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A86253 The law of conveyances, shewing the natures, kinds, and effects, of all manner of assurances, with the manner of their several executions and operations. Also directions to sue out and prosecute all manner of writs, of extent, elegit, and judiciall writs upon statutes, recognizances, judgments, &c. A warrant to summon a court of survey: and the articles to be given in charge, and inquired of in that court. With an exposition of divers obscure words and termes of law, used in ancient records, &c. And also plaine decimall tables, whereby may be found the true values of lands, leases, and estates, in possession, or reversion. With a concordance of years, &c. / By John Herne Gent. Herne, John, fl. 1660. 1655 (1655) Wing H1570; Thomason E1597_2 165,473 258

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owne Child Attainders which give Escheat Attainder by Verdict Confession Outlawry Abjuration but upon either of them judgment must be given Forfeiture of Goods and Chattels Going beyond the Sea without license Exigent awarded in Felony though he yeild his body thereupon Clergy in Felony standing mute in Felony Felo de se Flying for Felony though he returne and be tryed and found not guilty These bring a forfeiture of all a mans Goods and Chattels as well reall as personall Attainder to what time it shal relate for the forfeiture of Lands and Goods Forfeiture He that is attainted of Felony by Verdict Confession or Outlawry doth forfeit all the Lands he had at the time of the offence committed so that he can do no Act afterward to encumber the Land If Tenant in taile be attainted of high Treason he shall forfeit for no longer time then for his owne life If a man have an Estate for life of himselfe or of another do commit Treason or Felony the whole Estate is forfeited to the King but no escheat to the Lord. But a Copyhold of Fees as for life is forfeited to the Lord and not to the Crowne and if it be entailed Forfeiture by a Copy-holder the Lord is to have it during the life of the Offender and then his Heire is to have it A man attainted may purchase Pardon Corruption of blood but it shall be to the Kings use untill the party be pardoned yet the pardon giveth not back their Lands or Goods without a speciall Patent of Restitution which cannot restore the blood without an Act of Parliament So if a man hath a Son and then is attainted of Felony and pardoned and then purchaseth Land and then hath issue another Son and dieth the Son he had before the pardon though he be his eldest Son and the Patent have words of restitution to his Lands yet he shall not inherit them but the second Son shall inherit them because the blood is corrupted by the Attainder and cannot be restored by Patent alone but by Act of Parliament And if a man hath two Sonnes Where a man shall be said to dye without Heire although he have one and the eldest is attainted in the life of his Father and dieth without issue living the Father the second Son shall inherite the Fathers Lands but if the eldest Son have any Issue though he dye in the life of his Father then neither the second Son nor the Issue of the eldest shall inherit the Fathers Land but the Father shall be there accounted to dye without Heire and the Land shall escheat whether the eldest Son hath issue or not though he be pardoned after the death of his Father Note that the Heires procreate after the Attainder shall not inherite the Lands of his Father nor of his Mother But the Heires begotten before the Attainder shall inherit the Lands of that Father and of that Mother which was not attainted but the Lands of his Father attainted or of his Mother which is attainted he shall not inherit although the King hath pardoned the Attainder The operation and effect of a pardon For a pardon doth but onely cleare the corruption of the bloud of these children which be borne after the pardon and so to make them capeable to inherit such lands which their Ancestor shall purchase at the time of the pardon or any time after but not to inherit such lands as the Ancestor was seised of before nor to purge the bloud of those children begotten before the pardon as to make them inheritable to any Ancestor Alien and Denizen A man seised of lands in Fee hath issue an Alien borne out of the Kings Leigeance he cannot be heire Propter defectum subjectionis though he be born within lawfull marriage if made Denizen by the Kings Letters patents yet cannot he inherit to his father or any other but otherwise it is if he be naturalized by act of Parliament for then he is not accounted in law Alienigena but Indigena but after one is made Denizen the issue that hee hath afterwards shall be heire to him but no issue that he had before If an Alien come into England and hath issue two sons these two sons Indigenae subjects borne because borne within the Realme and yet if one of them purchase land in Fee and dieth without issue his brother shall not be his heire for there was never any inheritable bloud between the Father and them and where the sons by no possibility can be heire to the Father the one of them shall not be heire to the other An Alien that is naturalized by Act of Parliament is to all intents and purposes as a naturall born subject differs much from denization by Letters patents for if he had issue in England before his denization that issue is not inheritable to his father but if his father be naturalized by Parliament such issue shall inherit so if an issue of an English man be born beyond Sea if the issue be naturalized by act of Parliament he shall inherit his fathers land but if he be made denizen by Letters Patents he shall not and many other differences there are between them An Alien borne out of the Kings leigeance his ancestors not being of the faith and leigeance of England is neither heire to inherit nor to purchase within this realme yet the Lord shall not have the escheate because he died without heire but the King which is the supreame head and the supreame person shall have this Land by the common Law But an Alien borne out of the Realme and within the Legiance of the King his Father and Mother being then and all their live of the legiance of the King shall inherit by the common Law Infants borne out of the Kings legiance the father and mother at the time of the birth being leigemen of England shall inherit by the Statute of 25 E. 3. so that the mothers of the children pass the Sea with the husbands leave and consent this statute extendeth all to children whose fathers and mothers were dwelling in England If an Alien marry here an english woman and hath issue this issue shall inherit to the wife the same law where the husband an English-man marry a woman that is an Alien and hath issue he shall inherit his father All which said trusts every one of them the said A. B. C. D. for himselfe severally and respectively Covenant severall no joynt covenant and for his severall and respective heire Executors and Administrators for as much as shall concerne him or them and his or their said heires Executors or Administrators c. doth covenant c. And the said A. B. C. D. do severally and respectively that is to say either of them for himselfe and by himselfe his severall heires Executor When Covenants are severall they are as severall Deeds written in one Parchment Coke 5. part fo 23.
elder son was in possession of the dignity no more then of his blood for the dignity is inherent to his blood and neither by his own act nor by the act of another hath he gained more actuall possession then by the Law descended to him Coke 3. pars fol. 42. Actuall possession quid Possession in Law quid Here 's jure proprietatis heres jure representationis An actuall possession is when a man entreth in Deed into lands to him discended A possession in Law is when lands be discended to a man and he hath not yet really entred into them nor hath seisin of the rents reserved upon any estate made for life by him from whom he claimeth Every one that is heire unto another is as the eldest Son shall inherit onely before all his brothers Aut heres jure representationis as where the eldest Son dieth in the life of his Father his issue shall inherit before the youngest Son for although the youngest Son be magis propinquus yet jure representationis the issue of the eldest Son shall inherit for he doth represent the person of his Father And even as none may be procreate but of one Father and one Mother and ought to have in him two bloods viz. the blood of his Father and the blood of his Mother those two bloods commix in him by lawfull marriage doth constitute and make him heire So none may be heire to any one unless he hath in him both the bloods of him to whom he shall make himself heire And therefore the heire of the half blood shall not inherit because he wanteth one of the bloods that should make him inheritable for as in this case the blood of the Father and the blood of the Mother make but one blood inheritable and both are necessary to the procreation of an heire therefore desiciente uno non potest esse haeres And this is the reason of the Maxime of Possessio fratris de feodi simplex facis sororem esse haeredem Co. 3. pars Ratcliffs case fo 37. If a man be attainted of felony by judgment the heires begotten after the attainder are foreclosed from all manner of hereditary Succession as well on the part of the Mother as on the part of the Father And Britton gave this reason because the Son procreate after the judgment had not two bloods inheritable in him for at the time of his birth the blood of his Father was corrupt for ex leproso parente leprosus generatur filius And when the Father is attainted of felony the blood in respect of what it shall be inheritable being corrupt the Son as like to it hath not but half blood viz. the blood of the Mother in him without corruption And therefore he holdeth that such a Son shall not inherit his Mother And with him Bracton accordeth for saith he Non valebit felonis generatio nec ad hereditatem paternam vel maternam si autem ante feloniam generationem fecerit talis generatio succedit in hereditatem patris a quo non fuit felonia perpetrata Because that at the time of his birth he had two lawfull bloods commixt in him which may not be corrupt by attainder subsequent but onely as to that Father or that Mother by whom the Felony was done and committed Assise To arraigne an Assise is to cause the Demandant to be called to make the plaint and to set the cause in such order as the Tenant may be inforced to answer thereunto and is derived of the French word Arrayner to order or set in right place and the Assise is Arrained in French and entred in Latine Executed and things executory a difference There is a diversity between Inheritances executed and Inheritances executory As Lands executed by Livery c. cannot by Indentures of Defeasance be defeated afterwards And so if a Disseisee release to a Disseisor it cannot be defeated by Indenturs of Defeasance made afterward but at the time of the Release or Feoffment c. the same may be defeated by Indentures of Defeasance for it is a Maxime in Law Quae in continenti fiunt in esse videntur But Rents Annuities Conditions Warranties and such like that be inheritances executory may be defeated by Defeasance made either at that time or at any time after And so the Law is of Statutes Recognizances Obligations and other things executory Distress for a mercement He that distraineth for an Amercement and such like must be sure to distraine the Goods and Chattels of him that is amerced because he may not distraine another mans beasts for this amercement But for rent or services it is otherwise for the party may distraine the beasts found in the land that are levant and couchant there N. B. fol. 100. B. Distress Damage-feasant And if a man take beasts for Damage-feasant and the other offer sufficient amends he refuse c. Now if he sue a Replevin c. for the beasts he shall recover Damages onely for the Detinue of them and not for the taking for that was lawfull F.N.B. 69. The Lord may seise a Herriot service aswell as a Herriot custome Herriot service Herriot custome may be seised Warde and so it was then adjudged by the whole Court Plow fo 96. Replevin Woodland versus Mantle It was resolved that when the King maketh an heir apparent which in age of a Tenent by Knights service a Kt in the life of his ancestor after the ancestor dieth the said heir within age in this case he shall be out of ward and shall pay no value of his marriage nor the Lord shall have the custody of the Land for in such ease by the making of him Knight in the life of his Ancestor he is made as of full age so that when his Ancestor dieth no interest either in the body or in the land ever vesteth in the Lord. It was also resolved that when the heir within age is made Knight after tender made to him although that he within age marry else where yet he shall not pay the forfeiture of marriage Cok. 6. pars fo 73. Sir Drue Druries case If an infant in the life of his father be made Knight and his Father die he shall be in Ward but otherwise it is where an infant in Ward is made Knight there he shall be out of Ward 2. E 6. tit Garde 42. Magna Char. Cap. 3. Touching the time of the beginnning of a Lease for yeares it is to be observed Commencement of a lease Inclusive exclusive that if a Lease be made by indenture bearing Date the 26. of May c. to have and to hold for 21. yeares from the Date or from the day of the Date it shall begin the 27. day of May. If a Lease beare Date the 26. of May. c. to have and to hold from the making hereof or from henceforth or from the sealing and delivery hereof
life make a Feoffment that is a forfeiture and yet nothing passeth but his own estate But making a Livery in fee it is a forfeiture though none of the remainders be divested Coke 2. pars fol. 76. b. Bredons case vide plus fol. 50. this is a forfeiture and yet no reversion or remainder is divested out of the King A particular Estate of any thing that lyeth in Grant cannot be forfeited by any grant in Fee by Deed As if Tenant for life or years of an Advowson Rent Common or of a reversion or remainder of Land by Deed grant the same in fee this is no forfeiture But if such a Tenant levy a Fine c then it is a forfeiture Note The diversi●y between Livery and Se●sin of Land and the delivery of a deed and what is a good delivery of a deed in Law there is a diversity between Livery and Seisin of Land and the delivery of a Deed for if a man deliver a Deed without saying of any thing it is a good delivery but to a Livery of Seisin of Lands words are necessary as taking in his hands the Deed and the ring of the doore if it be of a house or a turff or twig if it be of Land and using the words aforesaid And a Deed may be delivered to the party without words without any act of delivery As if the Writing sealed lyeth upon the Table and the Feoffor or Obligor saith to the Feoffee or Obligee Go and take up the said Writing it is sufficient for you or it will serve the turne or take it as my Deed or the like words it is a sufficient delivery Cokes Littleton title Dower fol. 36. a. 29 H. 8. Dyer fol. 95 43 Eliz. inter Hawsly Lacker in Banco Rs. Hillary 12 Jac. Rs. in Com. Banco The Grant of a Seignory Rent-charge Rent-seck Attornment in toto withall incidents therunto as also the Remainder or reversion of any of these or the remainder or reversion of the Land it self is nothing worth without Attornment viz. the agreement of the Tenant that must be presently charged As Lord Mesne and Tenant the Lord grants his Seignory the Mesne must attorne and not the Tenant prevaile for the Mesne is Tenant to the Lord Lord and Tenant the Tenant letteth the Land for life or giveth in taile saving the reversion to himself Now if the Lord grant his Seignory he in the reversion must attorne to the Grantee and not the Tenant for life or Tenant in taile for he in the reversion is Tenant to the Lord and not the other But if the Tenant had let his Land to one for life the remainder in fee thereupon a grant of the Seignory the Tenant for life must attorne for he is Tenant to the Lord so is not he in the remainder so long as Tenant for life liveth If Lands be let for years or given in taile saving the reversion upon a Grant of the reversion the Tenant of the Land must attorne And an Attornment may either be by word as to say I agree or am content with the Grant Or I attorne to you and become your Tenant by force of the Grant or else by the delivery of a penny and to the Grantee c. in name of Attornment or by any other matter implying an agreement as by a surrender to the Grantee of the reversion praying in aide of him c. and if such an Attornment be not to the Grantee in the life of the Grantor then the Grant is void In the Grant of a Reversion depending on a Freehold the attornment of the Freeholder is sufficient though he be not the Tenant that must presently be charged As if Lands be let to a man for years the remainder to another for life and hee in reversion grant the reversion to another the attornment of him in the remainder is sufficient 1 Littleton fol. 1●… 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 nly and where not If a man bind himself and his Heires in an Obligation or 〈◊〉 covenant by writing for him and his 〈…〉 or 〈◊〉 grant an Annuity for him and his ●…res in all these cases the Law chargeth the Heire after the death of the Ancestor with this Obligation Covenant Annuity Warranty yet with these three cautions that the party must by speciall name bind himself and his Heires for if the party in the bond Covenant Annuity or Warranty doth not bind himself as well as his Heires in such case the Heire shall never be bound 2. Some Action must be brought against the Heire whilest the Land or other Inheritance resteth in him unalienated away For if the Ancestor dye and the Heire before an Action be brought against him upon those Bonds Covenants or Warranties do alien away the Land then the Heire is cleaned discharged of the burthen 3. No Heire is further to be charged then the value of the Land descendeth to him from that Ancestor that made the charge and that not to be sold outright but to be kept in extent and at a yearly value untill the Debt or damage be run out Neverthelesse if an Heire that is sued upon such a Debt of his Ancestor doth not deale clearly with the Court when he is sued that is if he come not immediatly by way of confession and set down the true quantity of his Inheritance discended and so submit himself as the Law requireth then that Heire shall be charged of his owne other Lands Goods and money for this Deed of his Ancestor As if a man bind himself and his Heirs in an Obligation of a hundred pounds and dieth leaving but ten acres of Lands to his Heire if his Heire be sued upon the Bond and cometh in and denieth that he hath any by discent and it is found against him by verdict that he hath ten acres this Heire shall be now charged by his false plea of his owne Lands Goods and body to pay the hundred pounds though the Land be not worth ten pounds All words which do prove by specialty Words onely which do shew a man to be a Debtor to another is a good Obligation without binding the Executor that the maker of the Writing is a Debtor to another that is a sufficient Obligation and though the Executor or Administrator are not expressed yet the Law will charge them because they represent the Estate of the Testator but the Heire shall never be charged without expresse mention of the Heire Dyer fol 2 3. Acquittance for one Rent is a discharge of all former Rents Those cannot be heirs If a Rent be behind for twenty years and the Lord make an Acquittance for the last that is due all the rest are presumed to be paid and the Law will admit no proofe against this presumption Cokes Littleton fol. 373. A Bastard can be no Heire nor have any unlesse it be his owne Child A man attainted of Treason or Felony can be no Heire nor have an Heir though it be his
carry them to the market or faire and there selleth them this sale doth bar me of the property of my goods saving that if it be a horse he must bee ridden two hours in the Market or Faire between ten and five of the Clock and Tolled for in the Tolle-Booke and the seller must bring one to avouch this Sale known to the Tolle-book-keeper or else the Sale bindeth not and for any other goods where the Sale in a Market or Faire shall bar the owner not being the seller of his property it must be sale in a Market or Faire where usually things of that nature are sold As if a man steale a horse and sell him in Smithfield the true owner is not barred by this Sale but if hee sell the Horse in Cheap-side New-gate or Westminster Market the true owner is not barred by this Sale because these Markets are usuall for Flesh Fish c. not for horses So as where by Custome of London every shop there is a Market all the dayes of the week saving Sun-daies and Holly-daies yet if a peice of Plate or a Jewell that is lost or a chaine of Gold or Pearle that is stollen or borrowed be sold in a Draper or Scrivenors Shop or any other but a Gold-smith the sale barreth not the true owner sic in similibus The owner may seise his goods after they are stollen wheresoever hee findeth them except they were sold in a Faire or Market and that bona fide without fraud But if the Thiefe bee condemned of the Felony or out-lawed for the same or out-lawed in any personall Action or have counted a forfeiture of goods to the Crowne then the true owner is without remedie and yet if after the goods were stolen the true owner maketh fresh pursuite after the thiefe taketh the goods with the theef hee may take them againe and if he make no fresh persuit yet if hee prosecute the Felon so far as Justice requireth as to have him arraigned indited and found guilty though he be not hanged nor have judgement of death in all these cases he shall have the goods againe by a writ of a restitution to the party in whose hands they are No Sale on a Sunday or Holiday shall be said a sale in Market Overt to alter the property Waive A Theife having stollen goods being pursued flyeth away and leaveth the goods this leaving is called a waving and the property is to the King or to the Lord of the Mannour where it was wayved But if the Felon be Indited Adjudged found guilty or unlawed at the suite of the owner of these goods he shall have restitution of them as before Stray Property in live Chattel is thus gotten when they come into other mens grounds then the party or Lord into whose grounds or Mannours they come causeth them to be seised and with a Withe put about their necks and to be cryed in three Markets adjoyning shewing the Markes of the Cattel which done if the true owner claime them not within a yeare and a day then the property of them is in the Lord and if the stray remaine with the Lord eight or ten Months and then strayeth away to another Lordship and is seised by a second Lord the first Lord hath no remedy to have it againe Wrecke Where a man Dog or Cat escape alive out of Ships it shall be no wreck but the things shall bee prized by the Sheriffe or Coroner and delivered to those of the Towne where they be found to answer them So as if any within the yeare and day prove that the goods bee his they shall be restored to him Westminster cap. 4. Treasure hid in the earth not upon the earth nor in the Sea and Coyne though not hidden being found Treasure Trove is the Kings Stanford 410. 10 Eliz. Plowden fo 322. If a man be out-lawed Indited of Felonie or Treason Forfeitures or confesse it or be found guilty of it or refuse to be tryed by Peeres or Jury or be attainted by Jury or fly for Felony though hee be not guilty or suffer the Exigent to bee awarded against him although hee be not outlawed or go over the Seas without License all the goods he had at the judgement hee forfeiteth to the Crowne except some Lord by Charter can claime them for in those cases prescription will not serve except it bee so ancient that it hath had allowance before the Justices in Eire in their circuites Execution sued in personall Actions or in the Kings Bench in ancient time Recoveries in personall Actions are of two sorts either to have execution of the profits of the land and Chattels or a capias ad satisfaciendum In those of the first sort execution shall be of any land which the party had the day of the judgement given but for Chattels though it be Leases for yeares only those which he had the day of the execution sued So as if he sell his goods bona fide after judgment before execution sued forth those goods are not liable to the Execution Or if a Writ of Execution be sued forth and never returned and after the Defendant Alien his goods and the Plantiffe purchase another Writ which is returned yet the Execution shall not be of these goods for Writs which never are returned are not of record nor of any force at all but an alienation made after the teste of that second Writ had been nothing worth Old Na. Br. 165. 42. E. 3. 11. 2. H. 4. 141. Executors with all things incident to that Office Executors BY Executor-ship goods are gotten when a man is possessed of goods maketh his last Will and Testament in writing or by word and maketh one or more Executors thereof these Executors have by the Will and death of the parties all the property of their goods Chattels Leases for yeares Wardships and extents and all right concerning those things Those Executors may meddle with the goods and dispose them before they prove the Will but they cannot bring an Action for any debt or duty before they have proved the Will The proving of the Will is thus they are to exhibit the Will into the Bishops Court and then they are to be sworne and the Bishops Officers are to keep the Will Originall and certifie the Copy thereof in Parchment under the Bishops scale of Office which Parchment so sealed is called the Will proved Administration and Executors By letters of Administration property in goods is thus gotten when a man possest of goods dieth without any Will there such things as the Executors should have had if he had made a Will were by ancient law to have come to the Bishop of the Diocesse to dispose for the good of his soule that died he first paying his funerall and debts and giving the rest ad pios usus This is now altered by the Statute Law so as the Bishops are to grant Letters of