suos infra Content̄ Iur̄ Iure unde infra fit mentio Exact̄ similit̄ vener̄ Qui ad veritatem de infra Content̄ dicend electi triati Iurati fuer̄ Super quo p̄d H. ꝑ quendam J. B. de Consilio ipsius H. C. manutentione exitus interius Iunet̄ Coram p̄fat̄ Iust̄ Iur̄ p̄d in Evidentijs oftend dic̄ quod c. Here recite the Evidence truely unde petit̄ Iudiciū qd Iur̄ p̄d veredict̄ suum de suꝑ infra Content̄ pro ipso H. reddant c. Et pd J. A. ꝑ quendā C. J. de Consilio suo Demurrer dic̄ qd materia ꝑd ꝑ p̄fat̄ H. C. Iur̄ pred suꝑius in Evidentiis ostent̄ minus in lege existic ad pro band exitum interius Iunct̄ pro parte ejusdem H. quodque ipse ad materiam illam in forma p̄d in Evident̄ ostent̄ necesse necesse non habet nec ꝑ legem terr̄ tenet̄ respondere hoc paratus est verificare unde pro defectu sufficient̄ mater̄ Iur̄ p̄d in hac parte ostens Idem I. petit̄ Iudic̄ quod Iur̄ de Veridict̄ suo suꝑ Exit p̄d reddend exoneretur debitum suum infra spec̄ una cum dampn̄ suis occasione de tent̄ debiti illius sibi addiundi cari c. Et p̄d H. C. Ex quo ipse suffic̄ mater̄ in Joynde lege ad manutenen exit̄ infra Content̄ pro parte ipsius H. Iur̄ pred suꝑius in Evident̄ ostens qd ipse ꝑat̄ est verificare quā quidem materiā p̄d J. non dedicit nec ad eam aliqualiter respond sed verificationem illam admittere omnino recusat pet̄ Iudic̄ qd pred J. ab actione sua pred versus Eum habend precludatur ac qd Iur̄ pred de Veredict̄ suo suꝑ exit̄ pred reddend onerentur c. A Precedent of a Demurrer upon the Evidence And now at this day the said Plaintiff and Defendant by their Attornies did appear and the Iury likewise did appear and were sworn c. upon which Sir T. W. Serjeant at Law of Councel with the Plaintiff gave in Evidence so and so and repeat it truely and did require the Iurors to find for the Plaintiff upon which J. C. of Councel with the Defendant saith That the Evidence and Allegations aforesaid alledged were not sufficient in Law to maintain the Issue joyned for the Plaintiff to which the Defendant néedeth not nor by the Laws of the Land is not holden to give any Answer wherefore for default of sufficient Evidence in this behalf the Defendant demands Iudgment that the Iurors aforesaid of giving their Verdict be discharged c. and that the Plaintiff be barr'd from having a Verdict c. Then the Plaintiff joyns and says That he hath given sufficient matter in Evidence to which the Defendant hath given no Answer c. and demands Iudgment and that the Iury be discharged and that the Defendant be Convicted then the Iury may give Damages if Iudgment shall happen to be for the Plaintiff c. A Bill of Exception Memorand That the First day of August Ebor. sc An. 1650. before T. P. and W. Iustices of our said Lord the King for taking of Assizes in the said County assigned in a Plea of Trespass and Ejectment which J. S. in the Court of our said Lord the King before himself by Bill doth Prosecute against E. B. supposing by the said Bill that the aforesaid T. B. c. and recite the substance of the Declaration or what it is c. and the Issue and then what the Evidence to prove the Defendant guilty was c. which here was a Surrender of a Copyhold out of Court c. and that he desired the Iury aforesaid to give their Verdict for the said T. B. of and upon the Premisses and that he likewise desired the Iudges aforesaid that they would inform the Iury aforesaid that the Surrender aforesaid out of Court made was good and effectual in Law and the aforesaid Iustices the aforesaid Surrender of the Land aforesaid with the Appurtenances made out of Court of the Mannour aforesaid in form aforesaid did affirm to the said Iurors was not good in Law by which the said Thomas for that the aforesaid matter to the said Iurors in Evidence shewed doth not appear c. did request of the said Iustices according to the form of the Statute in such case provided this present Bill which doth contain in it the matter aforesaid above by him to the Iurors aforesaid shewed by which the said Clayton's Reports Iustices at the request of the said Thomas this Bill have sealed at D. aforesaid 1. Westm 2. 31. 13 E. 1. When the Iustices will not allow a Bill of Exception upon Prayer if the Party impleaded tender the same unto them in Writing and requires their Seals thereunto they or one of them shall do it 2. If the Exception sealed be not put into the Roll upon Complaint thereof to the King the Iustice shall be sent for and if he cannot deny the Seal the Court shall procéed to Iudgment according to the Exception This Bill of Exception is given by the Statute Westm 2. cap. 31. before which Statute a man might have had a Writ of Error for Error in Law either in redditione Judicii in redditione Executionis or in Processu c. which Error in Law must be apparent in the Record or for Error in sait by alledging matter out of the Record as the death of either party c. before Iudgment But the mischief was if either party did offer any exception praying the Iustices to allow it and the Iustices over-ruling it so as it was never entred of Record this the party could not assign for Error because it neither appeared within the Record nor was any Error in fait but in Law and so the party grieved was without remedy until this Statute was made This Act extendeth to all Courts to all Actions and to both parties and to those who come in their places as to the vouchee c. who comes in loco tenentis It extendeth not only to all Pleas Dilatory and Peremptory c. to Prayers to be received Oier of any Record or Déed and the like but also ●o all Challenges of Iurors and any material Evidence given to any Iury which by the Court is Over-ruled 2 Inst fo 427. All the Iustices ought to Seal the Bill of Exceptions yet if one doth it it is sufficient if all refuse it is a contempt in them all And the party grieved may have a Writ grounded upon this Statute commanding them to put their Seals Juxta formam Statuti hoc sub periculo quod incumbit nullatenus omittatis The party must pray the Iustices to put their Seals but if they deny it they may be
joyn although they be not nearest nay though 20 Counties be between them Finch French 59. 1 Inst 154. But if it be of a Lease at Ickford of Land in Bury in Suff. the Venue must be of Bury not of Ickford ib. 619 If the issue be taken upon the name or Where the Writ is brought condition of the person this shall be tryed in the County where the Writ is brought 21 E. 4. 8. for this may be well known there Rolls ib. 615. Where the issue is to be tryed upon a point which shall be tryed by two Counties and one cannot joyn with the other this shall be tryed where the Writ is brought 21 E. 4. 8. but for this see before where the Counties cannot joyn In Debt in London against I. S. of D. in Where in other County than where the writ is brought Essex if the Defendant saith that he was at S. in Essex at the time of purchasing the Writ and not at D. this shall be tryed in Essex and not where the Writ is brought for none can know where he dwelt so well as the County of Essex 12 H. 6. 5. Vide many cases in Rolls ib. 605. c. about this matter In an Action of the Case against a Sheriff upon an escape in London and the Arrest laid Where the escape was and not where the Arrest was to be in Southampton adjudged that the Visne shall be where the escape was because that is the ground of the Action and not where the Arrest was Cro. 3. part 271. In Debt upon an Obligation payment was pleaded apud domum mansionalem Rectoriae de Much-Hadam and the Venire facias was de vicineto de Much-Hadham where it ought to have been de vicinet Rectoriae de Much-Hadam but it was adjudged good because Much-hadam is here intended a Vill. ib. 804. So you see that where a thing is alledged to be done at the Capital House * Rectoriae of D. there the Venire shall be of D. For that is intended to be all one with the Vill. Castle But where it is at the Castle of Hertford c. there the Venire facias shall not be de Rolls tit Tryal 621. vicineto de Hertford but de Castro de Hertford for Castrum Hertford is intended a distinct place by it self and so of all Castles Cro. 2. part 239. More 862. A Venire facias may be awarded of a Castle Rolls 618. Where the issue is not parcel of the Mannor Mannor of D. or the Custom of a Mannor is in question the Venire ought to be of the Mannor Hob. 284. Cro. 2. part 327. If the Mannor be laid to be in a Vill the Venire facias Rolls tit Tryal 621. may be of the Mannor in the Vill as de vicineto mane●ii de Stansted-Hall in Windham Cro. 2. part 405. More 851. Arundels Case li. 6. 14. The Venue cannot be of a scite of a Mannor Rolls tit Tryal 618. In the Common Bench in Trespass for taking away a Bag of Pepper the Defendant justified as Servant of the Mayor and Commonalty of London for Wharfage due to them by the Custome of London which the Plaintiff refused to pay The Plaintiff replyed that the Custome did not extend to him London because he was a Free-man of the City and ought not to pay Wharfage to which the Defendant re-joyned that the Custom extended to him as well as to strangers upon which issue was joyned Resolved 1. That the issue should be tryed Re●order per Pais not by the mouth of the Recorder because he certifies nothing but what the Mayor and Aldermen direct who are concerned in the cause 2. That the Venire facias should not be awarded to the Sheriffs of London nor Middlesex because the Tryals there are by Free-men But it shall be to the County Where the Tryal shall be by the County next adjoyning next adjoyning viz. to the Sheriff of Surry So where any City is concerned the Venire facias shall not be directed to the Officers of the City but to the County next adjoyning Hob. 85. Stiles 137. More 871. vide hic cap. 2. If the issue concern the Mayor and Commonalty of a Town the Array shall be made all of Foreigners 31. Assise 19. vide Rolls tit Tryal 597. So if the issue concern the Mayor and Commonalty c. although they are not parties yet the Venire facias shall be directed to the Sheriff of the next County 15 E. 4. 18. Where a man lends a Horse to another Where a man lends his horse in one place and he is spoiled in another Visne where he is spoiled to till his Land and the Horse dies with excessive Labour the Visne shall be from the place where the excessive labour was and not where the delivery was More 887. vide Hob. 188. Rolls tit Tryal 615. pasch 22 Car. 2. B. R. Horsley versus Potter An action of the case was brought for misusing an Horse in Itinere the Contract was laid at Swafham in Norf. and the riding to Peterborough in Northampton-shire where the Horse died it was tryed in Norf. and the Court seemed that it ought to have been tryed in Northampton-shire where the damage was done and not where the contract was made but it was aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes 17 Car. 2. cap. 17. after Verdict that Statute being then in force Where a promise is laid in one place and Promise in one place and breach in another Visne guided by the issue the breach in another the Visne must be according to the event of the issue whether it be taken upon the promise or breach But if no place be alledged for the breach and issue be taken upon it the Visne must be from the place of the promise which shall be intended right where the contrary appears not see Godbolt 274. Easter 39 Eliz. In the Kings Bench Trespass Assault and Battery en Wilts continuing the Assault in Middlesex and adjudged that the Jurors shall come out of both Counties More 538. The name of a Mannor or Land or Misnomer other local thing shall be tryed where it lies because it is local but the name or addition of a person shall be tryed where the Action is brought because this is transitory Bro. tit Visne 7. lib. 6. 65. In Covenant upon an Indenture of Demise of the Rectory of Stoken Church in the County of Oxford That the Defendant Where the Land lies had good Power and Authority to demise The Indenture was alledged to be made at London and the Venire facias was awarded to the Sheriff of Oxon and this being assigned for Error Iudgement was affirmed and this adjudged to be good More 710. because the Rectory was in Com. Oxon. vide pag. 45. In Debt upon an Obligation in one Where the Land lies and not where the Writ c. County to perform Covenants in a Lease and the Land
one challenged by the Plaintiff and the other by the Defendant When the Tryal is to be had by two Counties the manner of the tryal is worthy of observation and apparent in our Books If the four Knights in the Writ of Right be challenged they shall try themselves and they shall choose the grand Assise and try the challenges of the parties If the cause of challenges touch the dishonour or discredit of the Juror he shall not be examined upon his Oath but in other cases he Juror examined shall be examined upon his Oath to inform the tryors If an Inquest be awarded by default the Defendant hath lost his challenge but the Plaintiff may challenge for just cause and that shall be examined and tryed Wheresoever the Plaintiff is to recover View per visum juratorum there ought to be six of the Jury that have had the view or known the Land in question so as he be able to put the Plaintiff in possession if he recover In Proprietate probanda and a Writ Challenges to inquire for waste the parties have been received to take their challenges But passing over many things touching this matter I will conclude with the saying of Bracton Plures autem aliae sunt causae recusandi juratores de quibus ad praesens non recolo sed quae jam enumeratae sunt sufficiant exempli causa 1 Inst 157 158. Treat doth signifie as taken out or withdrawn Treat what and is applied to a Juror that is withdrawn by consent or removed and discharged by challenge A Juror sick was withdrawn and another sworn Palmers Reports 411. If the Defendant do not appear at the tryal Challenge lost when he is called he loseth his challenge to the Jurors although he doth afterwards appear 'T is a good challenge to a Juror to say he A wrong name is returned by another name in the Pannel A Juror appeared and said he had no No Freehold Freehold and prayed that he might not serve yet the Judge would not spare him for he may have an action against the Sheriff for returning him Rolls 2 part Reports 483. CAP. The Challenge pro defect Hundred must be written in Parchment and t●e Council must arraign it in French upon which the Defendant may take issue or demur The Clerk or Associate in Court must call the Jury over and ask if they have any Lands within the Hundred or had at the time of the Array of the Pannel and whether they dwell or did dwell in the same And upon examination if it appear clearly that they have no Lands or Tenements nor dwell in the Hundred then the Clerk is to mark them by the side of every of their names thus pr●ter Hundred but if he find there be two Hundredors he is to resort back to the prae●er Hundred and swear them in order So that you see the Tryal whether Hundredors or not is determined by the Courts examination by the Poll severally But if the Council demur and the other side joyn in demurrer the Iudge of Assises may affirm the Challenge and over-rule the Demurrer or allow the Demurrer good and proceed to the Tryal of the Cause or if the Iudge doubt it may be determined in Bank but this is great delay If the challenge be adjudged good the Court awards Que le pannel il soit casse At Common Law there ought to have been In Cities Corporations Burroughs and Towns and Counties this Challenge cannot be 4 Hundredors returned and appeared in all actions pro meliori notitia causae in controversia for vicini vicinorum facta scire praesumuntur But by the Statute 35 H. 8. ca. 6. six are to be returned and appear But since by the Statute 27 Eliz ca. 6. if two Hundredors be returned and appear it is sufficient in all personal actions But in real actions there must be six or else Remanet pro defectu Jur. The Court shall appoint two Tryors in a challenge to the Poll and if they find two indifferent the first Tryors shall be discharged and the two that are found indifferent being sworn to try the Issue shall also be sworn to try the rest of their Fellows At Common Law there used to be returned 24 upon the Venire and afterwards a Habeas corpora with a Decem Tales and if a full Jury did not appear or were challenged then a Distringas with an Octo Tales and so to the Duo Tales if there was not a Tales de circumdantibus may be in the case of Aliens full Jury And this was the course until the Statute 35 H. 8. which gives the Tales de circumstantibus at the Assises c. and by the Stat. 5 Phil. Marie ca 7. where the King Queen or Informer c. are parties A Challenge may be taken to those of the Tales de circumstantibus By the Statute 33 Ed. 1. The King and those who prosecute for him must shew their cause of Challenge as betwixt party and party and left to the discretion of the Iustices The King or any one authorised for him may release his challenge Where the party may challenge the King may challenge 'T is no challenge to say the Juror is the Kings Tenant or that he is favourable to the King but 't is good to say the Sheriff or Juror bears grudge or malice to the Defendant where the King is party If the Juror hath any Freehold 't is sufficient although not to 40 s. a year For the Statute which injoyns that speaks only betwixt party and party The first who challenges be he Plaintiff or Defendant shall have the preference and advantage of his challenge If a Juror be once challenged and withdrawn upon the principal he cannot serve upon the Tales if he doth 't is Error and Iudgement may be stayed And so if he be challenged and a Jury remain pro defect Juratorum if he be sworn upon a new Distringas 't is Error not helped by any Statute of Jeofailes and a mis-tryal and a Venire facias de novo may be awarded Cro. Eliz. fol. 429. Whitbys Case Elisors may be sworn in some cases to return and impannel all Juries as should upon any Venire facias Habeas Corpora or Distringas Jur. come to their hands impartially indifferently and without favour or affection or at the denomination of any person The Record of Attainder Conviction Excommunication Outlawry c. or a Copy thereof ought to be produced to prove the cause of challenge thereupon Where bodies politick or Corporate are concerned a challenge may be taken which arises from the individuals as Brother to one of the Prebendaries is a good challenge where the Dean and Chapter are parties c. Hob. 87. so a Parishioner where the right of the Church comes in question at the Suit of the Parson 17. Ass 15. In High-Treason the prisoner may peremptorily challenge to the number of 35. which is under the
specialty or on Record Hob. 284. Hutt 35. But an account stated for rent and other things is good Evidence In Indebitat for money c. delivery of Corn or other matter in satisfaction is good evidence Contr. in a special Action of the case on Assumpsit Indebit lies not for money won at Dice Wiche's Case Hill 14 15 Car. 2. B. R. If a promise be made to pay at a day certain and the day is past the Plaintiff may declare to pay on request so if he declare on payment at a day certain give in evidence a promise on request i. e. when it 's created on account which gives the duty for there the time is ex abundanti but where the action is founded on the Contract otherwise for there the evidence must pursue the Contract Hill 1650. B. R. Child's case Promise to restore a Horse hired for a Iourney if the Horse dies in the Iourney without the Riders default his promise binds not Lisle's case cited in Matraver's case Trin. 1651. B. R. One brings an Assumpsit for 20 l. and gives in evidence a promise if two would surrender to pay them 20 l. a piece good Mich. 1655. B. R. Thomas and Gerey Indebit for 50 l. brought by Edgar against Chetham Clerk The evidence was T. was indebted to Edgar in 50 l. Chetham desires Edgar to let him take the 50 l. of T. and he would give Edgar a Bill of Exchange to receive so much at London accordingly T. promises to pay Chetham the money which promise he accepted and gave a Bill of Exchange to Edgar after T. became insolvent then Chetham prohibits the payment of his Bill whereupon this action is brought Per Wadh. Wyndham Just Ass Norf. Summer 1663. the action lies for Chetham having accepted the promise of T. and given a Bill c. is now become a Debtor to Edgar until his Bill be paid though he never receives the money of Thompson In Indebitat It is good evidence against the Father that Physick was delivered to his Daughter at his request Stone-house vers Bodvill Hill 14 Car. 2. B. R. One promises a Bayliff that if he would let one arrested be in his house that night he would deliver him in the morning it 's a good promise and the Bayliff or the Plaintiff may bring the action Benson vers French Pasch 15 Car. 2. B. R. Indebitat The case was the Plaintiff sold 60 Comb of Rye to the Defendant at 14 s. per Comb to be delivered before Mich. the Plaintiff delivered 50 Comb before the time and brought this action for the money for it and good though it was agreed the money to be paid on the delivery of the last Rye per Hale Ch. Baron 1. Though the agreement is intire yet the several deliveries make several contracts 2. Though the payment was to be on the last delivery yet a time being set for delivery it 's intended to be paid when the delivery should have been 3. The time being past it 's now a duty and so Indebitatus lies 4. The Defendant has his remedy for not delivering the residue Baker vers Sutton Lent Assise Norf. 1662. Indebitat lies for a portion after the Ioynture setled so for 1000 l. on promise of so much for every Horse-shoo nail but the Jury may mitigate Damages ib. A promise to marry B. within 3 Months within a Fortnight after they meet and the party promises again to marry her within 3 Weeks this last promise is no discharge of the former being all within the time of 3 Months but had the last promise been to marry her within some other time after the 3 Months it had discharged the former Hite vers Chaplin Pasch 1658. B. R. Indebitatus by one Defendant give evidence that another was partner with the Plaintiff at the delivery of the Wares Plaintiff Nonsuit Franklin vers Walker Norf. Lent Assise 1667. per Moreton Contr. in Trespass for there Ioint-tenancy must be pleaded Indebitatus for 9 l. Defendant pleaded non assumpsit infra sex annos issue inde the Plaintiff proved a Debt of 9 l. due 10 years before and an acknowledgement of the Debt within 6 years and an offer to pay 5 l. for the whole Per Hale The Plaintiff nonsuit for the acknowledgement of the Debt is no more than is done by the Plea but there must be a new promise of the Debt within 6 years to make the action hold and here the promise or offer to pay 5 l. gives no action for the 9. l. Bass vers Smith Suff. Summer Assise 1668. Debt Debt on a Bond to perform Covenants to deliver possession at the Terms end to the Lessor or his Assignes breach was assign'd in not delivery to two purchasors demand being made by both and issue joyn'd thereon in evidence demand by one is good 2 Cro. 475. Debt on Bond to perform an award ita quod the award be delivered to the parties in evidence delivery proved to the Wife is sufficient for the Jury to presume the delivery to the party himself per Hale Norf. Summer Assise 1665. Trice and Prat. At the same Assises per Moreton Just delivery to the parties Son is good evidence Violet and Cook Debt against an Heir c. riens per descent c. a Feoffment given in evidence made before the action that it was fraudulent may be given in evidence though not pleaded 5 rep Co. Goathes case Hob. 72. Debt against Executor who pleaded ne unques c. Plaintiff replied that he Administred as Executor and gave in evidence Administration granted to him by which he Administred Good Dyer 305. In Debt against Executors and plenè Administravit pleaded the Defendant cannot give in evidence a Bond satisfied where the Executor and Testator were obligors per Coventry Lord Keeper 33 Eliz. Perkins vers Perkins In Debt for Tythes Modus to a Vicar is good against the Parson and so is a Modus to a Parish Clerk per Moreton Just Lent Cambr. 1667. Barber vers Cosier In Debt against Executor de son tort who pleads ne unques c. It is sufficient to charge him by proving he hath administred of never so little value Clayton 6. Against Executor de son tort who pleaded fully administred the evidence was the Intestate made a Bill of Sale of his goods to the Defendant who was bound with him in a Bond as surety for his Counter-security but the goods remained in the Intestates possession during his life for some few hours ruled a fraudulent Deed by Barkley Just at York 11 Car. Legard and Linley Clayton 39. quaere Debt against Administrator who pleaded If the Defendant pleads plenè c. pretor judgements c. The Plaintiff must prove Assets above the sum of those Judgements Huntington by Judge Windham 33 Car. 2. plene c. and gave in evidence Iudgements and good without pleading per Henden 1638. York Clayton 65. Quaere for if Iudgements be kept on
is insufficient for the whole But if the Iury give a Verdict of the whole Finding more than the Issue Issue and of more c. That which is more is Surplusage and shall not stay Iudgment for Utile per inutile non vitiatur Leon. 1 part 66. Gro. 1 part 130. But necessary incidents required by Law the Iury may find Yet in many Cases nay almost in all Where the Verdict ought to be of more than is in the Issue the Iury ought to find more than is put in Issue otherwise their Verdict is not good and therefore they are to assess Damages and Cost because it is parcel of their Charge as a Consequent upon the Issue though t● be not part of the Issue in terminis li. 10. 119. An Action of the Case on Deceit was brought for that he sold unto the Plaintiff two Oxen and warranted them to be sound on not Guilty the Iury found him Guilty as to one and not Guilty to the other and good for that the Action was founded not on the Contract but the Deceit 3 Cro. 884. Gravenor and Mete In Debt the Plaintiff declares that he had Iudgment against Baron and Feme for a Debt of the Wives dum sola c. that they were in Execution and suffered to Escape the Iury found the Husband only in Execution and Escaped and Iudgment for the Plaintiff Roberts versus Herbert Hill 12. Car. 2. C. B. So in Trespass against two one comes Damages by the first Inquest and pleads Not guilty and is found guilty In this case the first Inquest shall assess damages for the whole Trespass by both Defendants and afterwards the other comes and pleads Not guilty and is found guilty The finding of Damages by the first Inquest to which he was not party shall bind him and therefore if the Damages are outragious and excessive the Defendant Attaint in the last Enquest shall have an Attaint li. 10. 119. So in Trespass Quare clausum fregit if Issue be joyned upon a Feoffment and the Jury give outragious Damages An Attaint lies for the inquiry of Damages is consequent and dependant upon the Issue and parcel of their charge Ibidem In the 11th Report fo 5. It was resolved Damages by the first Inquest That in Trespass against two where one comes and appears c. against whom the Plaintiff declares with a simul Cum c. who pleads and is found guilty and Damages assessed by the Enquest and afterwards the other comes and pleads and is found guilty The Defendant which pleaded last shall be charged with the Damages taxed by the first Inquest for the Trespass which the Plaintiff had made joynt by his Writ and Count and done at one time cannot be severed by the Jurors if they find the Trespass to be done by all at one and the same time as the Plaintiff declared So in the Trespass against divers Defendants Several Damages Vide Devant ca. 4. if they plead not guilty or several Pleas and the Jury find for the Plaintiff in all the Jurors cannot assess several Damages against the Defendants because all is but one Trespass and made joynt by the Plaintiff by his Writ and Count. And although that one of them was more malicious and de facto did more and greater wrong than the others yet all came to do an unlawful act and were of one party so that the act of one is the act of all of the same party being present But in Trespass against two if the Jurors find one guilty at one time and the other at another time there several Damages may be taxed But if the Plaintiff bring an Action of Trespass against two and declare upon a several Trespass his Action shall abate And this is the diversity betwéen the f●nding of the Jury and the confession of the party And in Trespass where the Defendants plead several Pleas all tryable by one Jury and they find generally for the Plaintiff the Jurors cannot sever the Damages if they do their Verdict is vicious But in Trespass against two where one Judgment de melioribus dampnis appears and pleads not guilty to a Declaration against him with a simul Cum c. and afterwards the other appears and pleads not guilty to a Declaration against him also with a simul Cum c. Whereupon two Venire fac issue out and one Issue tryed after the other and several Damages assessed in judgment of the Law the several Juries give one Verdict all at one time and the Plaintiff hath his Election to have judgment de melioribus dampnis by any of the Inquests And this shall bind all but fiat nisi una Executio It is a Maxim That in every case where Damages an Inquest is taken by the Mise of the parties by the same Inquest shall damages be taxed for all And in Mich. 39 H. 6. fo 1. In an Action of Trespass against many who pleaded in Barr the Term before and one of them made default which was Recorded Writ of Inquiry There it is resolved by all the Court That for saving of a Discontinuance a Writ of Enquiry of Damages shall be awarded but none shall issue out because he shall be contributory to the damages taxed by the Inquest at the Mise of the parties if it be found for the Plaintiff and if it be found against the Plaintiff then the Writ of Enquiry shall issue forth And the Reason wherefore no Writ shall issue out at first to inquire of damages until c. is because that if a Writ should issue out and be executed this is nothing but an Inquest of Office and not at the Mise of the parties and yet this Inquiry if it might be allowed ought to serve for all the damages For inquiry of damages shall not be twice and the others which have pleaded to Inquest if the Issue be found against them shall be chargeable to those damages which are found by the Inquest of Office and if they be excessive they shall have no remedy although there be no default in them for they cannot have an Attaint because it is but an Inquest of Office But in Trespass against two who plead Damages by the first Inquest not guilty c. severally and several Venire fac awarded The Inquest which first passes shall assess damages for all and the second Inquest ought not to assess damages at all but that Defendant shall be contributory to the damages assessed by the first Jury notwithstanding he is not party to it yet if these damages be excessive he shall have an Attaint because though he is a stranger to the Issue yet in Law he is privy in Charge And so no damage or mischief can accrue to him in this Case Now let us sèe when something is left Verdict when to be supplied by Writ of Inquiry c. out of the Verdict which the Jury ought to have inquired of whether
was intended for damages and how much for costs so that there may be more damages than the Plaintiff declared for or less and so the Court knows not how to increase the cost wherefore he shall have Iudgment but for 20 marks by reason of the incertainty Where a special Verdict is not entred according Verdict amended by the Notes to the Notes the Record may be amended and made agrée with the Notes at any time though it be 3 or 4 c. Terms after it is entred lib. 4. 52. lib. 8. 162. Cro. 1 part 145. In the Case of Turnor and Thalgate Mich. 1658. B. R. It was said per Cur ' That special Verdicts may be amended by the Notes but the Notes cannot be amended or inlarged by any Averment or Affidavit for that were to f●●d a Verdict by the Court. Yet in that Case where the Notes were that the Iudgment c. was vacated pro ut per Rule the Verdict was amended vacated per Cur ' pro ut per Rule for so is implied in the Notes See a Verdict amended by the Notes after Iudgment and Error brought Rolls 1 part Reports 82. If the matter and substance of the Issue Form Hob. 54. be found it is sufficient for precise forms are not required by Law in special Verdicts which are the finding of Lay-men as in Pleadings which are made by men learned in the Law and therefore intendment in many Cases shall help a special Verdict as much as a Testament Arbitrament c. And therefore he which makes a Deputy ought to do it by Escript but when the Iury find generally that A. was Deputy to B. all necessary incidents are found by this and upon the matter they find that he was made Deputy by Déed because it doth tantamount lib. 9. 51. And in the 5th Report Goodale's Case It was resolved That all matters in a special Verdict shall be intended and supplyed but only that which the Iury refer to the Consideration of the Court. In all Cases where the Iury find the matter Ill conclusion committed to their charge at large and over more conclude against Law the Verdict is good and the conclusion ill li. 4 42. and More 105. 269. the Iudges of the Law will give ●udgment upon the special matter according to the Law without having regard to the conclusion of the Iury who ought not to take upon them Iudgment of the Law li. 11. 10. Vide Devant Where the Declaration in Trespass is As general as the Narr Cum aliquibus averiis of a number uncertain and the Verdict is as general as the Declaration cum aliquibus averiis there the Verdict is good Cro. 2. part 662. In Ejectione firme where the Plaintiff declared of a Messuage and 300 Acres of Pasture in D. per nomina of the Mannor of Monkhall and five Closes per nomina c. upon Not guilty the Iury gave a special Verdict viz. quoad four Closes of Pasture containing by Estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture that the Defendant was Not guilty Quoad residuum they found matter in Law And it was moved by Yelverton That this Verdict was imperfect in all For when the Quoad Residuum incertain Iury find that the Defendant was Not guilty of four Closes of Pasture containing by estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture it is incertain and doth not appear of how much they acquit him And then when they find quoad residuum tne special matter it is incertain what that Residue is so there cannot be any Iudgment given and of that Opinion was all the Court wherefore they awarded a Venire facias de novo to try that Issue Cro. 2 part 1●3 Ejectione firmae of 30 Acres of Land in D. and S. The Defendant was found guilty of 10 Acres and Quoad Residuum not guilty Quoad Resisiduum and it was moved in arrest of Iudgment That it is uncertain in which of the Vills this Land lay and therefore no Iudgment can be given sed non allocatur and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff for the Sheriff shall take his Information from the party for what ten Acres the Verdict was Cro. last part 465. diversitas apparet Where the Iury find Circumstances upon Circumstances an Evidence given to incite them to find fraud c. yet the same is not sufficient matter upon which the Court can judge the same to be fraud c. Brownlow 2. part 187. Yet in many Cases the Iury may find Circumstances and presumptions upon which the Court ought to judge As to find that the Husband delivered Goods devised by the Wife Vpon this the Court adjudged that More 192. the Husband assented to the devise at first Where a Verdict is certainly given at the Postea amended how Tryal and uncertainly returned by the Clerk of the Assizes c. The Postea may be amended upon the Iudges certifying the truth how the Verdict was given Cro. 1. p●rt 338. In many Cases a Verdict may make an ill Ill Plea made good by Verdict Plea or Issue good As in an Action for words Thou wast perjured and hast much to answer for it before God Exception after Verdict for the Plaintiff in arrest of Iudgment For that it is not laid in the Declaration that he spake the words in auditu complurimorum or of any one according to the usual form sed non allocatur for being found by the Verdict that he spake them it is not material although he doth not say in auditu plurimorum whereupon it was adjudged for the Plaintiff Cro. 1. part 199. Sée Cro. last part 116. Where the Barr was ill because no place of payment was alledged yet the payment being found by Verdict it was adjudged well enough for a payment in one place is a payment in all places Trespass by Baron and feme de clauso fracto of the Barons And for the battery of the feme ad dampnum ipsorum the Defendant Quoad the Clausum fregit pleaded Not guilty Quoad the Battery justifies And for the first Issue it was found for the Defendant And for the second for the Plaintiff and now moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Declaration is not good because the Baron joyns the feme with him in Trespass Baron Feme de clauso fracto of the Barons which ought not to be But for the Battery of the feme they may joyn whereto all the Court agréed But it was moved That in regard it was found against the Plaintiffs for this Issue in which they ought not to joyn and the Defendant is thereof acquitted and the Issue is found against the Defendant for that part wherein they ought to joyn This Verdict hath discharged the Declaration for that part which is ill and is good for the residue As in 9 E. 4. 51. Trespass by Baron and Feme for the Battery of both The Defendant pleaded Not guilty and found guilty and damages assessed
that the Land was held in Socage yet this is good for this shall be intended this being a Collateral thing and this being the most common Tenure If they find that he was seised and made his Will in haec verba c. although they Will. do not find that he Devised the Land as in the former yet this is good by intendment But if a thing is left out and cannot be intended the Verdict is not good If the Issue be whether the Sheriff took J. S. and kept him in Prison in Execution for certain Debt and Damages by force of a Cap. ad Sa. and the Iury find that he took him by force of an alias Cap. ad Sa c. although they do not find that he kept him in Execution for the Debt and Damages aforesaid according to the Issue yet this is a good Special Verdict for it shall be intended for the Consequence is necessary from this which is found for he could not take him but that he must be in Execution Vide several instances of this Roll. tit Tryal 697 c. If the Iury find that J. S. was seised in Fée and made his Will in haec verba and that he afterwards died although they do not find that he died seised yet it shall be Will. intended that he died seised and so good If they find that A. did Bargain and Bargain and Sale Sell c. although they do not find any consideration yet this shall be intended So if they find that such persons Authorizati Letters Patents virtute literarum patentium dominae Elizabethae c. and do not find that the Letters Patents were under the Great Seal yet this shall be intended Verdicts of Lay-men shall be taken according to their intent and néed not so precise a form as in Pleadings lib. 4. 65. Hob. 76. Therefore if the Iury find a Recognizance in nature of a Statute Staple in this manner That the Conusor came before R. O. Recorder of London and T. O. Maior of the Staple Et recognovit se debere to B. 200 l. and do not say Secundum formam statuti c. nor Prescriptum Obligatorium c. although the Statute of 23 H. 8. provide That it shall be by Bill Obligatory sealed with three seals and here it doth not appear that there was any Bond or Seal nor that it was according to the Statute yet these things shall be intended they having found a Recognizance before the Maior and Recorder A Special Verdict may be amended by Notes the Notes If the Iury find a Special Verdict and Where a special Conclusion of a special Verdict shall aid the Imperfections of it refer the Law upon that special Matter to the Court although they do not find any title for the Defendant which is a Collateral thing to the point which they refer to the Court yet the Verdict is good enough for all other things shall be intended except this which is referred to the Court lib. 5. 97. In Ejectment If the Plaintiff declare upon a Lease made by A. and the Iury find a Special Verdict and Matter in Law upon a power of Revocation of Vses by an Indenture and limitation of new Vses and then a Lease for years made to the Plaintiff by the Lessor in the Declaration and another in which there is an apparent Variance but they conclude the Verdict and refer to the Court whether the grant of a new Estate found in the Verdict be a revocation of the first Indenture or not The special Conclusion shall aid the Verdict so that the Court cannot take notice of the variance betwéen the Lease in the Declaration and Verdict because the doubt touching the Revocation is only referred to the Court. And although they refer to the Court whether this be a Revocation of the first Indenture and not of the former Vses and limitation of new Vses as it ought to be yet in a Verdict this is good for their intention appears So Note a difference between a special Conclusion and Reference to the Court and a general Conclusion and Reference to the Court Vide hic apres In Debt for 40 s. for a Horse sold and For whom the Verdict shall be said to be found the Iury find 40 s. Debt for two Horses sold this is found against the Plaintiff for this is not the same Contract So in Debt for 20 l. if the Iury find 40 l. Debt this is against the Plaintiff In Debt for 20 l. for Wood sold and the Iury find the Bargain was for 20 Marks the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment for this Variance So in Debt for Rent upon a Demise of two Acres and the Iury find it upon the Demise of one Acre the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment But in Debt for 24 l. 8 s. received for the Plaintiffs use if the Iury fi●● the Defendant owes 24 l. but not the 8 s. the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for perhaps he had paid the 8 s. In an Action upon the Case against A. if the Plaintiff declares That by Custom c. amongst Merchants c. If two are found in Arrearages upon Accompt and they assume to pay this at certain Days that any one of them may be charged for the whole by himself and then shews the Accompt of A. and B. who were found in Arrear in so much c. and promised to pay this at certain days but paid it not and now he brings his Action against A. although upon non Assumpsit pleaded it be found that the days of payment are mistaken yet the days being past the Action lyes because the Law makes the Duty upon the Accompt for which after the days an Action lyes Where all is to be given in Damages Damages the Iury are Chancellors and may give so much as the Case requires in Equity In Detinue of a Bond of 100 l. if the Detinue Iury find that he received a Bond of a greater or less Sum the Verdict is for the Defendant So in a promise to do two things if the Promise Iury find but one of them 't is for the Defendant Otherwise in Ejectment upon a Demise Ejectment of 10 Acres if the Iury find a Demise of less the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment If the Issue be upon a Prescription for Prescription Common belonging to a Messuage and 200 Acres of Land 50 of Meadow and 50 of Pastu●e if the Iury find Common belonging to the House 20 Acres of Meadow and 20 of Pasture in two of the Vills and not in the rest the Prescription is not found If part of the Trespass or wrong be found Trespass Case 't is sufficient in Trespass or an Action of the Case upon a Tort as by a Commoner for putting and depasturing Cattel in the Common If the Issue be whether all the Lands in Audita Quaerela Execution were the Estate of the Father in Tail or in
Fee and part is found in Tail and part in Fée Iudgment shall be given for the Defendant who pleaded the Seisin in Fée If the Plaintiff declares upon a Demise Ejectment made the first of May to Commence at Michaelmas next if the Iury find a Lease made at any other day before the Feast 't is found for the Plaintiff for the day of making is not material Otherwise of a Lease for years ●n Possession As of a Lease made the 5th of May Habend for thrée years from Lady-day before and the Iury find a Lease made the 15th day of May for three years from the same Lady-day for this is a Lease in Possession In false Imprisonment in Middlesex and Imprisonment the Defendant justifie in London to which the Plaintiff saith the Defendant took him in Middlesex de son Tort demesn and Issue upon this and the Iury find the Defendant took him in Middles●x lawfully upon a Writ yet this is for the Plaintiff for the Issue is upon the place and not upon the Tort for that is confessed by the Pleading if the taking was in Middlesex In Debt for 20 l. and the Iury find 40 l. the Debt Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment the reason séems to be because it cannot be the same Debt which is intire but upon another Contract which is mislaid If the Issue be Payment af●er Execution Audita Quaerela and the Iury find payment before yet the Issue is proved for payment before is payment after In Debt upon a Bond bearing date the 25 Obligation of June upon Non est factum if the Iury find it his Déed but that it was delivered 8 days after the ●ate this is found for the Plaintiff If the Issue be that two made the Feoffment Joynt and several or two were Churchwardens c. and the Iury find but one c. the Issue is not found If the breach of Covenant or Wast be Obligation Covenant Wast assigned in cutting 20 Trees and the Iury find but 10 yet the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment If in Replevin c. the Iury find that Totum Pars. part of the Cattel were Levant and Couch●nt and part not and the Issue is upon all the Issue is not found In Ejectment for him who pleaded all Ejectment Void in part of 14 Acres and the Iury find guilty of 20 the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for the 14 and the Verdict is void for the residue In an Information upon an usurious Contract Information Usury by two 't is not sufficient to find a Contract by one Otherwise where the Tort and offence is several as against two upon the Statute 4 E. 6. P●o emptione butiri and selling it by Retail c. and so in an Action upon the Case in Nature of Conspiracy and for words laid twice in one Declaration This will put in Issue the manner as well Modo forma as the matter where the manner is material as the time of the Fact and other Circumstances The Plaintiff replies That W. made a Replevin Lease Lease to him 30 Martii Habend from Lady-day last and Issue Modo fo●ma and the Iury find a Lease made the 25 Mar●ii Hab●ndum Ex●unc for a year this is good although the time of making and Commencement of the Lease are mistaken inasmuch as Extunc includes the Feast Yet because a sufficient Title and Lease is found for the Plaintiff to put in his Cattel this is sufficient this being the substance and the Modo forma shall not put the Circumstances in Issue So in Trespass if the Defendant justifie the putting in his Cattel for Common which he Claims from Pentecost to a certain time every year which is traversed Modo forma and the Iury find that he had Common in Vigilia Pentecostis in festo and the day next to this to the time this is found for the Defendant But otherwise in these Cases id an Assise of Common because there he ought to recover his Title In Debt for Rent if the Defendant plead an Entry by the Plaintiff before the Rent was due scilicet such a day which was after and Issue upon the Entry Modo forma and the Iury find for the Defendant he shall have Iudgment for the scilicet is void and the Modo forma go to the matter Sée after In Debt upon a Bond and the Defendant Non est factum plead Non est factum and the Iury find the Bond made joyntly by another with the Defendant the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for the Defendant should have pleaded this If a Devise be pleaded Absolute if the Devise Iury find a Devise upon a Condition Precedent 't is not good In Debt against A. as Daughter and Riens per Discent Heir to B. and the Defendant plead Riens per discent of B. and the Iury find that B. was seised in Fée and dyed having Issue the Defendant his Daughter and his Wife with Child of a Boy who was afterwards born alive and dyed one hour after this Issue is found against the Plaintiff because the Defendant had the Land as Heir to her Brother who was last seised and not to the Father and so the Defendant had not the Land by Discent from the Father but from the Brother and yet this is Asse●s in her hands if it had béen specially pleaded In a Writ of Error brought by him in remainder Error in Tail to reverse a Fine if the Defendant plead in Barr of the Writ of Error a Common recovery by the Tenant in Tail to which the Plaintiff replies That at the time of the Recovery suffered he himself was Tenant to the Praecipe and so the Recovery void Vpon which Issue is joyned Part. and the Iury find that he was Tenant of part but not of other part This Issue is partly found for the Plaintiff and partly for the Defendant so the Court shall procéed to the Examination of the Error for that whereof he was found no Tenant but 't is a good bar of the Writ of Error for that whereof he is found Tenant to the Praecipe In Assumpsit to pay Money upon request Promise and issue upon this if the Iury find the Plaintiff promised to pay the Money but do not say upon request nor Modo forma 't is not found for the Plaintiff In Ejectment of a Manner if the Iury If the Substance of the Issue be found 't is sufficient Manner find that there were no Fréeholders and so 't is no Manner in Law yet being a Manner by Reputation and so the Tenements pass by the Lease Therefore this Verdict is found for him who pleads the Lease of the Manner for the substance is whether any thing was demised or not In an Information of Extortion against Goal the Gaoler of the Goal a Prison of the Castle of Maidston the Iury found there was no
Castle but that there was a Goal this was for the Plaintiff because Goal is the Substance If the Issue be whether the Defendant had Accompted before R. and W. Auditors Accompt assigned by the Plaintiff and the Iury find an Accompt before R. only the Issue is found for the Defendant for the Accompt is the effect of the Issue Vide Rolls tit Trial. 707. c. If 11 agrée and the 12th will not the Verdict of the 11 cannot be taken but the Court Jury agree may carry the Iurors with them in Carts until they are agréed 41 Ass 11. A privy Verdict may be altered in open Verdict altered Court In an Extendi fac upon a Statute if the Iury deliver their Verdict in Writing they may afterwards make it more formal but they cannot alter it in substance for it is a compleat Verdict by the delivery So of Presentments c. A Fine pleaded in Barr and that after Fine and Non-claim the death of A. scil 1 August 3. Car. B. Father of the Plaintiff was alive in plena vita remansit infra hoc Regnum infra quatuor Maria c. apud W. in Com. D. and no Entry or Claim within five years after and the Plaintiff replies and takes Issue què Modo forma il non fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum Angliae modo forma c. And the Iury find quod non fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum Angliae 1 August 3 Car. but that he was there 1 Maii 4. Car. and remained there a Month and refer to the Court Au fuit remansit infra hoc Regnum modo forma c. This Issue is found for the Defendant for the matter and substance of the Plea is whether he was within the Realm after the death of A. and five years before Entry or Claim per him or the Plaintiff and modo forma shall not make the day material Roll. tit Trial. 713. Iudgment upon a Demurrer and a Writ Judgment Arrest at what time of Inquiry executed at the return the party may shew any thing in Arrest of Iudgment for Iudgment is not compleat until the last Iudgment The first is but an Award A man may plead any thing in Arrest of Iudgment after a Verdict which will make Error if the Iudgment be given In Debt upon a simple Contract against an Executor if he will not plead in Abatement but other Matter which is found against him he shall not afterwards alledge that he is not chargeable in Arrest of Iudgment So in Debt against Executors upon Arrearages of Accompt where they are not chargeable That which appears ill upon the same Record What may be alledged but not a ma●●er of Fact which doth not appear upon the Record because the parties cannot by the Issue As that a Iuror was challenged and yet served on the Tales for this cannot appear without alledging matter of Fact Nor that the Defendants Attorney had no Warrant But if there be any irregular or foul practice this may be offered to set aside a Iudgment If any thing be omitted in the Declaration Variance between the Verdict and the Declaration or if more be put into the Declaration than is found by the Iury if it make a material Variance betwixt the Nar. and the Verdict the Action shall abate These following are adjudged material Variances If the Declaration be for these words Thou procuredst eight or Ten of thy Neighbours Words to Perjure themselves and the Iury find that he said Thou hast caused eight or 10 c. for he might be a remote Cause scilicet causa sine qua non without Procurement Nar. He is a Bankrupt Verdict He will be a Bankrupt within two days Nar. He is a Thief Ver. He stole a Horse Nar. Thou art a Murderer Ver. He is c. Nar. I know him to be a Thief Ver. I think him to be a Thief So it is a material Variance if a special Promise be laid to be upon Request and the Verdict find it without Request So if the Promise Declaration be upon a Lease made by two or by Baron and feme and the Iury find that one of them had nothing in the Land or that the Baron only made the Lease or that the two were Tenants in Common and so several Leases otherwise if they were Coparteners So in Case that the Testator was indebted to the Plaintiff in 55 l. and the Defendant being Administrator in consideratione c. Promise to pay this upon non Assumpsit if the Verdict find the Promise to be to pay 30 l. part of the 55 l. So in Ejectment If the Nar. be of a Lease Eje ment of thrée Acres a Lease of a Moiety will not maintain the Nar. So in Wast for Cutting Trees and the Wast Verdict find that he eradicated the Trées but did not cut them A Prescription in modo decimandi That Prescription every one who hath seven Lambs or under seven shall pay to the person ob for every Lamb and the Iury find that and further That if he had more than seven Lambs he should pay a Lamb and that the Parson should pay the Parishioner ob This is not the same Prescription but makes a Variance But if there be a Variance between the Variance Verdict and the Nar. either by way of Surplus or Defect but if this matter of Variance be not material in the extenuation of the Action or Damages the Action shall lye notwithstanding the Variance These ensuing are adjudged not to be material Nar. Strong Thief Verdict Thief Nar. I say c. Ver. I affirm or I doubt not Nar. The Plaintiff will do such a thing Ver. I think in my Conscience he will c. Nar. Of a Lease by a Parson for five years if he tam diu should be Parson tam diu viveret And the Verdict find the Lease to be for five years if he tam diu viveret without the words and should continue Parson for the Law implyeth That if he be deprived or resign that the Lease Determines Nar. He is a Murderer Ver. He was a Murderer for when he says He is a Murderer 't is not intended that he did the Act in presenti but before So in Trespasses or Actions upon Torts and wrongs which are several If the Verdict find part 't is no material Variance and the Plaintiff in these Cases shall have Iudgment Roll. tit Tryal 720. A Jury of Middles●x was demanded in Enquest by default the Common-Pleas the first day of the Term and some appeared and some not so that there was not a full Jury and neither the Defendant nor his Attorney did appear and therefore the Plaintiff prayed that the Inquest might be awarded by default and by the opinion of Welsh and Dyer his prayer shall be granted and the Custos Brevium and all the Prothonotaries said the
course was so for the parties are demandable before the Jury and if the Plaintiff make default he shall be non-suited and if the Defendant make default the Jury shall be awarded by default whether they appear or not Dyer 265. Where an Inquest is taken by default What the Defendant looses by his default the Defendant shall loose his Challenges and by 28 Ass p. 42. tit Enquest in Fitz. he shall loose his Evidences also Bro. Enquest 10. quod non est lex Det. The Defendant pleaded a Release and the Plaintiff replyed non est factum and at the day of the Venire facias the Defendant made default and the Inquest was taken upon his default and found for the Defendant for which the Plaintiff took nothing by his When the Defendant may be condemned by default and when an Enquest must be taken upon the default Bill And yet if the Plaintiff had prayed it he might have had the Defendant condemned by his default before the taking of the Verdict Et sic ●ide folly in le Plaintiff Bro. Ib. 5. But upon such Release and default in Trespass the Enquest shall be taken by default and the Defendant shall not be condemned by default though the Plaintiff pray it and the reason is because the debt is certain and the damages are incertain in Trespass Bro. Ib. 3. And Finch fo 409. hath well collected out of Brook That always in an Action of Trespass whatsoever the Issue be Release Iustification c. and also in Debt Detinue Accompt and the rest which are for things in certainty if the Issue be taken upon a matter in fait only as payment or that an Acquittance pleaded in Barr by the Defendant was made by Dures c. The Inquest shall be taken by default if the Defendant makes default But in the last recited Actions of Debt c. If the Issue be upon the Acquittance it self Release or other matter in writing the Plaintiff may pray Iudgment upon the Defendants default if he will but if he do not pray it the Jury shall be taken by default as in an Action of Trespass The Jury may give a Verdict without testimony Verdict without or against testimony or against testimony when they themselves have Conuzans of the Fact Plo. Com. 86. CAP. XIV How the Jury ought to demean themselves whil'st they consider of their Verdict when they may eat and drink when not What Misdemeanor of theirs will make the Verdict voyd Evidence given them when they are gone from the Barr spoils their Verdict For what the Court may fine them and where the Justices may carry them in Carts till they agree of their Verdict An Amercement Assered by the Jury THere is a Maxime and an old Custom Jurors ought not to eat or drink in the Law that the Jury shall not eat nor drink after they be sworn till they have given their Verdict without the Assent and Licence of the Justices and that is ordained by the Law for eschewing of divers inconveniencies that might follow thereupon and that especially if they should eat or drink at the Costs of the parties and therefore if they do so it may be laid in Arrest of Indgment But with the assent of the Iustices they may both eat and drink as if any of the Jurors fall sick before they be agréed of their Verdict so soon that he may not commune of the Verdict then by the assent of the Iustices he may have meat or drink and also such other things as be necessary for him and his fellows also at their own costs or at For by assent of the parties they may eat and drink Br. Jurors the indifferent costs of the parties if they so agrée or by the assent of the Justices may both eat or drink and if the Case so happen that the Jury can in no wise agrée in their Verdict as if one of the Jurors knoweth in his own Conscience the thing to be false which the other Jurors affirm to be true and so he will not agrée with them in giving a false Verdict and this appeareth to the Iustices by Examination the Iustices may in such case suffer the Iury to have both meat and drink for a time to sée whether they will agrèe And if they will in no wise agrée the Iustices may take such order in the matter as shall séem to them by their discretion to stand with reason and conscience by awarding of a ●ew Inquest and by setting fine New Inquest when the Jury cannot agree upon them that they shall find in default or otherwise as they shall think be●● by their discretion like as they may do if one of the Iury die before the Verdict c. D. a●● Student 158. If the Iury after their Evidence given unto them at the Barr do at their own Charges eat or drink either before or after they Where if the Jury eat or drink it shall avoid the Verdict and where only fineable be agreed on their Verdict it is finable but it shall not avoid the Verdict But if before they be agréed on their Verdict they eat or drink at the charge of the Plaintiff if the Verdict be given for him it shall avoid the Verdict But if it be given for the Defendant it shall not avoid it Et sic è converso But if after they be agréed on cheir Verdict they eat or drink at the charge of him for whom they do pass it shall not avoid the Verdict 1 Inst 228. To give the Iury money makes their Verdict void by two Iustices Leon. 1 part 18. If the Plaintiff after Evidence given and What delivered to the Jury after Evidence shall avoid their Verdict the Jury departed from the Barr or any for him do deliver any Letter from the Plaintiff to any of the Jury concerning the matter in Issue or any Evidence or any escrowle touching the matter in Issue which was not given in Evidence it shall avoid the Verdict if it be found for the Plaintiff but not if it be found for the Defendant Et sic è converso But if the Jury carry away any Writing unsealed which was given in Evidence in open Court this shall not avoid their Verdict albeit they should not have carried it with them Ib. By the Law of England a Jury after How the Jury ought to be kept by the Bayliff their Evidence given upon the Issue ought to be kept together in some convenient place without meat or drink Fire or Candle which some Books call an Imprisonment and without spéech with any unless When they may eat and drink See Smith's Common-wealth 74. it be the Bayliff and with him only if they be agréed After they be agréed they may in causes betwéen party and party give a Verdict and if the Court be risen give a privy Verdict before any of the Judges of the Court and then they may eat and drink and the next
c. R. P. Esq late Sheriff of the said County of E. from the same Office of Sheriff of that County was duely amoved and the said King now by his Letters Patents ha●h Committed unto one T. P. Knight the Custody of the said County of E. by pretence of which said Letters Patents the said J. P. now remaineth Sheriff of that County which said T. P. of A. at A. aforesaid took to his Wife Anne of the Blood of M. now the Wife of him the Plaintiff that is to say the Daughter of R. D. the Son of W. D. Knight Father of Anne Mother of the said M. now Wife of him the Plaintiff which said T. P. Knight and A. had Issue betwéen them A. P. yet alive and in full life remaining at A. aforesaid and this he is ready to prove c. And out of that cause he prayeth a Writ of the Lady the now Queen of Venire fac to try the said Issue in form aforesaid joyned to be directed to the Coroners of the said County and because the said Defendant doth gain-say and doth not grant that to be true therefore notwithstanding the same Challenge a Command Challenge gain-said is to the Sheriff that he make to come Twelve c. of the Visne of B. by whom c. Easter Term 38 H. 8. Rot. 558. And hereupon Challenge to the Array because the Coroners made the Pannel at the Denomination of the Plaintiff the Defendant doth Challenge the Array of the Pannel of the said Iury because he saith That that Pannel was made and arrayed by A. and C. Coroners of the said County at the Denomination and in favour of the Pannel of the said Plaintiff and this he is ready to verifie and requesteth that the same Pannel may be quashed And the said Plaintiff saith That the said Pannel by the said Coroners was well and equally made and not at the denomination nor in favour nor in promotion of the said Plaintiff whereupon the said Iustices by the consent of the said Parties did choose and assign D. and E. two of the said Iury now appearing to try the said Challenge which said Tryors being elected and tryed say upon their Oaths That the said Pannel was well and faithfully made and arrayed by the said Coroners and not at the denomination neither in favour nor in promotion of the said Plaintiff whereupon the Iurors of the said Iury being called tryed and sworn say c. A Precedent of Challenge to the Array May it please you Mr. Baron This Enquest you ought not to take for that Sir John Ramsden Knight Sheriff of the County of York who did retorn the Pannel betwéen the said A. Plaintiff and B. Defendant is Cosin to the Plaintiff c. and shew how of Kinn c. and so where the Challenge is for lack of Hundredors or other principal Challenge put it down c. and this he is ready to averr whereof he prays Iudgment and that the said Pannel be quashed Or thus And now at this day S. c. comes the aforesaid J. S. Plaintiff and J. B. Defendant by their Attorneys and the Iurors also impannelled and demanded did come and thereupon the said J. B. doth Challenge the Array of the Pannel aforesaid because c. This must be put in Writing but under Counsels hand where the Challenge is to the Poles it is in short way by a Verbal Challenge see the learning of this is excellent and copious in our Books A Precedent of a Plea after the last Continuance And now at this day c. comes such a one Defendant by J. C. his Councel and saith This Action the Plaintiff against the Defendant ought not to maintain for that after the Quindene of the Holy Trinity last past from which day until such a day in Michaelmas Term next unless the Iustices of Assizes before come such a day c. the Action aforesaid is continued c. the Plaintiff by his Déed dated c. did Release c. and shew the Matter what it is whether in abatement in Bar dilatory or peremptory as the Case is c. and this he is ready to averr Note Brook in his Abridgment tit Continuance 61. 83. says That after the Inquest is awarded to inquire of Damages The Defendant cannot plead a Plea Puis le darrein Continuance because he hath no day in Court to Plead The day of Nisi prius and day in Bank are all one so that a Release made betwixt these days cannot be pleaded in Bank but it seems that a Release made betwéen the day of the Venire facias retorned and the Writ of Nisi prius awarded and the day of the Nisi prius may be pleaded at the day of the Nisi prius but not after the Verdict 21 H. 6. fo 10. Bro. tit Jour c. 31 tit Continuance 76. 42. 27. 13. A man shall have but one Plea after the last Continuance for the Plaintiff shall not be delayed ad infinitum 16 H. 7. 11. Bro. tit Continuance 59. 41. 45 46. 5. 21. After the Inquest taken by default and before Iudgment the Defendant came and pleaded an Arbitrament made after the last Continuance And by the Opinion of the Court he had no day in Court to plead this Plea and 't was said That he could Plead no Plea in such Case but as Amicus Curiae and of matter apparent he shall be received otherwise he must resort to his Audita Quaerela 21 H. 7. 33. Broke ibid. 38. But if the Iury remain for default of Iurors the Defendant may plead a Release c. at the day in Bank Puis le darrein Continuance although he did not offer it at the Nisi prius otherwise if the Iury had béen taken at the Nisi prius 22 H. 6. 1. Broke ibid. 30. If it be pleaded at the Nisi prius the Court Record the Plea and discharge the Inquest and give day to the parties in Bank Bro. ibid. 34. 8. In Debt after Issue joyned the Defendant at the Nisi prius pleaded Payment of part after the latter Continuance in Abatement And the Iury being discharged and the Plea adjourned in Bank for that no place of Payment was pleaded the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover his Debt because after Issue joyned no Respondes ouster can be awarded L. 5. E. 4. 139. Aleyn's Reports 66. in the Case of Beaton and Forrest Now although when difficulty arises in the Evidence the matter is most commonly of late found specially and Demurrers on the Evidence are seldom used yet in asmuch as it is sometimes done and that our Practicer may be prepared with an Authentick Precedent for that purpose I shall transcribe one out of Coke's Entries fo 134. viz. Postea die loco Infra Content̄ Coram ●ss Postea Jacobo Dyer Milite Capitali Iustitiat̄ Dom̄ Regine de Banco Nicolao Barham uno servient̄ dict̄ Dom̄ Regine ad legem Iustic̄ ipsius Dn̄e Regine ad
that in an Action upon the Case far Asumpset the parties being at issue a demurrer was joyned upon the evidence and thereupon the Jury discharged and afterwards judgment was given for the Plaintiff and a Writ of Inquiry of damages awarded and damages found and Judgment thereupon where the Jurors which came to find the Issue although by the Demurrer they were discharged of the Issue yet ought to have assessed damages conditionally if judgment should be given for the Plaintiff And in proof thereof was cited Newis and Scholastica's Case in Plo. Com. fol. 408. and the old Books of Entries c. And it was said by the Court If these Precedents be good Law th●● it may be inquired of by the same Jury conditional●y But it may be as well inquired of by a Writ of Inquiry of damages when the Demurrer is determined And the most usual course is when there is a demurrer upon evidence to discharge the Jury without more inquiry But as My Lord Chief Baron Montague held at the Assises in Cambridgeshire 1682. it may be one way or other In the Assise by R. Newis and Scholastica his Wife against Lark and Hunt which was taken by default The Precedent in Plowd Com. as to this matter runs thus Recogn ' Assisae pred exacti venerunt qui ad veritatem de premissisdicend electi triati 8 ●●rati fuerunt sup quo Willielmus Bendlows Serviens ad legem de consilio predictorum R. Scholasticae in manutentione Assisae pred coram Justic Dominae Reginae de Banco hic in evident Recognit Assisae pred dixit quod diu ante diem impetration is Assisae pred quidam H. Clark fuit seisitus ●c Et condidit testamentum ultimam voluntatem sua in scriptis inter alia unde pars inde in hiis Anglicis verbis sequitur videl Also this is the last Will and Testament of me the said Henry Clark for and concerning c. Et ulterius idem Serviens ad legem ex parte pred R. S. dedit in evident eisd Recognit quod c. Quorum pretextu idem jam Serviens ad legem exigit quod iidem Recogn Assisae pred Assisam pred de tenementis pred cum pertin ' in visu c. pro parte ipsorum R. S. triari comparere debeant c. Et veredictum suum dare debent quod pred W. Lark J. Hunt dictos R. S. de tenementis pred cum pertin ' in visu c. disseisiverant c. Et pred W. Lark J. H in propriis personis suis dic quod evidentiae allegatione● pred ex parte pred R. S. superius allegat minus sufficien in lege existunt ad manutenend Assisam pred ad quos ipsi necesse non habent nec per leg terrae tenentur respondere unde pro defectu sufficien evident in hac parte pet judicium quod juratores pred de veredicto suo in premissis dicend exonerentur c. Et quod pred R. N. S. ab Assisa sua pred habend precludantur c. Et pred R. S. dicunt quod ex quo ipsi sufficien materiam in manutentione Assisae pred in evident recognit pred ostend quam quidem materiam pred W. Lark J. Hunt non dedicunt nec ad eam aliqualit respond petunt judicium Et quod iidem Jurator inde exonerentur quod pred W. J. de Assisa illa convincantur c. Sup. quo dict est Recogn pred quod inquir quae dampna pred R. S. sustinuertam occasione disseisinae pred quam pro misis custagiis suis per ipsos circa sectam suam in hac parte apposit si conting judicium pro eisdem R. S. in placito pred sup evidentias pred reddi Qui quidem Recogn dicunt sup sacram suum quod si conting judicium in placito pred pro pred R. S. sup evidentias pred reddi iidem R. S. sustinuer dampna occasione disseisinae pred ad 13 s. 4 d. pro misis custagiis suis ad 20 s. Et quia Justitiarii hic se advisare volunt de sup premissis priu●quam judicium inde reddant dies datus est partibus predict c. Note several Exceptions were taken to the manner of giving the Evidence First for that the intire Will was not shewed but part and that this being the foundation of the Evidence the whole Will ought to have been shewed for there might be some o●her matter of substance as a Condition Limitation c. in the parts not shewed But all the Justices disallowed this Exception and said the party in any Title or Bar needs shew no more than what makes for him As in an Act of Parliament in which are divers branches 't is sufficient to shew that branch which serves ones purpose and not like the Case of a Fine or Recovery of 20 acres where I must shew the whole Record although I am concerned but in one acre because the Originial is intire and so is the Record grounded upon it See also Fulmer●ton and Stewards Case Plo. Com. 102. Another Exception was That the fine was not shewed under the Seal of the Court or the Great Seal but one part indented of the Chirograph was only shewn which the Jurors were not bound to believe because it wanted a Seal But all the Justices were against this and said the Jury might find the Fine of their own knowledge without the shewing of the parties or they might find it upon the Credit of any Witness that had seen it and the shewing the part indented is the usual evidence of a Fine Note a Fine indented and not exemplified under Seal c. shall not be delivered to the Jury 34 H. 6. 25. And they said because it is only the Inducement of the verity to the Jurors the party could not Demurr upon this for the effect of the matter is that ther● is such a Fine which is amongst the Records And this is the substance of the matter and the part of the Chirograph is nothing but the Image of the verity and therefore suum coram Baronibus hic prestitum in premissis dicit quod c. here recite the Evidence Et pred Attorn Domini Regis pro eod Domino Rege dic quod evidentiae pred superius dat minus sufficien in lege existunt ad manutenend seu proband exit pred pro parte ipsius A. F. superius ad patriam junct unde ob insufficient earundem evident ac ex quo per evidentias illas non dedicitur forisfactura bonorum pred in informatione pred spec i em Attorn Domini Regis pro ipso Domino Rege petit judicium ac quod eadem bona remaneant Domino Regi forisfacta juxta formam statuti pred Et pred A. F. dic quod evidenciae pred superius ex parte ipsius A. F. dat
was mis-named in his Christian Name in the Venire Iudgement was arrested But it is there adjudged that if he had been well named upon the Venire and misnamed on the Distringas or Postea then upon Examination it should be amended But the Countess of Rutlands Case lib. 5. 42. is express in the point and so is Cro. 3. part 860. Rolls 196. Teppet in the Venire and Tipper in the Distring Amended And so if the mistake be in the Pannel Jurata the Sheriff may come in Court and amend it And so if Samuel be in the Venire and Distringas and Daniel in the Nomina Juratorum upon examination this may be amended And so if the name be right in the Ven. and mistaken in the Christian name in the Distringas or Postea it is amendable Rolls 197. And so if he be De A in the Venire and Distringas and De B. in the Nomina Juratorum this is amendable And it is to be known that in most Cases where the Venire facias Hab. Corpora or Distringas be defective they are to be amended but if the Malady be so fatal in the Venire that it causes a mis-tryal as in the mistake of a Jurors Christian Name or where a Juror not returned is sworn c. then the Verdict Venire facias de novo is to be set aside and a Venire facias de novo to be awarded and so was it to be upon those mistakes now amendable by the Statutes before the making thereof And where a Jury giveth a Verdict which is accepted One Jury shall not try a cause twice and recorded by the Court be the Verdict perfect or imperfect the Jurors are discharged and shall never try the same issue again upon a new Nisi prius But if the Verdict be so imperfect that Iudgement cannot be given upon it then the Court shall award a Venire facias de novo to try the issue by other Jurors li. 8. 65. Bulstr 2 part 32. If upon an issue all the matter be not Venire facias de novo fully inquired a Venire facias de novo shall issue 18 E. 3. 50. In an Audita Querela if the parties go to issue upon payment according to the defeasans of the Statute and this is found for the plaintiff but the Jury do not assess Damages the Court shall award a Venire facias de novo to assess damages 22 E. 3. 5. vide hic cap. 6. and Rolls tit Tryal 593. 595. If the Record of the Nisi prius be unum modum tritici for modium and the Plaintiff is Nonsuit at the A●●●se for this mistake if the Record in Court be right scil Modium this Nonsuit shall not be Recorded but a Venire facias de novo shall be awarded So for any other mistake as if the Record in Court be Grays-Inn Lane c. and the Nisi prius which is but a transcript be Graves-Inn Lane c. For this is a nonsuit upon another Record than what is in Court In Battery against Three who plead Three several Pleas and upon the Writ of Nisi prius two issues are found for the Plaintiff and Damages assessed but nothing is found for the third issue this is a mis-trial and a Venire facias de novo shall issue In Detinue if the Jury find Damages Detinue and Costs but no value as they ought this shall not be supplied by a Writ of Inquiry of Damages but a Venire facias de novo shall be granted And so of other defects in finding the full issue In a Quare impedit if the issue be found Quare impedit for the Plaintiff but by negligence the Jury do not inquire of the four points scil de plenitudine ex cujus pr●sentatione si tempus semestre transierit and the value of the Church per annum This shall be supplied by a Writ of Inquiry without any Venire facias de novo because the Court ex officio ought to have charged the Jury with the four points of Inquiry and if the Jury had found them no Attaint lay for as to this they were but as an Inquest of Office In a Writ of Annuity if the issue Annuity be found for the Plaintiff but the Jury do not assess Damages or Costs this shall not be supplied by a Writ of Inquiry but a Venire facias de novo shall be granted In Ejectment against Baron and Feme and Ejectment the Jury find the Wife not guilty and find a special Verdict as to the Husband which special verdict is afterwards adjudged insufficient by the Court a Venire facias de novo shall be granted for both as well the Wife as the Husband and the Wife may be found guilty because the Record and issue is intire and the Verdict is insufficient and void in tout So if there be several issues and the Imperfect Verdict Jury find some well and directly and in others special Verdicts which are imperfect a Venire facias de novo shall be granted for all and the Jury may find contrary to their first finding In trespass of Assault and Battery and taking away of grain and the Defendant as to the Batery justifies in defence of his grain upon which the Plaintiff demurs and as to the grain he pleads not guilty which is found for the Plaintiff and the Jury do not tax Damages for the Battery depending in demurrer as they ought in this case if the demurrer be afterwards adjudged for the Plaintiff yet the Damages for this cannot be afterwards supplied and taxed by a Writ of Inquiry of Damages but a Venire facias de novo shall issue to Tryal because all is comprised in one Original Vide apres cap. 13. and devant cap. 2. Who shall grant it In a Scire facias upon a Recognisance in Chancery if the Parties be at issue upon which the Record is commanded into B. R. and there it appears that the Venire facias is not well awarded the Venire facias de novo shall be awarded in the Kings Bench and not in the Chancery Roll. ●it Tryal 723. In Yelvertons Reports fo 64. the Case Album breve the County left out in a Venire facias is That a Venire facias was made Vicecomiti leaving out Salop for which there was a blank left in the Writ But re vera it was returned by the Sheriff of Salop. In Arrest of Iudgement it was alledged that the Venire facias was Vicious for this cause But Gawdy said it should be amended and by Fenner and Williams It is as no Writ because it is not directed to any Officer And then it is aided by the Statute of Jeofailes For it might rather be called a blank than a Writ because it was directed to no Officer If there be no return of the Sheriff indorsed upon the Venire facias it was held not amendable 35 Eliz. lib. 5. 4 Otherwise of the Distringas
Trover lies for damages for the Horse in which the Jury shall prove the 3 l. given was only for the conversion not the value of the Horse and by him Trover lies for goods in the Plaintiffs possession to recover damages for the conversion only Tyndal vers Jolliffe Norf. Lent Assises 1660. In Trover by Administrator where the conversion was in the time of the Intestate the Plaintiff must shew the Letters of Administration Contr. where the conversion was after his death Per Hale Norf. Sum. Ass 1660. If an Estray be claimed within the year and the day c. and the Lord refuses to deliver it Trover lies though the keeping is not paid for and the Lord sayes he detains for the same and the Lord can't detain for the meat c. but must bring his action Per Moreton Just Lent Norf. 1667. Bond vers Paston Quaere vide Dent tit Trespass per Wyndham Contr. and I think is Law At the same Assises Daniel vers Berney by Moreton Just Proclamation may be made of an Estray by any person and it is not necessary that it should be made by the Bell-man or any other Officer Vide Co. Entries 170. Barber vers Fawcet In Trover issue was joyned on tender of amends for keeping c. and Verdict pro Plaintiff and judgement Note I find precedents that in Trover the matter of an Estray may be pleaded specially or given in evidence on Not guilty Oats were taken from the owner and carried to a Miller to make into Oat-meal and before it was done the owner prohibits the Miller c. and demanded the Oats who notwithstanding made them into Oate-meal Per Barkely it 's a conversion in the Miller 1630. Clayton 57. Hollworth's case On non Cul. The Defendant gave in evidence a seisure for goods Foreign bought and Foreign sold Per Custom of Lynn Norf. good per Hale Norf. Sum. Ass 1668. Harwich vers Twells A man lends his Horse to a special purpose the Bailee abuses the Horse and over works him then the lender takes the Horse again Per Hugh Wyndham Just Lent Assises Bucks Trover lies not Constables case Dower In Dower the issue was ne unque seisie que Dower and for the Plaintiff a Feoffment in Fee was given in evidence to the Husband the Defendant would have given in evidence a seisin in tayle with a discontinuance and then the Feoffment c. and so a remitter but it ought to be pleaded per Cur. Dyer 41. If an Heir Mortgage for years and then assigne Dower legally i. e. a 3. part of the whole the assignment shall bind the Mortgagee Cont. if the assignment be illegal as of one whole Mannor when there were three Mannors that being not as the Law would have done it And if a disseisor assigne a legal Dower it 's good But if the Heir Mortgage in Fee and then assigne c. legally c. that is not good because the whole Freehold was out of him at the time of assignment Per Hugh Wyndham Just Bucks Lent Ass 1668. Account Against S. as receiver of two 30 ls and as Bayliff for receiving his Rents for several years not saying any certain sum of Rents Per Earl Sergeant the proper way is to find quod Computet as to what is certain in the declaration and so proved as the money was but not to the Rents and so he said was the opinion of Hale But per Moreton Just the Verdict shall be general and it may be both ways Saye's case Norf. Lent Assises 1667. Thus far I have made an Essay of a method to be further built upon by our Practiser and have given some cases not in Print and it may be useful I shall add some other cases not so proper for heads except that of Evidence with which I shall conclude this Chapter Evidence Inspection of a Deed Inrolled may be given in evidence Contr. of a bare Deed not Inrolled or of a Deed that needs no Inrollment Pasch 1655. B. R. Goodson's case A Deed to Lead the uses of a fine was Inrolled on the acknowledgement of but one of the parties to it was allowed by Glyn Ch. Just in evidence as Roll Ch. Just had done before him though no binding evidence Turber vers Maddison Pasch 1655. B. R. An office found at a death c. may be given in evidence A Verdict against one under whom either Plaintiff or Defendant claims may be given in evidence against the party so claiming cont If neither claim under it Duke and Ventres Mich. 1656. B. R. If an Action be brought on a Statute which has several provisoes in it the Defendant may plead not guilty and aid himself by any of the provisoes in evidence But if provisoes be made to that Statute of which the Defendant may take advantage he ought to plead it and not give it in evidence per Roll. Ch. Just Mich. 1650. B. R. Jones 320. accord Iointenancy in trespass cannot be given in evidence but must be pleaded in Abatement Jones versus Randal Hill 1652. C. B. Arrest and Imprisonment to prove a Bankrupt must be proved by Record Newby vers Bathurst Pasch 1659. B. R. In a Tryal at Barr. The custome of New-England to marry by the Magistrate in the presence of a Minister was allowed good by Hale Ch. Just B. R. Trin. 1663. at Guild-Hall in t Hall Hall The Certificate of the King under his sign Manual was allowed in Chancery for proof without exception Hob. 213. Records as Patents Statutes Judgments may be given in Evidence Hob. 227. contr to Dyer 129. When Records are pleaded they must be Sub pede Sigilli Contr. if given in Evidence Stiles 22. Whites case An answer in Chancery is Evidence against the Defendant himself but the Bill must he proved Godb. 326. Vpon a traverse of a Lease parol for years viz. Absque hoc quod A. demisit c. Nihil habuit in tenementis may be given in Evidence Dyer 122. Shewing a Grant to digg Turfs is no Evidence against a Prescription for the same but the Grant being the same with the Prescription shall be taken as a confirmation Crew Vernon Moore 819. Quaere tamen v. Moore 830. Where a Court of Pipowder is claimed by Prescription and Grant and good 2 Cro. 313. Acc. In Trespass for taking Goods after Iudgment per confession non sum informatus or nil dicit Property need not be proved to a Writ of inquiry for it would oppose the first Iudgment Quod quaerens recuperet and the Iudges might have Assessed damages if they would Yelv. 151. Yet quaere if the Defendant may not disprove property in mitigation of Damages for the Iury may find no Damages A Copy of a Deed is good Evidence where the Defendant has the deed and will not produce it Per Vernon just Clayton 15. A deed of Feoffment without Livery may be given in Evidence as a Release Per Berkly 11 Car. Clayton 32. If a
evidence In a special promise to pay 20 l. if the Plaintiff would pay 10 l. c. and an averment Non assumpsi● that he paid the 10 l. upon non assumpsit the Defendant shall not give in evidence that the Plaintiff did not pay the 10 l. neither is the Plaintiff bound to prove it for the issue is upon the assumpsit and not upon the payment of the 10 l. which might have been traversed And although 't was said that in all actions there is a general issue to be taken which shall put all the declaration in issue and that must in this be non assumpsit or nothing yet by the advice of all the Iustices of Serjeants Inn in Fleetstreet it was ruled as abovesaid Mich. 16 Car. B. R. between Holditch and Brodrig I have been the more particular in this because I have known Plaintiffs nonsuited in such cases at the Assisses for want of proving rhe averment although I must confess I never agreed with the Iudge herein that did it For it is a mistake to say The Plaintiff must in all cases prove his whole Declaration if he proves the matter in issue he ought not to be nonsuited Rolls tit Tryal 1681. If an Advowson be pleaded to be granted Grant per fait Where it is sufficient to prove the effect of the Issue Per fait and this issue is taken by a stranger to the fait if it be found granted sans fait or by another fait it is good for the Deed is surplus and the effect of the issue is upon the grant not upon the fait If an Imprisonment by dures at D. Dures be in Issue 't is not material whether he was ever at D. or not for the effect of the Issue is if the Deed was made by dure● So of a Feoffment pleaded by Deed a Feoffment without Deed or another Feoffment Deed is good for the effect of the Issue is upon the Feoffment not upon the Fait In escape of a Prisoner and the Issue Fresh Suit is if the Gaoler immediately after the escape made fresh suit if the Prisoner hath escaped a day and night before the Goaler knew it and then he makes fresh suit it is sufficient to prove the effect of the issue for convenient pursuit is immediate fresh suit in Law If in pleading an Indenture of demise Non demisit modo forma you mistake the recital and the issue is non demisit modo forma The mistake shall not hurt for the effect of the Issue is upon the demise If a man plead not guilty he cannot give What thing may be given in evidence upon the general Issue Trespass Battery in evidence a matter justifiable which shall be a confession of the act for this is contrary to the issue As son assault demesn in Battery upon Not guilty but upon Not guilty in Trespass for beating ones Servant per quod servitium amisit you may give in evidence that the Plaintiff did not lose his service by the Battery Nor upon nul wast fait can he say suficientment repair devant le brief purchase Wast If my servant without my consent put my Cattle in the Land of another I may Servant plead Not guilty and give this matter in evidence for by puting the Cattle in the servant has gained a property Vpon Not guilty he may give in evidence Information a discharge by a Proviso in the same Stat. for thereby he is Not guilty Contra formam Statuti but not a discharge by another Statute Vpon non habuit seu tenuit ad firmam contr formam Statuti the Parson may say he took the Farm for maintenance of his house according to the Proviso in debt upon the Stat. 21. H. 8. But upon the Stat. 5 E. 6. for ingrossing upon Not guilty 't is said that the Defendant cannot give in evidence a licence according to the Proviso of the Stat. sed quaere rationem Vpon ne unque son Receivor c. the Accompt Defendant cannot say that he paid the money according to directions c. In a Scire facias against Terrtenants Seisin Feoffment and a Feoffment pleaded before the judgement absque hoc that he was seised tempore Judicii and issue upon the seisin that the Feoffment was fraudulent to defraud the judgement may be given in evidence but otherwise if the issue had been upon the Feoffment So upon reins per discent by an Heir Riens per discent in debt upon an obligation that the Defendant aliened the Assets by fraud and covin and so void by the Stat. of 13 El. may be given in evidence because these are the general issues In Trespass for taking a stack of Corn Parcel the evidence may be of part and the Verdict as to 4 Combs or Bushels Guilty and as to the rest Not Guilty Vpon this plea the Executor may give in evidence a retainer for a debt due to himself Plenè administravit of as high a nature or paiment of debts with his own mony and that he kept goods of the Testator in lieu for this alters the property They can have nothing but what is delivered to them in Court and given in evidence What evidence the Jury may have with them Exemplifications by the party in Court if an exemplification come out of Chancery of witnesses examined there upon Oath who are dead the Jury shall have this with them but if the exemplification comprehend some Witnesses alive and some dead they shall not have it with them Neither shall they have any Pedegree drawn by a Herauld at Arms for it is no evidence Pedegree but only information for direction What Evidence the Jury may have with them see the 14. Chapter If a man makes a Feoffment and afterwards Who may be witnesses Not persons interested makes another with covenants that he was seised c. and afterwards an issue is taken upon the first Feoffment the Feoffee shall not be a Witness In an information for Vsury the Usury party shall not be a Witness because he would thereby avoid his own Bonds c. and be testis in propria causa Three men swear an Arbitrement in Perjury three several actions against them upon the Statute 5 Eliz. of perjury each of them may be a Witness for the other but in an Indictment of perjury upon 5 Eliz. the party grieved shall not be a Witness for he is to have 20. l. Common experience tells us upon an Indictment for Battery c. the party grieved may be a Witness because 't is only for the King In an action against the Hundred upon Hundred the Statute of Winton c. the Lessor living out of the Hundred may be a Witness for 't is not reason that he and his Lessee being an inhabitant should be both charged If the Servant be robbed of the Masters money the Master may be
per medietatem linguae he cannot challenge the Array for this cause at the Tryal if the Iury be all Denizens notwithstanding Stamford's Opinion to the contrary and the Books cited by him fol. 159. pl. Cor. For the Alien at his peril should pray a Venire facias per medietatem linguae Dyer 357. Vide Rolls tit Trial. 643. If the Plaintiff be an Alien he must suggest it before the awarding of the Venire facias but if the Defendant be an Alien the Plaintiff is allowed to surmise that before or after the Venire facias because the Defendants quality may not be known to him before 27 H. 7. 32. CHAP. XIII The Learning of General Verdicts Special Verdicts Privy Verdicts and Verdicts in open Court and where the Inquest shall be taken by default Inquests of Office c. Arrest of Judgment Variance betwixt the Nar. and the Verdict c. VErdit or Verdict In Latine Vere dictum Verdict quasi dictum veritatis As Judicium est quasi Juris dictum Is the Answer and Resolution of those 12 men concerning the matter of fact referred to them by the Court upon the Issue of the parties And this is the foundation upon which the Iudgment of the Court is built for ●x facto jus oritur the Law ariseth from ●he fact Wherefore it is no wonder that the Law hath ever béen so curious and cautelous as ●ot to believe the matter of fact until it is sworn by 12 sufficient men of the Neighbourhood where the fact was done whom the Law supposeth to have most cognisance of the truth or falsehood thereof which being sworn for the words are Juratores predict The Credit of Verdicts dicunt super sacrūm suum c. is the Verdict whereof we now treat And such credit doth the Law give to Verdicts that no proof will be admitted to impeach the verity thereof so long as the Verdict stands not reversed by Attaint And therefore upon an Attaint no Supersedeas is grantable by Law Plo. Com. 496. And it is worth our observation that the Law seems to take more care of the fact than of her self for the Major part of the Iudges give the Iudgement of the Law though the other Iudges dissent But every one of the 12 Iurors must agrée together of the fact before there can be a Verdict which must be delivered by the first man of the Iury. 29 Assise pl. 27. And this Verdict is of two kinds viz. one General or special general and the other special or at large The general Verdict is positively either General Verdict in the Affirmative or Negative as in Trespass upon Not guilty pleaded The Iury find Guilty or Not guilty And so in an Assize of Novel disseisin brought by A. against B. The Plaintiff makes his plaint Quod B. disseisivit eum de 20 acris terrae cum pertinentiis The Tenant pleads Quod ipse nullam injuriam seu disseisinam prefato A. inde fecit c. The Recognitors of the Assize do find Quod predict B. in juste sin● judicio disseisivit predict A. de predict 20 acris terrae cum pertinentiis c. This is a general Verdict 1 Inst 228. A Special Verdict or Verdict at large is Special Verdict so called because it findeth the special matter at large and leaveth the Iudgment of the Law thereupon to the Court of which 1 Instit 226. kind of Verdict it is said Omnis Conclusio boni veri judicii sequitur ex bonis veris premissis dictis Juratorum And as a Special Verdict may be found in Common-Pleas so may it also be found in Pleas of the Crown or Criminal Causes that concern life or member And it is to be observed that the Court The Court cannot refuse it cannot refuse a Special Verdict if it be pertinent to the matter in Issue 1 Inst 228. It hath béen questioned whether the Iury A special Verdict may be found upon any Issue as upon an absque hoc c. could find a Special Verdict upon a special point in Issue or no as they might upon the general Issue But this question hath been fully resolved in many of our Books first in Plo. Com. 92. It is resolved That the Iury may give a special Vardict and find the matter at large en chesc●n issue en le monde so that the matter found at large tend only to the Issue joyned and contain the certainty and verity thereof lib. 9. 12. And in 2 Inst 425. upon Collection of many Authors it is said That it hath béen resolved that in all Actions real personal and mixt and upon all Issues joyned general or special the Iury might find the special matter of fact pertinent and tending onely to the Issue joyned and thereupon pray the discretion of the Court for the Law And this the Iurors might do at Common Law not only in Cases between party and party but also in Pleas of the Crown at the Kings Suit which is a proof of the Common Law And the Statute of Westm the 2d cap. 30. is but an affirmative of the Common Law And as this spetial Verdict is the safest for A Free-hold upon Condition without Deed may be found by Verdict though it cannot be pleaded the Iury 1 Inst 228. so in many Cases it is most advantagious to the party and helps him where his own pleading cannot As for example saith Littleton Sect. 366 367 368. Albeit a man cannot in any Action plead a Condition which toucheth and concerns a Freehold without shewing writing of this yet a man may be ayded upon such a Condition by the Verdict of 12 men taken at large in an Assize of Novel diss●isin or in any other Action where the Iustices will take the Verdict of 12 Iurors at large As put the case a man seized of certain Land in Fée letteth the same Land to another for term of life without Deed upon Condition to render to the Lessor a certain Rent and for default of payment a Re-entry c. By force whereof the Lessee is seised as of Fréehold and after the Rent is behind by which the Lessor entreth into the Land and after the Lessée arraign an Assize of Novel disseisin of the Land against the Lessor who pleads that he did no wrong nor Dissesin And upon this an Assize is taken In this case the Recognitors of the Assize may say and render to the Iustices their Verdict at large upon the whole matter as to say that the Defendant was seized of the Land in his Demesne as of Fée and so seized let the same Land to the Plaintiff for term of his life rendring to the Lessor such a yearly Rent payable at such a Feast c. Vpon such Condition that if the Rent were behind at any such Feast at which it ought to be paid then it should be lawful for the Lessor to enter c. By force of which Lease
Embraceors F. N. 6. Br. 171. So much doth the Law hate that Jurors Fined for taking Money after their Verdict should privately take Money for their Verdict That certain Jurors were fined for taking Money after their Verdict though there was no pr●ingagement for it 39 Assise p. 19. The practice is otherwise at this day if it were not the Middlesex Iuries would not so Court the Bayliffs to return them especially to Tryals at Barr where 5 l. a man is frequent Gratuity sometimes more If a full Iury appear and some are challenged Issues off so that the Iury remains for default of Iurors the Defaulters shall loose their Issues 4 H. 6. 7. otherwise if a Iury be sworn and one is withdrawn by consent But if there be a joynder of Counties and a Iury of one County appear and not of the other The Defaulters of that County from which enough came shall not loose their Issues because the Inquest doth not remain for their default but for the default of them of the other County 48 Ass 5. Mes quaere If the Iurors at the return of Scire fac Amercement make default yet they shall not be amerced because the parties may be claimed at the first day but at the return of the Habeas Corpora they shall 10 E. 4. 19. 1 E. 3. 12. If any of the Iurors appear the Court Demand sur peine may charge them to inquire if any of the other Iurors were within the Town after the return and if they find they were they shall be demanded upon a Pein and if they come not they shall be amerced Rolls tit Trial. 632. A Juror was challenged and six other Jurors were sworn to try the Challenge who found him indifferent and thereupon the Juror fined for departing when he was challenged Jury was demanded but did not appear for which default he was fined the value of his Lands for a year and the other Jurors inquired of the value c. although the other party then would have challenged him when he was demanded so that he might have béen treit But the Court would not admit this because then the King would have lost his Fine 36 H. 6. 27. If a Juror appear and is adjourned upon Juror adjourned upon pain pain and makes default in this Case because he shall be fined to the value of his Land per annum this shall be inquired by his Companions of the Jury because the Court knows not the value of his Land li. 8. 41. A Verdict was taken from the Fore-man Fined for giving a Verdict before they were agreed of the Jury to which one of them did not assent and damages assessed to 20 s. in Trespass and Assault and afterwards every one of the 11. were fined for giving their Verdict before they were all agreed 40 Assise 10. Where a Iury are to be fined a Fine The fine must not be joynt jointly imposed on them is not legal but they must be severally fined because the offence of one is not the offence of another Et nemo debet puniri pro alieni delicto For then it might be said Rutilius fecit Aemilius plectitur lib. 11. 42. A man stroke a Juror at Westm sitting Punishment for striking a Juror in the Court who passed against him and he was thereof indicted and arraigned at the Kings Suit and attainted his judgment was that he should go to the Tower and stay there in prison all days of his life and that his right hand should be cu● off and his Lands seised into the Kings ha●ds 41 Assise p. 25. and now our Juror sées what punishment it is to strike him in the face of the Court. Let him hold his hands from others least the same Iudgment light on him By the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 6. It is Enacted that upon every first Writ of Habeas Corpora or Distringas with a Nisi prius 10 s. shall be returned in Issues upon every person impannelled and upon the second Writ 20 s. and upon the third 30 s. Issues And upon every Writ that shall be further awarded to try any Issue to double the Issues last afore specified until a full Jury be sworn And these Issues being returned upon a Not summoned Tenement in Fée simple in tail or for life of another or himself or in the right of his Wife the Land he then hath will be chargeable for it and any mans Cattel upon this Land may be distrained for it But if the Under Sheriff c. return a Juror summoned who in truth was not legally summoned and therefore doth not appear and so looseth Issues the Vnder-Sheriff shall pay him double the value of the Issues lost Sée the Statutes of 35 H. 8. 6. and the 2 E. 6. 32. And note the Law hath béen so careful to punish all offenders who would endeavour to byass and corrupt the Iury and to punish the Juries themselves if they receive Money to give their Verdict or any otherwise pre-ingage themselves to any of the parties All which is to the end that a true and honest Verdict may be given What punishment shall that Jury have which gives a false Verdict Such a punishment that as I said before in civil Causes it is without example and surely if the Jurors did bear it in their minds their Verdicts would be always grounded upon their Evidence and not upon their own Interests or any partiality to either of the parties Wherefore if the Jurors give a false Verdict which is perjury of the highest degrée upon an Issue joyned betwéen the parties in any Court of Record and Iudgment thereupon The party grieved may bring his Writ of Attaint in the Kings-Bench or Attaint Common-Pleas upon which 24 of the best men in the County are to be the Jurors who are to hear the same Evidence which was given to the Petite Iury and as much as can be brought in affirmance of the Verdict but no other against it And if these 24. who are called the Grand Iu●y find it a false Verdict then followeth ●●is terrible and heavy Iudgment at Common Law upon the Petite Iury. 1. That they shall loose liberam legem for Judgment in Attaint ever that is they shall be so infamous as they shall never be received to be a Witness or of any Jury 2. That they shall forfeit all their Goods and Chattels 3. That their Lands and Tenements shall be taken into the Kings hands 4. That their Wives and Children shall be thrown out of doors 5. That their Houses shall be rased and thrown down 6. That their Trées shall be rooted up 7. That their Meadow-grounds shall be ploughed up 8. That their Bodies shall be cast into the Goal and the party shall be restored to all that he lost by reason of the unjust Verdict So odious is Perjury in this Case in the eye of the Common-Law And the severity of this
commanded and may do it after Iudgment If the party grieved be dead his Heirs or Executors c. according to the Case may have a Writ of Error upon this Bill of Exceptions And no diminution can be alledged for the parties are confined to the matter in the Bill If the Iustice dye before he acknowledgeth his Seal according to the Act a Scire sac shall go to his Executor or Administrator for the Death of the Iudge is the act of God which shall not prejudice the party As in the case of a Certificate of the Marshal of the King's Host that the person outlawed was in the King's Service beyond Sea in a Writ of Error a Scire fac shall go to the Marshals Executor or Administrator upon shewing the Certificate If the Iudge denyeth his Seal the party may prove it by Witnesses ib. Error of a Iudgment at the Grand Sessions in the County of Pembrok in an Assise of darrein Presentment by Henry Cort against the Bishop of St. Davids Dorothy Owen al. for the Church of Stackpoole The fourth Error assigned was because the Issue being whether H. Cort did last present one R. D. the last Incumbent who was instituted and inducted upon his Presentation The Plaintiff offered in Evidence Letters of Institution which appeared to be and so mentions that they were sealed with the Seal of the Bishop of London because the Bishop of St. Davids had not his Seal of Office there And those Letters were made out of the Diocess And the Defendant had demurred thereupon That those Letters were insufficient and the Demurrer was denyed which Jones said was an Error because they ought to have permitted the Demurrer and should have adjudged upon it But it was held that the not admitting of the Demurrer ought not co be assigned for Error for when upon the Evidence the matter was over-ruled by the Iustices of Assize That was a proper cause of a Bill of Exceptions and the remedy which the Statute appoints in that Case And for the matter of the Letters of Institution sealed with another Seal and made out of the Dio●ess it was held they were good enough for the Seal is not material it being an Act made of the Institution the writing and sealing is but a testimonial thereof which may be under any Seal or in any place But of that point they would advise Croke 1. part 340. Note This Bill is to prevent the precipitancy of the Judges and ought to be allowed in all Courts and in all places of Pleadings and may be put in at any time before the Jury have given their Verdict But this Bill is rarely used there being impar congressus betwixt the Judge and the Councel and the Prudence of the Judges induce them to find special Verdicts in Cases of doubt and difficulty A Release Pleaded at the Assises after Issue joyned Et pred Def. in propria persona sua ven dic quod pred Justic Dom. Regis hic ad caption Jur. ss pred inter ipsum Def. prefat Quer. procedere non debent quia dic ' quod post xii diem F. ult preterit de quo die Jurat pred inter partes pred continuat fuit ante hunc diem scilt diem de Assise scilt primo die M. Anno c. apud c. pred Quer. per nomen c. remisit relaxavit c. Et hoc c. unde pet quod Justic pred ad captionem Jur. pred ulterius procedere nolunt The Death of one of the Defendants Pleaded after the last Continuance Et pred Def. per A. B. Attorn suum ven pred T. non ven super hoc pred Def. dic quod post ult concinuationem placiti pred scilt post xv Pasche ult preterit de quo die loquela pred ult continuat fuit hic usq ad hunc diem scilt in Cro. sce Trin. tunc prox ' sequen ' ante eundem diem scilt decimo die Maii ult preterit pred T. apud A. pred obiit Et pet quod null process ' nec aliquid aliud in placito pred ulterius versus prefat T. fiat Et quia pred J. K. hoc non dedic Ideo null process nec aliqui● aliud in placito pred versus prefat T. fiat c. A Baron Challenges the Pannel because no Knight was retorned of the same Et sup hoc idem T. calumpniat arraiament panelli pred quia dic quod ipse est tempore arraiament panelli il●ius fuit Baro hujus Regni Angliae locum vocem habens in quol Parliamento hujus Reg. Quodque in eodem pan●llo nullus Miles nominat retorn existit Et hoo paratus est verificare unde petit Judicium quod panellum illud cassetur c. Evidence and demurrer upon Evidence Middleton against Baker Cro. Eliz. 42. fol. 751. In Eject It was held by all the Court upon evidence to a Jury That if the Plaintiff give in evidence any matter in writing or Record or a sentence in the Spiritual Court as it was in this case and the Defendant offers to demurr thereupon the Plaintiff ought to joyn in the demurrer or wave the Evidence because the Desendant shall not be compelled to put matter of difficulty to lay Gens and because there cannot be any variance of a matter in writing But if either party offer to demurr upon any evidence given by Witness the other unless he pleaseth shall not be compelled to joyn because the Credit of the testimony is to be examined by a Jury and the Evidence is incertain and may be enforced more or less But both parties may agree to joyn in demurrer upon such evidence And in the Queens Case The other party may not demurr upon evidence shewn in Writing or Record for the Queen unless the Queens Councel will thereto assent But the Court in such case shall charge the Jury to find the matter specially as appears 34 H. 8. Dyer 53. But this is by Prerogative vide lib. 4. 104. the same case and 1. Inst 72. where my Lord Cook says If the Plaintiff in evidence shew any matter of Record or Deeds or Writings or any sentence in the Ecclesiastical Court or other matter of evidence by Testimony of Witnesses or otherwise whereupon doubt in Law ariseth and the Defendant offer to Demurr in Law thereupon the Plantiff cannot refuse to joyn in demurrer no more than in a Demurrer upon a Count Replication c. and so è converso may the Plaintiff Demurr in Law upon the evidence of the Defendant but the Kings Councel shall not be enforced to joyn in Demurrer but in that Case the Court may direct the Jury to find the special matter So that the several sorts of evidence make no difference as to the joyning in Demurrer 1. part Leon. 206. Darrose against Newbott Cro. 4. Car. fol. 143. In Error of a Judgment in Bridgewater The Error assigned was for
Will given in evidence was A. H. shall have all my inheritance if the Law will allow it and held sufficient to maintain the Issue Hob. 2. so upon Ne unques receiver per maines J. S. a delivery from J. D. by the appointment of J. S. Account to the Plaintiffs use is good evidence Hob. 36. Issue whether A. was taken by a Capias ad sat at the suit of B. and evidence of a taking at the suit of C. Arrest and then a delivery of a Capias ad sat at the suit of B. to the Sheriff is good Hob. 55. But a taking upon a Cap. utlagat or cap. pro fine with a prayer of the Plaintiff that he may remain for his satisfaction is not ibid. In a Consimili casu where the demandant counts Consimili casu Substance of an alienation in Fee yet the Defendant shall make his Traverse to the alienation modo forma and then the demandant shall maintain the Issue by an Alienation in Fee or in Taile or for Life for they are all alike material Hob. 105. In an Assise the Defendant pleaded the Deed of Warranty the Brother of the Plaintiff with Warranty A Deed of the Father with Warranty will not maintain the Defendants Issue Hob. 55. In Bennets Case Stiles 223. In a Tryal at Barr It was Juror said by the Court that if either of the parties to a Tryal desire that a Juror may give evidence of some thing of his own knowledge to the rest of the Jurors that the Court will examine him openly in Court upon his Oath and he ought not to be examined in private by his Companions And it was also said that if a Robbery be done in Crepusculo the Hundred shall Robbery not be charged but if it be done by clear day light whether it be before Sun rise or after Sun set it is all one and the Hundred shall be charged In an action of the Case for digging a hole in the Demurrer upon evidence High-way into which his Gelding fell c. upon Not Guilty this evidence was given that the Plaintiffs servant was driving the Plaintiffs Gelding in the way and that by reason of the hole he fell c. Upon which it was demurred because it was not proved that there was such a High-way nor who Action sur Case digged the hole Roll Chief Justice This evidence is no more than a special Verdict and it ought to find the way and the hole digged and all the matter conducing to the Issue and therefore it is not good as it is and a venire de novo was awarded Stiles 335. In Trover and conversion there was a Demurrer Demurrer upon evidence joyned upon the evidence and thereupon the Court directed the Jury to find Damages for the Plaintiff if upon the argument of the Demurrer the Law should be adjudged for him and then the parties desired the Jury might be discharged and referred the matter to the Judges to determine the Law upon the evidence In this Case Roll Justice took this difference If a record be pleaded it must be sub pede sigilli or else the Judges cannot judge of it But it may be given in evidence and the Jury may find Record it though it be not sub pede sigilli And the Court advised the parties for their own expedition to let a venire facias de novo be Issued out and to wave the Demurrer upon the evidence because it was not good nor could not bring the matter in question before them that they might determine it for one party saith there is a Writ and the other saith there is not a Writ which is bare matter of fact for the Jury to determine and not for the Court and the Demurrer ought to have been whether the Writ be good or bad and should have admitted that there was a Writ tiel quel and then had the whole matter come legally before the Court to wit whether the evidence given to the Jury be sufficient for them to find a verdict for the Plantiff upon the Issue joyned or not-For the matter of fact ought to be agreed in a Demurrer to an evidence otherwise the Court cannot proceed upon the Demurrer And he said if a Deed be pleaded the party must shew it in Court but in Deed. evidence 't is not absolutely necessary to shew it if it can otherwise be proved to the Jury and so it is of a Record and concluded that the Demurrer was Record not good and that there ought to be a venire facias de novo to try the matter again Bacon Justice said there ought not to be a venire facias de novo but that judgment ought to be given against one party to wit the Defendant for ill joyning in the Demurrer to the intent the party that is not in fault may be dismissed and the parties here have waved the Tryal per pays by joyning in Demurrer But Roll answered that no judgment at all could be given for both parties be in fault one by tendring the Demurrer and the other by joyning in it and the Defendant might have chosen whether he would have joyned or not but might have prayed the judgment of the Court whether he ought to join The Court advised to search Precedents for a venire facias de novo after a Demurrer upon an evidence and if there be any they hold that the same Jury ought to come again and not another Roll said if a special Verdict be found insufficient a new venire facias ought to Issue and he saw no difference betwixt that and this Case Wright and Pindars Case Stiles 22. and 34. In Debt for Servants Wages viz. 20 s. or a robe Debt yearly The Defendant may plead payment of the robe and shall not be put to the general Issue Servants wages where the payment is of another thing than money but of money he must plead nil deb and give the payment in evidence And the Defendant may plead that the Plaintiff departed out of his service and shall not be forced to the general Issue 9 E. 4. 36. Though surely that may be given in evidence upon nil deb for the Plaintiff must prove he served so indebitatus Assumpsit non Assumpsit upon the promise in Law an extinguishment by taking a Bond Extinguishment being a matter of a higher nature for the Debt may be given in evidence And Note if an Infant buy Goods and afterwards give a Bond and this Bond be avoided by Infancy Yet it seems the Contract shall not be revived Sed dubitatur Rolls tit Extinguishment 604. for now this Bond which was voidable is become void and a void thing shall not have such effect But a personal action once suspended is gone for ever But acceptance of a Bond shall not extinguish Rent nor arrerages of an account before an Auditor of Record because these are of a
conclusion of a Verdict shall aid the Imperfections of it 400. For whom the Verdict shall be said to be found 401 402 403 404. 407 408. 501. Variance betwixt the Verdict and the Nar. 501 502 503. Verdict by defauit 504. Venire fac of this Cap. 3. per tot and Cap. 4. per tot To whom to be directed 38 c. what faults in it shall vitiat the Tryal 50 60 c. 129. De novo 54 55 56 57. By Proviso 62 63 64. Visne Cap. 8. per tot from what places ibid. The Venue shall follow the Issue 101. 113. 115. 120. 109. 121. De Corpore Com. 101 102. 124. from two Counties 116 117. 107. where the Writ is brought 117. 105. from the next adjoyning County 120. 127 128. where of Matters done beyond Sea 105. where the Land lyes 107. 122. 125 126. 128. from two places in one County 123. out of a wrong place by consent 129. Suburbs of a City 129. View 271. Use 223. Usury 243. W. WItnesses Tryals by them 16. 31. Who may be Witnesses who not 183. 185 186. 188. 243 2424. 247 48. One Witness sufficient 215. 233. Their Priviledges 186. Detained 187. Witnesses joyned with the Jury 233. A Witness is to have his Charges 246. Witnesses against the King 247. Wills 18. 215 216. Wager of Law 23. Wales 127. Warranty 367. 179. Way 219. Warren 220. FINIS Books Printed for and Sold by George Dawes at his Shop over against Lincolns-Inn Gate in Chancery-Lane THE History of the World in Five Books I. Intreating of the Beginning and first Ages of the same from the Creation unto Abraham II. Of the Times from the Birth of Abraham to the Destruction of the Temple of Solomon III. From the Destruction of Jerusalem to the Time of Philip of Macedon IV. From the Reign of Philip of Macedon to the Establishing of that Kingdom in the Race of Antigonus V. From the setled Rule of Alexander's Successors in the East until the Romans prevailing over all made Conquest of Asia and Macedon Written by Sir Walter Raleigh Knight with his Life and Tryal added to it in Folio Brief Animadversions on Amendments of and Additional Explanatory Records to the Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts By William Pryn Esq in Folio A Book of Judgments in real personal and mixt Actions and upon the Statutes all or most of them upon Writs of Error collected out of the choice Manuscripts of Mr. Brownloe and Mr. Moyle sometimes Protonotaries of the Common Pleas as also of Mr. Smither formerly Secondary of the same Court. Perused transcribed corrected and tabled with Addition of Notes by George Townsend Esq second Protonotary of the Common Pleas Very useful and necessary for all Protonotaries Secondaries Students Clerks of Judgments Attorneys and all Practicers of Laws in Quarto Modus Intrandi Placita Generalia The Entring Clerks Introduction being a Collection of such Precedents of Declarations and other Pleadings which Process as well Mesne as Judicial as are generally used in every days practice with Notes and Observations thereupon Composed for the benefit of the Students of the Common Law of England as also of the Attorneys Entring Clerks and Sollicitors of the Courts of Common-Pleas and King's Bench acquainting them with Rudiments of Clerkship and such general Pleadings and Processes as are used at this day in the Courts of Records at Westminster By William Brown Gent. Author of Formulae bene Placitandi in large Octavo De Jure Maritimo Navali or a Treatise of Affairs and of Commerce in Three Books The Third Edition Corrected and inlarged with many useful Additions through the whole Book by Charles Molly Esq in large Octavo Jus Imaginis apud Anglos Or the Law of England relating to Nobrlity and Gentry faithfully collected and methodically digested for common benefit By John Brydal of Lincolns-Inn Esq in large Octavo Jura Coronae His Majestie 's Royal Rights and Prerogatives asserted against Papal Usurpations and all other Anti-Monarchical Attempts and Practices Collected out of the Body of the Municipal Laws of England in large Octavo Parsons Law or a View of Advowsons wherein is contained the Right of Patrons Ordinaries and Incumbents to Advowsons of Churches Collected by William Hughes of Greys-Inn Esq The third Edition reviewed and much enlarged by the Author in his life-time in large Octavo Mounsieur Scarron's Letters to Persons of greatest Eminency and Quality Rendred English by John Daves of Kidwelly in large Octavo Of the Office of the Clerk of the Market of Weights and Measures and of the Laws of Provision for Man and Beast for Bread Wine Beer Meal c. By William Shepard Esq in Octavo Hughes Quaeries or choice Cases for Moots containing several Points of Law not resolved in the Books being very useful for the Students of the Common Law Collected by William Hughes Esq late of the Honourable Society of Grayes-Inn in Twelves Decus Tutamen Or a Prospect of the Laws of England purposely framed for the Safeguard of the King's Majesty his Sacred Person Crown and Dignity against all traiterous Speeches Designs and Conspiracies To which are added peculiar Notes upon the Judgment in High Treason fit for all His Majestie 's Subjects and Leige-People to be acquainted withal By John Brydal of the Honourable Society of Lincolns-Inn Esq in Twelves There may be had several sorts of Blank Bonds very Vseful and Necessary for Attorneys and all other Persons relating to the Law SIngle Bonds for Payment of Money Double Bonds for Payment of Money Bonds for Performance of Covenants either Single or Double Single or Double Bonds for Arbitration with an Umpire Single or Double Bonds for Arbitration without an Umpire Single or Double Bonds to save Sureties harmless General Releases Letters of Attorney to Receive Money Warrants of Attorney to Confess Judgments Bail Bonds Single Bonds without Conditions Double Bonds without Conditions Sheriffs Warrants upon mean Process for any County or City Blank Warrants for a Justice of Peace Licenses for Ale-house Keepers Indentures Ruled and Text. And the best Ink for Records