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A29656 Some new cases of the years and time of King Hen. 8. Edw. 6. and Qu: Mary; written out of the great abridgement, composed by Sir Robert Brook, Knight, &c. There dispersed in the titles, but here collected under years. And now translated into English by John March of Grays-Inn, Barrister. All which said cases are hy [sic]the translator methodised, and reduced alphabetically under their proper heads and titles. With an exact table of the principall matter contained therein.; Graunde abridgement. Selections. French (Law French) Brooke, Robert, Sir, d. 1558.; March, John, 1612-1657.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538. 1651 (1651) Wing B4898; ESTC R213260 142,103 327

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Difference betwixt Riot Rout and Assembly ib Sanctuory See Tit Corone saving default See Tit. Judgement Scire fac ias Second deliverance See Tit. Retorn de aeverse Seisin 262 Seisin by the hands of an intrudor ib Livery ib Distress suspended not Seigniory 262 Seisin of the King loses not the arrerages ib Several precipe Debt and de●inue in the same Writ ib Several tenancy 263 Uncertain demand in an assise Statute Merchant Part of the land extended in the name of all no reextent ib proces in another County upon a nihil returned upon a testatum est ib Deiberate ib Surrender ib When a man may hold the land beyond his term upon a Statute 264 Judgement ib Reversion not extendable ib Diversity betwixt a purchase after the Statute and before execution and where t is purchased after execut ' had 265 Execution by Executors in the name of the Conusee who is dead ib Execution for the Executors of the Conusee 267 Conusor returned dead ib Retorn of extendi facias liberate ib Supercedias 268 Attaint ib Sureties Death of the King id Surrender 268 Surrender extra terram ib Trespas ib The King cannot record a surrender ib Surrender by the first termor ib Termor makes the Lessor his Executor 279 He in remainder surrenders where there is a Lease for years in possession ib Suitor Two suitor onel Coyurt Baron ib Taile 270 Single voucher and double voucher diversitie ib Where the assets aliend shall be a bar in a Formedon where not 271 Two sons by divers venters ib Collateral warranty by release ib Quere ib Taile extinct ib Surrender ib Tenant at will 272 Tenant by sufferance and at will ib Disseisor ib Tennant by Copy ib Formedon in discender by a copy-holder ib Intendment ib Where Tenant at will or a termor of a Mannor may grant copy-hold for life 273 Demise rendring the ancient rent or more ib Tenant by sufferance See Tit. Tenant at will ib Tender ib What shall be the attendance in a condition ib Diversity 274 Condition of reentry for non payments ib At what time the lessee ought to make tender ib Tender upon the land ●e contra ib Tenures 275 Tenant makes a Feoffment of a moyety this is not pro praticula The like matter in the Cheq 5. H. 6. Ro. 4. ex parte ib Remember Thesaurarij 276 Tenure in capite ib Et de honore diversity ib Ouster I' main ib Socage in capite ib Diversity ib To hold by suite of court ib Court Mannor 277 Testament 277 Where a man shall have for life and where see simplely devise ib Payment by the Heir Executor or Assignee ib Quere ib Will of 3 Mannor by the stat 32. H. 8. 278 Testament cannot be without Execut. ib Where a legacy or devises shall be good though the devisor names no Executors ib Feoffment of all after the Stat. of 32 H. 8. ib Ward 279 Primer Seisin ib Explanation of Wills by Stat. 34 and 35 H. 8. ib. Testmoignes Witnesses 279 Age of Witnesses in Etate proband ib Titles 280 See Tit. Pleadings ib Travers of Office 280 Title made upon traverse tendered ib Traverse dying seized found by Office ib Termor cannot traverse 281. Monstrance de droit ib Traverse against the King ib Where the King shall have Prerogative where not ib. Non-suit in Traverse and Petition diversity ib. Judgement in Traverse ib. Travers by c. 282 Action upon the Case for making of false clothes ib. Seisin in Fee Traversed in Assize ib. The King shall waive his issues contra of an Informer ib. Without that that he had any thing 283 The mean conveyance in the Title shall not be traversed where the Plaintiff in his Title binds the Defendant ib. Remitter ib. Seisin in Fee traversed 284 Treason Misprision of Treason ib. Where Tryall shall be per pares 285 Forfeiture for misprision of Treason 286 Compasse or imagine ib. What shall be said Treason ib. Deprive ib. Quaere ib. Fine for misprision of Treason ib. Alien commits Treason 287 Diversity ib. Trespas 287 Quare vi armis of taking in anothers soil ib. Tryall 288 Tryal of a Peer of the Realm arrained upon an Indictment and appeal diversity ib. Tryall in Court Baron by wager of Law ib. Tryall of the Law shall bee by the Justices and of a particular custome per patriam ib. Tryall of a Bishop 289 Variance 289 Quare imped and the Writ and the Deed vary ib. Verdict 289 Verdict at large in a Writ of entry ib. Villeinage 290 Asserts in their hands ib. Diversity ib. Where the King shall have the Villeine of another in Ward or Ideot ib. Quaere ib. Voucher 291 See B. Tit. Voucher ib. Usury 291 Diversity where the day is certain and where incertain to make usury ib. Defeasance ib. Usury and where not 292 Waife 292 Waives his proper goods for Fellony ib. Waste 29● Waste by a Termor who dyes before action brough● ib. Cutting of Beech of 20. 0● under 20. yeers of age shall be Waste 293 Locus vastat waste in hedg-rows ib. Where the Termor may take all the under-wood e● contra ib. Silva cedua 294 Waste for not covering of a new frame and house ib. Waste by the Heir ib. A man shall be named Heir or Executor in the Premises and not in the alias dictus ib. Conclusion to the Writ 295 Abridgment HOlden by the Prothonatories of the Common Bench in Trespass of Battery That of such matters which lie in Conusance of the Justices they may increase dammages after a Verdict upon Issue otherwise of such matter which lies not in their Conusance as Trees cut But yet there they may increase costs 3. Mar. 1. B. Abridgement 36. the end Acceptance Note By Fitzjames and Englefield Justices if Tenant in Dower Leases for years rendring rent and dies the Lease is void and acceptance by the Heir of the Rent will not make the lease good for t was void before otherwise of voidable Leases 22. H. 8. B. Acceptance 14. If Tenant in Taill Leases his land for twenty years rendring rent and dies and the Lessee leases to another for ten yeares and the issue accepts the rent of the second Lessee this is no affirmance of the Lease for there is no privity between the second Lessee and him contrary if he paies it as Bayliff of the first Lessee and B. seems if the first Lessee had Leased over all his Term in parcel of the land let and this Assignee paies the rent to the issue in tail that this affirms the entire Lease for Rent upon a Lease for years is not apportionable 32. H. 8. B. Acceptance 13. Tenant in Tail the Remainder over Leases for years rendering Rent and dies without issue he in the Remainder accepts the rent this shal not binde him because that when the tail is determind all that is comprised within it is determined and so the Lease void and he in the Remainder
other and that A. brought a Formedon of th●● tenements and pleaded certain c. an● recovered by Action tried and the esta●● of the Plaintiff mean betwixt the title 〈◊〉 and his recovery judgeme●● si of such an estate assize c. to wh●● the other said that every of the said 〈◊〉 and N. were Villes by themselves and 〈◊〉 at issue and 't was found that they we●● several Villes and the seisin and disseis●● by which 't was awarded that this tena●● then Plaintiff should recover And because that he hath recovered these sain● Lands against the Plaintiff himself in H. judgement si assise And Shelly Just. held strongly that this recovery of Land in H. is no plea in an assise of Land in N. and therefore the assise ought to be awarded and so it seems to B. 25 H. 8. B. Judgement 66. If A. infeoffs B. upon condition c. to re-enter there if a man impleads B. who vouches A. and so recovers or if A. re-enters upon B. without cause and ●s impleaded and loses there in the one case and the other the condition is determined for the Land is recovered against him who made the condition 26 H. 8. B. Judgement 136. Note by Bromley chief Just. that a Judgement where there is no original is void as in an assise the Plaintiff appears and after makes a retraxit and after the Justices of Assize record an agreement betwixt them in nature of a Fine this is void and coram non Judice and shall not be executed by reason that no Original was pending but was determined before by the retraxit For without Original they have not Commission to hold Plea and then they are not Judges of this cause 2 M. 1. B. Judgement 114. Issues joyns Issues joyned Trespass upon the case quod def assumpsit deliberat quer 4 pannos laneos and he pleads quod assumpsit liberare 4 pannos lineos without that qd assumpsit modo forma and so at issue And 't is found that he assumed to deliver 2 pannos laneos sed non 4 so see that this issue though that it comes in a traverse doth not amount but to the general issue the Pl. recovered dammages for the 2 and was barred and amercied for the rest But otherwise 't is if the issue be If A. and B. infeoffed the tenant in a Precipe quod reddat necne and 't is found that A. infeoffed him but that A. and B. did not infeoff him this is found against the tenant in toto or against him who pleads such Feoffment which is so found 32. H. 8. B. Issues joyns 80 Verdict 90. Informed in the Excheq against A. B. for buying Wools betwixt shearing time and the Assumption such a year of C. D. contra forma Statuti where 't is not cloth nor he did not make thereof cloth nor yarn He sees that he did not buy of C. D. contra formam Statut. propt c. And no issue for 't is not material nor traversable whether he bought of C. D. or of E. F. or of another but whether he bought them contra formam Statut. necne And therefore the Issue shall be that he did not buy modo forma c. 33. H. 8. B. Issues joyns 81. Negativa pregnans 54. Travers per 367. In waste issue was taken if the defendant cut twenty Oaks there if the Jury finde ten and not the rest the Plaintiff shall recover for the ten and shall be amercied for the rest 2 M. 1. B. Issues joyns 80. the middle Issues returns Issues returned See Tit. Intrusion Jurisdiction If the Lord of a Mannor claim the Tythes of such Lands in D. to finde a Chaplain in D. and the Parochians claim them also for the same purpose 't is said for Law that the Lay Court shall have jurisdiction betwixt them and not the Spiritual Court 25 H. 8. B. Jurisdiction 95. 'T was said where a man pleads a plea in Banco ultra mare it shall be condemned at this day because that it cannot be tried in England 36 H. 8. B. Jurisdiction 29. Jurors Trial of a Peer of the Realm arraigned upon an Indictment and appeal diversity See Tit. Trial and Tit. Enquest Where Jurors may take conusance and notice of a thing in another County See Tit. Attaint Jury took a Scroll of the Plaintiff which was not delivered to them in Court and passed for the Plaintiff and because that this matter appeared to the Court by examination therefore the Plaintiff shall not have Judgement 3 M. 1. B. Jurors 8. Leet NOte for Law if a pain be put upon a man in a Leet for to redress a Nusance by a day sub poena 10 l. and after 't is presented that he did it not and shall forfeit the pain this is a good presentment and the pain shall not be otherwise affeered And the Lord shall have an Action of Debt clearly but he cannot distrain and make avowry except by prescription of usage to distrain and make avowry 23 H. 8. B. Leet 37. Note where the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 25. saith Et visus de Fran●hi-plegio tunc fiat ad illum Terminum St. Michaelis sine occasione this is ●●tended the Leet of the Tourne of the Sheriff and not other Leets 25 H. 8. B. Leet 23 the end Leases By Fitz-James ch Just. Englefield●ust ●ust and many others if tenant for life ●ases Land for yeers rendring rent and ●●es the Lease is void and then the rent is ●etermined The same Law of a Parson ●nd though the successor receives the rent ●he Lease is not good against him for ●hen 't is void by the death of the Lessor 〈◊〉 cannot be perfected by no acceptance B. Leases 19. Debt 122. Otherwise 〈◊〉 seems of a Lease for life made by a Par●●● rendring rent and the successor accepts 〈◊〉 rent this affirms the Lease for life 24 〈◊〉 8. B. Leases 19. A man leases for ten yeers and the ne● day leases the same Land to another fo● twenty yeers this is a good Lease for th● last ten yeers of the second Lease 26 H. 8. B. Leases 48. Where a Lease for 300 or 400 yee●● shall be Mortm in See Tit. Mortmain A man leases a house cum pertin ● Land shall pass by these words cum per● Contrary if a man leases a house cu● omnibus terris eidem pertin there 〈◊〉 Lands to this used pass and many Gra●● are de omnibus terris in D. nuper M● nasterii de G. pertin and especially● heavers that it hath pertained de tempor● c. 31 H. 8. B. Leases 55. If a Parson of a Church leases for 〈◊〉 and dies the successor accepts fealty 〈◊〉 shall be bound by this during his 〈◊〉 Contra upon a Lease for yeers made 〈◊〉 him this shall not binde the successor 〈◊〉 acceptance of the rent for 't was void 〈◊〉 the death of the Lessor 32 H. 8. 〈◊〉
there were but one in the Deed then it shall be referred to the one only But in a Devise 't was said by some that the words afore are a Fee-simple Contrary in a Gift and Feoffment for the one shall bee taken by intendment the other not 31 H 8. B Estates 4. A man gives land to a Husband and Wife for terme of their Lives diutius eorum vivent the remainer to the Heirs of their bodies this is a taile executed by reason of the immediate remainer notwithstanding the words of the Statute quod voluntas Donatoris in omnibus observetur by all the Justices 35 H 8. B Estates 78. By opinion in the kings Bench If a man deviseth his Land to W N solvend ten pound to his Executors and dies the Devisee hath a Fee-simple by reason of the payment without words Heredibus or in perpetuum and this shall be intended the intent of the Devisor The same Law if a man sell his Land to W N for twenty pound this shall be intended a sale in Fee-simple without words Heirs for Conscience c. est equum bonum which is a ground in every Law 4 Ed 6. B. Estates 78. Estoppell If a man hath Liberties Rent Common or the like by prescription and after takes a grant thereof of the King by Patent or of another by Deede this determines his prescription by conclusion B Prescription 102. Estoppell 210. for Writing shall determine Contracts and matter in Fait 33 H 8. B Prescrip 102. 'T was agreed that a stranger to a Fine or Recovery shall not pleade it for Estoppell contra If hee claim the same Land under the Fine or Record by those which were parties or claims the same Estate or part of it and that this estate continues for then he is privy in the Per 36 H 8. B Estoppell 216. the end If two joyn-Tenants are which hold of the King in chiefe and the one releases to the other in Fee and after both respit Homage in the Exchequor by this he which released hath gained the moity by conclusion as it shall be where two joyne in suite of livery out of the hands of the King where the one hath nothing by the opinion of some And the same of Partition by two where the one hath nothing 37 H 8. B Estoppell 218 Note that a man which Leases by Deede poll for yeeres or by Parol may avoid this Lease to say That hee had nothing in the Land tempore dimissionis Contrary Upon a Lease by Indenture for this is an Estoppell 38 H 8. B. Estoppell 8. If a man Indicted of Extortion or Trespasse puts himself upon the grace of the King and makes a Fine and after the party sues him for it by Bill or Writ and he pleades Not Guilty hee shall have the Plea and the making the Fine to the King shall not estop him for there the Entry is quod petit se admitti per Finem and doth not confesse it precisely and therefore no Estoppell Yet B seemes to make the Fine by protestation that hee is not guilty and then 't is all cleere Time H 8. Estoppell 82. A man pleads a Pardon of the King in the Exchequer for alienation without License where the Land is not holden of the King in capite This is an Estoppell to him to say after that He doth not hold in capite 7 Ed 6. B Estoppell 222. By Hales and Montague If a man Leases to N his own Land by Deed intended the Indenture is no Estoppell but during the Lease and not after Casus B Estoppell 221. Estranger A is bound to B in a 100. l. and B makes a Defesance to W S That if W S payes 40. l. that the Obligation shall be void This is worth nothing per opinionem because that A that should plead it is a Stranger to the Deed But where two are bound to me and I make a Defesance to one this shall serve the other to plead if he can shew it as in Trespas against two a release to one shall serve the other if he can shew it 34 H 8. B Estranger al fait 21. Estray If a man takes Beasts as an Estray and keeps them three quarters of a yeer and after they stray from him and another happens on them the first Lord which kept them for three quarters cannot take them again because that he had no property in them till hee had kept them a yeer and a day and Proclamation passed in the two next Market Towns and two Market dayes the one in the one Town and the other in the other for the possession of the second Seizor is good against him who hath no property 33 H 8. B Estray 11. Executions Note by Fitz and the Court If a man recover in a Writ of Annuity he shall have a Fierifacias of the Arrearages incurred within the yeer and a Scire fac after as soon as the Annuity is Arrear and never a Writ of Annuity again for 't is executory and the same Law of an Action and Judgement upon composition which is executory de tempore in tempus and the like And in every Scire fac in which he recovers after the first Judgement he shall have execution of the Arrearages within the yeer by Fiere fac for every one is founded upon the Judgement 23 H 8. B Executions 119. Scirefac 213. By the whole Court in the Common-Bench If two are bound in an Obligation conjunctim divisim the Obligee impleads the one and hath execution of his body and after impleads the other and condemns him hee may have execution against him also for the taking of the body is a good execution but 't is no satisfaction and therefore hee may take the other also But if the one satisfie the Plaintiff hee shall not have execution after and therefore this Order That the Plaintiff upon an Obligation shall have but one execution is intended such execution which is a satisfaction and where both are impleaded by one originall by severall Precipes c. 29 H 8. B Execution 132. Scire fac upon recovery of Debt and Damages the Defendant said that once the Plaintiff sued a Capias ad satisfaciend by which the Sheriff had took his body Judgement c. And there 't is said That a Capias ad satisfaciend is not of Record before the retorn of it therefore no Plea Yet B seems the Plea good by the taking of the Body though no Writ bee returned 37 H 8. B Executions 6. Executors 'T was noted by Fitz and others That in an Action of Debt against an Executor 34 H 6. upon an Obligation of his Testators who pleaded not his Deed and found against him the Judgement by the Record was That the Plaintiff should recover of the dead if hee hath any and for that the book at large fol. 24. is reported further in these
●●●nviction without abjuration Other●●e if he will abjure for then he shall 〈◊〉 be burnt the first time but upon re●●se he shall be burnt 2. M. 1. B. ●eresie Homage See Tit. Fealty Ideot BRent of the County of S●●merset who was presen●●ed for an Ideot cou●● write Letters and Acqui●tances and the like an● therefore was adjudge● an Unthrift but no Ideot Time E. Ideot 4. the end Imprisonment 'T was determined in Parliament th● Imprisonment almost in all cases is but retain the offender till he hath made Fine and therefore if he offers his Fi●● he ought to be delivered presently 〈◊〉 the King cannot retain him in prison af●●● the Fine tendered 2 M. 1. B. Imp●●sonment 100 the end Incident Court-Baron is incident to a Man●● and Court of Pipowders to a Fayr a● 't was sed arguendo that therefore Lord of the Mannor or Fayr cannot gr●● over the Court-Baron nor the Court Pipowders or if they grant the M●● ●●or with the Fayr they cannot reserve ●●ch Courts for they are incident c. 9 H. 8. B. Incidents 34. 'T was said that if a Seigniory rests in ●omage Fealty and Rent and a man ●●covers the Rent by this is the Homage ●●covered for a Precipe lies not of it ●ime H. 8. B. Incidents 24. the ●●id Indictments An Indictment of Death ought to com●rehend the day of the stroke and day of 〈◊〉 death and the same Law of Poy●ning so that it may be known if he ●●ed of the same stroke or not 24 H. 8. ● Indictments 41. By Fitz Just. a Justice of Record may 〈◊〉 indicted of taking of money and other ●●ch falsity but not of that which goes in ●●lsifying or defeating of the Record as 〈◊〉 say that he altered the Record from ●respass into Felony and the like which ●●lsifies the Record Casus B. Indict●ent 50. the end Intrusion Tenant in Tayl of Lands holden of 〈◊〉 King aliens without license which found by Office the King shall have 〈◊〉 Issues of the Land à tempore inquisiti●●nis capt and not before B. Alienat●ons 26. in medio But where the t●●nant dies and his● heir enters upon Off●●● found for the King of the dying seised the ancestor there the heir shall answ●● the profits taken by him before 26 H. B. Intrusion 18. the end Note where 't is found by Office th● I. N. tenant of the King was seized a● died seized and that W. his heir intrude● and after by Act of Parliament the Ki●● pardons all Intrusions in this case the e●try and the offence is pardoned but not 〈◊〉 issues and profits for the escheat or sh●● be charged of this by way of accou●● whether he hath received them or not 〈◊〉 when the office is of Record he ought receive them except where 't is found the Office that such a man took the pro●● thereof But where the King pardo● where no Office is found the heir is ●●●charged as well of the issues and prof●● and also of Livery as of Intrusion by r●●son of the pardon for by this is p●●doned And there though the Office comes after which findes the intrusion of the heir yet all is gone by the Pardon and this shall serve because all was pardoned before to which the King was intitled of Record 33 H. 8. B. Charters de pardon 71. Intrusion 21. Issues returns 22. Office shall have relation to the death of the ancestor as to Land descended to the heir of the Kings tenant and as to intrusion B. Relation 18. the end Otherwise as to alienation made by the Kings tenant without License this shall not relate before the finding of it B. Relation 18. Intrusion 19. And such entry by purchase is not called Intrusion but a Trespass and so are the words of the pardon thereof quod pardonamus transgression ' praedict c. 33. H. 8. B. Intrusion 19. Joyntenants If a Lease be made to three of Land at Common Law for term of life or for yeers habendum successivè yet this is a ●oynt estate and they shall hold in Joynture and successivè is void But where the custom of Copie-holds is that this word successive shall hold place this is good there by the custom 30 H. 8. B. Joyntenants 53. Leases 54. If a man inf●offs two upon condition that they shall infeoff W. N. before Michael ' and the one dies the other sole makes the Feoffment this is good The same Law if two lease Land rendring rent and that if it bearrear by two months and lawfully demanded by the said Lessors that they may re-enter the one dies and the other that survives demands it and 't is not paid he may re-enter And the same Law if the Lease were made to two with words that if it be arrear and demanded of them two c. and the one dies and the Lessor demanded it of the other that survived and he doth not pay this is a good demand and the Lessor may re-enter 33 H. 8. B. Joyntenants 62. Journeys accounts Grantee of a next presentation brings a Q. impedit and dies after the six months past and his Executors bring another Q. impedit by Journeys accounts and by the Justices it will not lie See Tit. Q. impedit Judgement A man recovers by default against an ●●fants and the Infant brings a Writ of ●●rour and reverses it for his non-age ●therwise if he had appeared and lost 〈◊〉 plea or by voucher he shall not re●●rse it for non-age B. 6 H. 8. Saver de fault 50. If I have Title by Formedon or cui vita and enter and the other recovers ●gainst me I am remitted to my first acti●● But if a man recovers against me by ●●lse Title by Action tried where I was by good Title I shall then have Error 〈◊〉 Attaint or a Writ of Right 23 H. 8. ● Judgement 111. Assise in Com. B. the tenant pleads in ●●ar a recovery by Assise by him against 〈◊〉 Plaintiff of the same Tenements in ●om O. and this now Plaintiff then ●●nant pleaded in Bar by release of the ●ncestor of the Plaintiff with Warran●● which was void by non-age and ●his found for the Plaintiff by which he ●ecovered against this Plaintiff judgement si where he accepts the Land to be in the Country of O. now he shall be received to say that it lies in the County 〈◊〉 B. And 't was said in the Common Bench● that though this Land were then put 〈◊〉 vJew the Plaintiff shall not be bound 〈◊〉 the recovery for it cannot be intended one and the same Land 25 H. 8. ● Judgement 62. Assize of Land in N. the Defendan●● said that once before he brought an assiz● of the same Land in H. against the sam● Plaintiff and these Lands put in vJew and this now Plaintiff then took the ●●nancie and pleaded in Bar and said th● H. and N. are one and the same Ville an known by the one name and the
and such Lease is Mortmain by the words of the Statute de religiosis 7 E 1● S. colore termini for the said Statute is quod nullus emeret vel sub colore donationis aut termini aut ratione alterius tituli ab aliquo reciperi aut arte vel ingenio sibi appropriare presumat c. And the same Law o● a Lease for 400 years or the like Contrary if a man leases for a 100 years or the like and covenants that he or his heirs at the end of a 100 years will make another Lease for another 100 years and so further this is not Mortmain for t is but one Lease for a 100 years and the rest is but a Covenant but in the first case for that is for 300 years at first in effect and all by one and the same Deed B. Mortmain 30. Leases 49. And 99 years is not Mortmain And also a Lease for a 100 years is not Mortmain by B. for t is a usual term 29. H. 8. B. Mortmain 30. By Br. if an alienation in Mortmain be and the alienee is disseised and the disseisor dies seised his heir is in by discent yet the Lord may enter within the year for he hath but onely a Title of Entry and cannot have an Action But otherwise of him who hath right of Entry and may have an Action 1. E. 6. B. Mortmain 6. the end Negativa preignans see Tit. Issues joyns Non-ability VVHere and in what Case a●● Alien is disabled from bringing of an Action what not See Tit Alien Non est factum Note that in Debt upon an obligation made for Usury and the Defendant pleads this matter he shall conclude and so the obligation is void Judgement si action and shall not conclude non est factum 7. E. 6. B. Non es● factum 14. the end Nonsuit Note that the King cannot be non-suited Yet B. seems that he who tam pro Domino rege quam pro seipso sequitur may be nonsuited 25. H. 8. B. Non-suit 68. Note when the parties in an Action have demurred in judgement and have a day over there at that day the Plaintiff may be demanded and may be ●onsuited as well as at a day given after issue joyned 38. H. 8. B. Nonsuit 67. Nontenure Where a man is barred by a false verdict and brings an attaint against the first Tenant nontenure is no plea for he is privy contrary of a stranger as where the Tenant infeoffs a stranger after 19. H. 8. B. Nontenure 6. In an attaint Non tenure is no plea ●or a privy to the first action contra●or ●or a stranger to the first Action B. Nontenure 16. And t is said that t is ●o plea in an attaint to say that the Plaintiff in the Attaint hath entered ●fter the last continuance 20. H. 8. B. Nontenure 22. Nontenure is no plea in Waste See Tit. Waste Nosme Name What shall be a good name of Purchase See Tit. Discent Note if a Dutchess or other such state marries with a Gentleman or an Esquire she by this shal lose her dignity and name by which she was called before as in the case of the Lady Powes and Dutches of Suffolk the one espoused R. Haward and the other S. the Dutches AdrJan Stokes and therefore Writs were abated in their Cases For by the book of Heralds quando mulier nobilis nupserit ignobili desinit esse nobilis 4. M. 1. B. Brief 546. Nosme 69. Notice The Patron shall take notice of every voidance of an Advowson except resignation and of this the ordinary shall give him notice Lecture Frowick B. Notice 27. Office devant c. Office before c. NOTE by those of the Exchequer where a man is attainted by Parliament and all his Lands to be forfeited and doth not say that they shall be in the King without Office there they are not in seisure of the King without Office for non constat of Record what Lands they are 27. H. 8. B Office devant 17. If the King grant Land for term of life after the Patentee dies yet the King cannot grant it over till the death be found by office this by reason of the Stat. that a grant before office shall be void 29. H. 8. B. Office devant ●6 If an Office finde the death of the Kings Tenant and that his heir is of full age and doth not say when there it shall be intended that he is of full age tempore captionis inquisitionis but that he was within age tempore mortis tenentis and therefore it ought to be expressed certain when he was of full age 29. H. 8. B. Office devant 58. Note that t is an antient course in the Exchequer that if it be found by Office that I S. was seised in Fee and died sed de quo vel de quibus tenementa tenentur ignorant that a Commission shall issue to enquire of it certainly de quo c. and if it be found that of W. N. then the party shall have Ouster l'main of the King But if an Office be found quod tenetur de Rege sed per que servitia ignoratur this is good for the King and it shall be intended to be holden in Capite per servitium Militare for the best shall be taken for the King But now in these cases a Melius in quirendum shall be awarded by the Statute 30. H. 8. B. Office devant 59 Land was given by the King pro erectione Collegii Cardinalis Eborum and the Colledg was not erected and upon office found thereof the King seised Time H. 8. B. Office 4. the end T was agreed by the Justices that the King is not intitled to the land of his ward without office though he hath in it but a Chattell yet it comes ratione tenure which is a seigniory and free hold in the King 5. E. 6. B. Office devant 55. Note that of a Chattell the King is in possession without office And ●contra of land and of free hold except of a term And sometimes he shall be in possession of inheritance without office yet the King shall not have the land of his ward without office though he hath in it but a Chattel for the ward comes by reason of the tenure which is a seigniory and free hold in the King and therefore a difference betwixt this and a lease for years of a man outlawed For if a man hath a term for years or a ward and is outlawed this is in the King without office Lecture B. Office devant 60. Officer Note for Law if a man hath a fee of a Lord and after is made Justice this fee is not void by the Law but after the making of him Justice he is not to take any fee but of the King and the same law of him who hath an office of Steward and after is
claims not by the Lessor 1. E 6. B. Acceptance 19. Bishop Leases Land of his Bishoprick for years rendering Rent and dies the Successour accepts the Rent this shall binde him for the Bishop hath a Fee-simple and may have a Writ of Entry Sine assensu capituli otherwise in case of a Parson or Prebend who can have but a Juris utrum 2. E. 6. B. Acceptance 20. If a man be bound in an obligation to pay ten pound to the Obligee at Paris beyond Sea at a certain day if the Obligor pay at another place and the same day in England and the other accepts it t is good clearly 38. H. 8. B. Conditions 206. Acceptance of Rent by the Lord from the disseisor of the Tenant shall not bar him of his escheat otherwise if he had avowed for it in Court of Record c. See Tit. Escheat Action popular Note By the Statute the party which sues an Action Popular ought to sue it within the year after the offence done and not after and this as well of offences done against the Statute then made as against Statutes after to be made so see that it goes to a Statute after made B. Action Popular 6. Action upon the Case If I have a Mill in B. and another makes another Mill there by which I lose my Toll by going of divers to it yet no Action lies otherwise if the Mill disturb the water from coming to my Mill there I shall have an Action upon my Case 24. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 42. the end In an Action upon the Case where the Plaintiff delivers goods to the Defendant and the Defendant for ten shillings promises to keep them safe and does not to the dammage c. And by Fitzherbert and Shelly Justices Non habuit ex deliberac ' is a good Plea 26. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 103. Note in an Action upon the Case betwixt Awsten Plaintiff and Thomas Lewis Defendant for calling him false and perjured he justifies because that the Plaintiff was perjured in the Star-chamber in such a matter c. and a good Plea by the Court. 28. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 3. more of this in the next Action upon the Case for calling the Plaintiff false perjured man the Defendant justifies that such a day and year in the Starchamber the Plaintiff was perjured and pleaded certain in what c. for which he called him false perjured man as afore as t was lawful for him and a good Plea by the Court in the Common Bench. Wherefore the Plaintiff said of his own wrong without that he swore in manner and form c. 30. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 104. If a man bring debt of 10. l. the Defendant wages his Law and after the Plaintiff brings an Action upon the Case against the same Defendant that he promised to pay the 10. l. c. The Defendant may plead that for the same summ the Plaintiff brought before an Action of Debt in which the Defendant waged his Law Judgement if Action And a good Plea for he was once barred of the same summ And in Action upon the Case that the Defendant promised to pay 10. l. to the Plaintiff which he ought to him for a Horse and a Cow the Defendant may say That he promised to pay 10. l. to the Plaintiff which he did ow● to him for a horse which he bought of him which summ he hath paid to the Plaintiff without that that he promised to pay 10. l. which he did ow● to the Plaintiff for one Horse and one Cow as c. Or without that that he did ow● to the Plaintiff 10. l. for a Horse and a Cow as c. 33. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 105. Action upon the Case for that the Defendant found the Goods of the Plaintiff and delivered them to persons unknown there that he did not deliver them in manner and form is no plea without saying not guilty where the thing rests in doing And if the Action were That whereas the Plaintiff was possessed c. as of his proper goods and the Defendant found them and converted them to his proper use t is no Plea that the Plaintiff was not possessed as of his proper Goods but he shall say not guilty to the misdemeanour and shall give in evidence that they were not the goods of the Plaintiff and yet t is true not guilty against him 33. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 109. In an Action upon the Case that the Goods of the Plaintiff came to the hands of the Defendant and he wasted them the Defendant saies that they came not to his hands c. and a good Plea and gives in evidence that they were not the proper goods of the Plaintiff 34. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 103. the end Action upon the Case was brought in London by A. B. that whereas he was possessed of certain wine and other stuff and shews in certain in such a ship to the value c. and doth not shew the place certain where he was thereof possessed and yet good And alledged that the Defendant such a day year and place in London promised for 10. l. That if the said ship and Goods did not come safe to London and put upon the Land that then he would satisfie to the Plaintiff 100. l. and that after the ship was robbed upon the Trade on the Sea for which he brought the action for not satisfying and the truth was that the bargain was made beyond sea and not in London But in an action upon the Case upon an Assumpsit and the like which is not local the place is not material no more then in debt for he alledged that the said goods in the parish of S. Dunstons in the East London before they were set to land or c. were carried away by persons unknown c. and the action lies well in London though they were perished upon the high sea 34. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 107. 'T was agreed That an Action upon the Case doth not lie against the Executors upon the Assumpsit of the Testator though they have assets 37. H. 8. B. Action upon the Case 4. the end In an Action upon the Case for a thing which lies in Feasans as for burning of Goods or Deeds and the like not guilty is a good plea contrary for non Feasons of a thing which he ought to do as to make or repair a Bridge House Park Pale scouring a Ditch and the like and doth it not there not guilty is no plea. 2. E. 6. B. Action upon the Case III. Action upon the Case for calling the Plaintiff false Justice of Peace vel his similia these words his similia were ordered to be struck out of the book by the Court for the incertainty 4. E. 6. B. Action upon the case 112. Action upon
the arrearages for they are reall and parcell of the rent or annuity But if the Judgment be of arrearages and dammages there he shall have his age B. age 50. And where he recovers in a Writ of annuity or assise as before Or hath avowed for a Rent which is Freehold and recovers the arrearages without costs and damages he shall not have an action of Debt of that but a Scire facias for t is real But where he hath Judgement of it with costs and dammages which go together so that that t is mixt with the personality then lies a Writ of Debt against the Heir of the arrearages and dammages and this B. thinks in default of Execution per curiam 23. H. 8. B. Debt 212. age 50. Note That of the Land of the Duchy of Lancaster and other Lands which the King hath as Duke or the like his age is material and he may have his age as another common person may for he hath them as Duke not as King B. Age 52. 78. As if the King alien Land parcel of his Dutchy of Lancaster within age there he may avoid it for Non-age for the reason aforesaid otherwise of Land which he hath as King for the King cannot be disabled by Non-age as a common person shall B. Prerogative 132. Yet by the Statute of 1. E. 4. which is a private act not printed but inrolled in the Dutchy Chamber by which King H. 6. was attainted of Treason and that all the Lands of the said Dutchy should be forfeited and should be a Dutchy separated and incorporated c. t is annexed to the Crown but by another private act 1. H. 7. t is disannexed and made as in the time of H. 4. 1. E. 6. B. Age. 52. Note t was in a manner granted by all the Justices in the Common Bench That if a Parson Prebend or the like be within age of 21 years and makes a Lease of his Benefice within age that yet this shall binde him for where he is admitted by the Law of holy Church to take it within age so the Common Law inables him to Demise his Benefice within age 4. Mar. 1. B. Age. 80. Alienations If the Tenant of the King alien in Fee without licence and die his Heir within age the King shall not have the Ward because that nothing is discended to him and that the Alienation is good save the Trespass to the King which is but a Fine by Seiser B. Alienations 29. Gard 85. But otherwise if the Alienor were Tenant in Tail and if the Alienation without licence be found by office the King shall have the Issues of the Land from the time of the Inquisition taken and not before B. Alienations 26. in medio But where the Tenant dies and his Heir enters upon an office found for the King of the dying seised of the Ancestor there the heir shall answer the profits taken by him before 26. H. 8. B. Intrusion 18. the end T is said for Law That a fine for alienation is one years value of the land aliened and the same Law of a Fine for intrusion upon the King But the Fine to have licence to alien is but the third part of the yearly value of the land which shall be aliened and for licence to alien in Mortmain the Fine is the value of the Land for three years 31. H. 8. B. Alienations 29. the end If a man obtain licence to alien the Mannor of D. and all his Lands Tenements in D. he cannot alien by Fine for the Fine shall be certain so many acres of Land so many of Meddow so many of Pasture and the like and the alienation ought not to vary from the Licence Yet by B. t is otherwise used with an averment that all is one 32. H. 8. B. Alienations 30. Note if there be two Joynt-tenants who hold of the King in Capite and one releases to the other all his right this is no alienetion nor doth he need Licence or pardon of it for he to whom the Release is made is in by the first feoffor and not by him that Released nor shall he Fine for such release and so t is used in the Chequer that t is no alienation But if three Joynt tenants are and the one Releases to one of the others there he is in of it by him that releases Contra if he had released to all his compagnions and where a man Releases by Fine to the Tenant of the King this is no alienation Otherwise of a Fine Sur Conusans de droit Com ceo c. for this is an estate made by Conclusion 37. H. 8. B. Alienations 31. Tenant of the King in Capite cannot alien for term of life without Licence for it alters the Freehold Time H. 8. B. alienations 22. the end Note That for Burgage Tenure of the King a man may alien without licence well enough 6. E. 6. B. Alienations 36. Note That a Devise by Testament was taken to be an alienation 3. Mar. 1. B. alienations 37. Alien See Tit. Denizen Note by the whole Court in the Kings Bench an alien may bring an action personal and shall be answered without being disabled because he is an alien born otherwise in an action real and the same B. seems in an action mixt and he may have a property and buy and sell. 38. H. 8. B. Denizen 10. Nonability 40. T was said in the Kings Bench That to say that the Plaintiff is an alien born Judgement if he shall be answered is no plea in an action personal otherwise in an action real Yet this hath been in question after this time in the same Court and t was said that an alien born is no plea in Trespass if he doth not say further That the Plaintiff is of allegiance of one such a one enemy to the King for t is no plea in an action personal against an alien that he is of the allegiance of such a Prince which is of amity with the King 1. E. 6. B. Nonability 62. If an alien born purchase the King shall have it but the purchase ought to be found by office and so t was in the case of Alien King and B. seems that an information in the Chequer will not serve in this case Time E. 6. B. Denizen 17. the end T was said in Parliament That if an alien born obtain a Lease for years that the King shall have it for he cannot have Land in this Realm of no estate 4. Mar. 1. B. Denizen 22. Amendment By Fitzherbert and the Court where a Writ of Error was sued to remove a Record out of the Common Bench into the Kings Bench betwixt an Abbot and I. N. the Warrant of Attorney varied in the Roll in the name of the Abbot and t was amended after Judgement and if they had not amended it they said that those of the
of the Countrey by Cerciorari to the Chancery and may be sent to the Justices of the Kings Bench by Mittimus and then they shall proceed upon it 36. H. 8. B. Certiorari 20. the end Certificate of the Bishop 'T was holden that if the Bishop certifies that such a person paid not his Tenths according to the form of the Statute which wills That ipso facto the Benefice shall be void that in this case a man shall not have an averment contrary to the certificate Time H. 8. B. Certificate devesque 31. the end Challenge Note by the Exchequer and both Benches where the parties are at issue in a plea of land where the land lies in three or four hundreds there if the Juror hath land in any of the hundreds or dwells in any of the hundreds it suffices 4. M. 1. b. Challenge 216. In Treason t is a good challenge to witnesses to say that he was one of his accusers b. Corone 219. And note that by the Statute of 33. H. 8. a peremptory challenge is ousted in case of high Treason yet by the said Statute Queen Mary t is enacted That all tryals of Treason shall be according to the order of the Common Law and not otherwise And therefore it seems that he may have a challenge peremptory as at Common Law S. 35. Jurors 4. M. 1. B. Challenge 217. Trials 151. the end Where a Grant of the Bishop or charge by him with the assent of the Dean and Chapter shall binde the successor and where not See Tit. Confirmation Charters of Pardon Note if a man be attained of murther or Felony by Outlawry or otherwise and the King pardons him all Felonies Murthers and Executions eorundem and Outlawries and Waivings and Sectam pacis And a pardon and release of all Forfeitures of Lands and Tenements and of Goods and Chattels shall serve but for the life and for the land if no Office be thereof found But it shall not serve for the goods without restitution or gift For the King is intitled to them by the Outlawry without Office but the King is not intituled to the Land till Office found And if an Office be found after yet the pardon shall serve for it shall have relation to the judgement then the mean pardon serves well contrary where an Office is found before the pardon granted for then the King is seised by the Office and there a release or pardon cannot give it but there ought to be a Gift or Grant 29. H. 8. B. Charters of Pardon 52. Note if alienation without licence be pardoned by Act of Parliament the party may enter without Ouster l'main or amoveas manum Otherwise by another pardon by letters Pattents 29. H. 8. B. Charters of Pardon 53. If intrusion by the heir post mortem antecessoris be found by Office and after the King pardons it by act of Parliament or by letters Pattents yet the heir shall sue Livery for this is not restored to him by a pardon but if the pardon were granted before Office found and at the making of the pardon the heir is of full age he shall retain the land and the Office found after the pardon shall not hurt him 30. H. 8. B. Charters of Pardon 54. Chattels If Lessee for years devise his Term or other his Chattel or Goods by Testament to one for term of his life the Remainder over to another and dies and the Devisee enters and aliens not the Term nor gives or sels the Chattel and dies there he in Remainder shall have it but if the first Devisee had aliened given or sold it there he in the Remainder had been without remedie for it B. Chattels 23. Done 57. And so B. seems if they be forfeit in his life he in remainder hath no remedy 33. H. 8. B Done 57. the end Choice in Action Thing in Action Note where the Statute of 31. H. 8. gives to the King the possessions of Abbies and all rights of Entries Actions Conditions and the like which the Abbies might have had and that he shall be in possession without office and that he shall be adjudged in actual and real possession of them in such plight and sort as they were at the time of making of the Statute Yet if an Abbot were disseised of 4 acres of land the King cannot grant it over before entry made by him in it because t is a thing in action real and not like to a thing in action personal or mixt as debt ward and the like by some And some è contra by reason of these words That the King shall be in possession Yet by B. this seems that he shall be in such possession as the Abbot was S. of a thing of which the Abbot had possession the King hath of this actual possession of such of which the Abbot had but a cause of entry or right in action of these the King shall be vested of a Title of entry and Title of action But the thing to which he hath such cause of entry or of action is not for this in him in possession and therefore cannot pass from the King by general words but B. seems if the King recites the diseisen and how the right and action thereof is given to him by the Statute and grants it specially that t is good 33. H. 8. B. Choice in Action 14. 'T was said for Law That the King may grant a thing in action which is personal as debt and dammages and the like or a thing mixt as the ward of body but not a thing real as an action of land and the like as Rights Entries Actions and the like which Abbots might have And that the King shall have these by the Statute of dissolution of Abbies 31. H. 8. These things in action the King cannot grant Yet by B. see if there be not words in this Statute to put the King in possession though the Abbot were put to his action 33. H. 8. B. Pattents 98. Clergy No man shall have his Clergy but where his life is in jeopardie and therefore not in petty larceny And the Bishop is Ordinary all Priests Abbots and others inferior to him which demand Clergy or have Clergy and if the Bishop hath his Clergy the Metropolitan shall keep him as his Ordinary and if the Metropolitan offend and hath his Clergy the King shall have him and keep him the same is of Laps Reading B. Clergy 19. Corone 183. Note That at this day Bigamus shall have his Clergy by the Statute but a man attainted of Heresie shall not otherwise of a man excommunicated and a Jew nor Turk shall not have their Clergy and a Greek and Roman who use not our letters shall have their Clergy and shall stay till a book of letters of their countrey comes B. Clergie 20. And if a man who is captus oculis prayes his Clergy he shall have it if he
plena curia Contrary if he doth it out of Court without such authority Yet the high Steward may demise customary land by copy out of Court by some Quaere thereof by B. if he hath not a special authority from the Lord to demise 2. E. 6. B. Court baron 22. Tenant by copie 26. Customs Information in the Exchequer against a Merchant for lading Wine in a strange Ship the Defendant pleads the licence of the King made to I. S. to do it which I. S. had granted his authority thereof to the Defendant quod habetur consuetudo inter mercatores per totam Angliam that one may assigne such a licence over to another and that the assignee shall enjoy it c. to which t was demurred in law and t was agreed for law That a man cannot prescribe a custom per totam Angliam for if it be per totam Angliam this is the Common law and not a Custom contrary if the custom had been pleaded to be in such a City or County as Gavelkinde Borrow-English Glocest. Fee and the like 35. H. 8. B. Customes 59. Dammages NOte in Trespass local That upon an inquest of Office to enquire of Dammages the Court may abridge or increase them But otherwise upon the Principall S. upon issue tryed betwixt party and party but there it may encrease costs For the party is at his attaint but upon an inquest of Office he cannot have an attaint 34. H. 8. B. dammages 144. See Tit. costs Default If a woman be received in default of her Husband and after shee makes default judgement shall be given upon default of the husband and no mention shall be made of the receit Time H. 8. B. default 85. Demurrer Inquisition found that I. S. held certain land of the King ut de honor suo Gloucester which is not in Capite upon which proces issued against W. S. who had intruded c. and to sue Livery and because that this Tenure is not in capite and therefore Livery not due the party demurred upon the record for t is no cause of Livery And where a man declares upon a Statute and recites it otherwise then t is or pleads it otherwise then t is the other may demur upon it for no such Law if it be misrecited 32. H. 8. B. Demurrer in Law 25. Denizen See Tit. Alien Note for Law That where an Alien born comes into England and brings his son with who was born beyond Sea and is an Alien as his Father is there the King by his Letters pattents cannot make the son Heir to his Father nor to any other for he cannot alter his law by his letters Pattents nor otherwise but by Parliament for he cannot disinherit the right heir nor disappoint the Lord of his escheat and the son of an Alien which son is born in England he is English and not an Alien 36. H. 8. B. Denizen 9. Deputie T is said that a Deputation of an Office which lies in grant ought to be by Deed and not by word 28. H. 8. B. Deputy 17. Detinue By Shelley and others if a man meddle with goods as by trover of them he shall be thereof charged though that he deliver them over before action brought 32. H. 8. B. Detinue de biens 1. The end Debt Where Debt lies and where a Scire facias See Tit. Age. Debt upon Indentures of Covenants where the Defendant had Covenanted to do many things and the Plaintiff the like to do many other things ad quas quidem conventiones per implendam uterque obligatur alteri in one hundred pound and the one breaks Covenant by which the other brings Debt and the Defendant pleads payment of ten pound to D. which was all to which he was bound judgement if action and no plea per curiam because he did not shew thereof a Deed where the Plaintiff declared upon the Indenture which is a Deed And yet otherwise in pleading of payment of Rent reserved upon a Lease for years made by Indentures For there he may levy it by distress and therefore an averment may come in ure But otherwise where all rises by specialty where it lies in payment 25. H. 8. B. Debt 173. Debt upon an obligation with Condition where the condition is not broken by which he is barred he shall never sue this obligation again for once barred est pro imperpetuo 29. H. 8. B. Debt 174. Administrator of a Lord brings an action of Debt for relief which fell tempore intestati and the Defendant pleaded in Bar and traversed the Tenure and so at issue And therefore B. seems that the action lies clearly for him for the Defend did not demur so if it be brought by an Executor of the Lord for relief due to the Testitor Rot. 5●9 in the Common Bench. 32. H. 8. B. debt 193. Relief 11. the ends Devise Not that a Fem Covert with assent and will of her husband may make her Testament and devise the goods of her Husband yet if the Husband prohibit the probat of the Testament of the Wife after her death then all is void For the husband may countermand it B. devise 34. the end Testament 21. the end And a Devise by the husband to his Wife is good though they are one and the same person in the Law for the devise takes not effect till after the death of the husband and then they are not one person 24. H. 8. B Devise 34 T was agreed by all that if a man wills that I. S. shall have in his Land in date after the death of his Wife and dies now the wife of the Devisor by these words shall have the Land for her life by reason of the intent of the Will 29. H. 8. B devise 48. Note That in London a man may Devise by Testament to a common person though the Testament be not enrolled but if he Devises in Mortmain he ought to be a Citizen and a Freeman resident and the Testament o●ght to be enrolled at the next Hustings 30. H. 8. B. devise 28. A man Devises to two heredibus eorum and dies and after one of the Devisees dies and the other survives he shall not have the intire by Survivor but onely a moytie for this was the intent of the Devisor by Audley Chancellor of England B. devise 29. and by B. there the end If one devise to another in feodo simplic● the devisee hath a Fee simple 30. H. 8. A man wills that his land Devisable shall be sold by his Executors and makes four Executors and dies all the Executors ought to sell for the trust is put joyntly in them Quaere for B. seems That if one or two die that the three or two which survive may sell for there is the plural number Executors and death is the act of God B. Devise 31. and by him where
barre the demandant by which the demandant recovers and the tenant over in value that this land recovered in value shall not go to me in reversion after the death of the tenant for life nor the reversion of the land recovered in value shall not be in me in the life of tenant for life and so 't is holden at this day 25. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 33. Note by some where a writ of entry in the Post is brought against a husband and wife where the wifis tenant in taile and they vouch overe and so the demandant recovers against the husband and wife and they over in value if the wife tenant in taile dyes and the husband survives this shall not bind the issue in taile for the recompence shall go to the survivor and then it shall not bind the issue in taile Yet B. seems that this opinion is not law for the recompence shall go as the first land which was recovered should go And voucher by husband and wife shall be intended for the interest of the wife 25. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 27. the end Tenant for life the remainder over or tenant in taile the remainder over is impleaded by a writ of entry in the Post and he vouches a stranger the demandant recovers against the tenant and the tenant over in value this shall bind him in remainder by Monntague Just. and others for the recompence shall go to him in remainder But yet in the case of the Lord Zouch and Stowell in the Chancery the law was determined otherwise by all the Justices B. seems the reason because that when he vouches a stranger the recompence shall not go to him in remainder contrary if he vouches the donor or his heir who is privy But after this day many put in●ure to bind the remainder 27. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 28. Recovery against Feoffees seised to use in tailes See Tit Feoffements to uses 'T is held that where tenant for life is the remainder over in tail or for life and the tenant for life is impleaded and vouches him in remainder who vouches over one who hath title of Formedon and so the recovery passes by voucher there the issue of him who hath title of Formedon may bring his Formedon and recover against the tenant for life for the recompence supposed shall not go to the tenant for life and therefore he may recover for his ancestor warranted but the remainder and not the estate for terme of life and therefore the tenant for life cannot bind him by the recovery for he did not warrant to him And therefore in such case the sure way is to make the tenant for life to pray in aide of him in remainder and they to joyn and vouch him who hath title of Formedon and so to passe the recovery for there the recompence shall go to both 30. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 30. 'T was agreed that if tenant in taile the reversion to the King suffers a recovery this shall bind him and his issue but not the King by the common law See now the Statute of thereof that it shall not bind the issue 33. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 31. Taile 41. the end Relation Where an office found for the King shall relate where not See Tit. Intrusion Of the Relation of an Act of Parliament See Tit. Parliament Note that the attainder of Treason by Act of Parliament shall not have elder relation then to the first day of the Parliament except it be by speciall words that he shall forfeit his lands that he had such a day and after 35. H. 8. B. Relation 43. 'T is held for good Law that by attainder of felony by verdict a man shall forfeit all his lands that he had the day of his felony done or ever after for this shall have relation to the Act contra upon an attainder by out lawry For B. seems there that he shall not forfeit but those which he had the time of the outlawry pronounced or after for outlawry hath not relation as a verdict hath Time H. 8. B. Relation 42. the end Relation of an Inrolment See Tit. Faitz inrol Releases Husband and wife purchase in fee and after they lease for years by Indenture and after the husband releases to the lessee and his heirs this is no discontinuance and yet this gives a freehold to the lessee during the life of the husband Per plures without doubt 29. H. 8. B. Releases 81. G. Chancery was possessed of an Indenture and lost it and I. S. found it to whom the said G. C. released all actions and demands and after the said I. S. gave the same Indentrue to John Tison and after the said G. C. brought in action of detinue against the said I. T. who pleaded that the said I. S. found the Indenture and that the said G. C. released to the said I. S. all actions and demandes and after the said I. S. gave the said Indenture to the said I. T. Judgment if action And t' was agreed in the common Bench the case being of land demanded ibidem that this is a good barre and that the release of all demandes shall exclude the party of seisure of the thing and of his entry into the land and of the property of the chattell which he had before And it was moved in the Kings bench and they were of the same opinion and said that the reason is because that entry in land and seisure of goods are demandes in Law 34. H. 8. B. Releases 90. Relief See Tit. Debt Remainder See Tit. Discent Remitter No Remitter against an Act of Parliament See Tit. Parliament Note a Per curiam if Tenant in Taile makes a Feoffement to his use in Fee before the statute of uses made 27. H. 8. and dyes before the said Stat●te his heir within age and after the Statute is made before the full age of the heir by which the heir is in possession by the Statute he shall not be remitted by it Contrary of a discent after the Satute for this shall be a remitter 34. H. 8. B. Remitter 49 If a man hath a Tittle of entry and not a right of entry as by escheat mort●maine assent by a woman to a ravisho●● and the like and takes an estate of th● terretenant he shall not be remited for he hath but a Tittle And a ma● cannot be remitted but in respect o● a right before as where a man is di●seised and takes an estate of the disseisor he is remitted for he had a right of entry before And the same Law where a man decaies his Tenements or converts Land from tillage into pasture against the Statute and makes an estate for life to his Lord he shall have no other estate for he had but a Title of entry and not a right of entry Quaere for Non adjudicatur 34. H. 8. B.
primer sesin of the third part by vertue of that clause in the Stat Saving to the King Ward Primer sesin Livery and the like by which it appears that the intent of the act is that the King shall have as much as if the Tenant had made a will and had dyed seized yet by all after that the King is served of his duty of it the gift is good to the Donee against the Heir 2 E 6. B Testament 24. Note that 't was adjudged betwixt Vmpton and Hyde that the explanation of the Statute of Wills is not to take effect only from the time of the explanation but the first Stat which is explaned shall be so taken ab initio So that the Wills of Vmpton Gainesford and others which are excepted in the explanation shall be taken good by the Stat of 32 H 8. of Wills which was explaned 4 M 1. B Testament 26. Testmoignes Witnesses The age of Witnesses in an Aetate probanda is 42 years Lecture B Testmoignes 30. the end Titles Note that a man shall make a good title in an Assize to say that I N was seized in Fee to the use of T P which T P infeoffed the Plaintiff who was seized and disseized c. without shewing what person made the Feoffment to the use of T P or how the use commenced 36 H 8. B Titles 61. Travers of Office 'T is said for Law that none can traverse except he makes title to the same land in the premisses or close of his traverse 22 H 8. B Traverse d' Office 48. 'T was found that I S dyed seized by which W S his son comes and saith that the said I S in his life was seized in Fee and infeoffed A B in Fee to the use of the said I S and his Heirs and dyed and after by the Stat of uses 27 H 8. he was seized in possession without that that I S his father dyed seized pro ut c. and a good traverse And a Termor cannot traverse an Office by the Common-Law except it were found in the Office and then he might have a monstrans de droit and ouster L'main the King 29 H 8. B Travers d' Office 50. Where a man shall have a Petition where traverse See Tit Petition Where the King hath no other title but by false Office there the party who can make title may traverse as well against the King as against the party if the King had granted it over but now this is helpt by Stat 33 H 8. B Travers d' office 51. the end Where a Tenure is found of the King ut de Ducat suo Lancastrie which in truth is false yet this need not to be traversed for the King hath this Duchy as Duke not as King and a man shall not be put to traverse but where the Office is found for the King ut pro rege Angliae for then he hath a prerogative and as Duke none 1 E 6. B Travers d' Office 53. Non-suit or relinquishing of a traverse is peremptory contra of Non-suit in a Petition and the Judgement of traverse is no other sed quod manus domini Regis amoneantur et quod possessio restituatur to him that traversed Lecture B Travorse d' Office 54. Travers by c. What thing shall be traversable what not See Tit Issues joynes Action for making false clothes in Bartholomew-Fair contrary to the Stat The other saith that he made them well and truly at D in the County of F without that that he made them in Bartholomew-Fair in L pro ut c. and a good Plea 35 H 8. B Travers by c. 368. If in Assize the Tenant Pleads that his Father was seized in Fee and dyed by Protestation seized 'T is said that the Plaintiff may make title by a stranger without that that the father of the Tenant was seized in Fee c. 38 H 8. B Travers by c. 26. the end Information in the Chequer the Defendant Pleads a Plea and traverses a materiall point in the information upon which they are at issue there the King cannot waive this issue as he may in other cases where the King alone is party without an Informor ut supra by the Kings Attorney and ●thers learned in the Law 38 H 8. B Travers by c. 369. Tender not traversable in a Writ of ●ntrusion maritagio non satisfac for the single value See Tit Forfeiture of marriage Trespas The Defendant said that I N was seized in Fee and leased to him for twenty one years and gave colour the Plaintiff said that his father was seized and dyed seized c. and ●he entred and was seized untill the Trespas absque hoc quod dictus J N aliquid habuit tempore dimissionis and a bad traverse but he shall say without that that I N was seized in Fee modo forma pro ut c. in Communebanco 4 E 6. B Travers per 372. Assize The Tenant makes a barr by a Stranger and gives colour the Plaintiff makes title by the same person by which the Defendant made his barr s that I S was seized and gave in tayl to his father who infeoffed W N who infeoffed the Tenant upon whom A B entred and infeoffed the grandfather of the Plaintiff whose Heir he is in Fee who dyed seized and the Land discended to the Plaintiff so he was in in his Remitter until by the Defendant disseized And in truth A B never entred nor never infeoffed the Grandfather and yet 't was held cleerly that the Tenant in his barr to the title cannot traverse the Feoffment of A B but ought to traverse the dying seized of the grand-father of the Plaintiff which remitted him for this binds the entry of the Tenant and is the most notable thing in the title 4 E 6. B Travers per 154. Trespas The Defendant said that I was seized and infeoffed him and gave colour The Plaintiff may say that H was seized and leased to I at will who gave to the Defendant and R re-entered and infeoffed the Plaintiff he ought to say without that that I was seized in Fee modo forma pro ut c. Time E 6. B Travers per 217. the end Place not traversable See Tit Attaint Treason A Chaplaine had affixed an ancient seale to a Patent of non-residenee made by himselfe of the part of the King and was imprisoned in the Fleet for it And 't was holden misprision and no Treason by the Justices and he escaped and was not put to death for 't was said That because he did not counterfeit the Kings seale but tooke an ancient seale this is not Treason 37 H 8. B Treason 3. the end 5. Note that in January this yeere H Howard Earle of Surrey sonne and Heir apparent of Thomas Duke of Norfolke was attainted of high Treason for joyning the Armes