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A67724 The young lawyer's recreation being a choice collection of several pleasant cases, passages, and customs in the law for the entertainment as well as profit of the reader. Philonomus. 1694 (1694) Wing Y104; ESTC R6327 83,933 224

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first Marry that one shall have Fee they enter Marry neither of them shall have Fee for the Uncertainty 1 Inst 218. a. Where one shall have Judgment to be hanged after he is slain IN an Appeal of Death the Defendant waged Battel and was slain in the Field yet Judgment was given that he should be hanged which the Judges said was altogether necessary for otherwise the Lord could not have a Writ of Escheat 1 Inst 390. b. One Attainted after his Death THE Lord Coke observes that in Eire it has been seen that a Man hath been attainted after his Death by Presentment 1 Inst 390. b. Execution before Judgment UPON Issue joyned and Tryal thereupon a Verdict was found for the Plaintiff and the Postea was delivered to the Clerk of the Judgments to enter the Judgment but through the Clerk's neglect Execution was taken out before it was entred Hereupon the Court was moved to supersede the Execution because there was no Judgment to warrant it Roll said it being but a neglect of the Clerk Judgment might well enough be entred tho' the Execution were issued forth and because the Trial between the Parties is right Stiles 229. Where a Grant to a Monk shall be good AN English Man goes into France and there becomes a Monk yet is he capable of any Grant in England because such Profession is not triable and also because all Profession is taken away by Statute and by our Religion holden as void so adjudged in Ley's Case p. tot cur 2 Roll. 43. Nor will such Profession abroad disable him to bring any Action here because it wants Trial so that of foreign Profession the Common Law takes no knowledge 1 Inst 132. b. The Freehold discontinued and not the Reversion HUSBAND and Wife Lease the Lands of the Wife by Deed for Life reserving a Rent the Husband dies This was a discontinuance at Common Law for Life and yet the Reversion was not discontinued but remained in the Wife Otherwise if the Husband had made the Lease alone 1 Inst 333. a. Reversion Revested yet the Discontinuance remains FEME Tenant for Life the Baron makes a Feoffment and the Lessor enters for the Forfeiture here is the Reversion revested and yet the Discontinuance remains at the Common Law for the Wife was put to her cui in vita and could not enter after her Husband's Death 1 Inst 335. a. Where the Defendant may pray and have Judgment against himself IN Assumpsit to pay several Summs at several days if the Action be brought for default of payment at the first day before any other day of payment is incurred and the Defendant plead Non Assumpsit which is found against him but the Plaintiff will not enter Judgment for fear of being barred to have a new Action upon the same promise if default be in the other payments yet may the Defendant enter Judgment according to the Verdict if he will 2 Roll. 97. Shapeland and Curtis Vide Dyer 194. n. 34. and 2 Roll. 97. That if a Verdict be found for the Defendant and he will not pray Judgment yet Judgment shall be given for him at the prayer of the Plaintiffs because then he may have his Attaint against the Jury Where the Plaintiff shall have Judgment tho' the Issue be found against him IN Replevin the Defendant avowed for a Rent of 20 l. supposing that I. S. was seized in Fee of the place where c. and in 28th of Eliz. granted a Rent of 20 l. per annum and for the Rent arrear an 12 Jac. he avows c. it was found specially upon issue Non concessit that T. S. was seized in Fee and let that Land an 23 Eliz. to I. S. for 21 Years and he so possessed granted that Rent and fi c. upon this Verdict tho' the Issue be found Quod concessit and so for the Avowant yet because it appears that the Estate out of which the Rent is granted was determined a long time before the distress taken so that the Defendant had not any title to avow 't was held That Judgment should be for the Plaintiff tho' the Issue was found against him 2 Cro. 442. Harrison and Metcalf See 2 Cro. 221. 435. 640. Cro. Eliz. 157. Agent and Patient IT is a Rule in Law that Idem non potest esse Agens Patiens and therefore a Man cannot present himself to a Benefice make himself an Officer nor Sue himself and therefore when one having right to Land has the Freehold cast upon him by a latter Title he shall be said in of his ancient Title because there is none against whom he may Sue but himself and he cannot Sue himself Littleton 147. b. So no Man can summon himself and therefore if a Sheriff suffer a common recovery it is Error because he cannot summon himself Dyer 188. a. Owen 51. A Man cannot be both Judge and Party in a Suit and therefore if a Judge of the Common Pleas be made Judge of the King's Bench tho' it be but hâc vice it determines his Patent for the Common Pleas for if he should be Judge of both Benches together he should controul his own Judgment for if the Common Pleas err it shall be reformed in the King 's Bench. See Cro. Car. 600. Littleton Chief Justice of the Common Pleas made Lord Keeper yet continued Chief Justice so Sir Orlando Bridgman was both Lord Keeper and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas at the same time for these places are not inconstent 1 Siderf 338 365. A Bishop cannot hold a Parsonage by Commendam within his own Diocess because he cannot visit himself or be Parson and Ordinary too 1 Siderf 305. If a Fine be levied to a Judge of the Common Pleas he himself cannot take the Connsance for he cannot be his own Judge But if an Action be sued in C. B. against all the Judges there there for necessity they shall be their own Judges 2 Roll. 92 93. But Note in many cases the same Person may be Agent and Patient where the Law cannot do otherwise as a Feme Tenant in socage may endow herself de la pluis beale Lit. Sect. 48. So an Executor may pay himself by Retainer So where one may vouch himself 1 Inst 390. a. So where one limits a Remainder to himself If one of the Chapter being sole seized enfeoffe the Dean and Chapter by that he himself shall take by his own Livery Perk. Fol. 42. See Hob. 138 139. A Mittimus directed to the Bishop of Durham commanding him to send a Record to the Justices of the County Palatine to be tried there is well enough and may be executed by the Bishop tho' he himself be one of the Justices So one may be Judge and Officer diversis respectibus as in a Redisseisin the Sheriff is Judge and Officer Cro. Car. 138. So where a Mayor keeps the Goal Cro. Eliz. 76. Where one Impannelled on a Jury may challenge himself A PEER of
the Realm or Lord of Parliament Scil. Baron Viscount Earl Marquiss and Duke propter honoris respectum are not to be sworn on Juries and if neither Party will challenge him he may challenge himself for 't is provided by Magna Charta Quod nec super cum ibimus nec super eum mittimus nisi per legal● judicium parium suorum aut per legem terrae Co. 6. 52 53. But note If a Peer is to be tried by his Peers he cannot challenge any of ' em 1 Inst 156. b. Where an Infant shall not reverse his Fine IF an Infant being a Feme covert or other Infant levy a Fine by grant and render to her or him in tail or for Life and the Husband die the Wife shall not have a Writ of Error because she is Tenant of the Land and she cannot have a Writ of error against herself so that she is without remedy So in the case of the other Infant per Catlyn Owen 33. Where one shall have a Formedon of Land that was never given 'T IS holden in 42 Edw. III. 53. cited in Mary Pottington's Case Co. 10. 37. b. that in some case a Man shall have a Writ of Formedon of Land that was never given as if Lands in tail are lost and the Tenant in tail recovers other Land in value the Issue in tail shall have a Formedon of the Lands recovered in value and yet those Lands were not given Livery and Seisin over a Wall IF one that is seised in Fee of an Orchard makes a Feoffment of it to I. S. and goes into the Orchard and cuts a Turf or a Twigg and delivers it in the name of Seisin to the Feoffee over a Wall of the same Orchard the Feoffee then being in other Land not mentioned in the Feoffment this is a void Livery 2 Roll. 6. numb 5. Note If it appears that the Feoffor intends to make an actual Livery it shall never amount to a Livery in Law 2 Roll. 7. n. 40. Where a Man shall give and take by his own Livery IF there be Dean and Chapter and one of the Chapter is sole seised of Land in Fee in his own right and thereof enfeoffs the Dean and Chapter by Deed and makes Livery and Seisin according to the Deed here the Feoffor gives and takes by the same Livery Perk. Sect. 205. So of a Mayor and Commonalty c. William the Conqueror 's Charter to Norman Hunter I WILLIAM the Third Year of my Reign Give to thee Norman Hunter To Me that art both Leef and Dear The Hop and the Hopton And all the Bounds up and down Under the Earth to Hell Above the Earth to Heaven From Me and Mine To Thee and Thine As good and as fair As ever they were To witness that this is Sooth I bite the White Wax with my Touth Before Jug Maud and Margerie And my youngest Son Henry For a Bow and a broad Arrow When I come to hunt upon Yarrow Vide Speed 424. b. 2 Roll. 181. Meriton's Anglorum Gesta in Vita W. I. Whether one can take and loose a Fee by the same Livery TENANT in Tail makes a Lease for his own Life the Remainder to the Donor in Fee this gift of the Fee is void because the Donor had it before But if Tenant in Taile make a Lease pur auter vie the Remainder to the Donor this vests a new Fee in him because that by the discontinuance he devested the ancient Fee out of him and gave him a new Fee-Simple by Marvine But Knightly denied this to be Law and that there should not be a new Fee-Simple in the Donor because then he should take a Fee and loose a Fee by the same Livery at an instant which cannot be ideo quaere Dyer 8. a. 9. a. Slander A. THE Attorney of B. brought an Action against C. for saying to B. Your Attorney is a bribing Knave and hath taken Twenty Pound of you to cozen me Judge Warburton held the Words not Actionable for an Attorney cannot take a Bribe of his own Client But Hobart said he might when the reward exceeds measure and the end against Justice as to raze a Record c. and Hob. says after he had spoken Justice Warburton began to stagger in his opinion and so the Plaintiff had Judgment Hob. 8 9. and 1 Roll. 53. Infant AN Infant brought an Action of Trespass by her Guardian the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was above Sixteen Years old and agreed for 6 d. in Hand paid that the Defendant have licence to take two Ounces of her Hair to which the Plaintiff demurred and adjudged for her for an Infant cannot licence tho' she may agree with the Barber to be trimmed 3 Keb. 369. Scroggam against Stewardson Trespass for shaking a Sword at him A WOMAN shook a Sword in a Cutler's Shop against the Plaintiff being on the other side of the Street and in Trespass of Assault and Battery there was a Verdict of the Assault and not guilty of the Battery 'T was prayed to give no more Costs than Damages and so granted which was a Noble 3 Keb. 283. Smith and Newsam Where a Man shall be forced to spend his Money against himself I. S. PRAYED a Prohibition to the Ecclesiastical Court at Salisbury because his Wife Sued him there to be separated propter saevitiam and Sentence was given for him and he enforced to pay all the Costs for his Wife afterwards she appealed and because he would not answer the Appeal against himself and pay for the transmitting of the Record he was excommunicated and now prayed a Prohibition it was thought by the Court a very hard case that he should be obliged to spend his Money against himself but because it was alledged that the Course was so in the Spiritual Court they would advise c. and proceedings stayed in the mean time Cro. Car. 16. Green's Case One Indicted for taking away a young Woman and Marrying her ONE Brown was Indicted on Stat. 3 H. VII cap. 2. for forcibly taking away and marrying the Daughter of one Sommers a City Orphan in the Custody of the Chamberlain Note The Child herself being about Fourteen Years old was held a good Witness to prove the Fact and the evidence was that she was worth 5000 l. that she was menaced by the Defendant in a Vizard and carried away in a Coach to Westminster and the next day with her own consent but caused by the precedent menace she married him but was not defiled having been surprised that day he was found guilty and had judgment to die and was accordingly executed 3 Keb. 193. See the Lady Fullwood's Case Cro. Car. 482 484 488 492. and Halès Pla. Cor. tit Felonies by Stat. that the taking a Woman against her Will and marrying her is Felony by the said Statute But such Maid Widow or Wife must have Lands Tenements or Goods or be Heir Apparent so that the Motive of taking away is Lucre and
at Rovers or at a Bird or hewing a Tree and the Hatchet-head flies off or a School-Master in reasonable manner beating a Scholar or a Father his Son or a Master his Servant and Death ensues it is Chancemedley Dalt 351. 352. Quaere If a Man beat his Wife for Correction only and she die thereof King William Rufus was shot by accident in New Forest by Sir Walter Tyrel And in the Reign of King James I. Arch-Bishop Abbot a Man of a holy and unblameable Life medling with edg'd Tools that he used not to handle in his Study by a sad accident killed a Keeper with a forked Arrow as he was shooting at a Deer where-upon he retired to Guilford in great perplexity but the King granted out a Commission to enquire whether casual Homicide did make the Arch-Bishop irregular and in the disquisition of it he found many Friends that restored him to his Palace Wilson's King James 198. Buggery or Sodomy BUGGERY is a detestable and abominable Sin not to be named amongst Christians committed by carnal Knowledge against the Ordinance of the Creator and Order of Nature by Mankind with Mankind or with brute Beasts or by Woman-kind with brute Beasts 3 Inst 58. Bugeria is an Italian Word and signifies this description and it was complained of in Parliament that the Lombards Italians had brought into the Realm the shameful sin of Sodomy inter Christianos non nominandum as it is said Rot. Parl. 50 E. 3. nu 58. The words of the Indictment be Contra ordinationem Creatoris naturae ordinem rem habuit veneream dictumque puerum carnaliter cognovit c. so as there must be penetratio i. e. res in re either with Mankind or with Beast but the least penetration maketh it Carnal Knowledge See the Indictment of Stafford Coke lib. Intr. for committing Buggery with a Boy for which he was attainted and hanged Emissio Seminis makes it not Buggery but is an Evidence in that case of penetration 3 Inst 59. If the Party Buggered be within the age of discretion it is no Felony in him but in the Agent only ib. Note the Words of Stat 25. H. 8. c. 6. that makes this offence Felony are No Person offending c. which extends as well to a Woman as to a Man and therefore if she commit Buggery with a Beast she is a Person that commits Buggery with a Beast to which end the Word Person was used and the rather for that somewhat before the making of this Act a great Lady had committed Buggery with a Baboon and conceived by it c. ibid. And of late Years one Hick's was Indicted at the old Baily upon this Statute having suffered a Dog to copulate with her which being fully proved and found by the Jury she was condemned and hanged at Tyburn and the Dog on a Tree by 3 Keeble 800. See Hutton's Rep. 115. the Lord Audley's Case He was Indicted that Deum prae oculis non habens nec naturae ordinem respiciens sed instigatione Diabolicâ motus c. Vi Armis in quendam Florence Fitz-Patrick Yeoman insultum fecit cum eodem felonicè contra naturam rem veneream habuit ipsumque F. c. carnalitèr cognovit peccatumque illud Sodomiticum c. cum eodem F. commisit c. The like Indictment for the same offence with the same Person at another time and being tried by his Peers Twelve of the Lords acquitted him and Fifteen found him guilty and so he had Judgment Felony Rape Burglary IF a Woman kill a Man that assaults her to ravish her 't is not Felony because he comes to commit a known Felony himself Hales Pla. cor tit Felonies If a House be broken and enter'd with an Intent to commit a Rape it is Burglary whether the Intent be executed or not Hales tit Burglary For note Rape was Felony at Common Law then by Stat. Westm 1. c. 13. made but Misdemeanor then by 13 E. 1. c. 34. restored to Felony again Rape is a violent deflouring of a Woman or carnal Knowledge had of the Body of a Woman against her Will. If a Woman at the time of the supposed Rape do Conceive with Child by the Ravisher this is no Rape for a Woman cannot Conceive with Child except she doth consent Dalton's Inst cap. 160. pag. 392. One W. D. was Arraigned in Banco Regis upon an Indictment of the Rape of a Girl of the age of Seven Years Scil. Quod ipsam felonicè rapuit carnalitèr cognovit he pleaded Non Culp but was found Guilty upon the Evidence of several Matrons But note the Court doubted of a Rape in so tender a Child but had she been Nine Years old and more then it might be otherwise Dyer 304. pla 51. Post The Law is That a Wife shall not be endowed unless she be past the age of Nine Years at the time of the Death of her Husband and the reason is Quia Junior non potest dotem promereri neque virum Sustinere Co. Lit. Sect. 36. which perhaps was the ground of the Opinion in the former Case One Woman Principal to the Rape of another IF a Man and a Woman be present with purpose that the Man shall by Violence carnally know the Body of another Woman there also present against her Will and the Man doth the fact in the presence of the other Woman she being present shall be a Principal Ravisher as well as the Man He the Agent and She the Co-adjutant And so one Woman may be a Principal to the Ravishment of another Dod. 138. Dalton 392. cap. 160. To Ravish a Harlot Felony IT is a good Plea in an Appeal of Rape to say That before the Ravishment supposed she was his Concubine as Bracton says And yet to ravish an Harlot against her will is Felony for Licet Meretrix fuerit ante certe tunc temporis non fuit cùm nequitiae ejus reclamando consentire noluit Bract. l. 2. Dalton ubi sup Consent to Rape NOTE Tho' if a Woman prove with Child it is no Rape for that she cannot conceive unless she consent as it was observed before yet if a Man Ravish a Woman who consents for fear of Death this is Ravishment against her Will for that Consent ought to be voluntary and free Dalton ubi sup To Ravish a Woman where she neither consents before nor after or to Ravish any Woman with force tho' she do consent after is Felony and the offender has no benefit of Clergy ibid. 13 E. 1. 34. 6. R. 2. c. 6. But if a Woman be under Ten Years then tho' she do consent before yet by Stat. 18. El. cap. 7. it is a Rape Hales tit Felonies by Stat. Cromp. 47. Dalt 393. By the Statute 6 R. 2. c. 6. both the Ravisher and Ravished where she consents after the fact are dissabled to have or challenge any Inheritance Dower or Joint Estate after the death of her Husband or Ancestor
suspension in Judgment of Law grew after the taking of the particular Estate 1 Inst 298. a. in medio A Rent is granted to B. for the Life of A. the Remainder to the Heirs of the Body of A. this is a good Remainder and yet it must vest upon an instant 7 H. 4. 6. immediately upon the Death of A. who is cestuy que vie the Remainder vests in his Heir See Finch's Law 69. Tenants in Common LEASE for Life Remainder to the right Heirs of I. S. and I. D. who are living their Heirs shall take it in common not Jointly for that they cannot take at the same time for by intendment both Fathers will not die together 18 E. 3. 28. Felonious Taking A. SEEING the Horse of B. in his Pasture and having a mind to steal him comes to the Sheriff and pretending the Horse to be his own obtains him to be delivered unto him by a Replevin yet this is a Felonious and Fraudulent taking for the Replevin was obtained in fraudem Legis 3 Inst 108. 1 Siderf 254. Felony to take his own Goods A MAN delivers Goods to another and afterwards the Bailor privately steals them from the Bailee with an intent to charge him c. this is Felony and in judgment of Law he is said in this case to take the Goods of another the Bailee having Jus possessionis or a special property and the Bailor Jus Proprietatis 3 Inst 110. Keilway 70. Ha. Pl. Cor. 67. One Farr a Solicitor had obtain'd Judgment against the casual Ejector upon which he sued an Hab. fac possessionem and the Sheriff's Bayliffs entred the House with him and broke a Door where certain Goods were and took the Woman to whom they belonged and required special Bail of her for default whereof they carried her to Newgate and then Farr took the Goods which were of a great Value For which being Indicted and it appearing he did all this with intention to take the Goods without any colour of Title for his Client he was found guilty of Felony and tho' he was a Solicitor and had been convicted of Forgery before yet he could not read and so he was hanged 1 Sid. 254. Felony to steal a Winding-Sheet ONE William Haines digged up the several Graves of three Men and one Woman in the Night and took their Winding-Sheets from their Bodies and buried them again 'T was resolved The property of the Sheets remained in the owner scil in him or them who had property therein when the dead Body was wrapped therewith viz the Executors Administrators or other owner of 'em vide 11. H. 4. If Apparel be put upon a Boy it is a gift in Law ' cause the Boy hath capacity to take it but a dead Body being but a lump of Earth hath no capacity Also it is no gift to the Person but bestowed on the Body for the reverence towards it to express the hope of Resurrection Besides one cannot relinquish the Property he hath to his Goods unless they are vested in another Note Haines had his Clergy and escaped death Co. 12. 113. and 3 Inst 110. Woman Bailiff A WOMAN may be sued in Account as Bailiff for she may well discharge the Office of a Bailiff 19 H. 6. 5. b. Felo de se yet the killing involuntary A. GIVES B. such a Stroak as he fells him to the Ground B. draws his Knife and holds it up for his own defence A. in haste meaning to fall upon B. to kill him falls upon B's Knife whereby he is wounded to death he is felo de se for B. did nothing but what was lawful in his own defence 3 Inst 54. Ha. Pl. Cor. 28. and Bac. Elem. 4. So if a Gun be discharged with a murtherous intent at I. S. and the Piece break and strike into the Eye of him that dischargeth it and killeth him he is felo de se and yet his intention was not to hurt himself but in criminalibus sufficit generalis malitia intentionis cum facto paris gradus for if one perswade another to kill himself and is present when he doth so he is a Murtherer But Quaerae If A. lay impoisoned Fruit for a Stranger and his Father or Mother come and eat it Whether this be petty Treason because it is not altogether Crimen paris gradus See Bacon's Elem. 59 60. A Non compos mentis wounds himself mortally and dies Compos ONE during the time that he is Non compos mentis gives himself a mortal Wound but dies not thereof till he has recovered his memory he is not Felo de se because the Stroak which caused his death was given when he was not compos mentis Et Actus non facit Reum nisi mens sit Rea. 3 Inst 54. A Man that is Non compos mentis kills another this is no Felony the same for a Lunatick during his Lunacy But Note He that incites a Madman to kill another is a Principal Murderer A Non compos mentis can't commit Treason THE ancient Law was that if a Mad-man had killed or offered to kill the King it was Treason 4 Rep. 124. Nec veniam laeso numine casus habet Ovid. But now by Stat. 25. E. 3. by force of these Words Fait compasser ou imaginer la mort He that is not Compos Mentis and totally deprived of all compassings and imaginations cannot commit High Treason by compassing c. 3 Inst 4. 6. Where Execution was done upon a Man for the death of a Child the Child being then alive IN the County of Warwick there were two Brethren the one having Issue a Daughter and seized of Lands in Fee devised the government of Her and his Lands until she came to Sixteen Years to his Brother and died The Uncle brought up his Neece very well both at her Book and Needle and she was eight or nine Years old Her Uncle for some offence correcting her she was heard to say Oh good Uncle kill me not after which time she could not be heard of tho' much enquiry made Whereupon the Uncle being suspected of her Murder and the rather because her next Heir was upon Examination 8 Jac. Regis committed to Goal for suspicion of Murder and admonished by the Justices of Assize to find out the Child and so bailed him until the next Assizes Against which time for that he could not find her and fearing what would fall out against him took another Child as like unto her both in Person and Years as he could find and apparelled like the true Child and brought her the next Assizes but upon view and examination she was found not to be the true Child and upon these presumptions he was Indicted found Guilty had Judgment and was Hanged But the truth of the case was The Child being beaten over night the next morning when she should go to School ran away into the next County and being well Educated was received and entertained of a Stranger and when
they may be gone before he can take them But you cannot destrain in the Night time for Rent behind 1 Inst 142. a. A Rent is payable at a day he has all the day 'till Night to pay it but if it is a great Summ he must be ready to tell it before Sun set for the other is not bound to tell it in the Night ibid. Livery and Seisin in the Night by an Attorney good Cro. Eliz. 42. said there to be so adjudged Yet an Atturnment which is in lieu of Livery 1 Inst 49 a. cannot be made after Sun-set Stiles Pract. Reg. 47. yet sure 't is less solemn than Livery which must be upon the Land or in view of it whereas an Atturnment is but an Assent which may be given any where ergo Quaere License to sow Land no Lease IN Sir William Essex his Case Hob. Rep. 35. The Lord Hobart says he is clearly of Paston's opinion in 21 H. VI. 37. That if one license me to sow his Land that is no Lease of the Land and therefore if I sow the Land the Owner shall reap it Gift A BORROWED 100 l. of F. and at the day brought it in a Bag and cast it upon the Table before F. and F said to A. being his Nephew I will not have it take it you and carry it home again with you Per Curiam it is a good gift by paroll being cast upon the Table for then it was in the possession of F. and A. might well wage his Law Otherwise if A. had only offered it to F. which had been only a chose in Action not to be given without a Writing Noy 67. Flower 's Case Where one that is no Party to a Record shall have Error to reverse it A FEME covert was Sued as a Feme Sole but by her Husband's Name she appeared and pleaded and Judgment was given against her The Baron and Feme joyn in a Writ of Error The Court said a Stranger to the Record may not have a Writ of Error to reverse it but that is because he may have another remedy to avoid the prejudice But in this case the Baron hath no other remedy for his Wife is taken in Execution and by this means he shall lose her Society and so it was reversed Stiles Rep. 254. 280. Hayward and Williams Where an Attaint may be brought by one that is no Party to the Issue IF two commit a joint Trespass there can be but one Satisfaction and therefore if they be sued in one Action tho' they may sever in Pleas and Issues yet one Jury shall assess damages for all and note as to the damages he that is no Party to the Issue shall have an Attaint as well as his Fellows Hob. 66. Cock and Jennor 2 Cro. 349. accord that if the damages be too great any of the Defendants may have an Attaint tho' he be not the same Party against whom the Verdict was found The reason hereof is given in Sir J. Heydon's Case Co. 11.5 b. that although he be a Stranger to the Issue yet because that by the Law he is privy in charge he shall have an Attaint Vessels go with the Wines as Accessories in a Bequest A BEQUEST of Wines doth convey the Vessels wherein they are to the Legatary not as if a Man in his Liquor should think for no Man else would the Vessels were part of the Wines as Medals of Gold or Silver are part of such Metals but because the Testator's intention in the Eye of the Law seems to bequeath them as Accessories to the Principal excepting such which by reason of the greatness of their Bulk and wide Capacity cannot without much difficulty be removed out of the Cellars where they are Orphan's Legacy 474. 103. A Legacy taken away under a Condition is understood as given under the contrary condition as if a Testator saith A. B. shall not have 100 l. if my Ship which I expect home should chance to perish in the Sea in this Case A. B. shall have 100 l. if that ship shall safe arrive Orphan's Legacy 464. 24. Christian Name DECLARATION in Assumpsit quod cum quidam ...... Alison was indebted to the Plaintiff for Wares sold the Defendant in consideration the Plaintiff would forbear did promise to pay if the said ...... Alison did not pay After Verdict and Judgment for the Plaintiff error was assigned that no Christian Name was alledged Chief Justice Rainsford and Twisden were of opinion That the Plaintiff must averr the certainty of his Praenomen or Christian Name and that Verdict helps it not no more in Suit against the third Person than against the Party hiself to whom the Goods were sold and it cannot be intended that quidam was the Christian Name it being with a blank The other Judges contra because he may be a Jew or an Anabaptist that hath no Christian Name and the forbearance only is the ground of the Action Indictment for stealing Goods de quodam ignoto good because the stealing is the substance And tho' the Defendant might have demurr'd yet after Verdict it is well enough 3 Keb. 769. Bechino and Gumly Adjornatur Bond not to exercise his Trade A MAN was bound in an Obligation to another that he should not use his Art in such a Town for two Years Hull swore by God if the obligee were present he should go to Prison 'till he had paid a Fine to the King because the Bond is contra Legem terrae 2 H. V. fol. 5. b. See tit Imprisonment Fitz. 14. Justice Reeve said March Rep. 193 he was confident you shall never find one Report against this opinion of Hull such Bond being void because it takes away a Man's livelihood which is one reason against Monopolies which is grounded upon the Law of God for in Deuteronomy Chap. 24. Ver. 6. it is said No Man shall take the nether or the upper Milstone to pledge for he taketh a Man's Life to pledge Which may also be the reason that the Utensils of a Man's profession cannot be destreined for thereby the means of his Livelihood should be taken away See Noy 180. It may not be impertinent to set before you the following differences under this Head for some Books say that a promise not to exercise ones Trade in such a Town is good but that a Bond in such case is void March Rep. 77. pl. 121 and 191. pl. 238. Barrow and Wood. Broad and Jollyffe's Case 2 Cro. 596. is That one may Upon Consideration agree and promise that he will not keep Shop in such a Vill or Street for that Volenti non fit injuria And in the Case of Prugnel and Goss Allen's Rep. 67. Roll. Just takes these differences Where a Bond or Promise restrains the exercise of a Trade altho' it be as to a particular place only yet if it be upon no consideration the Bond and Promise is void But if there were a Consideration for the restraint as if A.
assign a Shop or sell braided Wares to B. there in respect of the apparent prejudice which may accrue to B. if A. should continue the Trade such a Bond or Promise is good adjudged so in Froward's Case upon a Writ of Error But note although there be such a consideration yet if the restraint be general throughout England it is void Vide 1 Roll. 16 17. and Moor 115. and 242. Cunning Practice A MAN was Arrested in an Action of Debt and presently made a Warrant to an Attorney to acknowledge a Judgment for him upon which he was discharged but afterwards he revoked the Warrant of Attorney before the Judgment was confessed the Court observing this cunning practice commanded the Attorney to plead Non sum informatus that Judgment might be entred and said they would defend him against the Party if he brought an Action against him Latch 8. Trick in the business THE Court was moved that there might be a Rule of Court for I. S. upon satisfaction made of a Judgment obtained by him to acknowledge Satisfaction but the Court denied it and said there was some Trick in the business for no doubt but the Party upon receipt of what is due to him will acknowledge Satisfaction without a Rule to compell him Stiles 164. The River of Thames a High-Way MR. Attorney General prayed Judgment in an Information against Smith for laying Logs which is a Nuisance on the River Thames The Defendant pleaded the general Pardon but Nuisances on the High-Way being excepted therein and this being as much a High-Way as the Road and the Hundred answerable for Robbery thereon Judgment was given for the King 3 Keeble 759. Intention of the Parties A. CONTRACTS with B. for 18 Barrels of Ale paying a certain summ of Money and A. would have kept the Barrels after the Ale was spent but adjudged he should not for the intent of the Parties never was that the Vendee should have them but only the Ale and the common usage is that the Vendor shall have the Barrels again 27. H. VIII 27. b. cited 1 Bulls 175. So if one covenant with another that if he come to his House he will give him a Cup of Wine and he comes he shall not have the Cup also because it was never the intent of the Party ibid. Countermand of Arrest A. DELIVERS a Writ to the Sheriff to arrest I S. and after forbids him and desires the Writ again the Sheriff refuses and arrests I. S. Quaere if I. S. may have faux Imprisonment against the Sheriff It seems he may not Whether shall A. have an Action upon the Case against the Sheriff it seems he shall for it may be he is prejudiced Whether the Sheriff shall have an Action against A. for his Fee Latch Rep. 19. Slander by an Infant and against an Infant AN Action upon the case for Words lies against an Infant of Seventeen Years of Age for Malitia supplet aetatem Noy 129. An Infant brought an Action against one Child for these words I charge thee with Felony and had a Verdict and Judgment tho' moved in arrest c. because not averred the Plaintiff was of an Age to commit Felony for the Defendant must plead that and shall not be averred by the plaintiff to avoid his own Action Noy 124. Baily against Child Grant of the next avoidance by Letter I. S. BROUGHT a Quare impedit declaring upon a grant of the next Avoidance the Defendant demanded Oyer of the Deed and the Plaintiff shewed a Letter which was written to his Father by the Patron wherein he tells the Father that he had given to his Son the Plaintiff the next avoidance Whereupon the Defendant demurred and adjudged for him for the Letter was a meer banter and the grant not good without Deed. Owen 47. and Cro. Eliz. 163 164. A. granted the next Avoidance to B. and C. and was bound to B. in an obligation that he should enjoy the said Presentment without any disturbance or claim of the said A. C. released to A. his interest in the said Advowson the Church became void A. offered to joyn with B. in the presentation It was holden the obligation was forfeited notwithstanding that A. had a puisne Title after the Bond entred into 4 Leon. 18. Bluet's Case Legacy of Books A TESTATOR saith I give my Physick Books to my Son if hereafter he shall study Physick but if he make the Law his Profession then let him have my Law Books the Son after studies Law and Physick both he shall have the Testator's Books of both Professions Orphan's Legacy 472 89. If the Testator saith I bequeath or commit my Estate as well as my Soul to God whoever hath his Soul his parish Church shall have his Estate Orphan's Legacy 471 81. Bequest of Horses IF a Man bequeath all his Horses his Mares shall go too but not è contra nor by a bequest of Geldings ibid. 467 53 56. and fol. 441 12. Devise A. DEVISES that B. shall be his Heir and C. devises Lands to A. and his Heirs B. shall have those Lands as Heir to A. for a Devise shall not be construed void when it possibly by any probable construction can be made good So note a Man may be Heir ex vi Testamenti before he is Heir ex vi Doni 2 Siderf 27. Heir by descent of an Estate that by possibility could not be in his Ancestor LAND is given to A. and B. so long as they jointly together live the Remainder to the right Heirs of him that dies first A. dies the Remainder vested not during the Life of A. his Death must precede the Remainder and yet his Heir shall have the Land by descent 1 Inst 378. b. Note whensoever the Ancestor takes a Freehold and after a limitation is made to his right Heirs they shall not be Purchasers tho' in Words it be limited by way of Remainder But if a Lease for Years be made to A. Remainder to B. in tail Remainder to the right Heirs of A. there the Remainder vests not in A. but the right Heirs shall take by Purchase if A. die during the Estate tail 1 Inst 22. b. 376. b. 319. b. 2 Roll. 417. Where a Prisoner shall not be judged in Execution tho' he yield himself unto it A PRISONER having been in execution was suffered by the Gaoler to go out and then came into the Gaol again and remained there till the time of another Sheriff and then escaped the new Sheriff is not answerable for it by Hobart For when he was let to go abroad voluntarily by the Gaoler the Execution was utterly discharged so as he could not be taken again legally nor so judged in Execution tho' he would yield himself unto it or the Creditor so allow him Neither can two Sheriffs be chargable Simul Semel for two escapes out of one and the same Execution at the same time Hob. 202. Sheriff of Essex his Case Note it was agreed by
the Court in the Case of Allanson and Butler 1 Siderf 330. that if a Prisoner in Execution escape by negligence he may be retaken either by the Sheriff or the Plaintiff but if he escape by the agreement of the Sheriff he cannot retake him but the Plaintiff may for otherwise by the death or insufficiency of the Sheriff he should be left without remedy Execution Discharged A. HAD a judgment and execution against B. who was thereupon taken and in custody in the King's Bench Prison A. consented afterwards that B should come to him out of Prison to the Horse Shooe Tavern which was out of the Rules without a Keeper or Rule of Court thinking to make some agreement with him B. accordingly went to the Tavern but because they could not agree the Matter A. took him up again upon the same Execution in the same Prison whereupon B. brought an Audita Querela and adjudged well for the Execution was discharged by the Prisoner's going at large with the Plaintiff's consent and so could not be retaken upon it Stiles 117. Walker and Alder's Case and 147 Accord Slander of a Midwife A MIDWIFE brought an Action upon the Case for saying She is an ignorant Woman and hath small practice and is very unfortunate in her way but goeth about feeling Women's Bellies but there are few but are sick or die under her Hands Judgment was given for the Plaintiff 2 Keb. 489. Wharton and Clover A Sheriff cannot upon private process rush into a House which by Craft he gets to be opened AN Under-Sheriff and others upon a private Process at the Suit of C. against D. who lay in the House of A. came and knocked at A's Door whereupon A's Wife came to the Door and opened it a little to see who was there upon which they presently with their Swords drawn rushed in upon her whether she would or no and bare her down and brake open the Chamber Door where D. lay and brake also B's House adjoining to it to get Instruments to break doors withal and hurt divers in the House The Lord Chief Baron and Lord Hobart held the first entry unlawful for the opening of the Door was occasioned by 'em by craft and then used to the violence intended Hob. 62. See Co. 5. 92. b. and 2 Cro. 556. One Man kills another taking him in Bed with his Wife ONE Maddy taking of Nabor in the Act of Adultery with his Wife in his House killed him upon the spot and the Court conceived it but Manslaughter here being a sufficient provocation and no precedent Malice so he had his Clergy and was gently burnt c. 2 Keb. 829. Outlawry must be reversed in Person SIR W. Reade being outlawed upon an Indictment for not repairing a Bridge brought a Writ of Error and moved to pursue it by Attorney and put in Bail and not to appear in Person But all the Clerks of the Crown-Office affirmed that none could assign Error upon Indictment but in Person and so also to put in Bail The Court greatly pitied Sir William's Case because he was Ninety years of Age and very infirm having kept his Chamber for a year and more by reason of his infirmity and they conferred with the Attorney General how it might be done but all at length resolved it could not be admitted being against the course of the Court and doubted if the King 's Privy seal could help him Sir William was thereupon brought from his House ten miles from London in a Horse Litter upon Mens shoulders to the Bar and came into the Court and assigned his Error and put in bail to prosecute c. The Error was that he was named in the Indictment and Exigent Willielmus Reade Miles de Comit. Midd. without saying de such a place alledging some place certain within the County and therefore reversed 2 Cro. 616. Note some time before this Case an Outlawed Person prayed to appear by Attorney and upon Affidavit made of his sickness the Court ex gratiâ speciali allowed him to appear by Attorney but commanded the Clerk to enter it Quod venit in propriâ personâ the Law being clear that upon an Outlawry he must appear in Person 2 Cro. 462. vid. Stiles 297. See 4 Leon. 22. Taylor 's Case this difference agreed where matter in Fact is pleaded to avoid an outlawry it ought to be in Person but a matter of Record might be pleaded by Attorney Scribere cum Dasho ONE Coswell outlawed moved to reverse it because instead of proxim there is used px for it's abbreviation without any dash then instead of Infra scr the abbreviation of Infra scriptam there is used Infra sr for which exceptions 't was quashed Stiles 18. Nonsence how to be construed in giving a Legacy AN Imperfect Speech in bequeathing a Legacy may be reduced to such as is equivalent to that which is perfect if the Testator's mind and meaning may rationally be presumed For example the Testator saith Let 10 l. to A. B. without the Words Be given Orphan's Legacy 464 12. A. devises then takes the Devisee to Husband c. ALICE Allen made her Will and thereby devised certain Messuages to James Amynde and his Heirs and afterwards she married the said James and during the Coverture she often said he should never have the Messuages by the said Will She died without Issue he surviving and adjudged that her marriage revoked the Will for it is against the nature of a Will to be irrevocable since it takes not any effect 'till the death of the Devisor and her own Countermand after marriage was of no force because then she is wholly subject to the Will of her Husband therefore the taking of him to Husband being her own proper Act amounts to a Countermand in Law otherwise it were very mischievous to Women that their Wills should be in force whether they will or no and 't is not fit to leave it in the Wife's choice to Countermand because the compulsion of the Husband is to be feared Co. 4. 60. b. Force and Hemblin's Case King Edgar's Law against Drinking THE Danes first brought into this Realm Excessive Drinking and King Edgar permitting many of them to dwell here was at length constrained to make a Law against this excess which never comes alone driving certain Nails into the sides of their Cups as limits and bounds which no Man upon great Pain should be so hardy as to transgress 3 Inst 200. If the excess of Drinking extend to the loathsome and odious vice of Drunkenness it is punishable by Act of Parliament See 4 Jac. cap. 5. 7 Jac. cap. 10. 21 Jac. cap. 7. The Ancient Britains were free from this Crime Ecce Britannorum mos est laudabilis iste Ut bibat Arbitrio Pocula quisque suo A Drunkard is voluntarius Daemon and what hurt or ill soever he does his Drunkenness aggravates it Omne Crimen Ebrietas incendit detegit 1 Inst 247. a. Offences Capital and
Ship-board at Lisbon in great heat of Speech with one Captain Bask and added Because he is an Heretick and because his Traiterous Intent and the Imagination of his Heart is declared by these Words it was held High Treason by the Common Law and within the express Words of 25 Edw. III. and he being arrested by Warrant for this cause most insolently put his Finger into his Mouth and scornfully pulling it out said I care not this for your King c. He was found guilty and had Judgment accordingly He confessed he was a Dominican Frier and made Priest in Spain and altho' this and his returning into England to seduce the Liege People be Treason by Stat. 23 Eliz. yet the King's Attorney said he would not proceed against him for that but upon 25 Edw. 3. of Treason Cro Car. 332 333. See Cro. Car. 125. that no Words are Treasonable unless made so by some Statute and 3 Inst 14. Whether 't is a Nuisance for a Rope-dancer to erect a Stage c. JACOB Hall the famous Rope-dancer had erected a Stage in Lincoln's Inn-Fields but upon a Petition of the Inhabitants there was an Inhibition from Whitehal Now upon complaint to the Judges that he had erected one at Charing-Cross he was sent for into Court and the Chief Justice told him he understood it was a Nuisance to the Parish and some of the Inhabitants being in Court said it occasioned Broils and Fightings and drew so many Rogues to that Place that they lost Things out of their Shops every Afternoon Hales said that in 8 Car. I. Noy prayed a Writ to prohibit a Bowling-Ally erected near St. Dunstan's Church and had it Modern Rep. 76. Post Information for keeping a Cock-pit ONE Howel being Convicted of keeping a common Cock-pit six Days was fined 12 l. the Court conceiving it an unlawful Game and took their Measures by 33 H. VIII c. 9. of 40 s. a Day tho' the Information were at Common Law 3 Keb. 465. and 510. Forfeiture of a Copyhold A. LORD of a Mannor holding of his Court and B. a Tenant being in the Court there arising a Question whether the Court were then legally held B. was asked if he appeared or not he answered If it be a legal Court I do appear but if it is not a legal Court I do not appear Quaere if this be an appearance or such a refusal to appear whereby the Copy-holder shall forfeit his Copy-hold or not Roll Chief Justice said if there was a real Controversie whether the Court was well held or not it would be hard to make it a Forfeiture but if not and that the Words were used only as a Shift to avoid his Suit and service it is a Forfeiture for the Words are like Jack in a Box and no body knows what to make of 'em the other Three Judges inclined it was no forfeiture Stiles 241. Parker and Cook Rope-dancing Ante. THE Court being informed that Jacob Hall was building a Booth for dancing on the Ropes at C. sent for him and the Workmen by a Tipstaff and because he would not enter into a Recognizance not to build on they committed him and then he ceased 2 Keb. 846. Replevin of Goods not destreined REPLEVIN is the bringing of the Writ De Replegiari facias by one whose Cattle or Goods are distreined c. and putting in Surety to the Sheriff that upon delivery of the Distress he will prosecute the Action against the Distreinor Yet Note In a special Case a Man may have a Replevin of Goods not destreined as if there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Mesne put in his Cattle in lieu of the Cattle of the Tenant paravaile whom he is bound to acquit he shall have a Replevin of those Cattle yet they never were distreined 1 Inst 145. b. Replevin lies notwithstanding a grant to keep the Distress against Gages and Pledges IF a Rent be granted with clause of Distress and further that the Grantee shall keep the Goods distreined against Gages and Pledges 'till the Rent be paid yet shall the Sheriff replevy the Goods for 't is against the nature of such a Distress to be irreplevisable and by such an intention the Currant of Replevins should be overthrown to the hinderance of the Commonwealth and so 't was dissallowed by the whole Court and awarded that the Defendant should gage deliverance or else go to Prison which the Lord Coke saies in his opinion is an excellent point of learning 1 Inst 145. b. Witches THE Law against Witches does not prove there be any but it punishes the Malice of those People that use such means to take away Mens Lives If one should profess that by turning his Hat thrice and crying Buz he could take away a Man's Life tho' in truth he could do no such thing yet this were a just Law made that whosoever should turn his Hat thrice and cry Buz with an intention to take away a Man's Life shall be put to death Selden Note To say of one Thou art a Witch is not Actionable because he may bewitch you with his fair Countenance or fine Discourse 2 Cro. 150. and 306. contra because it brings him within danger of the Stat. 1 Jac. which makes every witchcraft Felony but to say Thou art a Witch and deservest to be hanged will bear Action because the last Words explain what manner of Witch he intends So to say Thou art a Witch and hast bewitched my Mother's Milk Drink Hogs c. So it seems of Children But to say and hast bewitched I. S. Quaere because I. S. may be captivated with the amiableness of the Plaintiff's Person So Note the difference between saying he has bewitched a thing which has sense and a thing which has not 1 Siderfin 52. 53. Trespassor ab initio A MAN comes into a Tavern and will needs stay up all Night the Vintner is not bound in such Case to watch with him nor attend upon him all the Night and therefore if he prays him to be gone and he will not but remains there all Night he is a Trespassor ab initio 11 H. IV. 75. b. Note He that misuses an Authority which the Law gives him as in that Case so if one distrein for Rent and kill the Distress shall be a Wrong-doer ab initio Otherwise if he abuse an Authority that another gives him as if I lend my Horse to I. S to ride to York and he ride farther yet the riding to York shall not be unlawful Vid. Co. 8. 146. Perk. fo 39. 40. 2 Roll. 561 c. in Abridgement Quaere if a Distress be taken for a Rent-charge and is misused whether the Destrainor shall be a Trespassor ab initio because the Authority to distrain comes from the Party Justice Hutton's Case MR. Justice Hutton having argued in the Exchequer Chamber in a Case adjourned thither upon a Scire facias by the King against Hampden for Ship-money wherein he was of opinion That as well
the Obligee as his Deed this is a good Obligation for he delivered that which makes the Obligation and more as his Deed and altho' the Delivery be void for the Surplus yet it 's good for the residue Cro. Eliz. 613. Fox and Wright's Case cited also 2 Roll. 25. Action upon the Case for inserting his Name in Letters of Excommunication ONE Harris was Excommunicated by Sentence and the Letters of Excommunication delivered to the Parson of the Parish to be read and published in the Church But the Parson having malice against one Kenton razed out the Name of Harris and put in Kenton and pronounced him Excommunicate whereupon Kenton brought an Action upon the Case against the Parson and adjudged maintainable for altho' the Excommunication be Spiritual and the denouncing thereof yet the Rasure and Alteration is meerly temporal for which an Action well lies at the Common Law and this was not only an injurious Vexation but also Scandalous to Kenton Cro. Eliz. 838. Kenton and Wallinger and 1 Roll. 100. Prince Henry committed to the King's-Bench HENRY the Fifth whilst he was Prince did many things very incongruous to the greatness of his birth for he and his wild Companions would often way-lay and rob his Father's and his own Receivers and when one of his Servants was arraigned at the King's Bench Barr for Felony this Prince hearing of it posted thither and commanded his Fetters to be struck off and he to be set at Liberty When William Gascoigne Lord Chief Justice opposed him therein and commanded him upon his Allegiance to cease from such Riot and keep the King's Peace the Prince in a Rage ascended the Bench and gave the Judge a Blow on the Face who sate still undaunted and boldly thus spake unto him Sir I pray remember your self this Seat which I here possess is not mine but your Father's to whom and to his Laws you owe double Obedience if his Highness and his Laws be thus violated by you who should shew your self obedient to both who will obey you when you are a Sovereign or Minister Execution to the Laws that you shall make Wherefore for this default in your Father's Name I commit you Prisoner to the King's-Bench until his Majesties pleasure be farther known With these Words the Prince abashed stood mute laid by his Weapons and with obeysance done went to the Prison Medull Hist Angl. in vita H. V. 3 Inst 225. He proved afterwards one of our greatest Kings being as I find him Charactered a Prince Godly in Heart Sober in Speech Sparing of Words Resolute in Deeds Provident in Counsel Prudent in Judgment Modest in Countenance Magnanimous in Action Constant in Undertaking a great Alms giver Devout to God-ward a Renowned Soldier Fortunate in Field from whence he never returned without Victory Queen THE King cannot grant to another for Life the Office of making Saddles for the Queen for the Queen is a Feme sole and so may choose her own Officers Dubitatur P. 6. Jac. C. B. between Auburcurmil and Cure 2 Roll. 213. n. 12. The Violating of a Queen Dowager no Treason THE Stat. of 25 E. 3. says Si homme violast la Compaigne le Roy c. which signifies the King's Wife or Consort for it is no Treason to violate her unless it be done during the Marriage with the King and therefore extends not to a Queen Dowager who after the King's death is not sa Compaigne 3 Inst 8. 9. Action upon the Case for throwing Wine upon his Velvet Doublet ONE Carey brought an Action of Trespass quare vi armis against Stevens for casting Wine upon his Velvet Doublet and well brought tho' he might have had an Action upon the Case Noy 48. Where one may justifie the detaining of a thing 'till Satisfaction made IF a Taylor has a Sute to make for me he is not compellable to deliver it untill he is paid for the making yet he cannot sell it for default of payment as an Inn-keeper may an Horse where there is no special agreement for the keeping of the Horse is a charge because he eats but the keeping of Apparel is no charge Yelverton 67. Note If I contract with a Taylor to give him so much for making c. he cannot detain the Cloths till he is satisfied c. because he may sue me upon the Contract per Williams 2 Roll. 92. initio See Popham's Rep. 127. Robinson and Walter that an Inn-keeper may detain the Horse of I. S. till he be satisfied for the Meat he has eaten tho' he were brought to him by a Stranger A Wife entices another Man to marry Her COOPER brought an Action upon the Case against Witham and his Wife for that the Wife maliciously intending to marry him did often affirm that she was sole and unmarried and importuned strenuè requisivit the Plaintiff to Marry her to which affirmation he giving Credit married her where in facto she was Wife to the Defendant so that the Plaintiff was much troubled in mind and put to great Charges and much damnified in his Reputation He had a Verdict but no Judgment for by Twisden the Action lies not because the Thing here done is Felony No more than if a Servant be killed the Master cannot have an Action per quod Servitium amisit quod Curia concessit besides the ground of this Action is the Communication and Contract of the Wife which shall not bind the Husband 1 Siderf 375. Whether Trespass lies for Husband or Master for a Battery whereof his Wife or Servant dies IF one beat my Servant whereby I lose his Service for a long time and he afterwards dies I shall have an Action of Trespass because it was a distinct Trespass to me by William's Justice But if one beat my Wife whereby she languishes c. and after dies I shall not have Trespass for this Battery because the Trespass was not done to me but to my Wife so that she was to have joyned in the Action and I only for conformity 2 Roll. 568. Huggin's Case Note that Case is reported by Yelverton 89. 90. and warrants not the diversity taken for 't is holden there by Three Judges no mention of Justice Williams that the Master shall not have an Action for such Battery and loss of Service but that here as well as in the other Case the Servant dying with the extremity of the Battery it is now become an Offence to the Crown being turned into Felony which drowns the particular Offence and private wrong offered to the Master and so his Action is gone Vide 1 Siderf 375. Acc ' and Stiles 347. where Roll. himself being Chief Justice cites the Case of Higgins to have been adjudged That Trespass lies not for the Battery of a Wife whereof she died because says he it is Felony the reason given by the Three Judges why it lies not for the Master See 1 Brownl 205. Admiralty A MERCHANT hath a Ship taken by a Spaniard