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A44485 The booke called the mirrour of justices made by Andrew Horne ; with the book called the diversity of courts and their jurisdictions ; both translated out of the old French into the English tongue by W.H. Horne, Andrew, d. 1328. 1646 (1646) Wing H2789; ESTC R23979 152,542 367

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any falsity to me in deed or in word whereof he is Appealed or Impeached in Judgement if he deny it it is lawfull for me to prove the Action either by Jury or by my Body or by the Body of one Witnesse and if it be of the false Judgement of many then the proofe belongeth only against the pronouncer of the Judgement for the whole Court And so it is in case where you deny your Gift Baylement Pledges Deed Seale or other manner of Contract or the words which you spake or the deed which you did Neverthelesse you are to distinguish of the qualities of the Causes for in Appeales of Felony none can Combate for another as is said but in Veniall Causes although one be killed in the Battaile he committeth no Murder but onely those vanquished or their Clyents for them shall tender to the Combitants vanquishing forty shillings in name of Cowardize besides the Judgement upon the principall And in case where Battaile could not be joyned not there was no Witnesse the people in personall Actions used to helpe themselves by a Miracle of God in this manner If the Defendant were a woman or of such a condition that she could not joyne Battaile and the Plaintiffe had no Witnesse to prove his Action then the Defendant might cleare her credit by the Miracle of God or leave the proofe to the Plaintiffe and in the contrary case the proofe onely belonged to the Plaintiffe At the day of the proofe or of the purgation after the Benediction and the Malediction of the Priest cloathed with the holy Garments of the Masse and after the parties Oathes one used to keepe the party and he was to carry in his hand a peece of burning Iron if he were a Free-man or put his hand or his foote in boyling water if he were not Free or to doe some such thing which were impossible to doe without a Miracle from God and if he was not hurt or blemished the adverse Party remained as attainted but Christianity suffered not that they be by such wicked Arts cleared if one may otherwise avoid it Battaile is not to be joyned betwixt all people for it is not to be joyned but betwixt equalls nor yet betwixt all equalls for not betwixt the Father and the Son nor betwixt Women or Infants or Clerkes or Parents or Assignes Equalls are not a man and a woman nor a Holy man and an Excommunicate Petson nor a Christian and an Infidell nor a whole man and a sicke nor a man of good memory and a Mad-man nor a wire man and a foole not a sound man nor a man mayhemed nor a man and a childe nor a Clerke and a Lay Person nor a man professed in Religion and a Secular man not a true-man and a Felon nor a man within the Kings Alleagiance and out of his Alleagiance nor the Lord and Tenant The smallnesse also of the thing in demand doth hinder the Battaile and many other Caus●s as it appeareth in the Law of Fees neverthelesse if those who are not receiveable to joyn in Battaise will Combate if the Bartaile be joyned betwixt them it is no wrong to them who desire it And if any one offereth himselfe to Combate with one armed who before was not brought by the Parties and the adverse Party de nand Judgement for the default of his adversary as if he rendereth a Witnesse who offereth himselfe to decide the difference and now he offereth to furnish the Battaile by another who was not seene nor heard in Court and who cannot and ought not to try the Battaile in such case it belongeth to try the Exception as peremptory to the Action if the Parties will not agree unto it Chap. 3. Sect. 24. Iuramentum Duelli AFter the Battaile joyned adjourned and presented the parties duly armed First the defendant is to swear in this manner Heare this you man who ●hold by the hand whom you call N. by name that I did never kill such a one your Father or said any such thing such a day c. So God me helpe and the holy Evangalist Afterwards the plaintise ought to sweare in this manner H●are you this man who I hold by the hand That you who are called by your Right name N. are perjured because that you such a day c. felloniously killed c. Or said such words or did such athing c. Cap. 3. Sect 25. The Ordring of the Combatants AFter their Oathes be taken it behoveth to looke that the parties be Armed according to the ancient usage of what condition soever they be Knighte or others The Auncient usage to bee Armed in all Cases of Combate is this The Bodies are armed without Seme cotu et baliea And the heades and the necks and the hands uncovered the backs thyes Leggs and Feet armed which Iron And each to have a shield of Iron and a staffe ●orned of one Assise The Plaintise commeth into the List from the East and the Defendant from the West on the place they sweare in this manner That they have not about them any Charme not deceit not have cat not drunke any thing whereby the truth might be disturbed lessined and the Law of the Divill enhaunced So God them helpe and the holy Evangelists Then Proela nation is made that none disturbe the Battaile and Oyes is made that there be no noise upon a Corporall punishment And then they meet together and if the defendant defend himselfe till after the Sun setting and demand Judgment of the default of the Plaintife In that case Judgement shall be given for the defendant And if any fraud bee found with one of the parties as to be privily armed or there ●s ound or other thing unallowable and the fraud be adjudged that they be presently severed and Judgment is present ly to be given and the vanquished is to acknowledge his offence in the hearing of the people or speake the horrible word of Cravent in the name of Cowardize or his left Foote to be disarmed and uncovered in signe of the Cowardize and that Iudgment be presently given against the Principall Cap. 3. Sect. 26. AS to personall Trespas in the Case this exception lyeth Sir Hee wrongfully impleadeth me of this Trespas for the same man impleaded such or such before such Iudges in such a place of the same Trespas and made me no partie to the suit and for asmuch as that hee then recovered by Iudgment his full damages against them named in his plaint And this suit is not brought against mee but to recover damages and the Law is That a man shall not recover double damages I demand Judgment of his Action As to the Allienations and Occupations of Franchises Reals Appendants to the Crowne a man shall not vouch therein to warranty not demand the View not prescribe in them for of such dignities none can helpe himselfe by a plea of long prescription but such avowries of long Continuance are accounted rather prescriptions
realls And if any one receive a Felon wittingly into his Franchise the same is now challengable CHAP. IV. SECT 17. Of satisfaction of Debt IF a Plaintiffe recover against many by Iudgement he shall have but once damages as in this case If many Persons owe one Debt and every one be bound in the whole if one of them make agrement for the same although he doe not make a speciall agreement for all the Debtors all of them neverthelesse are discharged because satisfaction hath respect to the Debt and not to the persons CHAP. IV. SECT 18. Cases of Disseisin IF the Iurours in Petit Assizes are agreed that one shall give their common Verdict for all and if they say that they know nothing nor that the Plaintiffe shall receive nothing because he proved not his Action and if they be of divers opinions they are not therefore to be threatned nor imprisoned but they are to be severed and diligently examined And if two Iurours be found to agree amongst all the rest it sufficeth for him for whom they speake and they are not to be examined upon the title of the possession but it is sufficient for the Iudge to know if the Plaintiffe were disseised of his Land whether it were rightfull or wrongfull according to the Plaint for though it were right neverthelesse it was tortious because the Tenant used force where he should have used Iudgement and for that he made himselfe a Iudge therein Iudgement is to be given for the Plaintiffe so as he shall recover seisin such as it is saving every right by another Writ for an Affize lyeth not upon Assize of the same Tenement betwixt the same parties not an Attaint upon an Attaint and if the Iurours for him whether they were sworn upon the Action or upon the Exceptions Iudgement goes for him and they behoove to enquire of the others named in the Writ and if the Disseisors came in with force and Armes although they hurt no persons body all of them neverthelesse are to be adjudged to Corporall punishment according to the quantity of the offence and if they cast him our of his dwelling house or out of his Demesne the felony of this Burglary is punishable at the Kings Suit or at the Suit of the Party for none is to be cast out of his house where he dwelleth and which he hath used as his owne for a yeare without Iudgement although he hath no title thereunto but by Disseisin or intrusion and it sufficeth for fotce and Armes onely the shewing of Armes for to hurt the Adversaries and under the name of Armes are contained B●wes Artowes Sawes Launces Speeres Staves Swords and Targets of Iron The Iury ought to enquire of the damages that is to say of the profits of the Tenements done since the Disseisin and to whose hands such profits after came and of the Charges Costs and reasonable expences which the Plaintiffe hath sustayned in his whole recovery and in all things and how much he is endamaged in distresse of his goods and in his honour and the damages being assessed it is to be awarded that the Plaintiffs recover his seisin such as it is according to the view of the Recognitors and the damages and the Disseisors are punishable according to the points of the offences For the goods found in the Tenements whereof none can know the value as Charter Writings Royall Treasure and such things locked up the Plaintiffe hath an Action by Appeale of Robbery or by a Writ of Trespasse In Iudgement of ●atcine veniable satisfaction is to be made to the 〈◊〉 in●ffes to the double of the value of 〈…〉 which are stolen and in case of 〈…〉 the value 4 double or foure 〈…〉 CHAP. IV. SECT 25. Of Amercements A Pecuniary paine we call an Amercement which follow reall offenders and m●●t and sometimes are certaine and sometimes uncertaine An Amercement is certaine sometimes according to the dignity of the Persons as it is of Earles and Barons for he who holdeth an entire Earldoine is to be amerced one hundred pound when he is least amerced And a Baron for a Barony entire one hundred Markes and he who holdeth lesse lesse and more more according to the quantity of the Tenure And sometime by a certaine Assize in another case as it is of Escapes of people imprisoned in which case yee are to distinguish of the place as where one escapeth out of the Kings Prison or out of the Prison of another out of the Kings Prison yee are to distinguish of the cause whether it be mortall or veniall and if mortall then distinguish if the cause were adjudged or not and if adjudged by norory of fact or of right then the Corporall punishment is uncertaine for if the Keeper or more be assenting to the escape punishment of death followeth thereupon and if the cause was not adjudged and the Keeper was not the Kings Officer nor assented to the escape then the Assize of punishment is so many Shillings sterling or more according to the usage of the Country or of the place or of the person And if the Cause he veniall then the escape is not punishable And if the escape be from the prison of others then yee are to distingu●sh of the cause and of the caption whether the cause be mortall or veniall and if mortall then the pecuniary paine aforesaid holdeth place and if the cause be veniall there is no punishment for the escape CHAP. IV. SECT 26. Of Amercements taxable COmmon Amercements are Taxable by the Oathes and A●●erments of the Peeres of those who sal in misere cordia according to the constitution of the Charter of Franchises which willeth that a Free-man be assessed when he falleth into an Amercement according to the quantity of his offence a Merchant saving to h●● his Merchandize and a Vi●●aine saving his Wainage and these Aff●rrors are to be chosen by the assent of the Parties if they will but the Kings Officers are the more grievonsly to be Amerced for the breach of their faith c. Many cases there are where Corporall punishments are brought in by Fines of money and such are called Ransomes which is as much as to say Redemption from Corporall paines whereof some Fines are common as for Murders other for personall Trespasses of Townes and Commonalties which Fines King Edward Ordained that they should be assessed in the presence of the Justices so as the names of them be put into the Roles of the Iustices so that the Estreates may come to the Sheriffe to leavie the same by parcells and not by totall Summons And in case where one recovereth Debt or Damages King Edward enacted that it should be in the election of them to doe execution by leavying such Debt and damages of the moveable goods of the Debtors at the very value to the value of the thing in demand except the Oxen and Beasts of the Plow together with the moyety of Lands and Tenements of the Debtors if
Verdict so are they chargeable to accuse the Conspirators who procure to save any Offendant or to indict an innocent in such Enquests All the Verdicts before the Coroners as well of Accessories as of the Principall are at the Commandment of the Coroners receiveable by the Sheriffes and the Principall and Accessories are to be taken and delivered to Maine prisors and in the presence of them and of the Sheriffes their goods moveables and not moveables are to be seized into the Kings hands and by a reasonable Extent and Divident the moveables are deliverable for the finding of the Prisoners and for their needful and reasonable sustinance the King to be answered the residue saving the right both to the Principall if they be acquitted and to the Accessories by Mainprise And if any one fly or make resistance and will not answer the Law it is lawfull for every one to kill him if he cannot otherwise apprehend him And Bermund awarded That all goods of those that fled should remaine forfeit to the King saving to every one his right although that afterwards he yeeld himselfe to the Peace And Iselgram said That he is no flyer who appeareth in Judgement before he be Out-lawed If any one fly to Sanctuary and there demand protection we are to distinguish for ●●le be a common Thiefe Robber Murderer Night-walker and be knowne for such a one and discovered by the people c of his Pledges and Deziners or if any one be convict for Debr or other offence upon his owne confession and hath sorjered the Realme or hath been exiled banished Out-lawed or Weyved or if any one have offended in Sanctuary or joyned upon this hope to be defended in Sanctuary they may take him out thence without any prejudice to the Franchue of Sanctuary But in the right of Offenders who by mischance fall into an offence mortall out of Sanctuary and for true Repentance run to Monasteries and commonly confesse themselves sorrowfull and repent such offenders being of good fame if they require tuition of the Church King Hen. 2. at Clarendon granted unto them that they should be defended by the Church for the space of forty daies and Ordained that the Townes should defend such flyers for the whole forty daies and send them to the Coroner at the Coroners view It is in the election of the offender to yeeld to the Law or to acknowledge his offence to the Coroners and to the people and to waive the Law and if he yeeld himselfe to be tryed by Law he is to be sent to the Goale and to waite for either acquittall or Condemnation And if he confesse a nortall offence and desire to depart the Realme without desiring the tuition of the Church he is to goe from the end of the Sanctuary ungirt in pure Sack-cloth and there sweare that he will keepe the straight way to such a Port or such a passage which he hath chosen and will stay in no parts two nights together untill that for this mortall offence which he hath confessed in the hearing of the people he hath avoyded the Realme never to returne during the Kings life without leave so God him help and the holy Evangelists and afterwards let him take the signe of the Crosse and carry the same and the same is as much as if he were in the protection of the Church And if any one remaine in Sanctuary above the forty daies by so doing he is barred of the grant of Abjuration if the fault be in him after which time it is not lawfull for any one to give him victuals And although such be out of the peace and the protection of the King yet none ought to dishearten them all one as if they were in the protection of the Church if they be not found out of the high way or wilfully breake their Oathes or doe other mischiese in the high way If he who is killed be unknowne in such case the Coroners ought to shew the murdered cloathes according to the Statute of King Kanute who Ordained for the safeguard of his Danes whom he lest in England That if a man unknowne were killed that the whole Hundred should be amerced to the King by the Judgement of Murder Four things excuse the Hundred from the Judgement of Murder 1 If the Felon be knowne who killed him for if the Felon be knowne then may he be attainted of the Felony 2 Another If the Felon be apprehended or if he fly to a Monastery 3 If the killing come not by Felony but by mischance 4 The fourth in case where a man is a felon of himself and because there could be no Murder of a man knowne it belongeth to the Coroners to enquire in those Fellonies of what Kindred or Lineage those that were killed were so that one may know by their Parents whether they were of the English nation or not for if no man could name their Parents it was great presumption that they were Alliens And thence it is that one calleth that Parentage Englishire where the Parentage be found of the Fathers or of the Mothers side and if no Englishire be found then that it hath the Judgement of Murder To the Office of the Coroners it also belongeth to receive the confession of Felons in the hearing of Witnesses whereby of a grand Felony done by many offenders it came to passe in the time of King John that one of the offenders petitioned the King That he would pardon him his life for that he had accused the other offenders who were his companions and that the King Out-lawed them and at the request of the King the Earles granted That in Sanctuarie only it should remaire for Law that offenders having confessed the Felony might accuse others and that it was then Ordained That the Coroners should take such Confessions and such Appeales but once and not many times Women are not admitted to bring Appeales nor Infants within the Age of 21. yeeres no Idiots nor men professors not Clerks indicted or appealed of any Crime nor men attainted of false Appeale not those who are vanquished in battaile but those who have government of themselves The Appelees are to be seised upon body and goods twice in the yeere that is to fay once after Michaelmas and another time after Easter And because Sheriffes to doe the same make their Turnes of the Hundred such visnes are called the Sheriffes Turnes where it belongeth to the Sheriffe to enquire of all personall Offences and of all the circumstance of Offences done within the Hundred and of the wrongs of the King and Queens Officers and of wrong done to the King and the Common people according to the Articles aforesaid in the division of Offences The Appeales are to be seised upon body and goods as afore is said and if any Forrainer be appealed who is out of the power of the Coroner the Kings Commisrary is to cause him to appeare or Outlaw him CHAP. 1. SECT 14. Of the
over to the Goale where they are to be received without difficulty of Fine or request CHAP. II. SECT 9. Of Goales and Goalers A Goale is nothing else but a common Prison and as a Leper or a man who hath a diseased body is not to be suffered to dwell or remaine amongst men who are sound so mortall siune is a kind of Leprosie which maketh the Soule abhominable unto God and therefore such mortall sinners or offenders ought to be separated from the society of the people And to the end that Innocents be not infected with their offences Goales were Ordained in every County to keepe such mortall offenders in there to remaine till Iudgement were given against them in case the offences were notorious There are 2 kinds of Prisons Common and Privite Every common Prison is a Goale and none hath a Goale but the King only A private Prison is another Prison from whence every one may escape who can so as he doe no other Trespasse in the escape None are imprisoned in a common Prison but for a mortall offence and therefore it was forbidden by King Henry the 3. That none should leavy money for any escape in the Land if the escape were not adjudged before the Iustices in Eyre whether for the same a Corporall or a pecuniary Punishment were awardable or not and because it is forbidden that none be pained before Iudgement the Law requireth That none be put amongst vermine or in any horrible not dangerou place not into any other paine but it is lawfull for Goalers to fetter those they doubt so as the Fetters weigh no more then 12. ounces and to enable the keeping of those in the Goale who are violent outragious or doe other Trespasse there CHAP. II. SECT 10. Of People Bayleable in Appeales SOme Appeales of mortall offences although they are not bayleable by Law neverthelesse they are suffered to be bayled when they are brought into the Goale as namely the Appeales of Murder Robbery Burglary Larcine or out of Prison where it is found that they are wrongfully Appealed and for such case was the Writ De odio accia invented Those who are condemned to have Corporall punishment are not to be Bayled but it is otherwise of those who are imprisoned for a Fine or any other pecuniary penalty or punishment CHAP. II. SECT 11. Of the Appeale of Maiesty OF the Crimes of Majesty not of falfifying not of any thing which concerneth the Kings right there lyeth no Appeale but Actions or Indictments For slanders of Sodomy our ancient Fathers would never agree thus for the scandalls of so doing that any one should bring Actions by way of Accusation not Indictments not would ever assent that they should be heard of in regard of the abominablenesse of the sinne but they Ordained that such notorious sinners should be forthwith Iudged and Iudgements framed against them Of the imagining of the Kings death and of other kind of offences of Majesty against an earthly King there were Accusations but for Indictments for every true Subject was with all expedition to shew the same to the King so that he be not taken or seised upon by his long stay or by great delay in what cases the Accusations are to be received and in full Parliament let the Accuser by himselfe or by a Serjeant doe it according as it was done in this case in the time of King Edmond in these words Rocelyn here saith against Walligrot That at such a day in such a yeare of the Raigne of such a King into such a place came the said Walligrot to this Rocelyn and found him to be in Counsell and in assistance with Atheling Turkille Ballard and others to Arrest or to make Prisoner or to kill our Lord King Edmond and to doe the same they were sworne to keepe Counsell and to commit this Felony according to their power CHAP. II. SECT 12. Appeale of Falsifying THis offence is not openly done it is seene by a false Writ or false money found in ones possession and although that three Persons are necessary in Iudgement in this case neverthelesse it is Ordained That the possessour of ill things be by the Iudge Ex officio driven to answer to the Title of their Possession thereof which is not so in all Cases And if there be any one who will not plead to Jugdement then he is to be returned to the Goale and all his goods are to be seised into the Kings hands and to be seised upon as in all Criminall Actions brought by Appeales or Indictments also in veniall Actions such contumacies used to be condemned for not pleading as by their pleading and lawfull Attainder And if any one saith that he came to the money lawfully and doth not know by whom not none o●fer themselves against him to prove the affirmative of the Action then it belongeth to the possessour of the money to prove the affirmative of his Answer And if any one saith that it came to him from a man certaine let it be as after herein is said CHAP. II. SECT 13. Of Appeales of Treason TReason is set forth in Appeales in this manner according as it is found in the Rolls in the time of King Alfred Bardulf here doth appeale Dirling there for that that in as much as this same Dirling was the Allie of the same Bardulf the said Dirling came such a day of the yeare c. and during the Alliance ravished the Wife of the same Bardulf or counterfeited his Seale or did him some other mischiefe Or thus Hakenson Father or other Parent or Lord or Allie this Dirling killed or thus remained in Aide and in Counsell with Daffray the adversary of the this Bardulf in speech which touched the losse of his life or members or of his earthly Honour or thus discovered his Counsell or his Confession or thus whereas he ought to have a lawfull enrolement according to Law of such a Plea the same Dirling falsly enrolled the same to his dis-inherison or otherwise to his damage or thus whereas he was his Atturney in such a Plea before such Judges to gaine or lose and should have done him right he lost by his default or by his folly negligence or collusion or restored the thing in demand or did him such hurt Or thus whereas he should have excused him or essoigned him such a day c he suffered him to lose the Possession or such other thing through his default or thus whereas he ought to have truly spoken for him in such a Case the said Dirling did ill advise him or speake against him in such a Io●nt and afterwards thus this Treason did the said Dirling feloniously as a Felon and traiterously as a Traitor and if he will deny it Bardulf is ready to prove it upon him by his body or as a mayhened man or a woman or a Clerk ought to prove And although that advice be given to some that it belongeth not to the Plaintiffe to
holds this Replication Sir such Avowry ought not availe him because he was not a knowne Bayliff in such a Hundred or because he did not any thing in the manner of a distresse as not in a due time nor had any warrant but tooke it in the night time or in such other manner feloniously robbed him and stole c. and in the like manner may a Replication hold against a robbery made by colour of disseisin CHAP. III. SECT 20. Of Burglary TO Burglary he may say That he entred into the Tenements without doing any Felony and not against the Peace as in to his owne demeane and free-hold CHAP. III. SECT 21. Of Rape IN Appeale of Rape he may deny the Felony and say that he ravished not her against her wil but that she assented and that appeareth because she conceived by him at the same time and there is no presumption that she was ravished against her will by fouling of her Garments nor shedding of blood nor Hue and Cry made or other manner of violence offered CHAP. III. SECT 22. Of Imprisonment TO the Appeale of Imprisonment he may say that he did it by force of a rightfull Judgement of such a Iudge but to that Plea is this Replication good that after there came a Warrant to him to deliver him he kept him in prison for the time named in the Appeale CHAP. III. SECT 23. Of Mayhem and Wounding IN Mayhem he may demand the View thereof for he cannot lawfully complaine when there is no Mayhem to be Iudged of and of Appeale of Wounding in the same manner By the death of the King all Pleas are suspended all Goales opened no Iudge Bayliffe or other Officer ought to entermeddle therewith for want or warrant and all Out-lawes and all Waives and those who have forjured the Realme and all banished Persons used then to returne except those who were exiled and banished for ever and if any recovered before for that he could not have Dett if he were not just●fied to the Peace and if he be brought to Iudgement and if he be accused of Outlawry he may say that he is discharged of the Outlawry by the Kings grant Or he may say that the Outlawry ought not to prejudice him because he was under the age of 2. yeares at the time of the Outlawry and therefore that he was not Outlawed for the felony Or because the felony was not done in such a County or because he was not Out-lawed in England or not within the Kings Dominion where the Writ runneth for an Outlawry prouounced against a man in the Bishoprick of Durham or elsewhere in the Land where the Kings Writ doth not run shall prejudice as one in the Land where the Kings Writ runneth Nec è contra Or because the felony was not done in the time of this King or not since the last Eyre in that County Or because the Processe of the Outlawry was false by a false Warrant or without any Warrant or because he lay sicke and was Essoigned De malo lect● or because he is alive for whose death he was Out-lawed or because he was Imprisoned the day of the Outlawry or because he was in the Kings service in the Holy Land or within the Realm for the profit of the Common-wealth Or because he had the Kings Protection or because he was a Mad-man or an Idiot or Deafe or Dumbe or professed in Reliligion in which cases if he pray to be received to Answer he is to be received And the Plaintiffe was to be demanded and it was to be proclaimed that if any one could shew why he should not be enlarged that he appeared at a certaine day All Parties in Iudgement are necessary to be present and they are to have Oyer of the Writs of the Originall the Plaintiffes Commission the quantity or the quality of his plaint And the Disseisor or their Bayliffes every one of them for himselfe may say in this manner he may Answer and say for himselfe that he hath not done any wrong or disseisin nor hath any thing in the Tenements put in the Plaint and he may so Answer and so of others till it come to the Tenant in whose name the disseisin was and he may Answer and say that he is not in by disseisin but is in by D. who infeoffed him who is not named in the Writ and it may be that D. entred by E. and so there may be many according to divers Feoffments betwixt the first Disseisor and the Tenant in which cases no Voucher to warranty holdeth place for a Personall Trespasse and therefore every one is well to looke not to make a Contract of a vicious thing and that he take Caution and such Surety in the Contract that he may have a recourse to recover if he lose the thing and therefore the Lords used so keepe their Mannours that none could enter by Intrusion Disseisin or by other vicious bargaines not otherwise unlesse the bargaines were entred in their full Courts whereby the Lords could not have received their enemies into their Mannours nor have taken their Homage against their wills nor any used to enter before they had found Sureties to restore to the Purchasor or his Heires the value of the thing if by rightfull Iudgement it belonged to him after his thing lost for the offence of Allienation or for his power of this warranty To the principall Disseisor it belongeth to have a regard if the Plaintiffe put more into his Plaint that he Answer not but to that which he may avowe he may say that there is varience betwixt the Originall and the Commission or that the Writ is vicious as it is in misprision of names or fit-names Of names as Renand for Harrand Margery for Margaret and such like or he may say the Writ is faulty for want of Sirnames or if the names of Dignity be omitted as if a Bishop Abbot Prior or other be disseised of any thing in the right of his Dignity and he makes his plaint simply of a Trespasse done onely to his Person and not to his Church or Dignity in this manner A. complaines to you wherea he ought thus to make his Plaint A Bishop of London and so it is of Disseisors Or he may say that the Writ is vicious because the Plaintiffe who is solely in the Plaint hath no cause of Action but with another who is not named in the Writ Or it may be faulty if it be not contained in the Writ Dissersivie eum where it ought to be Dissersivie eam or eos where it should be ewn or eam etè contra It is contained in the Writ wrongfully and without Judgement c. and to that one may plead not wrongfully but rightfully denying any other force And note that one may be disseised wrongfully and without Judgement and wrongfully and by Judgement as it is of those who are disseised of their Free-holds by the Judges who have no Iurisdiction and neverthelesse
to the Bayliffes sometimes to the Justices in Eyre sometimes to certaine persons named and sometimes to persons not named as to Bayliffes Justices and Sheriffes And every Plaintiffe used to have a Commission to his Judge by the Writ Patent aforesaid And now may Justices Sheriffs and their Clerks forge Writs thorough draw loose amend or empaire them without any prosecuting or punishment because the Writ are made close through abuse of the Law By that Seale only is jurisdiction grantable to all Plaintiffes without difficulty and the Chancellour is chargeable by his oath of allegiance to make such Writs and that hee do not delay or deny justice nor a remediall Writ to any one CHAP. IIII. SECT 4. Jurisdiction is a power to declare the Law THat power God gave to Moses and that power they have now who hold his place upon earth as the Pope and the Emperour and under them the King now hath this power in his Realme The King by reason of his dignity maketh his Justices in divers degrees and appoin●eth to them jurisdiction and that in divers manners sometimes certaine especially as in Commissions of lesse Assizes sometimes in certaine generally as it is of Commissions of Justices in Eyre and of the Chiese Justices of Pleas before the king and of Justices of the Bench to whom jurisdiction is given to heare and determine Fines not determined the grand Assizes the transations of Pleas and the rights of the King and of the Queen and of his Fees and the words of the Kings Writs whether they be named generally or specially Besides the Barons of the Exchequer have Jurisdiction over receivers and the Kings Bayliffes and of Alienations of Lands and rights belonging to the King and to the right of his Crowne Sometimes jurisdiction is given to Sheriffes for the defaults of others as appeareth in the Writ of Right where it is sayd That if he do not right that the Sheriffe of the County shall do it Sometimes to those who have the Returne of Writs Returnables Sometimes jurisdiction is given to the Justices of the Beach by removing of the Pleas out of the Counties before the sayd Justices and sometimes to Record the Pleas holden in meane Courts without Writs before the same Justices of the Bench But as those Records ought not to availe the Plaintiffes if not after judgement given that the Pleers be Returnable untill after their judgements And as the Pleas moved upon the Writs are to be remanded into the Lords Courts where the Lords have not failed to do right In like manner are the Pleas removed by Pone returnable in the Counties in case where the parties never appeared in Court for to Plead To the office of chiefe Justices it belongeth to redresle and punish the tortious judgements and the wrongs and the errours of other Justices and by Writ to cause to come before the King the proceedings and the Records with the originall Writs and before such Justices are all Letters Pleadable returnable and to be ended wherein mention is made before the King himselfe and the Writs not Pleadable nor Returnable before the King are returnable into the Chancery And also it belongeth to their office to heare and determine all plaints made of personall wrongs within twelve myles of the Kings house and to deliver Goals and the prisoners from thence who are to be delivered and to determine whatsoever is determinable by Justices in Eyre more o● lesse according to the nature of their commission On the other side there is a kinde of jurisdiction which is called Arbitrary which is not ordinary nor assigned as is such which is by the assent of the parties Of Jurisdiction commeth Judgement which hath many significations In the one judgement is as much to say as absolutions from offence In another sence as sentence which sometimes soundeth well as of discharge or acquittance from punishment and sometimes ill as Excomengment and in another sence as the end of the Plea and the end of jurisdiction Jurisdiction assigned may be for a time or for ever For a time as in some exception dilatory where the Action reviveth for ever as by a definitive sentence upon the Action Judgements vary according to the difference of offences In like offences neverthelesse there are the like Judgements For the mortall offences according to the warrant of the old Testament were assoiled by death For in the old Testament it is found That God commanded Moses that he should not suffer Felons to live But before more is to be spoken of punishments it is to see by what introduction offenders and contumacious persons are compellable to appeare in Court and by what judgments CHAP. IIII. SECT 4. Defaults punishable DEfaults are punishable many wayes In appeals of Felony they are punishable by Outlawry which judgement is such that after that any one hath been solemnly called and demanded to appeare to the Kings peace at three severall Counties for felony and he commeth not that from thence forward hee is holden for a Woolfe and is called Wolfshead because the Woolfe is a beast hated of all people and from thence forward it is lawfull for any one to kill him as it is a Woolfe whereof the custome was to bring the heads to the chiefe place of the County or of the Franchise and according to Law for every head of an Outlaw to have halfe a marke and such Fugitives Outlawes forfeited for their contempts the Realm Countrey friends and whatsoever belonged to the peace and all manner of rights which they ever had or could have by any Title not only as to themselves but to their heires for ever Also all confederations of Homages of alliance of affinity of service of oathes and all maner of obligations betwixt the Outlawes and others were broken severed and defeated by such judgement And all manner of Grants Rents and Contracts and all manner of Actions which they had against any manner of persons were void not only from the time of judgement but from the time of the Felony for which such judgement was given and such persons could never againe resort to answer the Felony if the Processe of Outlawry were not faulty if not by the great mercy and favour of the King Weomen were not plevisibles and put in dozens as men but were waves CHAP. IIII. SECT 5. Defaults IN personall Actions venialls defaules used to be punished after this manner The Defendants were distrained to the value of the demand afterwards they were to heare their judgements for their defaults and for default after default judgement was given for the Plaintiffe This usage was changed in the time of King Hen. the first That no Freeman was not to be destrained by his body for an action personall veniall so long as he had Lands In which case the judgement by default was of force till the time of King Hen. the third That the Plaintiffe should recover his seifure of the Land to hold the fame in demeasure
after default untill due satisfaction was made so as the defaults were more hurtfull to persons in contempt then profitable Some Actions are personalls and not mixt in the introduction as of Neistie of Acccompt of leading away distresses and some actions there are that although they savour of the personalty and realty yet they hold not the rules of those actions As of Recognitions of Assizes in which if the Tenants make defaults for that there is no distresse nor seisure of the Land or other thing in the Kings hands but the Recognitions are to be taken ex officio and the Judgements are to be pronounced according to the Verdict of the Jurours in respect of such defaults CHAP. IIII. SECT 6. Of Personall Action IN personall Actions venialls where the Defendants are not Freeholders the defendants used to be punished after this manner First Processe was to bee awarded to arrest their bodies and those who were not found were put in exigent in what Court so ever the Plea was and were at three Courts solemnly demanded and proclaimed and if they appeared not at the fourth Court then were they banished the Lords jurisdiction or the Bayliffes of the Court for a time or for ever according to the quantity of the Trelpasses CHAP. IIII. SECT 7. Defaults in reall Actions THe defaults in reall Actions are punishable in this manner At the first default the plaintife is there seized to the value of the demand into the hand of the Lord of the Court and the Tenants are sommonable to heare their Iudgments of defaults Or after appearance the seisure is to be adjudged to the Plaintifes to hould in the name of a distresse untill by lawfull judgment hee be ousted thereof And if any one appeare in Court first he is to plenise the thing in demand and presently to answer the default In which case hee may deny the Summons because hee was never Summoned or not reasonably Summoned and thereof he may wage his Lawyer against the Testimoney of the Summoners although they be present and if he wage his Lawyer he is presently to plead to the Action or to the plaintife CHAP. IIII. SECT 8. Of Actions Mi●t THe defaults of mixt actions are punishable in this manner The defendants are distrainable by all their moveable Goods and Lands saving that they are not put out of that possession from Court to Court till they apeare and Answere and the issues come to the profits of the Lords of the Courts CHAP. IIII. SECT 9. Of Pledge and Mainpernor PLedges and Mainpernors are of one signification notwithstanding that they differ in names But Pledges are these who baile other things then the Body of Men as in Reall Actions and Mixt Mainpernors are in personall Actions only those w●● bayle the Body of a Man safe Pledges are those who are sufficient to answere the demand or the value and are true men and Freeholders to whom the Plaintife is and in whose Court the Plea is brought and if any one bring the Body or his Fees by default he is sufficient punished though hee bee not amerced but then the Offendor is first amerceable when he is brought to judgement and cannot excuse his wrong or save his default And as none who commeth before Summons is amecreable so no Plaintife is amerceable or his pledges de prosequendo for Nonsuit where the Tenant appeareth according to the warrant of the Summons or other wise maketh satisfaction for the same As in Case where the King Commands the Sheriffe that hee command such a one to appeare or to doe and if he do not and the Plaintifes put in sureties to prosecute his suit then that he summon or attach the defendant c. In which case if the Sheriffe had not warned the Tenant to appeare or to do according to the points of the Warrant if he take surety of the Plaintife to prosecute hee doth him wrong But the Plaintifes and their pledges are to bee amerced when the defendants offer themselves in judgment against them and they make defaults by Nonsuit And also those Sheriffs do wrong who forbeare to execute the Kings Commands in as much as the Plaintifes have found sureties to prosecute their Plaints when no mention is made in the Writts to put in sureties CHAP. IIII. SECT 10. Defaults after summons AS there is a default of persons in the like manner there are of things As of services issuing out of Lands where the Lands are in service and wherenot If Rent Suit or other service bee behinde to the Lord of the Fee The Tenant is not distraineable for the same by his moveable goods but it behoveth to sommon the Tenants to save their defaults or to make satisfaction or to answere wherefore those services due out of their possessions are behinde to the Lords and if they appeare not at the Sommon by the a ward of the suitors their Lands are to be seised into the Lords hands til they justify themselves by pledges And if they be againe summoned to heare the Iudgments for their defaults Although they come not at the second Summon they are not to bee amerced in as much as they came they may render the Land or alledge a priviledge or say something why they ought not to obey the Summons And if the Lord have not a proper Court nor suitors or hath not power to do Iustice to his Tenants in manner as aforesaid Then the same may bee done in the County or Hundred or elce in the Kings Courts Or at first by a Writ of Customes and Services and other Remediall Writts And if any one hath not any thing to acquit himself the Lord is not to loose his Right although hee be delayed thereof but the Lord may seize his Land as before is said and the Tenant is to recover his damages where he can and it shall be accounted his follie to enter or remaine in another Fee without the consent of the Lord. And if any one oust him of his Land and of his Tenement enforceth another person to hould of him and maketh himselfe mesne betwixt the Lord and the Tenant in prejudice of the Lord in such a case the law is used to hould the course after said CAP. IIII. SECT 11. Of champion IF any one do or say to his Lord of whom he houldeth any thing which turneth to the hurt of his body or to his dissinherison or to his great dishonour First by the Award of his Court or of some other such a one is sommonable if he be his Tenant and afterwards if he make default he is destrainable by his Land by the Lord till he appeare and if hee appeare and cannot discharge himselfe by his wager of Law by 12. men more or lesse according to the Award of the Court hee is to bee disinherited of the Tenancie which hee houldeth of the Lord in such a manner by the Judgment of the Suitors and so it behoveth that the Tenants leave their Lands and
Crime blemishing his credit or wrongfull slandering him of any personall wrong For those 3. Pleas are held odious the one because the Holy Scripture forbiddeth vengance to men but the punishment of Offendors belongeth to God and God commandeth to shew mercy and that is against the Appeale of Felony The other of attainder of perjury is odious ●or the Corporall punishment which followth thereupon The 3. because it is against the Law of Nature which will not that any man should be in slavery to another Creature Againe those who combate deadly for reward who are vanquished in the Combate by Judgement berwix● two men those who with-draw themselves from Bartailes when they have undertaken the Combate if therein they make default those who keepe Brothell-houses of loose women those who take againe their Wives after their finne of Adultery is knowne to them or keepe those suspected of that sinner those who are Adulterours those who Marry other Wives leaving the first those who are El●opours or Ravishers those who take rewards to suffer those who cast out their Children to death those who ravish their Cousens or Affines those who Marry a Wife within the yeare after the death of their former Wives those who suffer themselves to be Married within the yeare after the deaths of their first Husbands those and they who Contract Mart●ages elsewhere leaving their Wives or Husbands and those who too soone purifie themselves and many other infamous Persons are to be punished by Corporall punishments in divers manners CHAP. IV. SECT 14. Of Majesty THe punishment of the mortall Sin of Majesty against the King of Heaven Sodomy is by burying the offenders alive deepe in the earth so that the remembrance of them be forgotten for the great abomination of the fact it being such a sin which calleth for vengeance from God and which is more horrible then the ravishing of the mother but this offence is not to be brought before any Judge by way of Accusation but the very hearing of it is forbidden The Judgement of Romery is by fire either to be burnt or hanged The Judgement of Heresie is foure fold one is Excommunication another Degradation the third Dis-inheriting the fourth is Burning to Cinders The Judgement of Majesty against the Earthly King is by punishment according to the Ordinance and pleasure of the King The Judgement of falsifying and of Treason is by drawing of the Parties and hanging them till they be dead CHAP. IV. SECT 15. Of Burning THe Judgement of Burning is to hang untill the Parties be dead which used to be by burning and in case where the damageous burning is by encrease of any combustable matter it was used to cast them into the fire when they found them fresh in the doing of it CHAP. IV. SECT 16. Of Murder THe Judgement of Murder is commonly by hanging untill the Parties be dead in Felonies not notorious and in notorious it is by beheading the Murderours neverthelesse we are to distinguish for some kill men and offend not nor deserve any punishment some are Man-slayers in signification and not by name and some are slayers of themselves The first are Lawfull Judges who by a right Judgement and good Conscience kill men and the Ministers or Officers who doe Executions of such lawfull Judgement and also as it is of those who kill without Judgement and without offence as it is of those who are without discretion and kill men as Mad-men Idiots Infants within the age of seven yeares and those who kill men in keeping of the Kings Peace and of those who kill by Law as of those Men-slayers who kill men in their mortall offences notorious in Fact and as in is of those who kill men in their owne defence who otherwise cannot save their owne lives The other sort is of those who have a desire to kill and cannot as it is of those who cast Infants sicke people old people in such places where they intend they shall dye for want of helpe and as it is of those who so paine innocent men that to avoid the same they confesse themselves to have mortally offended those who Condemne men by corrupt Judgement although that they doe not directly kill them and as willfull Men-slayers who Appeale or Indite innocent Persons of mortall offence and prove not their Appeales or their Indictments and although these used to be Judged to death neverthelesse Ring Hen. the 1. Ordained this mitdgation that they be not Judged to dye but that they have Corporall punishment and of those who wrongfully Appeale yee are to distinguish for if any one hath appealed another so falsly that there was no colour of Appeale by Judgement or other reasonable proofe in such case he was to be adjudged to make satisfaction to the Party and afterwards to suffer Corporall punishment King Kannte used to Judge the Maine-prisors according as the Principalls when their Principalls appeared not in Judgement but King Hen. the 1. made this difference That the Ordinance of Kanute should hold against Maine-prisors who were consenting to the Fact and the other should be adjudged against the Plaintiffes according to the example of the Principalls if they were present and against the King they were punished with a pecuniary penalty The third Case is of those who burne hang hurt or otherwise kill themselves Againe yee a●e to distinguish of other Men-slayers as of Phifitians Jurours Justices Witnesses of Idiots Mad-men and Fugitives for Phisitians and Chirurgions are skilfull in their Fac●●ties and probably doe lawfull Cures having good Consciences so as nothing faileth to the Patient which to their Art belongeth if their Patients dye they are not thereby Men-slayers or Mayhemors but if they take upon them a Cure and have no knowledge or skill therein Or if they have knowledge if neverthelesse they neglect the Cure or minister that which is cold for hot or hot for cold or take little care thereof or neglect due diligence therein and especially in Burning and cutting off of members which they are forbidden to doe but at the perill of their Patient if their Patients dye or lose their members in such cases they are Men-slayers or Mayhemders Judges Iudge men sometimes falsly to death wittingly and sometimes out of ignorance in the first case they are Murderers and are to be hanged by Iudgement and not onely those who gave the Iudgement but the Accessories Abbettors and those who hindred not such Iudgement when they might have done it Andin the second place yee are to distinguish for one mannet of ignorance is as of a thing known had nor been known and this kinde of ignorance doth excuse the other is of a thing not knowne which ought to have been knowne although he was not bound to know it and this excuseth also the third kinde is which commeth of not knowing that which a man is bound to know and this excuseth not And note that ignorance in its selfe is no offence but this neglect of
the goods be held sufficient by a reasonable Extent untill the debt and damages be leavied Those who are Appealed and Endicted of Felony and are not to be found it behooveth that they be proclaimed and especially before the Kings and his Iustices Errants and if they be found guilty then they are to be commanded to put them in exigent so that the first county after the Eyre be the first day and so they be demandable at three Counly Courts untill they be Out-lawed if they ●ender not themselves to the Peace CHAP. IV. SECT 27. Of the Office of Justices in Eyre TO the Office of Iustices in Eyre it belongeth especially to enquire by Iurours and by examination of the Roles of the Coroners of all that were Out-lawed after the last Eyre and after Certificate of their names they are to enquire of the names of their Pledges that is to say whether they were in Dozien or in Franck-pledge and if their Pledges be in the same County then are the Pledges punishable by a pecuniary paine because they brought not those they tooke in Maine-prise to appeare and if they were elsewhere in Dezien then they are to enquire in whose Main-prise they were and they are punishable according to the example of the Pledges for the same cause To help the memories of the people are Escripts Charters and Minements very necessary to prove the conditions and the points of Contracts Gifts Sales Feoffments and other things By the Statute of Leuchfred it was Enacted that one might deny nude ●ontracts made by words and it was Ordained that Plaintiffes should prove their Writings which were denyed and not proveable by Neighbours in England and for forraigne Contracts by Battaile or by the setting to of other Seale or by Iurours at the election of the Plaintiffes If Iurours have obscurely or doubtfully or not sufficiently given their Verdict in any Action or Exception or any of the parties be grieved thereby there is remedy by a Commission of C●●tisicate to make the Iurour come againe and the Parties who are the Plaintiff ought to have under the Kings Seale and of the Iudge and of the Parties the proceedings of the Plea before and shew the defect and the offence of the Iurours in which case if the Iudge by examination finde it doubtfull the ●aid doubt is to be reduced to certainty and the obscurity to cleernesse and the errour into truth and so the first Iudgement is to be redressed The Contents of the Fifth Chapter A Busions of the Common Law The defects of the great Charter The reprehensions of the Statute of Merton and Marle-bridge The reprehensions of the Statutes of Westmister 1. The reprehension of the Statute of Wesim 2. and of Gloucester The reprehensions of Circumspecte agatis The reprehensions of the new Statute of Merchants CHAP. V. CHAP. V. Sect. 1. Abusions of the Common Law THere are many who say That although other Realmes use a written Law yet onely England useth her Customes and her Usages for Law not written but betwixt rightfull and tortious usages there is a difference for tortious usages not warranted by Law nor suffered by Holy Scripture are not at all to be used as for example those of Theeves whose usages are to rob and steale And to shew some abuses holden for usages which are frauds to the Law and repug●ants to right and which are not found justifiable by Holy Scripture is this Chapter made of a Collection of part of the abusions of the Law and of persons erring from the knowledge of the right of Law and from lawfull usages Abusion is a disuse or a misuse of right usages turned to abuses sometimes by contrariety and repugnancy to Law sometimes by too large a usage thereof 1 The first and chiefe abusion is That the King is above the Law whereas he ought to be subject to it as it is contained in his Oath 2 It is an abuse that whereas Parliaments ought to be for the salvation of the Soules of Trespassors twice in the yeare at London that they are there but very seldome and at the pleasure of the King for Subsidies and Collections of Treasuree and where the Ordinances ought to b● made by the assent of the King and of hi Earles they are now made by the Kin and his Clerkes and by Aliens and others who dare not contradict the King but de fire to please him and to Counsell him for his profit though the Counsell be not Covenable for the common people without calling the Counties thereunto and without following the rules of Law whereby it followeth that many Ordinances are grounded more upon pleasure then upon Law 3 It is an abuse that the Lawes and the Customes of the Realme with their occasions are not put into writing whereby they may be knowne so as they might be knowne by all men 4 It is an abuse that force holds in Disseisins after the third day of peaceable seisin for as much as he is not worthy to be aided by the Law who flyeth from Iudgement and useth force 5 It is an abuse that Justice is delayed in the Kings Court more then o●se where 6 It is an abuse to suffer any to be in the Realme above forty daies who is of the age of fourteene yeares English or Alien if he be not sworne to the King by an Oath of Fealty and in some Pledge and Dozien 7 It is an abuse that Clerkes and Women are exempted to make the said Oath to the King seeing the King taketh their Homage and Fealty for Lands 8 It is an abuse to hold an escape out of Prison or the breach of the Goale to be a mortall offence for that usage is not warranted by any Law nor is it used in any place but within this Realme and in France for as much as one is warranted to doe it by the Law of Nature 9 It is an abuse to suffer so many formes of Writs to be pleadable and therein especially that the Writs are Close and not Patents as the Writs of Right and in that they are made with interlinings and rasure and otherwise vicious 10 It is an abuse that the money is not quarterable that it is not Silver that it is held payable if the forrein circle be not whole to allay the Money per 18. d. and make paying of Lead to every c. 11 It is an abuse that the King takes more then twelve pence for the exchange of twenty shillings in the pound 12 It is an abuse that no pound is suffesed to weigh twenty five shillings or more then twelve ounces 13 It is an abuse that Treason is not adjudged more by Appeales then it is 14 It is an abuse that a man who hath done Man-slaughter of necessity or with the Peace or not feloniously is detained and kept in Prison untill he hath purchased the Kings Charter of pardon of death as it is for mischance 15 It is an abuse to hold the moveable goods of
Ports and such places which have Counsans of Pleas and also in Court Barons in which Courts is Iustice done according to Law c. And although they of the Cinque Ports ought to be empleaded of their Lands within the jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports yet that holdeth onely where the Tenant sheweth the same and taketh advantage thereof if he be impleaded in the Kings Courts of things which are within that jurisdiction but if the Tenant be sued in the Common Pleas for Lands within the Cinque Ports if the demandant doth recover by default or if the Tenant appeare and plead any matter which is found against him so that the demandant hath judgement for to recover the Land that judgement shall bind him for ever c. But the Tenant might have alleadged That the Land was within the Cinque Ports and by such Plea the Kings Courts should be outed of the jurisdiction c. And so it is of Lands within an ancient demeasne if a Writ be brought thereof in the Common Pleas if the Tenant appeareth and pleadeth and doth not take exception to the jurisdiction and the Plea be found against him so that the demandant recovereth the Tenant shall not reverse the judgement by a Writ of Errour because the Tenant might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and it should have been allowed c. But yet the Lord may reverse that judgement by a Writ of deceit and shall make the Land ancient demeasne as it was before c. And if one hath Counsans of Pleas in a Towne or in a Mannor and a Writ is brought in the Common Pleas of the same Land and the Tenant pleadeth and judgement is given against him the recovery is good for it is within the power of the King and the Writ of the Common Pleas doth take place there and if the Bayliffe or Lord doth not demand Cognusans the judgement is good But in another Action the Bayliffe shall have Cognusans for that the nature of the Lard is not changed and so see that where a man hath counsans of Plea c. it ought to be demanded by the Bayliffe or the Lord and the Tenant shall not demand the same if he be impleaded in the Kings Court but of the ancient demeasne there it behoveth the Tenant to shew the same and plead to the jurisdiction c. if he will have advantage thereof c. And so note that in the Cinque Ports there is such a liberty that the Lands and Tenements are pleadable there before the Barons c. and yet if one be impleaded at the Common Law of Lands within the Cinque Ports the Barons shall not have Counsans of the Plea but the Tenant may plead the same to the jurisdiction in abatement of the Writ c. The Court Baron NOte also that there is another Court which is called Court Baron in which Court the Suitors are the Judges and not the Steward and they hold plea of Contracts within the jurisdiction c. and yet it is said by some That the Defendant shall not shew that the Contract was made out of the jurisdiction and pray that the Plaintiffe be examined as in a Court of Pipowder The Judges of the Court Baron have Authority to hold plea before them of Debt upon Contracts or Detinue but not of detinue of Charters nor Actions of debt upon a judgement in a Court of Record but otherwise I thinke it is of a recovery in the same Court nor shall they hold plea of Maintenance forgery of false Deeds of deceit not of Decies tantum not of pleas of Accompts for they have not authority to assigne Auditors They shall not hold plea of Debt above the summe of forty shillings unlesse it be by prescription and they shall not hold plea of Free-hold by plaint but by a Writ of right they may But if a judgement be given of Free-hold upon a plaint it is said it is good untill it be reversed by a Writ of false judgement tamen quaere c. And note for what Suit a man shall be judged in a Court Baron and it is said That it is where a man is seised of Lands in Fee-simple and which he holdeth by service of Suit at the Lords Mannour that Suit is properly Suit-service and for such Suit he shall be judged in a Court Baron and for no other Suit as it is said c. And quaere also when erronious judgements are given how they shall be reversed viz. when by Writ of false judgement and when by a Writ of Errour And some say That in all Courts where the party might remove the plea by a Recordare upon a judgement given in such Courts a Writ of false judgement lyeth as in ancient Demeasne Court Baron County Court and Hundred but in other Courts which are of Record the plea shall be removed by a Certiorare and upon judgement given in such Courts which are of Record it shall be reversed by a Writ of Errour c. And if a man recovereth in a Court of Record by erronious judgement and Sueth not Execution some say That a Writ of Errour lyeth and the party shall have a Supersedeas if he will prey the same but if a man hath judgement in a Court Baron and taketh not forth Execution no Writ of false judgement lyeth Quaere the reason thereof and what the Law is in that case And note that sometimes the Sheriffe is Judge as in Reddisseisin Wast and Admeasurement and the Processe shall be served by the Baily as is said And note that the Sheriffe is an Officer ●o the Kings Court to execute the Processe thereof yet sometimes the Coroner is the Officer to the Court where defect is found in the Sheriffe c. so that he cannot by Law indifferently execute the Processe as for divers apparent causes yet if the Sheriffe dyeth the Processe shall not goe to the Coroner but shall stay till another Sheriffe is chosen c. And because the Sheriffe is an Officer appointed by the Law to attend the Kings Courts a man shall not take an Averment against the returne of the Sheriffe directly and the reas●n is because where Justice ought to be ministred and executed those who have the Government of the Law ought to repose trust and confidence in some person and if every one might averre against that which the Sheriffe doth then Justice should not be executed but should for ever be delayed c. The meanes and the remedy how a man may come to his due and to that which is wrongfully kept from him and that is by plea and this word is generall and hath divers effects implyed therein and may be divided into divers branches viz. Into pleas of the Crowne as appeales of Death Robbery Rape Felony and divers other things c. and into Actions reall whereby Lands Tenements Rents and other hereditaments are demanded as Writs of right Formed on c. Or Actions