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A47712 The fourth part of the reports of several cases of law argued and adjudged in the several courts at Westminster, in the time of the late Queen Elizabeths reign collected by a learned professor of the law, William Leonard, Esq. ... published by William Hughes of Grayes-Inn, Esq. ; with tables of the names of the cases, and of the matters contained in this book.; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster. Part 4 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1102; ESTC R19612 240,523 272

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the said Grant to the said Lord Owners of the Soil there might dig there It was further moved in this Case That the said Lord had demised the said Interest to one Laycott who assigned it over to A. and B. and if the said Assignment to two were good or not was a further question for if to two so he might do to twenty and so a surcharge might be to the Tenant of the Soil And as to that the said Iustices were of Opinion That the said Assignment to two was good But the two Assignees ought not to work severally but together with one Stock and with such Workmen as belonged to them two And Note it was holden in this Case That this word Proviso being coupled with other words of Covenant and Grant did not create a Condition but should be of the same nature as other words of Grant. CCLIX Pasc 25 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IT was found upon a Special Verdict in Trespass that the place where c. was Copyhold Land and that the Custom there is That every Feme covert there might devise her customary Lands to her Husband and surrender the same in the presence of the Reeve and six other persons and it was further found That A. was seized of certain Copy Land having Issue B. and C. his Daughters and dyed they both took Husbands and B. devised her part by her Will to her Husband in the presence of the Reeve and six other persons and afterwards at another day she surrendred to the use of her Husband who was admitted accordingly the Wife dyed the Husband continued the possession and the Husband of the other Daughter brought Trespass Rhodes Serjeant The Custom is not good neither for the Surrender nor for the Will for it is not certain what Estate she might devise by the Custom and also it is against reason that a Feme covert surrender to the use of her Husband And he cited the Case in Fitz. 13 E. 3. Dum fuit intra Aetatem 3. where Custom is pleaded in the City of Gloucest That every person might alien his Land when he knew how to tell 12 d. and to measure an Ell of Cloath and that Custom was disallowed for the incertainty for he ought to have shewed the certainty of the time scil at what age and the certain number of years Vide also 19 E. 2. Fitz. Gard. 127. That an Infant should be out of Ward when he could do as aforesaid And as to the Surrender it is against reason that a Feme covert should give to her Husband for the Wife hath not any will but the will of her Husband and the Statute of Wills utterly excepts Feme coverts as an unreasonable thing to suffer them to make Devises and although the Statute doth not extend to Customary Lands yet the like reason the like Law. But by Anderson the Equity of that Act extends to Copyholds as also doth the Statute of Limitations And it was said by some of the Serjeants that because the Husband was admitted Trespass did not lye against him for his Entry was continued with a lawful Ceremony In this case it was moved by Anderson If a Copyholder maketh a Lease for years by word if the Lessee might maintain Ejectione firmae and he conceived not for that ought to be a Title in facto and not by conclusion for neither the Iudge nor the Iury are estopped And he said that if the Tenant at will makes a Lease for years that it is not a good Lease between the parties to it but that the Lessee might well say that he had nothing c. Mead contrary And Anderson said The Book of 12 E. 4. 12. is not Law scil If Tenant at will makes a Lease for years it is not Disseisin but the said Book is contrary Also Anderson said That in the principal Case the Presciption is not well laid Quod quaelibet foemina cooperta viro poterit c. whereas there should be also words scil Et usae fuerunt c. And it was said That if the Devise be good then the Plaintiff and Defendant are Tenants in Common and the Action not maintainable Pasc 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLX Jeroms Case JErome made an Affray of which complaint being made to the Mayor the said Mayor sent the Defendant being Constable to bring the said Jerome to him by virtue of which they went to the house of the Plaintiff and signified to him the command of the Mayor and would have brought the Plaintiff to him and the Plaintiffs Wife assaulted them and they gently lay their hands upon the Wife which is the said Assault Battery and Wounding c. upon which it was demurred Cooke for the Plaintiff Customs The Custom is not good nor reasonable vide Magna Charta 29. Nullus liber homo capiatur nec imprisonetur c. nisi c. per legale judicium parium suorum vel per legem terrae Ergo shall not be taken and imprisoned upon a bare suggestion Vide 24 E. 3. Br. Commissions 3. That where a Commission issued to apprehend all who were notoriously suspected for Felons and Trespassors although they were not Indicted it was holden against Law and therefore was revoked Vide the Statute of 1 E. 3. cap. 9. 25 E. 3. 4. 28 E. 3. 3. Justice of Peace not by Prescription 37 E. 3. 18. 42 E. 3. 33. 2. To be a Iustice of Peace doth not lye in Prescription for no Iustice of Peace was before the Statute of 1 E. 3. and the beginning of them being known Prescription cannot be 3. Admit that the Mayor was a Iustice of the Peace yet he cannot determine any thing out of Sessions 4. The Prescription is That the Mayor may send for him and doth not say within the City and it shall be an unreasonable Prescription to say that the Mayor may send for him for in such case in any place within England may he send 5. It is not shewed that they had a Corporation which might prescribe 6. The Wounding is not answered for Molliter injicere manus cannot be taken for a Wounding nor for an answer to the Battery Fleetwood Serjeant and Recorder of London If the Statute of Magna Charta should be observed no Felon is duly handled at Newgate and here we have not pleaded by way of Prescription but of Vsage Consuetudo and Vsage are all one And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff for the Plea in bar was holden to be naught because the Wounding was not answered and the Custom is too general and also for the fourth Exception Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXI Goram and Fowks Case Prohibition THe Case was The Defendant libelled in the Spiritual Court that whereas he was Administrator to one A. and was bound in the Spiritual Court to bring in a true Inventory of all the Goods of the Intestate that the Plaintiff detained Jura Credita by reason of which
being sown the Executors of A. take the Corn it was holden the Obligation was not forfeited for that by the Laws the Corn did belong to the Executors II. Pasc 23 Eliz. A Man possessed of a Term devised the same to his Son when he came to the age of 18 years Devise and that his Wife should have it in the mean time and made his Wife his Executrix and died before the Son came to the age of 18 years the Wife took Husband It was holden that she should have the Term as Executrix till the Son came of the age of 18 years III. Mich. 23 Eliz. A Man made a Feoffment in Fee sub Conditione ea intentione that his Wife should have the Land for her life the remainder to his younger Son in Fee The Feoffee died without making such an Estate the Heir of the Feoffor entred it was resolved that it was not a Condition but an Estate which was executed presently according to the intent Trin. 8 Eliz. IV. Manning and Andrews Case Vide 1 Leon. 256. 1 Leon. 345. Fine levied a Bar. HVsband and Wife Donees in special tail the Husband levied a Fine of the Lands It was holden if the proclamations pass in his life time or before the Wife by her entry had avoided the Fine the Issue should be barred otherwise if the Husband had died before the proclamation had passed 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. V. Buckhursts Case Extinguishment LEssee for 10 years granted a Rent Charge to his Lessor for the said years the Lessor granted the remainder in Fee to the Lessee for years It was the opinion of the Iustices that the rent was gone because the Lessor who had the rent was Party to the destruction of the Lease which is the ground of the rent 26 Eliz. VI. Pulmants Case Assumpsit ONe who is indebted promiseth to pay it upon request in an Action upon the Case upon that Promise the Party needs not to express the Assumpsit with the request it being an old debt but otherwise it is where there is such a promise without any duty precedent VII Hill. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Assumpsit A Man in consideration of 20 l. paid him promiseth to assign to J. S. the Lease of a Stranger It was adjudged that an Action would lie upon such a promise because the Assumor might purchase the House and then assign it Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. VIII Rawson and Browns Case A. Being in prison at the suit of B upon an account Assumpsit and in custodia Marescalli The Marshal suffers him to escape A. being at liberty promiseth to B. that if he will permit him to be at large and further if he do such an act that he will pay to him 10 l. which he doth not pay whereupon B. brings Assumpsit against him it was adjudged that the Action would not lie for that both the considerations ought to be proved and A. was at large before 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IX Strangborough and Warners Case NOte Assumpsit That a Promise against a Promise will maintain an Action upon the Case as in consideration that you do give to me 10 l. on such a day I promise to give you 10 l. such a day after 31 Eliz. X. Escrigs Case IF an Executor promiseth to a Creditor Assumpsit that if he will forbear to sue him until such a time that then he will satisfie the Creditor his debt in that case the Execuor is liable to pay the debt of his own goods adjudged 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench Rot. 30. XI Kirkman and Reignotts Case A Lease was made to two Habendum to them Occupant and to two others for their four lives and the longer liver of them It was resolved that the two named in the Habendum should not take any thing and that if the two first die there should be no Occupancy for the lives of the two in the Habendum was intended an Estate to them and not a Limitation of the Estate of the first two Pasc 30 Eliz. XII Barkhouse Case DEbt against Lessee for years for rent Forfeiture The Defendant claimed Fee in the Land whereas he had no Fee It was resolved that it was a forfeiture XIII Pasc 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Avowry IT was resolved by the Iustices that an Avowry might be for part of a Rent Mich. 28 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XIV Strangden and Burnets Case IN an Action of Trover and Conversion of Goods to his proper use in Ipswich The Defendant pleaded that the Goods came to hands in Dunwich in the same County and that the Plaintiff gave unto him all Goods which came to his hands in Dunwich Pleadings absque hoc that he is guilty of any Trover or Conversion in Ipswich It was ruled to be a good manner of pleading by reason of the special Iustification Vide 27 H. 6. But where a Iustification is general the County is not traversable at this day Vide 19 H. 6 7. 24 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. XV. Infant AN Infant made a Lease for years rendring rent and when he came to his full age he said to his Lessee God give you joy of it It was holden by Mead Iustice that thereby the Lease was affirmed and made good Pasc 25 Eliz. XVI Fullers Case ONe is bound to pay his rent at a day certain payment before the day adjudged doth not discharge him 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XVII Carter and Martens Case Payment TWo are bound for a Debt the Principal makes the Surety his Executor who pays the Debt generally Quaere if it shall be as Executor or as Obligor XVIII Pophams Case Bargain and Sale. LAnd was bargained and sold the Bargainee levies a Fine of the Lands and afterwards within the six months the Deed is enrolled It shall pass by the Fine and the Conusee shall have the Land for the Enrollment shall relate to the time of the bargain and sale 18 Eliz. XIX Henninghams Case IT was adjudged in this Case that he who is special Heir by the Custom as of Borough English Land shall have the Writ of Error and not the Heir at the Common Law. Hil. 19 Eliz. Adjudge XX. Parry and Herberts Case LEssee for years upon Condition that he shall not grant over the Land by Will or otherwise Condition and he deviseth the same to his Executors who except it only as Executors and not as Devisees It was holden that the Condition was broken because he had done as much as in him lay to have granted it over In the Exchequer XXI Sir Thomas Hobbies Case A Man hath issue two Sons and is attainted Heirs the eldest Son purchaseth Land and dyeth without issue the second Son shall inherit the Land as Heir to him notwithstanding the attainder of the Father because the blood is not corrupted between the two Sons
Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXII Barton and Edmunds Case AN Infant and another were bound for the debt of the Infant Infant the Infant at his full age promised to save the other harmless the Infant died It was adjudged that upon this Assumpsit Assumpsit an Action upon the Case did lie against his Executors XXIII Mich. 36 Eliz. In the Kings Bench adjudged IF an Executor promise to pay a Debt when he hath not Assets It was the Opinion of all the Iustices that no Action upon the Case lieth against him but if he hath assets then it is otherwise And the Heir if he hath nothing by descent is not subject to an Action upon such a promise Mich. 28 Eliz. XXIV The Lord Pagets Case Indictments AN Indictment was Quare vi armis clausam A. B. apud D. fregit whereas A. B. then had a Lease at Will of the land the matter was for digging of Turfs the Indictment was holden to be good XXV 25 Eliz In the Kings Bench. Indictments INdictment De uno Equo where it was a Gelding holden not good But otherwise it is where Trespass was brought de Equo castrato and the Iury found a Gelding and adjudged for the Plaintiff 26 Eliz. XXVI Tucker and Nortons Case Execution AN Infant in Execution upon condemnation in Debt sued a Writ of Error his Father and Brother bailed him It was said the Recognisance shall be by them two only that the Infant shall appear and if the Iudgment be affirmed that they pay the mony and not that they shall render his body to prison for when he is once discharged out of Execution he shall never be in Execution again XXVII Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Nobleman Recognizance IT was holden by the Iustices That a Nobleman shall be bounden with his bail in a Recognizance that he shall render his body and that upon the Statute of 13 E. 1. If he hath not goods or lands his body shall be taken in execution for the Law in such case excepts only Clarks XXVIII Hil. 26 Eliz. In the Exchequer Felo de se THe Queen granted to one Catalla utlagatorum felonum de se within such a Precinct One indebted to the Queen having Goods is felo de se within the Precinct Resolved the Queen should have the Goods to satisfie her debt 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXIX King and Cottons Case LEssee for life the remainder in tail the remainder in fee Disseisin Lessee for life makes a Deed of Feoffment of the Land and delivers it and makes a Letter of Attorney to another to deliver Seisin who enters and makes Livery accordingly adjudged that the Attorney is a Disseisor 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXX Gerrards Case THe Owner of the Lands severed his Tythes Prohibition and a stranger took them and carried them away The Parson libelled in the Spiritual Court against the Owner of the Land for the Tythes who thereupon prayed a Prohibition It was adjudged no Prohibition should issue in this Case for that he might plead the same matter in Bar in the Spiritual Court. Hil. 31 Eliz. XXXI Willet and Wilkinsons Case NOte it was adjudged Surrender that if Lessee for years take another Lease from the Guardian in Soccage that the same is a Surrender of his first Lease Note the second Lease was made in the name of the Guardian Trin. 26 Eliz. XXXII Ould and Conyes Case IT was adjudged Commoner Conies that a Commoner cannot kill Conies which destroy his Common though he hath not any other remedy Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXXIII Mayes Case ONe sent a Letter by a Carrier to a Merchant for certain Merchandizes to send them to him receiving a certain sum of mony the Merchant sent the Merchandizes by the Carrier without receiving the mony It was the opinion of the Iustices that the Buyer should not be charged for the mony for it was a conditional bargain and it was the folly of the Merchant to trust the Carrier with the Wares Mich. 30 Eliz. XXXIV Haltons Case A Recognizance was acknowledged before Sir N. Read one of the Masters of the Chancery Recognizance Inrollment and the Recognizor died before it was enrolled it was doubted if it might be enrolled at the Petition of his Executors it was agreed by the Iustices that it might be well enough for it is like to a Conusans of a Fine before a Iudge which may be removed out of the hands of the Iudge by Certiorari and yet it is not a Record till the perfection of it At the same time it was doubted also if the Chancery would aid a man when there wanted the words Heirs in a Deed where the land was sold for mony Chancery compel Attornment But it was agreed that after a Fine levied the Chancery might compel the Tenant to Attorn Hil. 27 Eliz. XXXV Holland and Hopkins Case IN Ejectione firmae it was agreed by the Court that if a Disseisor be of an 100 Acres and he lets the same to divers for Years that the entry into one Acre by the Disseisee is an entry against them all but if they had been Tenants for life Quaere for that then he might have his Action against them And it was said Entre congeable that if one makes a Lease for years rendring for the first two years 10 l. and afterwards 30 l. every year with condition if the rent of 30 l. or any part of it be behind that the Lessor enter The Lessor enters for not payment of the 10 l. that his entry is lawful for the 10 l. was parcel of the rent for it was but one rent Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XXXVI Clamp and Clamps Case Copyholder Surrender A Copyholder in possession surrendred the Reversion of his land post mortem suam to the Lord to an use c. It was adjudged that thereby nothing passed XXXVII Trin. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Lease was made of a Mannor with all Gardens Orchards Yards c. and with all the profits of a Wood except to the Lessor forty Trees to take at his pleasure It was a Question if the Lessee should have the Wood It was the opinion of Dyer That the Wood was not comprised within the Lease but the Lessee should only have the profits as pawnage Leases herbage c. And he said it was a Case adjudged a man made a Lease of a Wood ad faciendum maximum proficuum meliori modo quo poterit that the Lessee thereby could not cut the Trees nor do waste Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer XXXVIII Butler and Lightfoots Case IT was holden by the Barons Copyholder Surrender 3 Leon. 239. That if Tenant for life be of a Copyhold the Remainder over in Fee to another he in the Remainder may surrender his Estate if there be no custom to
the contrary for the Estate of Tenant for life and he in the Remainder are but one Estate and the admittance of the particular Tenant is the admittance of him in the Remainder XXXIX Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer IN an Information upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 4. Upon Statute of 5 Eliz. Apprentices against one for exercising the Trade of a Chandler not having been an Apprentice to the same by the space of 7 years It was holden by the Iustices That for as much as he had been Apprentice to a Taylor for 7 years which is one of the Trades mentioned in the said Statute that the penalty thereof did not extend to him but Iudgment was given against the Informer For it was holden clearly upon the said Statute That if one hath been an Apprentice for 7 years at any Trade mentioned within the said Statute he may exercise any Trade named in the said Statute although he hath not been an Apprentice to it Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer XL. Sir John Hawkins and Chapmans Case IF A. be bounden to B. by Obligation with Condition for the performance of Covenants although the Covenants Assignment of Bonds to the Queen or some of them be for payment of money yet the assignment of such Bonds to the Queen shall not be received and if it be assigned it shall be put out of the Court For no Bonds shall be assigned ut supra but such which are made for payment of money XLI Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer A. Lessee for years the remainder to B for years the term of A. came to the Queen and afterwards the Reversion Clark Baron said That the Lease of B. should begin presently and cited the Case 1 Eliz between Wortesly and Adams where a Lease for years is made to A. and afterwards a Lease in Reversion is made to B. for years A. obtains an Estate for life from him in the reversion the Lease of B. shall begin presently But Manwood Chief Baron held that the first Lease was not extinct XLII Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer Upon Stat. 31 Eliz. of Inmates UPon the Statute 31 Eliz. cap. 7. the Case was this A Woman having a great Messuage viz. a Brewhouse alotted to her for her Dower let the same to another reserving to her self two or three Rooms of it and now an Information was exhibited against the Lessee upon the said Statute Clark Baron A Cottage proprie loquendo is where a poor man inhabits and this being a great Messuage cannot be said a Cottage Inmates are where there are more Families than one Manwood Be it a Messuage or a Cottage for more Families than one makes a Messuage a Cottage as to this Statute Gent. The words of the Statute are There shall not be more Families than one in any Cottage made or to be made and I conceive it ought to be a Cottage accounted in Law before the inhabitations of the Inmates Clark If I grant to you all my Cottages in D. my Messuages shall not pass If I marry my Daughter and she and her Husband inhabit with me in the same house are these Inmates Manwood An Inmate is such an one who is at his own finding and therefore if the Husband and Wife are entertained there at the charge of the Father of the Daughter they are not Inmates And if in our Case any Inmate be the same is the Woman for she hath the lesser part of the Messuage Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Exchequer XLIII Cursons Case 3 Leon 239. Execution of a Statute binds the King. CUrson acknowledged a Statute to Alderman Starkey of London and afterwards he acknowledged another Statute to one Hampden who assigned the same to Fitton who assigned the same to the Queen Starkey sued forth Execution upon his Statute and the Lands of Curson are Extended and he hath a Liberate of it Assignment to the Queen It was agreed by all the Barons if Starkey had Execution upon his Statute before the Queen the Execution shall stand against the Queen and the Queen should not put him out A. recovers Debt in the Kings Bench so as he hath Title to sue Execution by Elegit The Defendant sold his Lands and afterwards A. assigned his Execution to the Queen It was holden that the Queen should not have Prerogative against the Feoffee to have Execution of the whole Land and it was holden by Manwood Chief Baron If Execution be had upon a puisne Statute and that is afterward avoided by an elder Statute and the elder Statute is satisfied by the Execution now the younger Recognizee shall enter without suing forth a new Execution Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XLIV Clarks Case IN Ejectione firmae The Case was the Master Brothers Leases by Corporations Misnosm and Sisters of the Hospital of the blessed Mariae Virginis by Indenture by the name of the Hospital Beatae Mariae c. leaving out the word Virginis leased the Land It was resolved that notwithstanding the want of the word Virginis that the Lease was good Then it was moved that the words of the Indenture are Haec Indentura inter Magistrum Fratres Sorores Hospital Beatae Mariae c. Testatur that the said Master with the assent of the Brothers and Sisters aforesaid had leased to A. in cujus rei testimonium the said Master with the assent of the Brothers and Sisters aforesaid had put their common Seal Ayliffe and Clench Iustices held that the Lease was void for here the Brothers and Sisters being one entire Body with the Master are not parties to the Indenture but give their consent only And it is not like to the Case where Abbot or Prior makes a Lease for years with the assent of their Covent for the Monks and Friers being dead persons in Law cannot be parties to the Lease but here in the Case at Bar the Brothers and Sisters are persons able in Law And it is not like to the Case of Parson Patron and Ordinary where the Parson with the assent of the Patron and Ordinary grant a Kent-charge for there the Parson is the principal Grantor and the others have not any express interest in the Land charged Gawdy Iustice contrary It is more honourable for Iudges to maintain Leases made by Corporations than for to permit them to avoid the same And he said for law If two Ioyntenants be of Lands and they make the like Indenture viz. Testatur that one of them with the assent of the other deviseth the Land Leases in witness whereof he with the assent of the other hath put his Seal it is a good demise by them both But Clench said that is not like our Case for the two Ioyntenants are distinct persons and the one of them may assent to the other but in our Case the Master Brothers and Sisters are but one person in Law and a Body cannot be distinct so as one can consent to the other
Common Pleas. LII Frice and Fosters Case IN Ejectione firmae the Plaintiff declared upon a Lease made 14 Jan. 30 Eliz. to have from the Feast of Christmas then last before for three years and upon the Evidence the Plaintiff shewed a Lease bearing date the 13 day of January the same year and it was found by Witnesses that the Lease was sealed and delivered upon the Land the 13 day of January Variance Whereupon Puckering and Cowper Serjeants moved on the part of the Defendant that for that variance between the Declaration and the Evidence of the Plaintiff that the Iury might be discharged Evidence good to maintain Issue But Anderson Chief Iustice said that the Evidence was good enough to maintain the Declaration for if the Lease was sealed and delivered the 13 of January it was then a Lease 14 January Quod caeteri Justiciarii concesserunt LIII Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield The Case was that A. seised of an Advowson in Fee Quare Impedit by Executors the Church voided the Bishop collated wrongfully A. dyed Collation it was holden that his Executors might have a Quare Impedit upon that disturbance and that by the equity of the Statute which gave an Action of Trespass to Executors of Goods carried away in the life of the Testator 4 E. 3. cap. 7. and that the Clerk should be removed at the suit of the Executors Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIV. Harvey and Thomas Case THe Case was that the Husband seised of Land in the right of his Wife made a Lease of it for years Fine by the Husband where avoids a Lease ê contra 1 Roll. tit Charge in Marg. 389. Plow Quaer 31. 261. ib. plus and afterwards he and his Wife conveyed the Land to a stranger by Fine the Husband died Wray Chief Iustice was of opinion that the Conusee should hold the Land discharged of the Lease Gawdy contrary In case of a Rent granted or a Recognizance acknowledged by the Husband the Conusee of the Fine shall avoid any of them But in this Case the Conusee meddles with the Land it self and an Estate in the Land is conveyed by the Husband which none but the Wife or her Heirs shall avoid and if the Wife after the death of her Husband accept the Rent upon such a Lease by that the Lease is confirmed Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench LV. Blaby and Estwicks Case IN Assumpsit It was moved in stay of Iudgment Assumpsit that one of the Defendants was dead after verdict but notwithstanding that Allegation Iudgment was given Attornment for the Court cannot take Notice of it judicially nor any of the Parties hath day in Court to plead it and therefore the Court is not to have regard to such Informations Wray It is not honourable for us upon such surmises which cannot be tryed to delay Iudgment and also the Party is not without remedy for he may have a Writ of Error 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVI Hore and Briddleworths Case HOre brought Trespass against Briddlesworth Quare clausum Domum suam fregit the Defendant pleaded and put the Plaintiff to a new Assignment i. e. a House called a Stable a Barn and another House called a Carthouse and Garnier And that was assigned for Error for that Assignment is not warranted by the Declaration Gawdy said it was good enough for Domus in the Declaration contains all things contained in the new Assignment but if the Declaration had been of a Close and the new Assignment of a Barn it had not been good Wray Chief Iustice Domus est nomen collectivum and contains many Buildings as Barns Stables c. And such was the Opinion of the Court. Mich 33 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVII Mans Case Prohibition MAn was sued before the Commissioners in Ecclesiastical Causes for an Incestuous Marriage viz. for marrying his Wives Sisters Daughter and although it be not expresly within the Levitical degrees yet because more farther degrees are prohibited the Archbishop of Canterbury and other the Commissioners gave Sentence against him Consultation upon which he sued a Prohibition upon the Stat. of 32 H. 8. c. 38. The Prohibition was general where it ought to be special that it be not within the Levitical degrees and therefore a Consultation was granted Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LVIII Doylies Case Appeals IN an Appeal de Roberie against Doyly It was agreed by the Iustices that the Party robbed shall have an Appeal of Robbery 20 years after the Robbery committed and shall not be bound to bring it within a year and a day as in the Case of an Appeal of Murder Vide contr 22 Ass 97. vide Stamford 62. Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. LIX Ruishbrook and Pusanies Case THe Plaintiff brought Trespass for pulling down his Hurdles in his Close The Defendant justified by reason that one Beddingfield was Lord of the Mannor of D. and that the said Beddingfield and all those whose Estate he had in the said Mannor had had a free course for their sheep in the place where c. And that the Tenant of the said Close could not there erect Hurdles without the leave of the Lord of the Mannor and that the said Beddingfield let to the Defendant the said Mannor and because the Plaintiff erected Hurdles without leave c. in the said Close he cast them down as it was lawful for him to do The Plaintiff replyed of his own wrong without cause c. It was holden by the Iustices to be an ill Plea Traverse for the Plaintiff ought to have traversed the Prescription 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. LX. Par Marquess of Northamptons Case PAr Marquess of Northampton took to Wife the Lady Bourchier Heir of the Earl of Essex Leases by a Baron contrary to Act of Parliament void 3 Leon. 71. who levied a Fine of the Lands of the Lady sur Conusans de Droit c. with a Grant and Render to them for Life the remainder to the right Heirs of the body of the said Lady And afterwards by Act of Parliament ●5 H. 8. It was enacted That the said Lady should retain part of her Inheritance and dispose thereof as a Feme sole and that the said Marquess should have the residue and that he might lease the same by himself without the Wife for 21 years or lesser term yielding the ancient Rent being Land which had been usually demised c. The Marquess leased the same for 21 years and afterwards durante termino praedict he let the same Land to another for 21 years to begin after the determination of the former Lease It was moved that the last Lease was void for three Causes 1. Because the Marquess had but for Life and then it cannot be intended that the Statute would enable
Defendant that these Matters of Forgery were not within the Statute of 5 Eliz. nor also the Perjury or the procurement thereof upon which the Lords of the Council there Upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Perjury referred the consideration of the said Statute to both the Chief Iustices who at the next day in Court declared their Opinions upon the said Matters i. e That the said Matters did not extend to the Forgery of a Deed containing a gift of Chattels personals which see clearly by the Statute which as to that purpose extends but to Obligations Bills Obligatorie Acquittances Releases or other Discharges and that also a Deed of Assignment of a Lease of Lands in Ireland is not within the said Statute and also they were of opinion that the said Perjury and the procurement of it was not punishable by the said Statute because the Oath was taken coram non Judice for the Town-Clerk of London could not take an Oath in such a case Note no more than a private person But because that the Bill in the perclose and conclusion of it was contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm the two Chief Iustices were of Opinion That the said Court might punish these Offences as Misdemeanors at the Common Law but not according to the Statute and afterwards Shyriffe was fined and by Order of the Court to stand upon the Pillory Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer Chamber LXXX The Queen and Lord Vauxes Case Bills IN the Exchequer Chamber before the Chancellor c. the Lord Vaux brought a Writ of Error upon a Iudgment given against him in the Court of Exchequer and assigned for Error that a Bill was exhibited against him that the Lord Vaux had taken certain goods of the Queen at Westminster in the County of Middlesex and also had intruded into the Rectory of Ethelborough in the County of Northampton whereas the Queen ought to have brought several Bills being for several causes arising within several Counties But it was resolved by the whole Court That the Bill of the Queen was good enough and here is no mischief for if the Defendant will plead Not Guilty two several Venire Facias shall be awarded one into Middlesex the other into the County of Northampton Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. LXXXI Owen and Morgans Case GEorge Owen brought a Scire Facias against Morgan to have Execution of a Fine levied 8 Eliz. by which Fine the land was given to the Conusee and his heirs the Conusee rendred the same to the husband and wife and to the heirs of the body of the husband Note that the husband was the Conusor the remainder in Fee to the now Demandant and note that the Writ of Covenant was between the Conusee Plaintiff and the husband Deforceant without naming the wife And afterwards the husband suffered a common Recovery without naming of the wife Common Recovery the hushand and wife died without Issue and now Owen to whom the remainder was limited by the Fine brought a Scire Facias in bar of which the Recovery was pleaded It was argued by Shuttleworth Serjeant That the said Recovery had against the husband was a good bar Feme not party to the Writ of Covenant not bound by a Recovery and should bar the remainder and the wife ought not to be named in or party to the Recovery for that nothing accrued to her by the Fine because she was not party to the Writ of Covenant and to the Conusans vide 32 H. 8. Fines 108. None can take by the Fine but those who are named in the Writ of Covenant but every Stranger may take by way of Remainder Vide etiam 7 E. 3. Br. Fines 114. 6 E. 3. Fitz. Fines 117. 7 E. 3. Fitz. Scire Facias 136. It is said by Herle if such a Fine ut supra be taken it is good as long as it is in force LXXXII Sir Richard Lee and Arnolds Case Post 93. SIr Richard Lee Kt. seized of three Manors made a lease of them to Sir Nicholas Arnold for certain years reserving for the one Manor 5 l. and for the other Manor 10 l. and for the third Manor 10 l. upon condition that if the said rents or any of them or any part c. be behind a re-entry into all the Manors and afterwards he bargained and sold the reversion of one of the said Manors to William Winter in Fee and afterwards by Deed indented and inrolled bargained and sold the two other Manors and for the rent of one of the said Manors the Vendee did re-enter into all the Manors Manwood Here are several reservations Reservation of Rents upon a joynt Lease several rents and several leases for although that the words are joynt yet by construction they are become several as Land given to an Abbot and a Secular man although here be joynt words yet they are Tenants in Common Litt. 296. And if I sell to you two Horses the one for 5 l. and the other for 5 l. here are two several contracts the Parties to whom these reversions are assured ut supra are Assignees within the Statute of 32 H. 8. by which it is enacted that Assignees may take advantage of Conditions for such an Assignee is not meerly in by act of law as the Lord by Escheat and he is not such an Assignee but is in by conveyance The Lessor enters upon his Lessee Assigns and makes his Feoffment and the Lessee re-enters now the Feoffee is an Assignee and this condition is destroyed in part and continued in part Condition destroyed in part good in part If one hath Common in the land of another for 20 beasts and releases his Common for 10 beasts the Common for the residue remains but if he purchaseth part of the land in which he hath Common the whole Common is destroyed A Feoffment to two with warranty and one of them releases the warranty all the warranty is gone As to the condition for as much as it is not collateral but incident to the reversion it may be severed and is of the same nature as the rent and reversion A man possessed of lands for 20 years and seized of other lands in Fee Conditions divided leaseth all the land for 10 years reserving rent with clause of re-entry and dieth now the Heir hath a reversion for the land in fee and the executor for the other land so the condition is divided according to the reversion so if lands were given to one in general tail and others in special tail he thereof makes a lease rendring rent and dieth having several Issues inheritable to each tail now the condition shall go according to the rent and he conceived that the Grantee of parcel of the reversion is an Assignee within the said Statute Grantee of parcel of the Reversion is an Assignee within 32 H. 8. Of Conditions as if a Lease for years
the Exchequer lend unto another 500 l. of the Queens money and takes a Bond for it in his own name yet the Queen shall have an Accompt against the Borrower Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer XC Pelhams Case IN the Exchequer Chamber before the Chancellor Treasurer Savile Rep 43. Grant of Office of Sheriff and Barons there in the Case of Pelham the Case was That the Queen had granted by her Letters Patents that Pelham should not be Bailiff Constable nor other Officer or Minister Licet eligatur yet it was holden that the Queen might make him Sheriff for that Grant doth not extend to Officers Royal as Grants of Amercements do not extend to Amercements Royal and also the Office of Sheriff doth not lye in Election but if the words had been Licet eligatur per nos then it should have been otherwise And such was the Opinion of Bromley then Lord Chancellor Trin. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench XCI Godbolts Case IN the Case of one Godbolt It was agreed Sales that the sale of a Bailywick of a Hundred was not within the Statute of 5 E. 6. cap. 16. For such an Office doth not concern the Administration of Iustice nor is it an Office of Trust XCII In Temps Eliz. A. Granted to B. a Rent-charge out of his Lands to begin when J. S. died without Issue of his Body J. S. dyes having Issue which Issue dyes without Issue Dyer held that the Grant shall not take effect for J. S. at the time of his death had Issue and therefore from thence the Grant shall not begin and if not then then not at all And Manwood said that if the words had been to begin when J. S. is dead without Issue of his Body then such a Grant shall take effect when the Issue of J. S. dies without Issue c. If Donee in Tail hath Issue which dies without Issue the Formedon in the Reverter shall suppose that the Donee himself died without Issue for there is an Interest Difference between an Interest and a Limitation and there is a diversity between an Interest and a Limitation for if I give Land between A. and B. for term of their lives if any of them dye the Survivor shall hold the whole but if I give Lands to A. for the lives of B. and C. now if B. and C dye the whole Estate is determined because it is but a Limitation and B. and C. have not any Interest Vide to this purpose 34 Eliz. Brudnels Case in Cook 5. p. 9. XCIII Temps Roign Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A. Seized of a Manor leased the same for years rendring rent with clause of re-entry and afterwards levied a Fine Sur Conusans de droit c. to the use of himself and his Heirs the rent being demanded is behind Dyer A. cannot re-enter for although the rent in right passeth without Attornment yet he is without remedy for the same without Attornment and it would be hard without Attornment to re-enter It was here moved further if the Conusor be an Assignee within the Statute of 32 H. 8. Manwood The reversion of a Termor is granted by Fine there wants Privity for an Action of Debt Waste and Re entries But if the Conusee dieth without Heir although that in right it was in the Conusee yet the Lord by Escheat shall make Avowry and yet the Conusee by whom he claims could not And in the Case at Bar the Conusee himself could not but the Conusor being Cestuy que use who is in by Act of Law shall Avow and re-enter without Attornment for the Conusor is in by the Statute of 20 H. 8. Harper The Heir of the Conusee shall Avow and re-enter before Attornment Dyer 13 H. 4. The Father leaseth for years rendring rent with clause of re-entry the Father demands the rent which is not paid the Father dyeth the Son cannot re-enter for the rent doth not belong unto him and therefore in the Case at Bar the Conusor cannot Avow for the rent before Attornment therefore not re-enter And in Case of Bargain and Sale the Bargainee is Assignee within the Statute but not the Conusor in this Case Temps Roign Eliz. XCIV 15 Eliz. Sir Francis Leak and Sir Walter Hollis Upon Attainder of Treason who shall seize the Goods for the Queen AT the Assizes the Opinion of Dyer and Stamford was demanded upon this matter One seized of Lands and Tenements and possessed of Goods within the Duchy of Lancaster was Attainted of High Treason and a great Question arose between Sir Francis Lake Kt. Bailiff of the Duchy and Sir Walter Hollis Sheriff which of them ought to seize for the Queen and their Opinion then was that the same did appertain to the Office of the Sheriff if in the Patent of the Sheriff there were not special words to the contrary XCV 15 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. TEnant at Will made a Lease from year to year Lease by Tenant at Will if a Disseisin Dyer conceived that it was not a Disseisin but the Lease was void and he said that the Book of 12 E. 4. 12. was not Law. For he who disseiseth a man ought to claim Inheritance in the land whereof the disseisin is done Harper conceived that the said Book of 12 E 4. 12. was good Law for a Lease at Will is a Lease at the will of both parties and therefore when the Lessee makes a Lease for years his will is determined and he will not hold at will. Manwood agreed with Dyer for if Tenant at Will lease for years rendring rent before that the Lessee for years entreth the Tenant at Will shall not have any rent for it was not a perfect contract otherwise it is where a man seized of Lands leaseth the same ut supra If one entreth into my land and occupieth the same of his own head claiming to hold the same at my will and afterwards I demand of him a certain rent for the occupation of my land he is now my Tenant at Will which all the Iustices granted Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XCVI Cutter and Dixwels Case ACtion upon the Case for that the Defendant exhibited a Bill to the Iustices of Peace against the Plaintiff containing and complaining That the Plaintiff is an enemy to all quietness seeking by all means to disquiet his neighbours and hath used himself as a lawless person and having Process to serve upon one in the Parish scil J. S. did keep the Process and would not serve it but on the Sunday in the time of divine Service not having regard to her Majesties laws or the quiet of his neighbors Vpon which Bill the Iustices to whom it was exhibited awarded Process against the Plaintiff to find Sureties for his good behaviour by virtue of which he was taken and imprisoned It was the Opinion of all the Iustices in this Case that upon this Matter an Action upon the Case would not
lie Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XCVII Baspoles Case THe Father seized of Lands is bound in an Obligation 3 Leon. 118. 2 Leon. 10 1. Stiles 148 Devise to his Son and Heir and devised his Land to his Wife until his Son shall come to the age of 21 years the remainder to the Son in Fee and no other Land descends to the Son from his Father It was moved that the Heir in this case at his Election might wave the Devise and take by descent or è contra Vide 9 E. 4. 18. per Needham It was the Opinion of Gawdy and Fenner Iustices that the Son should be adjudged in by descent Clench held the contrary Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XCVIII Onions Case IN an Action upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. for hunting in his Park the Statute gives treble damages It was the Opinion of the Iustices that notwithstanding that the Statute gives treble damages Costs that the Plaintiff should have Costs also XCIX Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN Debt the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover and a Scire Facias issued against the Bail before any Capias issued against the Principal Bail. and the Bail was taken and now they came and shewed this matter to the Court and prayed to be discharged Wray Iustice said They shall be put to their writ of Error for being but Error in Process we may reverse our own Iudgment C. Mich. 14 Eliz In the Common Pleas. A Man seized of a Pasture within which are two great Groves and Wood known by the name of a Wood leased the same by Indenture for years and also in the same Pasture were certain Hedgrows and Trees there growing sparsim by the same Indenture bargained and sold to the Lessee all Woods and Vnderwoods in and upon the Premisses and further that it shall and may be lawful to the Lessee to cut down and carry away the same at all times during the term Harper said the Hedg-rows did not pass by these words for they are not known by the name of Woods 14 H. 8. 2. Manwood held the contrary Mounson contrary to Manwood for the words of the Grant may be supplied by other in it viz. Woods Dyer held that these Hedgrows should pass for the Grant is general It was further moved if by these words the Lessee might again cut them c. or but once Harper Manwood and Mounson three of the Iustices held That he might cut them but once But Dyer held the contrary said so it should be if the words had been growing upon the Premisses and this word growing although it sounds in the present tense yet it shall be taken also in the future tense if not that the word tunc be laid for that is a word of restraint The case which was argued in the Chancery 27 H. 8. where I was present was this The Prior of St. Johns let a Commandry Provided that if the said Prior or any of his Brethren there being Commanders will dwell thereupon then the said Lease to be void And it was doubted if that Proviso did extend to the Successor for this word being in the present tense and yet it was holden by Fitzherbert that it should be taken in the future tense and so to extend to the Successor but otherwise if the words had been nunc being 15 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CI. Conies Case A Man seized of Lands in Fee devised Devises that his wife should take the profits of his Lands until Mary his daughter and Heir should come to the age of sixteen years and if the said Mary died that J.S. should be his Heir Manwood said Tail. That the daughter after she had attained the age of sixteen years should have the Lands in Tail for Devises shall be construed according to the interest of the Devisor if they have any certainty or reason but no intent shall be taken against reason and certainty It is certain the daughter shall not have Fee-simple for that should have descended to her without any Devise and these words if she dye cannot be intended a condition for it is certain that she shall dye but if the words had been If she dye before the age of sixteen years J. S. should be his Heir that had been a condition and if the words had been That after the death of Mary J. S. should be his Heir So as the Estate Tail remains in the daughter Mounson and Harper contrary And that she shall have but for life Mounson said That if Mary had been a Stranger to the Devisor she had taken nothing Devisee who shall first take And this case was put by Barham Serjeant A man devised 100 l. to his youngest daughter and 100 l. to his middle daughter and 100 l. to his eldest daughter and that all these sums should be levied of the Profits of his Lands It was holden by the better Opinion that the youngest daughter should be first paid and then the middle and then the eldest daughter c. and that he said was Conies Case CII 6 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Man made a Lease for life and afterwards made a Lease to another for years to begin after the death of the Tenant for life the Lessee for years died intestate the Ordinary committed Letters of Administration to A. the Tenant for life and A. joyned in the Purchase of the Fee-simple of the Land demised It was holden by the Iustices in this Case that the Fee was executed for one Moiety for the remainder for years Estate executed was not any impediment to the execution of it Manwood conceived that the Term was not extinct for the same is not properly a term Extinguishment but only an Interest of a Term which cannot be surrendred Mounson He hath the Term in auter droit as Administrator and therefore it cannot be extinct Dyer If an Executor hath a Term and purchaseth the Fee-simple the Term is determined A woman Termor for years takes Husband who purchaseth the Fee the Term is extinct by Manwood for the Husband hath done an act which destroys the Term scil the Purchase But if a woman being a Termor marrieth with him in the Remainder the Term continueth for here it is not the act of the Husband but the act of Law. It was the Opinion of Dyer Tenants in Common that in this case the Tenant for Life and the Administrators should be Tenants in Common of the Fee. CIII Mich. 17 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe husband is seized in right of his wife of certain customary lands in Fee and he and his wife by licence of the Lord make a Lease for years by Indenture rendring rent have Issue two daughters and the husband dyeth the wife takes another husband and they have Issue a son and a daughter the husband and wife dye the son is admitted to the Reversion and dyeth without Issue and by Manwood
of giving the Reversion by her Will to whom she pleased and such a Grantee shall be in by A. and his Will for A. hath given expresly to his wife for life and therefore by Implication she shall not have any further Estate But if an express Estate had not been appointed to the wife by the other words an Estate in Fee should have passed Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXI Sir Thomas Kemp and Windsors Case SIr Thomas Kemp was outlawed at the Suit of one Windsor who had against him four Capias utlagat ' and none of them were served and afterwards he sued out a fifth Capias It was moved by Mead that the said Sir Thomas keepeth open House and yet the Sheriff had not served the Capias Dyer The Sheriff may justifie to break the House to take his body and seize his Goods for the Queen for this Process is in Law at the Suit of the Queen but contrary where the Process is sued at the Suit of a Subject And the Iustices commanded Ford Prothonotary to make a special Capias for Body and Goods and a pain in the Writ of 100 l. upon the Sheriff to execute the Writ accordingly CXII Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THis Case was moved by Anderson Serjeant at Law Improvement of Common if in case of Common appurtenant by Prescription without number the Lord of the waste might improve for it is not admeasurable therefore not improveable for the Common being without number the sufficiency cannot be proved Dyer and Manwood Iustices although it be without number yet it may be reduced to a certainty being by Prescription as the number of the Cattel and the best and most substantial Tenant of the said Tenement at any time within time of memory had kept upon the said waste and then the Plaintiff the Lord might improve leaving sufficient according to such Rate Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXIII The Earl of Derbys Case Debt not against the Husband upon a Contract by the Wife DEbt by a Merchant of London against the Earl of Derby and his Wife and declared upon a Contract for Silks and it appeared upon the Evidence that the Countess during the Coverture had bought of the Plaintiff certain Silks for her own wearing and for the mony which the Countess agreed to pay for the same the Action was brought It was the Opinion of Dyer Manwood and Mounion that the contract by the Wife during the Coverture should not bind the Husband but admit that the Husband should be bound yet this Action is not well brought against the Wife for she ought not to be mentioned in the Writ CXIV Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Indictments ONe was indicted in the Country because he commanded J.S. to take up a Bridge being in Regia via leading from such a Town to such a Town and also the said J. S. was indicted for executing the command of the other Exception was taken to the first Indictment because no place of the commandment is alledged in the Indictment and for that cause the Indictment was taken insufficient although Mr. Plowden strongly insisted upon the contrary as in Trespass the Defendant justifies by the commandment of J. S. the same is good without any place of the commandment for in the first Case the commandment is traversable but contrary put by Mr. Plowden Vide 3 H. 7. 11. Markenfields Case Another Exception was taken to the Indictment because it is not there alledged that the Bridge was a common Bridge but because there was other words in the Indictment which supplyed the same scil in via Regia the Indictment was holden good enough CXV 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a writ of Partition between Tenants in common upon the Statute of 20 Acres of Land the Defendant as to part scil 10 Acres pleaded Non tenet pro indiviso and as to the residue confessed the Partition and by Manwood and Ford chief Prothonotary the confession ought to be in the beginning of the Plea and Non tenet pro indiviso in the second place last so as that part of the Plea which agrees with the Demand ought to preceed the part which denies demand And the truth of the Case was that the Defendant had but 10 Acres in all and of them was sole seized Manwood If your Case be such you may safely plead to the whole Non tenet pro indiviso 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXVI Duffams Case A Man made a Lease by Deed indented for 20 years to begin after the expiration of a former Lease thereof made to one Duffam in an Action brought by the second Lessee against the Lessor the Lessor said there was no such Duffam in rerum natura at the time of the supposed Lease made to Duffam It was said that such a Plea did not lye for the Lessor Estoppel for he is estopped to say against the Indenture that no such Duffam was c. And also if no such person was then the first Lease was void and the second Lease should begin presently which Mounson and Manwood concesserunt And Manwood said that the Defendant should be estopped by the recital of the first Lease to say that no such Duffam was and although that the common ground is that a recital is not any estoppel yet where the recital is not material as it is here for the second Lease is to be begun upon the expiration of the Lease recited there is an estoppel Recital Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXVII Brown and Fulsbyes Case UPon the Statute of 5 Eliz. of Vsury the Case was this Stat. 5 Eliz. of Usury A. borrowed of B. 80 l. and was bound in an Obligation to pay to him 90 l. at the end of the year It was the Opinion of the Iustices that although the 90 l. was tendred and B. the Lender did tell the same yet if he take and except but of 80 l. it is not Vsury within the Statute to make a treble forfeiture but yet in that Case the Obligation it self is void CXVIII Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer NOte in the Case of the Tenants of Owning and Northmaston It was holden by Manwood Chief Baron That he who hath vesturam terrae cannot dig the Land. And Gent Baron said where many have Lot-Meadow to be divided every year by lot who shall have the Grass of such an Acre and who of such an Acre c. and so change every year according to Lots they have not any Freehold therein but only Vesturam terrae Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CXIX Sir Walter Wallers Case 3 Leon. 259. Execution a Leon. 77. IN the Case of Sir Walter Waller it was moved if one hath Iudgment in Debt and thereupon within the year and day sueth a Capias ad satisfaciend although he doth not prosecute the same in two or three years yet when he pleaseth he may proceed
taken to it because in the Margent was written Middlesex and in the Indictment they both were named of London and afterwards in the proceedings the words are That Weshbourn and Brown entred in such manner in Com. praedict and that is incertain what County is intended Middlesex or London but the Exception was not allowed for London before is not expressed to be accounted but only implyed Another Exception was because they had not any addition but it was not allowed for it appeared to the Court. And after it was moved upon the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 11 that no Restitution upon such Indictment should be granted if ●he party indeed had had the Occupation or had been in quiet possession for three years next before the day of the Indictment and in the Case at Bar the Master hath been in possession by three years but the Parties indicted being his Servants had been with him but for one year it was thereby holden by the Court that upon the matter Restitution should not be granted for the possession of the Master in this Case takes away all Restitution and that by the Statute Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXIX Canons and Osborns Case A. Seized of a Rent in Fee granted the same by Fine to B. to the use of C. It was moved to whom the Ter-tenant should attorn And by Walmesly Periam and Windham there needs not any Attornment to the Conusee because all the right of the Rent is out of the Conusor Attornment and transferred to Cestuy que use instantly And Walmesly cited this Case to have been lately adjudged A Reversion in Fee upon a Lease for years was granted by Fine to A. to the use of B. B. without Attornment brought an Action of Waste and it was adjudged that the Action did well lye CXXX Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Lease for years is made by Deed Indented rendring Rent and the Lessor covenants that the Lessee paying his Rent shall enjoy the Land demised for the whole term the Lessee did not pay the Rent and afterwards is ejected by a Title peramount By Walmesly and Windham Iustices that the Covenant is conditional and that the Lessee should not have advantage of it if he did not perform the Condition which is created by this word paying Periam Iustice was strongly to the contrary viz. that the word paying did not create a Condition Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXI Thetford and Thetfords Case THe Case was an Action of Debt for Rent reserved upon a Lease for years the Plaintiff declared that Land was given to A. and B. his Wife Leases and the Heirs of their Bodies and that he and his Wife leased for years to the Defendant Baron and Feme and that the Donees were dead and that the Plaintiff as Heir c. for Rent behind c. And upon Non dimiserunt the Iury found that the Husband and Wife dimiserunt by Indenture and that after the Husband died and the Wife entred and within the term died Agreement Disagreement Now upon this matter Anderson Iustice conceived clearly that the Iury have found for the Defendant scil Non dimiserunt for it is now no Lease ab initio because the Plaintiff hath not declared upon a Deed and also the Wife by her disagreement to it and Occupation of the Land after the Death of her Husband had made it to be the Lease of her Husband only Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXII Acton and Pitchers Case IN a Writ of second Deliverance by Acton against Pitcher Leases within 32 H. 8. It was moved if a Lease made by a Prebendary were within the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. because the said Statute speaks of men seized in the right of their Churches and a Prebendary is seized in right of his Prebend and not in right of the Church But it is the Opinion of the whole Court that he was within the Equity of the Statute Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXIII Curtises Case IN a Writ of Error it was holden in the Common Pleas Amendment that if a Writ of Error be brought and delivered to the Chief Iustice de Communi Banco and allowed by him under his hand that afterwards the Record cannot be amended by Prothonotary Attorney or Clerk of the Court although that no Record be entred upon the Roll upon which the Writ of Error is brought Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXIV Scots Case SCot brought a Formedon against A. who made default after default Resceit Anders 133. and now came B. and surmised to the Court that C. was seized of the Land in Demand and gave the same to A. in Tail the remainder to the said B. in Fee and prayed to be received and afterwards the Court upon advice ousted him of the Resceit 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXXXV Terrets and the Hundred of c. Case IN an Action upon the Statute of Huy and Cry against the Hundred of c. the Defendants pleaded Not Guilty Action upon Statute of Huy and Cry. And in Evidence the Plaintiff to prove that he was robbed offered to the Iury his Oath in verifying his Declaration which Anderson and Periam utterly refused to accept of but Windham Iustice affirmed that such an Oath had been accepted of in the Case of one Harrington Oaths where the Plaintiff could not have other Evidence to prove the Cause in respect of secresie for those who have occasion to travel about their occasions would not acquaint another what monies or other things which they have in their journey and we see that the Law doth admit of the Oath of the Party in his own cause where the Oath shall make an end of the cause as in Debt where the Defendant wageth his Law. Periam That 's an ancient Law but we will not make new Presidents for if such an Oath be accepted of us in this case by the same reason in all causes where is secrecy and no external proof whereupon would follow great inconvenience and although such an Oath hath been accepted of and allowed here yet the same doth not move us and we do not see any reason to multiply such Presidents The Declaration is that the Plaintiff was robbed of 10 l. de Denariis ipsius querentis and upon the Evidence it appeareth that the Plaintiff was Receivor of the Lady Rich and had received the said mony for the use of the said Lady And Exception was taken to the same by Shuttleworth but it was not allowed of for the Plaintiff is accomptable to the Lady Rich for the said mony And it was agreed that if he which was robbed after he had made Huy and Cry doth not further pursue the Felons yet his Action lyeth Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXVI Townsend and Pastors Case Feoffment by Coparceners Cestuy que uses NOte It was holden in the Common Pleas by
and prayed him to seal it And Wotton said that he would not that the Obligation was forfeited contrary if he had not denyed to seal it but had shewed the same to his Counsel as in our Case But the Opinion of the Iustices was that the Obligation was forfeited For when he knew the last instant of the time he ought to have had his Counsel there ready with him Vide the Case of Arbitrement 18 E. 4. 21. At another day the Case was argued again by Andrews and he said that the Obligation was not forfeited For he said it is a Rule in Law Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas and in E. 4. a man was bound upon request to relinquish and renounce Administration and there it was holden that after the request he ought to have convenient time to go to the Ordinary before it shall be said that he had forfeited his Obligation In 33 E. 3. it is said that if J. S. be bound That if A B infeoff C. that then he shall pay to the Obligee 10 l. Now if the Feoffment be made after Sun-setting as it well may be yet it is sufficient to save his Obligation if he pay the mony the next day And 19 H. 6. an Annuity was granted to an Infant until he was promoted to a Benefice if a Benefice be offered unto him before he be of sufficient age and he refuseth it the Obligation is not forfeited If a man be bound to enfeoff and make Livery and Seisin of the Manor of D to one upon request and afterwards the Party is made King in which Case he cannot take Livery now if upon request the Party refuseth yet it is no Forfeiture And it hath been holden here by you all That if a man unlearned seals a Deed which is written contrary to the intent of the Parties the same not being read unto him by that he shall not be bound for ever But the Opinion of the Court was as before That the Obligation was forfeited CLVII Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. NOte that Mead and Windham the other Iustices being absent were of Opinion That a Copyholder in Fee who by Custom may surrender in Fee may make a surrender in Tail without any Special Custom to warrant it and he who may prescribe to make a Feoffment in Fee may make a Lease for Life and it shall be good because Omne majus continet in se minus Trin. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLVIII Trecarram and Friendships Case 1 Leon. 287. TRecarram made a Demise by these words This Indenture between Trecarram c. of the one part and Friendship his W●●e and their Children lawfully begotten at the Assignment of the said Friendship of the other part The Question was if L. the Daughter which the Husband and Wife had at the time of the Lease made was Party to the said Indenture and so took by it Or if another Son of Friendship which after he made his Executor should have the Term. Hamon 30 E. 3. If a Gift be made to Infants of such a man it is a good Name of purchase and if he hath but one Infant it is good to him and so in our Case where Friendship had Issue a Daughter at the time of the Lease that she should take only otherwise where he had many And the words viz. at the Assignment of Friendship are mere surplusage as 20 Ass where a man gave twenty loads of Wood in such a Wood whereof fourteen he hath of the gift of such a one these words whereof he hath of the gift of such a one are surplusage Cook conceived that the Daughter who was in esse at the time of the demise should have the Term For if a man make a grant to two as the one of them is not Capax he who is capable shall have the whole As a Feoffment to J. S. and the right Heirs of J. D. J. D. being alive J. S. shall have the whole So Ass a gift to a man and to such a wife which he shall have he shall have the whole and the wife nothing The words At the Assignment c. are void for there is not a Person able to take at the time of the grant therefore he shall not take afterwards and because the Daughter is able she shall Wray Iustice conceived that these words At the Ass●gnment of Friendship were not void but that he had reserved to him liberty to make his Son party or not and because he had not assigned him that he took nothing Ayliffe If Lands be leased to me my Wife and William my Son whereas his Name is John it is void as to the Son for the Misnomer but if he had said Son without more it had been good to the Son and so here if he had not mentioned any Assignment then the Daughter should have had it but contrary by the words of the Assignment Clench The intent of the parties is to be considered As if I grant to you Common within my Manor of D. it shall be construed to be within my Lands commonable and not in my Orchard And here it shall be intended those Children which he shall name when the sealing was and if he name others after it shall be void as a Lease to you and to her who you shall take to wife is void for there ought to be such a person at the time of the commencement of the Deed which might take And the Opinion of the whole Court was That the Defendant who claimed by the Executor should have the term and not the Plaintiff who claimed by the Daughter and therefore Iudgment was entred that the Plaintiff nihil capiat per Billam Pasc 24 Eliz. CLIX. The Countess of Sussex and Worths Case IN 4 and 5 Phil. and Mary 1 Leon 35. ● 3 Leon. 132. Co. 6 Rep. 33. Fitz-williams Case a private Statute was made by which the Manor of Barnham was assured to the Countess of Sussex for her Ioynture Proviso that it should be lawful for the Earl of Sussex to make a Lease or Leases for 21 years The Earl made a lease for 21 years and afterwards he made another lease for 21 years within a year before the first lease ended and the second lease was to begin at the end of the first lease and if the second lease was good and within the intent of the Act was the question Popham Attorney That it was not 1. Because it is to begin at a day to come 2. Because it is made during the first lease But it may be objected that it is said lease or leases It is not the sense of the Act for by it he might only make leases in possession and not in futuro and so he might make a lease for 21 years to begin after his death which should be a great prejudice to the Countess and against the intent of the Act which was made for her advantage The Lord Treasurer and W.
the overthrow of an Estate as the Statute which gives That if a Woman consent to a Ravisher that the next Heir shall enter if the Daughter entreth and afterward a Son is born he shall not put out the Daughter because the Statute shall not be drawn to a private intent to the overthrow of an Estate vested before lawfully in the Daughter Therefore neither in our Case the Act shall not be drawn to a private sense for the benefit of the Countess to overthrow the Lease for years and it is not like to the Case which hath been put If he make a Lease for twenty years and for other twenty years the same is not good by the Act which Case I agree for that is a Lease for forty years Egerton Solicitor contrary 1. As to the word Demise from dismission the same is nothing else but a letting of the Land. Lo Lease is from Laiser a French word and such a Demise at a day to come is an Interest of a Lease and not a Lease it self for he hath not let the Land As if I say I let you my Land for 21 years When shall you have my Land Shall you have my Land at a day to come or presently If I fell you Land and Covenant that it is discharged of all other Incumbrances than Leases for 21 years and there is a Lease to begin afterwards for 21 years I have broken my Covenant If I am bound to make you a Lease for 21 years and I say to you I make a Lease to you to begin 200 years after I have forfeited my Obligation If the custom of a Manor be that Dominus pro tempore may make Leases for 21 years may he make a Lease to begin 20 years after Truly not if there be not a Special Custom to make it good If I give authority to my Steward to make Leases of my Lands for 21 years he cannot make a Lease to begin at 100 years hereafter As to the Case of the Duchy there the Condition is that he shall make Leases according to his discretion therefore there he may make such Leases as he pleaseth As to the Statute of Richard 2. which enables Cestuy que use it is not like to our Act or Statute for that is that Feoffments Estates c. therefore he may make such Leases without doubt If I devise that my Executor shall make Leases of my Lands for 21 years he cannot make a Lease for to commence 100 years after and if they do not make them within convenient time the Heir shall avoid their Authority So the Statute Law hath such Exposition that the precise time ought to be observed as the Statute of 14 E. 3. Cap. 18. 1. Receit to Voucher 8. If the Tenant vouch to warranty a dead man and the Demandant will aver that the Vouchee is dead or that there is none such there the Averment shall be received without more delay Vpon that Statute the Case in 21 E. 3. where one vouched to warranty and a Summoneas ad Warrantizandum issued and then came the Demandant and would have averred that the Vouchee is dead the Tenant said he ought to aver the same upon the Voucher to warranty and that now he had surceased his time to take advantage of the time and the Demandant said That the Statute did not bind him to that nor prescribed any time but left the same generally yet by the Court it was awarded that he should have the Averment the time of the Voucher or not at all So the Statute of 11 H. 7. cap 20. If a woman who hath a Ioynture for life or in Tail and suffers a Common Recovery according to the Statute of 11 H. 7. cap. 20. and afterwards the Issue in Tail releaseth all his right by Fine and dieth his Issue may enter for the assent ought to be by Voucher in the same Action and the like for if there be a mean instance between the Recovery and the Assent then any Assent after is nothing to the purpose for the Recovery being once void by the Statute it cannot be made good by assent afterwards Vide Dr. Student 54. and yet the Statute saith Provided that the Act shall not extend to any such Recovery Discontinuance c. if the next heir be assenting to the same Recovery c. so as the same Assent or Agreement is of Record or enrolled and doth not say If the Assent ought to be at one time or at another But to come to Leases upon Statutes Before the Statute of 2 E. 6. cap. 8. if Leases were not found by Offices they should be ousted and put to their Traverse But put case that after that Statute a Lease to begin at a day to come is not found by Office shall it be aided by that Statute No truly and so it is holden in the Court of Wards at this day And the Lord Chief Iustice of England so held in his Reading at Lincolns Inn The Statute of 1 Eliz. of Leases to be made by Bishops is that Leases other then for 21 years from the time that they begin that is when they take effect as a Deed and when they take effect not to be executed for so they might make infinite Leases Quaere the further part of Egertons Argument in this Case And vide in Cooks 1 part of his Reports where this Case is reported to be adjudged that the Lease made in Reversion by the Earl was a void Lease Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. DEbt brought upon an Escape in L. the Defendant said That he suffered him to escape in C. by the commandment of the Plaintiff without that that he escaped in L. It was holden to be no Plea. But in an Action upon a false imprisonment in L. he may justifie That he was Sheriff of C. and took him by force of a Writ without that that he imprisoned him in L. Rodes Iustice One brings an Action upon an Escape in L. and in truth he never was in L. after the Escape in an Action he shall recover Periam and Rhodes Where the matter of Iustification is tied to a place there the place is traversable And Rhodes said There was a Case adjudged in an Action by Davage against the Mayor of Lynn where the Defendant justified as a special Iustice within the Town and traversed the place alledged by the Plaintiff Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLXI Scot and Scots Case Common Recovery 2 Leon. 128. 3 Leon. 225. 1 Cro. 73. GEorge Scot the Elder sued a Replevin against George Scot the Younger The Case was this One Georgo Scot 20 H. 8. being Tenant in Tail of certain Lands suffered a Recovery to the use of his last Will and 25 H. 8 by his Will declared That he willed that the Recoverers make a good and favourable Lease to Hugh Scot his younger Brother and 25 H. 8. they make a Lease to Hugh Scot for ninety nine years reserving
Marchioness had devised all her Lands and had not left any thing to her Heir for which Case the Heir of the Marchioness entred into the third part of the Manor of Cauford of which the Lease upon which the Ejectione firmae was brought was made by the Lord Mountjoy to Insley and into the third part of the residue of the whole land now his meaning was That if the rent was not well passed by the name of the Manor then the same descended to the Heir which was sufficient for him For the Special Verdict found also That the rent was the third part of the value of the whole Land of the Marquess So that thereupon it may be collected That if a man hath three Manors some of them holden in Capite and of equal value and he deviseth two of them and suffereth the third to descend that the Devise is good for every part of the two Manors and the Heir shall not have the third part of each Manor Pasc 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXIII Spring and Lawsons Case ONe recovered in an Ejectione firmae and afterwards the Defendant made a new Lease for years and he who recovered ousted him and he brought an Ejectione firmae and the other pleaded the former Recovery It was holden a good bar by all the Iustices but Windham and Periam and by them the same is no Estoppel for the Conclusion shall be Iudgment if Action and not Iudgment if he shall be answered And although that it be an Action personal and in the nature of a Trespass yet the Iudgment is quod habeat possessionem termini sui during which Term the Iudgment is in force it is not reason that he should be ousted by him against whom he recovered for so Suits should be infinite and by Rhodes an Entry pendent the Writ shall abate it CLXIV Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. AN Action of Covenant was brought against one who had been his Apprentice The Defendant pleaded that he was within age The Plaintiff maintained his Action by the Custom of London where one by Covenant may bind himself within age Exception was taken to it that that was a Departure For 18 R. 2. an Infant brought an Action against his Guardian in Socage who pleaded that the Plaintiff was within age The Plaintiff did maintain his Declaration That by the Custom of such a place an Infant of 18 years might bring accompt against his Guardian in Soccage and it was there holden to be no departure Wray Chief Iustice was of Opinion that it was no departure for he said It should be frivolous to shew the whole matter in his Declaration viz. That he was an Infant and that by the Custom he might make a Covenant which should bind him But Quaere of the Matter and of his Opinion for that many learned Lawyers doubted much of it And vide the Case in 19 R. 2. of the Guardian in Soccage Mich. 29 30 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLXV Savage and Knights Case ERror was brought upon a Iudgment given in Leicester in Debt Tanfeild assigned Error because in that Suit there was not any Plaint for in all Inferior Courts the Plaint is as the Original at the Common Law and without it no Process can Issue forth and here upon this Record nothing is entred but only that the Defendant Summonitus fuit c. and because the first entry ought to be A. B. Queritur versus C. Clench a Plaint ought to be before any Process issueth and the Summons which is entred here is not a Plaint and for that Cause the Iudgment was reversed It was said That after the Defendant appeared a Plaint was entred But it was answered That that did not help the matter for there ought to be a Plaint out of which Process shall issue as in the Soveraign Courts out of the Original Writs 28 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVI Grindal Bishop of Yorks Case GRindal Archbishop of York made a Lease for one and twenty years another Lease for years of the same Land being in being not expired by four years and dyed and in time of vacation the Dean and Chapter confirmed it Clench It is a good confirmation A Bishop makes a Lease for years reserving the ancient rent but where it was payable at four Feasts of the year it is now reserved payable once in the year the same is within the Letter of the Statute but not within the intent the same Law if the Rent before was usually reserved to be paid upon the Land now it is reserved to be paid at any far remote place And he said that although his lease was in possession yet not to take effect before the four years of the former Lease are expired cannot be said an Estate within the Statute of 1 Eliz. whereby any Estate may pass before the commencement of it for he to whom it was made had but a right to have the Land and he could not surrender And he held that the second Lessee should pay the rent as well by the Contract as by the Estoppel Periam At the Common Law a Bishop with the Confirmation of the Dean and Chapter might have made a Feoffment Gift in Tail and a Lease for any Term of years and he spake much What shall be said the Possessions of a Bishop And therefore if a Bishop disseiseth another of certain Lands and makes a Lease thereof under the Seal of his Bishoprick it shall be now his Seal and it shall be his election in what capacity he will take and then this Land is to be reputed parcel of the Possession of his Bishoprick Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVII Hoo and Hoes Case JOhn Hoo brought a Writ of Intrusion against Richard Hoo depending which Writ the Demandant prayed Estrepement and had it and declared upon it scil That the Tenant after the Prohibition fecit Vastum Estrepementum in prosternendo c. To which the Tenant pleaded Not Guilty But the Plea was not allowed by the Court for there is no Issue in this Case but he might to plead Quod non fecit vastum c. after the Prohibition 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXVIII Clinton and Bridges Case DEbt The Condition was for performance of an Award which was to pay 10 l. to the Plaintiff and to do divers other things The Defendant pleaded Quod perimplevit Arbitrium and shewed how the Plaintiff assigned for a Breach that the Defendant had not paid the 10 l. The Defendant rejoyned that he rendred it to the Plaintiff and he refused it It was the Opinion of Dyer that the same is a Departure for in the Bar the Defendant pleads that he hath performed the Award and shews how and now in the Rejoynder a Tender and Refusal which is not a performance of the Award although it is not any Breach of it 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CLXIX The Bishop of L's Case Tenures THe Case of the Bishop of
L. the King Lord Mesne and Tenant the Mesnalty is holden in chief and the Tenancy by Knights Service the Manor escheats by Attainder If the Tenancy should be holden in Chief was the question Manwood It hath been holden that no Tenure in Capite may be if not by the creation of the King And he said that if before the Statute of Westminster 3. the Kings Tenant in Capite had made a Feoffment to hold of him so as now there is Lord Mesne and Tenant and afterwards the Mesnalty came to the Crown by Attainder c. If by the coming of the Mesnalty to the Crown the Seignory Paramount be extinct then the Tenancy is not holden in Capite but they have taken a difference where the Mesnalty comes to the Seignory and where the Seignory comes to the Mesnalty But he said it was a good Case 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CLXX Pigotts Case Assignment of Debts to the King. PIgott Collector of the Subsidy granted by Parliament holden 28 Eliz. and by reason thereof endebted to the Queen one B. being indebted to him assigned the said debt to the Queen for parcel of her debt upon which Process issued out against B. and now at the return of the Process Cooper Serjeant moved in the behalf of B. that the Assignment was not good 1. There was no such Parliament holden 28 Eliz. 2. No assignment of Debt to the Queen is effectual where the Goods and Lands of the Queens debtor are sufficient but here constat de claro that Pigott is sufficient As to the matter of the Parliament the truth is that the Parliament was begun in October 28. But no Session was then holden but it was adjourned to Newbury 29 Eliz. But if a Session had been holden one ought to say it was Prorogued Fenner There is not any Authority in our Law for such assignments of Debt to the Queen Manwood The Parliament is October 28 Eliz. and so is the Roll and the Record of the Parliament The Writs of Parliament were returned in October 28 Eliz. But then the Queen adjourned the Parliament for there was no Session and although it was adjourned yet the first day of the Parliament was in October And such was the Opinion of all the Iustices 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer CLXXI. The Queen and Paynes Case AN Information was exhibited against Payne Treasurer of the Records in the Kings Bench Priviledge upon the Statute made against the buying of Cattle and he came and demanded Priviledge Manwood It hath never been seen that such Priviledge hath been granted against the Queen Vide 21 H. 6.22 in a Decies tantum by the better Opinion the Party shall have the Priviledge Some said that this is not like to the Case where the Queen only is Party for in such Case Attaint doth not lye against the Iury which have found for the Queen contrary where the Suit is tam pro Domina Regina quam c. Manwood The Law is not so for an Attaint lyeth where the Queen alone is Party Tanfield who was of Counsel with Payne shewed to the Court a President 29 Eliz. where one tam pro Domina Regina quam c. prosecuted a Suit in the City of Oxford upon a penal Statute and the Defendant claimed the Priviledge of the Common Pleas being an Officer there and by the Award of the Court the Priviledge was allowed him Manwood The Suit upon the penal Statute was in an Inferiour Court. But shew to us a President where the Courts are equal CLXXII Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Poor man was ready at the Bar to wage his Law and upon examination it was found that the Defendant was indebted to the Plaintiff ten pounds to be paid at the Feast of Christmas and that upon communication between them it was agreed that the Defendant should pay to the Plaintiff at the said Feast 5 l. in satisfaction of all the Debt due to the Plaintiff and as to the other 5 l. that he should be acquitted of it Vpon this matter the Iustices were clear of Opinion that the Defendant ought not to be admitted to wage his Law for notwithstanding that bare communication the whole Debt remained due not extinguished by the communication for 5 l. cannot be a satisfaction for 10 l. but contrary of a collateral thing in recompence of it c. And satisfaction and agreement to pay 5 l. before the said Feast of Christmas in satisfaction of the whole 10 l. Vpon such matter shewed the Court was of opinion that the Defendant might be admitted to wage his Law. CLXXIII Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Replevin the Defendant avowed for damage feasant Vpon which Issue was joyned and found for the Advowant and Damages assessed and a Retorno Habendo issued upon which the Sheriff returned Elongata upon which a Withernam was awarded And now the Plaintiff came into Court and tendred in Court the Damages assessed by the Iury Withernam and prayed a stay of the Withernam and cast the mony into Court. But the whole Court was clear of Opinion for the stay of the Withernam upon that matter only because in this Case the Plaintiff ought to be fined Fine for Contempt because he had essoigned his Cattel which is a contempt wherefore the Court assessed a Fine upon him of 3 s. 4 d. and then the Plaintiff had his prayer and request Mich. 37 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXIV Germies Case 2 Leon. 119. 1 Leon. 87. Assets IN Debt upon an Obligation against A. as Executor the Case was That the Testator of A. by his Will appointed certain Lands and named which should be sold by his Executors and that the mony thereof arising should be distributed amongst his Daughters when they had accomplished the age of one and twenty years the Lands are sold accordingly and if the monies thereof coming being in the hands of the Executor should be Assets to pay the Debts of the Testator was the question It was the clear Opinion of the whole Court that it was not Assets for that that mony is limited to a special use CLXXV Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Alien Purchaser THis Case was moved to the Court An Alien purchased Lands in Fee the Queen confirmed them to the Alien c. Office is found if the Confirmation should bind the Queen was the Question Some conceived it should For by Anderson Chief Iustice when an Alien is enfeoffed he takes by the Livery the Fee-simple of which he shall be seized until Office found and a Praecipe quod reddat lyeth against him Fenner An Alien and Denizen Ioyntenants are disseized they shall both joyn in an Assize vide 11 H. 4.26 And he said that the wife of the King takes a Husband being an Inheretrix they have Issue Office is found the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesie which see 33 E. 3. Fitz. Traverse 36. It was argued
Praepositus Socii Scholares Collegii Reginalis in Oxonia Gardianus Hospitalis c. And in an Ejectione firmae upon that Lease it was found for the Plaintiff It was objected in Arrest of Iudgment That this word Gardianus ought to be in the Plural Number Gardiani for the Colledge doth consist of many persons and every one of them capable and not like to Abbot and Covent The Court was all of Opinion that the Exception is not to be allowed but that as well the Lease as the Declaration were both good for the Colledge is a Body and as one Person and so it is as well Gardianus 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXX Greens Case AN Action upon the Statute of Huy and Cry was brought by Green The Case was Upon Statute of Hue and Cry. That the Plaintiff delivered to his Servant certain monies to carry the same from Bristol to London in which journey the Servant was robbed upon which matter the Master brought his Action It was moved That the Plaintiff by the Statute of 27 Eliz. c. 13. is not a person able to bring this Action because he was not examined twenty days before the Action was brought but the Exception was disallowed for the Court was clear of Opinion that the Master should not be examined but the Servant CLXXXI 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THis Case was moved upon the Statute of 1 and 2 Phil. and Mary cap. 12. The Town of Coventry was within the Hundred of Offley in the County of Stafford and Queen Mary by her Letters Patents made the said Town a County And now a Distress was taken in the residue of the said Hundred and brought into the Town of Coventry and if that be within the Statute was the question It was holden by the Court clearly That now the Town of Coventry is exempted out of the Hundred aforesaid and is a thing by it self and it is a good challenge for the Hundred of Offley that the Iuror challenged dwells in the Town of Coventry for now it is not parcel of Offley as to the King But as to the Lord of the Hundred the said Town remains parcel of it notwithstanding the Queens Grant. And the Citizens of Coventry shall do suit at the Court of the Hundred but in an Action upon the Statue of Hue and Cry of a Robbery committed in the residue of the Hundred the Citizens shall not be charged 25 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXXII Dolmans Case A. Seized of a Mannor to which two parts of the Advowson was appendant presented and afterwards aliened the Manor cum pertinentiis the Alienee presented and purchased the third part of the Advowson and presented again one J. S. Chaplain to the Earl of Rutland who had a dispensation and took another Benefice and was inducted 1 Eliz. and died 11 Eliz The Queen presented for Lapse and her Clerk was instituted and inducted the Alienee Lord of the Manor died seized inter alia this Manor was allotted to the Wife of Dolman for her part and he brought a Quare Impedit It was moved If Dolman should not joyn in this Quare impedit with her who had the third part and by Walmsley he need not Vide 22 E. 4. 8. By Brian If an Advowson descend to four Coparceners and they make Partition to present by turns and the third presents when the second ought for that time his presentment is gone but when it comes to his turn again he shall present which proves that they are several Tenants CLXXXIII Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. ONe recovered certain Copyhold Lands in the Court of the Lord of the Manor by Plaint in the nature of a Writ of Right It was moved in the Common Bench If a Precept may be made and awarded out of the said Court for the Execution of the said Recovery and to put him who recovered in possession with the Posse Manerii Posse Manerii Comitatus differ as in such Case at the Common Law with Posse Comitatus it was resolved clearly that force in such Cases is not justifiable but by Mandate out of the Kings Courts Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXXIV Anne Bedingfields Case DOwer was brought by Anne Bedingfield against Thomas Bedingfield the Tenant brought out of Chancery a Writ de Circumspecte agatis containing this matter that it was found by Office in the County of Norfolk that the Husband of the Demandant was seized of the Manor of D. in the County of Norfolk and held the same of the Queen in Chief by Knight Service and thereof died seized the Tenant being his Son and Heir apparent and of full age by reason of which the Queen seized as well the said Manor as other Manors and because the Queen was to restore the Tenements tam integre as they came to her hands it was commanded them to surcease Domina Regina inconsulta It was resolved that although the Queen be intituled to have Primer Seisin of all the Lands whereof the Husband died seized yet this writ cannot extend to any Manors not found in the Office for by the Law the Queen cannot seize more Lands than those which are found in the Office and therefore as to the Land found in the Office the Court gave day to the Tenant to plead in chief And it was argued by Gawdy Serjeant for the Tenant that the Demandant ought to sue in the Chancery because the Queen is seized to have her primer Seisin And cited the Case 11 H. 4. 193. And after many Motions the Court clearly agreed that the Tenant ought to answer over for the Statute of B●gamis cap. 3. pretends that in such Case the Iustices shall proceed notwithstanding such Seisin of the King and where the King grants the Custody of the Land it self 1 H. 7 18 19. 4 H. 7. 1. à multo fortiori against the Heir himself where he is of full age notwithstanding the Possession of the King for his Primer Seisin by the Statute of Bigam●s where the Heir was of full age there the wife could not be endowed in the Chancery But now per Prerogativa Regis cap. 4. Such women may be there endowed si Viduae illae voluerint And after many Motions the Court Awarded that the Tenant should plead in Chief at his peril for the Demandant might sue at the Common Law if she pleased Vide Cook 9. Part Acc. CLXXXV Savages Case ONe Savage was presented to a Benefice and afterwards took another and then purchased a Dispensation which was too late and then was qualified and afterwards accepted of the Archdeaconry of Gloucester and Underhil who had the Archdeaconry libelled against the said Savage in the Spiritual Court. Vide the Case reported in the first Part of Leonards Reports Sect. 442. Ideo Quaere there CLXXXVI Pasc 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. HVsband and wife Copyholders for Life the Husband surrendred to the Lord who granted the Land over by Copy to a Stranger
several Declarations the Declaration of the Feoffees shall stand for that the Land passeth from them So if Cestuy que use and his Feoffees make a Feoffment in Fee 21 H. 7. And to that purpose he put the Case reported by Plowden 15 Eliz. 464. Husband and Wife seized in right of the Wife they levy a Fine sur Conusans de droit come ceo c and the Conusee renders the Land to the Husband and Wife and to the Heirs of the Husband the Husband dieth the Wife discontinues the Land the same is not within the penalty of the Statute of 11 H. 7. For notwithstanding the Wife be now in by the purchase of her Husband yet that purchase is not within the meaning of that Statute because the Law respects the original Seisin which was in the Wife and so it was adjudged Vide Term. Mich. 30 Eliz. Pasc 25 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CLXXXVIII The Earl of Northumberlands Case THe Earl of Northumberland brought Debt for Arrearages upon Account The Defendant shewed that before the said Account the Plaintiff of his own wrong imprisoned the Defendant and he so imprisoned assigned Auditors and so the Account was made by Duress It was holden a good Plea by the Iustices of both Benches Pasc 25 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CLXXXIX Clark and Kemptons Case IN Ejectione firmae the Case was 1 Leon. 141. Smith and Burds Case Co. 10 Rep. 129. b. Payment of Rents The Defendant leased for years to the Plaintiff rendring rent payable at Michaelmas and the Annunciation or fourteen days after Et si contingat the said rent to be behind post aliquod terminorum vel festorum praedictorum in quo solvi debet by the space of 14 days post aliquod festum praedict that then c. It was adjudged in this Case that the Lessee had fourteen days after the said fourteen days mentioned in the Reservation without danger of the penalty of the condition and the last words post aliquod Festorum praedict for the contrariety shall be rejected Pasc 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXC Harris and Whitings Case DEbt upon an Obligation by Harris and his Wife as Executors of Giles Capel against Whiting the Condition was that if the Obligor before the Feast of Pentecost pay such a sum so as the Obligee be ready at the payment thereof to enter into a Bond of 200 l. with Sureties to purchase such Land c. that then c. The Defendant pleaded that he was ready to pay c. and that the Obligee was not ready to enter into such Bond ut supra The Plaintiff Replicando said that he was ready absque hoc that the Defendant was ready to pay It was moved that the Traverse was not good for the first Act here was to be done by the Obligee viz. to enter into the Bond ut supra for otherwise the Obligor had not any means to compel the Obligee to enter into it But by Wray Chief Iustice the first Act is to be done by the Obligor and at the Payment the other party is to do that which to him belongs to do Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXC Ralph Morris Case RAlph Morris and his wife libelled against one in the Ecclesiastical Court for that the Defendant called the Wife of the Plaintiff Veneficam Sortilegam Incantatricem Daemoniorum And now came the Defendant into the Kings Bench surmising that the matter of the Libel is determinable by the Law of the Land and thereupon prayed a Prohibition and it was holden that although the Offence of Witchcraft be in some cases punishable in our Law yet the same doth not take away the Iurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Law and to call one Witch generally an Action doth not lye in our Law as it hath been adjudged But to say He hath bewitched such a one an Action doth lye And by Wray Witchcraft which is made Felony by any Statute is not punishable by the Ecclesiastical Law but in case of Slander upon such a Witchcraft such slanderous words are of Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction and for Witchcraft which is not Felony the Ecclesiastical Court shall punish the party and afterwards in the principal Case a Consultation was awarded Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCI. Tyrrels Case TYrrel Warden of the Fleet of an Estate of Inheritance let the said Office for years and afterwards is condemned in London in many Actions of Debt and is there detained in Execution for the sum of fourteen hundred pounds and now one Iden sued the said Tyrrel in the Common Pleas in an Action of debt for 50 l. and had Iudgment to recover and thereupon the said Tyrrel is brought to the Bar and Iden prays he be committed to the Fleet in Execution for his Debt It was first moved by the Court if there was not a practize between Iden and Tyrrel for to deliver him out of the Compter in London to a more easie Prison c. But it was moved by Fenner who was of counsel with the Creditors in London that it should be very dangerous to commit Tyrrel Prisoner to the Fleet because he had the Inheritance of Custody of the said Prison and if the Lessee under whose guard he shall be surrenders his Interest or if he doth not pay his Rent so as in default thereof Tyrrel re-enter or if that the Term expire before that the Creditors of Tyrrel be satisfied then here is an Escape and discharge of Execution and we are without remedy But as to that it was said by Rhodes Windham and Anderson That if the Lessee surrender it shall be an Escape in him and he shall answer for the same Afterwards by Order of the Court Tyrrel was committed to the Fleet in Execution and the Sheriffs of London discharged Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CXCII Owen and Morgans Case THe Case between Owen and Morgan which was agreed Trin. 29 Eliz. was this Richard Owen was seized of Ante 26. Post 222. c. and levied a Fine to Owen and Morgan and to the Heirs of Owen and they granted and rendred the said Land to the said Richard and Lettice his Wife not Party to the said Writ of Covenant nor to the Conusans and to the Heirs of the body of the said Richard the Remainder over to the said Owen now Demandant in Fee The Husband alone without the Wife suffered a Common Recovery the Wife died the Husband died without Issue If this Recovery by the Husband only should bind the Remainder was the Question And now the Lord Anderson declared openly in Court for himself and in the name of his Companions the other Iustices that the Demandant ought to have Iudgment that the said Recovery should not bind the Remainder But first he spake to the Fine it self for the Wife is not named in the Writ of Covenant nor the Conusans but in the Render the Land is rendred to the Husband and Wife and the Heirs
the Kings Bench. CCVIII Barlow and Piersons Case BArlow brought a plaint of Debt in London against Edward Pierson which was his very name and he caused himself to be removed into the Kings Bench by the name of Edmund Pierson and in Easter last he put in Bail Edmund Pierson and we declared against him by the name of Edward his true name and Iudgment was given for us and now when we are to resort to the Bail we cannot find any such Person wherefore all our labour is lost and now we would declare de novo upon that Bail and we pray that the Court will give way to answer Kemp The ancient use was when any removed himself hither by Habeas Corpus the Plaintiff might declare against him at any time within a year after but of late time the Iustices to avoid over-long delays have taken this order that the Plaintiff in such Case declare within two Terms and this is the second Term in your Case wherefore you may declare And it was said that because that the Defendant had removed himself by the name of Edmund he is estopped to say the contrary But if it were upon an Original Writ here it is otherwise And afterwards the Plaintiff declared against him by the name of Edmund Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCIX. Kightley and Kightleys Case DEbt by Eustace Kightley against Charles Kightley Executors of the last Will of Francis Kightley The Defendant pleaded that they had fully administred The Case was this Francis Kightley made the Defendants his Executors who being within age administration was committed to another until they came of full age and after they were of full age the Iury found that in the hands of the Administrator fuerunt bona debita Testatoris amounting to the value of 4000 l. To which Administrator the Executors did release at their full age all manner of demands and if that release were Assets in the hands of the Executors was the Question Puckering Serjeant argued it was not Assets for a Release of a thing which is not Assets in the hands of an Executor cannot be Assets and things in Action before they come in possession cannot be Assets But a gift of Goods in possession is Assets And there is a difference betwixt a certain thing released and a thing incertain of a certain it is Assets for by such means he hath given a thing which is Assets but contrary of an incertain And this difference is proved by 13 E. 3. Execut. 91. where it is holden that if Executors release to the debtor he shall account for such sum before the Ordinary by Parn but Trew said he shall not account The whole Court was against Puckering And Anderson said It is a clear Case that this Release is Assets for he hath thereby given away that which might have been Assets And the Law doth intend that when he releases he hath recompence and satisfaction from the Party to whom the release is made And it is not requisite that every Assets be a thing in Possession or in the hands of the Testator for a thing may be Assets which never was in the hands of a Testator as monies for Lands or other Goods sold So if they come by reason of another thing which was in the Testators hands as the encrease of Goods by the Executors in their hands by merchandizing with the Goods of the Testator or Goods purchased by the Villein of the Testator after his death shall be Assets So monies received by the Executor of the Bailiff of the Testator after his death shall be said Assets Windam Iustice So it is if the Testator hath Sheep Corn or Swine and dyeth and they have young Lambs Pigs or Calves they are Assets for the reason aforesaid And he agreed that the release is Assets and he said it had been so adjudged and he denied the difference taken by Puckering Periam agreed with the rest in all and also denied the difference And he said the incertainty must be such that the same cannot be proved to the Court or unto a Iury that the thing released might not by possibility have been Assets For if Trespass be done to the Testator by taking his Goods and he dyeth and the Executors release all Actions the same is Assets because it might be proved to the Iury that had they not released but brought their Action of Trespass de bonis asportatis in 〈◊〉 ●estatoris that they might have recovered damages which should have satisfied the Debts or Legacies of the Testator and therefore it shall be Assets And yet the thing recovered cannot be in the Testator or a thing in possession or certain in the hands of the Executors With whom Rhodes agreed And Periam conceived that such Administrators made durante minori aetate of the Executor could not by our Law neither sue or be sued For as he conceived the Infant was the Executor and an Infant Executor may either sue or be sued and may release if there be a sufficient consideration given him wherefore he said if an Administrator doth release where he hath no cause nor good consideration he shall be answerable of his own Goods when he cometh of full age for the wasting of the Estate and such a release shall be Assets and it was holden that a release before Probate of the Will is good and it is Assets also And the same Term Iudgment was given that the Release of the Executor was Assets CCX Temps Eliz. In the Common Pleas. NOte by Dyer upon the words of the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. That a Feoffment of the Lands of his Wife it shall not be a discontinuance mes que but that the Wife may enter after the death of her Husband is an Abridgment of the words precedent for in some Cases such a Feoffment is a discontinuance as if after the Feoffment they be divorced she cannot enter but is put to her Writ cui ante divortium CCXI. Pasc 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. NOte by the Opinion of the whole Court A man made his Will in this manner I will and bequeath my Land to A. And the name of the Devisor was not in all the Will That yet the Devise was good by Averment of the name of the Devisor and proof that it was his Will and if a man lying sick having an intent to make his Will by words makes such a Devise but doth not command it to be put in writing but another without his knowledge or command puts the same in writing in the life of the Devisor it is a good Devise for it is sufficient if the Devise be reduced into writing Pasc 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXII. Brasiers Case NOte It was agreed by all the Iustices and affirmed by the Prothonotaries That if the Devisor levieth a Fine and the Disseisee in preservation of his right against the said Fine enter his Claim in the Record at the Foot of the said Fine
A. who is admitted he shall not hold the Land charged and so it was adjudged in the Court of Common Pleas. CCXXXVII Mich. 23 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IT was holden by all the Iustices in the Common Pleas That the Queen might be put out of possession of an Advowson by two Vsurpations and shall be put to her Writ of Right of Advowson as a common person shall be for it is a thing transitory and if the Queen after such Vsurpations grant the Advowson the Grant is void and so it was adjudged CCXXXVIII Mich. 23 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was Tenant in tail the remainder over to another in Fee makes a Lease for life according to the Statute and afterwards dyes without Issue and afterwards he in the Remainder grants his Remainder by Fine before any Entry and by Fenner the Conusee cannot now enter upon Tenant for life nor avoid his lease for by the Livery to the Tenant for life a Freehold passeth which cannot be avoided without an Entry As if a Parson makes a lease for life rendring rent and dyeth the Successor accepteth the rent now the lease is affirmed vide 18 E. 4. 25. and then when before any Entry he in the remainder grants his remainder the Grantee shall have it but as a remainder and so the Estate of the Tenant for life which before was voidable is now made good and so it was holden by Windham and Periam But by Mead and Dyer by the death of Tenant in tail without Issue the lease for life is become void for the Estate out of which the Estate for life is derived is determined by the dying without Issue Ergo c. Vide 21 H. 7. 12. A lease for life is made upon condition That if the Lessor pay to the Lessee at such a day 20 l. that his Estate shall cease now by the performance of the Condition the Estate is determined without any Entry CCXXXIX 32 H. 8. In the Common Pleas. NOte by all the Iustices of the Common Pleas That if a man holds of the King in chief by Knights Service and also holds of another Lord by Knights Service and dyeth his heir within age and the King seizeth the Wardship of the Body and Land and afterwards the heir cometh of full age and before Livery sued the other Lord grants over his Seignory to another and the heir Attorns It is a good Attornment and also Seisin of the Services had by such Lord by the hands of such an heir before Livery sued is good enough and shall bind him afterwards in an Avowry c. Temps H. 8. Vide 31 H. 8. Rot. 420. CCXL Sir William Hollis Case SIr William Hollis brought a Quare Impedit against the Bishop of Coventry Godfrey Fuliamb Kt. and William Waltham Clark The Case was Sir Ralph Langford Kt. was seized of the Manor of D. to which the Advowson was appendant and presented to the same Church one A. his Clark who was admitted c. And afterwards the said Sir Ralph granted the next Avoidance of the same Church to Sir Godfrey Fuliamb James Fuliamb George Fuliamb and William Walton eorum uni conjunctim divisim afterward the said Sir Ralph granted by fine the said Manor with the Advowson to Sir William Hollis in Fee the Church became void the said Sir Godfrey Fuliamb presented the said Waltham his Clark who was admitted c. And upon Argument at the Bar and Bench It was adjudged against the Plaintiff and the Presentment of Sir Godfrey sole without the others was good Notwithstanding also that Waltham the Presentee was one of the Grantees of the next Avoidance Tr. 31 H. 8. Rott 420. Vide 21 E. 4. 66. 35 H. 6. 62. See this Case lately Reported in Sir George Mores Reports by the name of Sir Godfrey Fuliambs Case CCXLI. Temps Roign Eliz. NOte by Hind and Hales the Kings Attorney Iustices of Assize in the County of Essex in the Case of the Bishop of London and one Heron Keeper of Cronden Park if the Keeper of my Park or any of his Servants without his assent of their own heads and without my commandment kill my Deers within the said Park being within his keeping or abateth or pulleth down any house within the Park or Barn for to lay Hay for the Deer there or cutteth any Trees Wood or Vnderwoods there growing and sells the same or gives it to another that in all these cases the Keeper of the Park shall forfeit his Office And it was agreed by them That such a Keeper hath not any estate or possession in the Park or in the Lodge but the possession remains always in the Owner of the Soil of the Park and the Keeper hath but the occupation and keeping and the surveying of the same for such a Keeper cannot justifie the holding of the Lodge with force in a Writ brought upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. by the Owner of the Park but it was agreed that he who hath the inheritance in such an Office shall not forfeit his Office for the causes aforesaid Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXLII. Fitz and Pierces Case IN Ejectione firmae by Fitz against Pierce Pierce was outlawed and now came and shewed by way of Plea that the outlawry was erronious in this videlicet ad Com' meum tent ' 30 Jan. 29 Eliz. whereas the said day was Dies Dominicus and so there was no County Court It was the Opinion of Windham that the same matter did well lye in Plea for it is matter apparent within the Record as in the case of Brecket and Fish Plowd Com. 266. Rhodes and Periam were of a contrary Opinion and said the case cited is not like to the case at Bar for there it appeareth to the Court as Iudges when every Term beginneth and endeth but it is otherwise in our case si 30 die Januarii be dies Dominicus necne for it shall be tryed by the Country c. Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLIII Keenes Case RAlph Keene Vicar of B. was Indicted for stopping quandam viam valde necessariam Indictment Nusance for all the Kings Subjects there passing Exception was taken to it because it wanted the word Regiam and the word necessariam doth not imply any matter for a Foot way is necessary Addition Also here the Party hath not any addition It is R. K. but it is not said Clarke and for these causes the Party was discharged Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCXLIV Peake and Pollorts Case ACtion upon the Case by Peake against Pollort Words upon these words Thou art a malicious and sedicious man and movest the Queens Subjects to Sedition It was the Opinion of the Court that the words were not actionable for they were too general for it may be that the Defendant hath stirred up the Tenants of a Manor to Tumults and Sedition which is not any great Scandal And the Statute of
for 21 years to begin at Michaelmas before and in pleading it was shewed That virtute cujus dimissionis posterioris the Plaintiff entred fuit possess crastino Michaelis which was before the making of the Lease and the Plaintiff in his Declaration declared That the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff had assigned to him the said Leases had promised to pay to him 630 l. It was found for the Plaintiff Cook For where the Plaintiff in an Action upon the Case declares upon two Considerations in such Case although the one be void yet if the other be good and sufficient the Action is maintainable but the Damages shall be given without respect had to the Consideration insufficient and the Plaintiff was to declare upon both Considerations for the Assumpsit upon which the Action is conceived was in consideration that both the Leases were assigned to the Defendant and our Declaration ought to be according to the Assumpsit and it was not material although that one of the Considerations was utterly void Another Exception was taken Because the Lease is set forth to be made 18 October and that by virtue thereof the Plaintiff entred Cro. Mich. Then the Plaintiff entring Cro. Mich. was a Disseisor and then being in by disseisin he could not assign his Interest to another and that appears clearly to the Court upon the whole matter But Cook said That shall not hurt us for it is but matter of surplusage to say Virtute cujus c. As 20 H. 6. 15. the Plaintiff in Trespass supposed by his Declaration that the Trespass for which the Action was brought commenced 10 H. 6. with a Continuando until the day of the Action brought viz. idem 14 Febr. 17 H. 6. where the Writ bore date 12 die Octobris Anno 17 H. 6. And Exception was taken to the Declaration because the continuance of the time was not put in certainty But the Exception was not allowed for it is certain enough before the viz. the day of Writ brought and so the viz is void and all that which follows upon it And so here this Clause Virtute cujus est totum sequitur est omnino void 7 H. 4.44 Br. Action upon the Case 37. The Writ was Quare Toloniam asportavit illud solvere recusavit Exception was taken to the repugnancy for it would not be carried away if it were not paid before yet the Writ was awarded good and the first word Toloniam asportavit holden void So here in the principal Case As to the other Exception it is clear That here is not any Disseisin upon this Entry of the Plaintiff before the making of the said Lease for there was a Communication betwixt the Parties of such a Lease to be made or of such an Assignment and peradventure the Entry was by assent of the other part and then no Disseisin And posito it should be a Disseisin yet the Plaintiff hath assigned all the Interest quod ipse tunc habuit according to the consideration and delivered to the Defendant both the Indentures of Demises and so he hath granted all that which he might grant And if it be a void Assignment or not is not material for quacunque via data the Consideration is good and then the Assumpsit good also Egerton Solicitor contrary In every Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit three things ought to concur Consideration Promise and breath of Promise and in this Case the Assignment of the Lease to begin after the death of the Lessor is void being but Tenant for life and no Consideration upon the confession of the Plaintiff himself And upon the second Consideration it appeareth the Lessor viz. the Wife who held for life had but a right to the Land demised for she was disseised for he to whom the Land was after let entred before the Lease was made for it doth not appear that he entred by force of any agreement made before the Lease therefore by his Entry he was a Disseisor It was also moved That here was not any sufficient consideration for by a bare or naked delivery Nihil operatur and here is not any word of Give or Grant. To which it was answered That the delivery of the Indenture was not a bare Bailment but a Delivery to the use in the Indenture and so it is pleaded and therefore thereby an Interest passed for such a delivery cannot be countermanded An Indenture with an Averment shall never make an Estoppel Clench Iustice If I deliver any thing to one for his proper use an Interest passeth but if it be to the use of another no Interest passeth The party may have usum but not proprietatem CCLVII Mich. 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Contract IF a Contract be made betwixt two here in England scil that one of them shall carry certain Goods of the others to Burdeux in France and sell them there and with the mony thereof coming shall buy other Goods for the use of him who was the owner of the first Goods and safely them deliver to him in London If now the party sell them in Burdeux and buyeth others with the monies thereof and brings them into England and there converts them to his own use upon this matter an Action lyeth at the Common Law for the Contract and the Conversion being the cause of the Action was made in England But if the Contract only was in England and the Conversion beyond the Seas the Party at his Election may sue at the Common Law or in the Court of Admiralty And if a Merchant here write to his Factor in France to receive certain Merchandizes which he hath sent to him and to Merchandize with them for his use if the Factor receiveth them and converts them to his own use the Father shall be sued in the Admiralty 25 Eliz. CCLVIII. The Earl of Huntington and the Lord Mountjoyes Case IT was agreed by the two Lord Chief Iustices 1 And. 308. upon conference had with the other Iustices in the Case between the Earl of Huntington and the Lord Mountjoy That where the Lord Mountjoy by Deed indented and inrolled bargained and sold the Manor of Camford to Brown in Fee in which Indenture a Clause was Proviso semper and the said Brown covenants and grants cum and with them the Lord Mountjoy his Heirs and Assigns That the said Lord his Heirs and Assigns might dig for Ore in the Wasts of Camford And also to dig Turf there to make Allom and Copperice without any contradiction of Brown his Heirs and Assigns that now here is a new Grant of an Interest to dig to the said Lord and his Heirs in the Lands aforesaid and not a bare Covenant and it was holden also that the said Lord could not divide the Interest granted to him in form aforesaid viz. To grant to another to dig one part of the said Waste c. But they were of Opinion That Brown his Heirs and Assigns notwithstanding
Common Law the King by such Attainder shall have such benefit and advantage as well of Vses Rights Entries Conditions c. as of Possessions Reversions c. as if it had been done and declared by Authority of Parliament that is as much as to say as if the Condition in its proper terms had been given to the King by Act of Parliament c. and vouched Dacres case 17 Eliz. cited by him before where upon a Grant of all his Goods and Chattels revokable upon tender of 5 s. it was resolved That such a Condition was given to the King and by special Grace of the Queen Sir Tho. Gorge had the benefit of it And here although the cause of the Proviso be private and special yet the Condition is not tyed in the cause and the Statute gives to the Queen all Conditions which are usual and for the benefit of the Queen and at the time of the making of this Statute such Conditions were usual tunc temporis the Condition was pen'd not by way of re-entry but that the use should be void and that such Conditions were usual at the time of the making of the Statute of 29 Eliz. appeareth by the Statute made two years before scil 27 Eliz. for the repressing of fraudulent Conveyances By which it is provided by an express branch of it against such Conditions containing power of Revocation and Laws are for the most part made to give order for things which may happen And I conceive That this tender for the Queen is well enough for the time notwithstanding all the terms are past yet the two years are not incurred I covenant within a year to suffer a common Recovery all the terms are past without any Recovery suffered yet no Action lyeth upon that covenant before the year be fully expired although that the terms be past it being impossible to suffer a Recovery within the time prefixed A. covenants with B. in consideration of Marriage to suffer a Recovery before the Feast of St. Michael and if A. before the said Feast doth not suffer such Recovery that then he shall be seized to the use of C. Trinity Term passeth without any Recovery had yet no use shall rise before the said Feast And I conceive that there needs not here any Office but if the Condition be to be performed on the part of the Patentee then the breaking of the Condition ought to be found by Office contrary where the condition is to be performed on the part of the King For acts which Subjects do are matters in pa●s therefore an Office is requisite to make them of Record but where the Queen doth any thing there needs not any Office to make it of Record The Queen herself might tender the King but by commission under the Great Seal she hath authorized another to do it and she hath taken sufficient notice that there was such a condition And when the Certificate is made and retorned the same is sufficient to inform her that the condition is performed for the Certificate being retorned is of record as well as the Commission as the retorn of the Writ And he cited the Case before cited Bartues Case 2 Eliz. Dyer The King leased the Manor of D. for years to A. upon condition that if the King at any time during the term shall make a Lease to the said A. of the Manor of S. for life then the Lease for years shall cease and be void the King makes the Lease for life the lease for years is void without any Office for the Lease for life is upon record The case of Auditor 3 Eliz. Dyer 197. where the Forfeiture of the Office appears of record And Baron Plags Case 15 H. 8. ibidem the determination of the Office of Remembrancer by acceptance of the Baron shall bind in the Exchequer void without a Scire Facias or Office. Vide etiam Dyer 5 Ma. 159. he being Iustice of the Common Pleas was made Iustice of the Kings Bench his first Office was gone and determined Also he said That the Condition being performed ut supra sua vi virtute without any Office shall make void the Conveyance to which it was annexed And if Sir Francis being attainted had tendred the King ipso facto as it worked to him so ipso facto it should work to the Queen When the Act of 29 Eliz. had made the Assurance void the Land is in the Queen presently by means of Sir Francis to whom the Land returned and from him in the same instant vested in the Queen Cook to the contrary The Condition is not given to the Queen Words make the Plea therefore the words of the Condition are to be considered in which it is to be seen if this Condition be annexed to the privity of Nature or be general The Form of the Condition is Sir Francis being a man of great Living and having a great Manor of his own Name in consideration of the preservation of his Name and Blood c. covenanted to stand seized c. And further pro eo quod his said Nephew was of tender age and his proof could not now appear and it might be that in time to come he might be given to intolerable Vices therefore the said Sir Francis did not think it convenient to settle the said Inheritance in his said Nephew absolutely without a bridle to restrain him therefore it was provided That if the Vncle delivered a King of Gold to his Nephew to the intent to make void c. And this is a special Condition private and peculiar to the person of Sir Francis incident to him and to no other and incommunicable and therefore it is not given to the Queen But such Conditions which the Heir Lord by Escheat or Executors may have the Queen shall have by the Statute 10 H. 7. 18. Lessee for years of a House covenants to repair it within six years within which term he dyeth no reparation being made covenant lyeth against the Executors contrary if the covenant had been that he should repair during his life It hath been said That the things which are matters of privity are the considerations which caused Sir Francis to make this Proviso but they are not any part of the condition or Proviso Truly the consideration raises the use and precedes the Proviso which is tyed to the consideration with an Ideo and all is but one Sentence knit together with the Ideo And although consideration of Blood be not parcel of the Proviso yet that which follows is scil for that his Nephew c. And in this Conveyance Sir Francis praestitit utrumque munus Nutricis ubera verbera And Acts of Parliament do not give away things knit to Nature by the general words All things Vide the Lord Brays case 2 Eliz. Dyer 90. The Father having the Wardship of his Son and Heir apparent if he Outlawed shall not forfeit the same for it is inseparable to him notwithstanding that
the whole matter is not any sufficient demand and so Wray Chief Iustice said CCLXXVIII Trin. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. ACtion upon the Case was brought for these words Thou wouldst have stoln my Cloak if J.S. had not come in the way and thou art a Thief and I will prove it After Verdict it was found for the Plaintiff It was objected in Arrest of Iudgment That these words were not actionable For the first words Thou wouldst have stoln my Cloak c. do not by Law give any cause of Action and when the words subsequent Thou art a Thief are depending apon the said former words and to be construed as spoken in respect of them and upon that intent But the Opinion of the whole Court was to the contrary And that the said latter words should be taken and construed in abstracto by themselves as in gross and not as dependant upon the former words and afterwards Iudgment was given that the Plaintiff should recover Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXIX Hungerford and Watts Case HUngerford brought an Action upon the Case againts Watts Words for that the Defendant had said That the Plaintiff had caused the Defendant to be arrested with forged Writs It was objected That the words were not actionable for it might be that the Writs were forged by strangers without the privity of the Plaintiff and that the Plaintiff not knowing them to be forged procured the Arrest But the Opinion of the Court was That the words were actionable for the word Caused extends as well to the Forgery as to the Arrest and so amounts to the slander of Forgery CCLXXX Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Costs IN an Action upon an Escape the Plaintiff is Nonsuited It was holden that the Defendant should not have Costs Note The words of the Statute upon an Action upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. for any offence or tort personal to be supposed to be done immediately to the Plaintiff Notwithstanding this Action is quodam modo an Action upon the Statute 1. by Equity of the Statute of West 2. cap. 11. which giveth it expresly against the Warden of the Fleet Yet properly it is not an Action upon the Statute for in the Declaration in such an Action no mention is made of the Statute which see in the Book of Entries 169 171. and also here is not supposed any immediate personal offence or wrong to the Plaintiff And an Action upon the Case it is not for then the Writ ought to make mention of the Escape and that it doth not here and yet at the Common Law before the Statute of Westm 2. an Action upon the Case lay for an Escape and so by Dyer Manwood and Mounson Costs are not given in this Case And by Dyer upon Nonsuit in an Action upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. the Defendant shall not have Costs for it is not a personal wrong for the Writ is quod disseisivit which is a real wrong Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXXI Hollingshed and Kings Case HOllingshed brought Debt against King and declared That King was bound to him in a Recognisance in 200 l. before the Mayor and Aldermen of London in interiori Camera of Guildhall in London Vpon which Recognizance the said Hollingshed before brought a Scire Facias before the said Mayor c. in exteriori Camera and there had Iudgment to recover upon which Recovery he had brought this Action and upon the Declaration the Defendant did demur in Law because that the Plaintiff in the setting forth of the Recognizance had not alledged That the Mayor of London had authority by Prescription or Grant to take Recognizances and if he had not then is the Recognizance taken coram non Judice and so void and as to the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 45. the same cannot extend to Recognizances taken in London which see by the words De his quae recordata sunt coram Cancellario Domini Regis ejus Justiciariis qui recordum habent in rotulis eorum irrotulantur c. and also at the time of the making of that Statute the City of London had not any Sheriffs but only Bayliffs And the Statute ordains That upon Recognizance Process shall go to the Sheriffs c. therefore not to them But the whole Court was clear to the contrary for we well know that they of London have a Court of Record and every Court of Record hath authority incident to it to take Recognizances for all things which do concern the Iurisdiction of that Court and which arise by reason of the matters there depending Another matter was Objected for that the Recognizance was taken in interiori Camera but the Court was holden in exteriori Camera therefore it was not well taken But as to that Anderson Chief Iustice said Admit that the Recognizance was not well taken yet because that in a Scire Facias sued upon it the Defendant shall not take any advantage he shall be now bound by that admittance As if one sues a Scire Facias as upon a Recognizance whereas in truth there is not any such Recognizance and the party pleads admitting such Record and thereupon Iudgment is given against him the same is not void but voidable And Fleetwood Recorder of London alledged many Cases to prove the Courts of the King ought to take notice that those of London have a Court of Record for if a Quo Warranto issueth to the Iustices in Eyre it doth not belong to them of London to claim their Liberties for all the Kings Courts have notice of them And at the last after many Motions the better Opinion of the Court was That the Plaintiff should recover Periam aliquantum haesitavit And it was said by Anderson and in a manner agreed by them all That if dependant this Demurrer here the Iudgment in London upon the Scire Facias is reversed yet the Court here shall proceed and take no notice of the reversal CCLXXXII Mich. 20 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Man seized of a Barn in which the Tythes of certain Lands have used to be inned let the same by these words Demises .. Demise and to Farm-let the Barn with all Tythes belonging to the same It was holden That by that Demise the Tythes did not pass but Tythes which had usually been demised with the Barn passed by such words as by the Demise of an House Cum omnibus terris eidem pertinent ' all the Lands pass which have used to be demised with the said House for the demising usually of the Tythes with the Barn makes the Tythes belonging to the Barn but not the Inning Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCLXXXII Haltons Case Recognisance Inrollment A Recognizance was acknowledged before J. S. who was one of the Masters of the Chancery and before the same was Inrolled the Conusee dyed the point was whether at the request of the Executors
of the Conusee it might now be Inrolled It was the Opinion of all the Iustices That upon the request aforesaid it might be Inrolled like as it was of a Conusance of a Fine taken before a Iudge which may be removed out of his hands by a Certiorari although it be not a Record before that it be certified in the speaking of that Case It was made a question whether the Court of Chancery might help a man who purchased Lands for valuable Consideration where there wanted the words Heirs in the Deed of Purchase or not but the point was not resolved But in that Case it was agreed by all the Iustices That after a Fine is levied of Land Chancery Attornment that the Chancery may compel the Tenant of the Land to Attorn And so where an Annuity or Rent is granted to one for life or in Fee and the Deed is Executed Sealed and Delivered but no Seisin is given to the party of the Rent or Annuity the Court of Chancery may decree a Seisin of the Rent to be given and the Rent to be paid to the Grantee and that was said to have been often times decreed in the said Court of Chancery CCLXXXIV Mich. 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intrusion Trespass NOte by Anderson Chief Iustice If one intrude upon the Possession of the King and another man entreth upon him that he shall not have an Action of Trespass for that Entry for that he who is to have and maintain Trespass ought to have a Possession But in such Case he hath not a Possession for every Intruder shall answer to the King for his whole time and every Intrusion supposeth the Possession to be in the King which all the other Iustices agreed except Periam who doubted of it And Rhodes Iustice said and vouched 19 E. 4. to be that he cannot in such Case say in an Action of Trespass Quare Clausum suum fregit CCLXXXV Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. NOte It was holden by Popham Chief Iustice Remainder and so said by him to have been resolved upon a Special Verdict in the County of Somerset 20 Eliz. That where a Lease was made unto Husband and Wife for their Lives the remainder to the Heirs of the Survivor of them that the same was a good remainder notwithstanding the incertainty and that in that case after the death of the Wife he should have Iudgment to recover the Land. But if a man be possessed of a term for 20 years in the right of his Wife and he maketh a Lease thereof for 10 rendring rent to him his Executors and Assigns and dyeth that in such case though the Wife surviveth yet he shall not have the rent because that she cometh in paramount the Lease But if a man be possessed of a term in the right of his Wife Mortgage and Mortgageth for payment of a certain Sum of Money at a day certain and before the day the Wife dyeth and the Husband payeth the Money at the day and then dyeth whether his Executors or the Administrators of the Wife should have the term was not then resolved Ideo Quaere that Case Trin. 32 Eliz. In the Exchequer CCLXXXVI Bartase and Hinds Case NOte Manwood Chief Baron gave it for a general Rule for all Counsellors at Law That they did not advise any Collectors of Subsidies or Fifteens to exhibit Bills in the Exchequer Chamber for the Non-payment of Subsidies c. for such Bills should not be allowed hereafter because they had remedy by Distress Also it was holden That if any be assessed for the Fifteen which he ought to pay or if two Towns are to pay together and the one Town be taxed more than it ought to be or had been accustomed those which are grieved by such Sesment may have a Commission out of the Exchequer which is called Ad aequaliter taxand ' and that was put in ure in a Case between Bartase and Hind where one of them was Lord of the Town of Little Marloe and the other of Hedford And it was also holden That Fifteens are to be levied of Goods and Chattels properly and one Township sometimes is richer than another and therefore it is not reason that they pay their Fifteen always according to the same proportion But by Clark Baron where the Custom hath been that the Fifteen should be taxed according to the quantity of Acres there the Rate and Purport shall be always one whosoever holds the Land and as to the Commission Ad aequaliter taxand ' Manwood and Fanshaw said That they could shew above twenty Presidents of it Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXVII Barnard and Tussers Case Debt BArnard recovered in a Scire Facias upon a Recognizance against Tusser and afterwards brought an Action of Debt upon the same Recovery and it was adjudged maintainable notwithstanding that it was Objected That the Iudgment in such Scire Facias is not to recover Debt but to have Execution of the Iudgment And by Wray Chief Iustice If in a Scire Facias to have Execution of an Annuity the Plaintiff hath Iudgment upon such Iudgment he shall have an Action of Debt Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXVIII The Earl of Arundel and Bradstocks Case THe Case was The Earl of Arundel let Lands to Bradstock for years upon condition that the Lessee should not do any Act by which his Goods and Chattels might be forfeited Bradstock committed Felony and before any Attainder he obtained his Charter of Pardon It was holden in this case That the Earl might lawfully enter but if the words of the Condition had been Whereby the Goods ought to be forfeited chen it had been otherwise for before Attainder they ought not to be forfeited Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXXIX Taylors Case Outlawry How avoided by Plea in Person TAylor was Outlawed in Debt and a Supersedeas of Record was delivered to the Sheriff before the awarding of the Exigent It was holden that the party should avoid the same by Plea then it was moved if the Plea should be pleaded by Attorney or in Person To which it was said by Manwood That where matter in fait is pleaded in avoidance of an Outlawry it ought to be pleaded in Person but matter of Record by Attorney And Ford Prothonotary said It was so agreed in Sir Thomas Chamberlains Case in 7 Eliz. and so it was adjudged in this Case CCXC. Mich. 17 18 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was The Prior of Norwich made a Lease for life by Indenture by which the Lessee covenanted to find Victuals to the Cellerer at all times when the Cellerer came thither to hold Court the Priory was dissolved and the Possessions given to the Dean and Chapter newly erected It was holden in this case That the Lessee should perform that covenant to him who supplyed the Office of Cellerer scil the Steward And
and a Writ de novo awarded CCXCVIII A. Is bound to B. upon Condition to stand to the Arbitrement of certain persons who award that B shall make a Release to A. of all Actions Debts Duties and Demands at the request of A. and afterwards A. comes to B. and requires him to make him a Release who said to him That he was unlearned and that he would go to one to make it and the next day after the request he seals and delivers it to A. who accepts of it It was holden by Windham and Mead That notwithstanding that Acceptance the Obligation was forfeited for they said That presently after request he ought to have done it in the speediest manner that might be Vide acc ' 15 E. 4. 31. Vide also Wottons Case 16 Eliz. Dyer 338. Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCXCXI The Dean and Chapter of Christ Church and Parotts Case Grants of the King. NOte in the Common Pleas in a Case between the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church in Oxford and Parott It was holden by the Iustices that if the King grants Lands unto a Corporation by another name than that which they were named before yet the Land shall pass and the Letters Patents shall be to them as a new Incorporation c. Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCC Beechers Case Jurors BEecher being a Gentleman of the Middle-Temple was Retorned in an Attaint and before the Retorn of the Pannel he became a Minister of the Church and now at the day of the Retorn he appeared and prayed to be discharged according to the Priviledge of those of the Ministry But the Court would not allow of his prayer because that at the time of the Pannel made he was a Lay-man Wherefore he was sworn one of the Iury. Hil. 19 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCI. Vernon and Sir Thomas Staveleys Case TEnant in Tail made a Lease for the life of the Lessee according to the Statute of 32 H. 8. Discontinuance and by Wray and Gawdy Iustices the same was not a Discontinuance But if Tenant in Tail levyeth a Fine which bindeth his Issue by the Statute of 4 H. 7. 32 H. 8. that same is a Discontinuance Look upon the Statute of Leases and of Fines the words in the former are scil Such Fines shall be good and effectual in the Law but in the other scil Such Fines shall be a bar against the Conusor and his Heirs And if Tenant in Tail after such a Fine dyeth without Issue the Donor cannot enter but is put to his Formedon And as to the principal Case Dyer agreed in opinion with Wray and Gawdy Trin. 28 Eliz. Rot. 1027. CCCII Milborne and the Inhabitants of Dunmowes Case MIlborne brought an Action upon the Statute of Winchester against the Inhabitants within the Hundred of Dunmow in the County of Essex It was found by Special Verdict Upon Statute of Hue and Cry. That the Plaintiff was robbed the 23 of April inter horam secundam Matutinam tempore Nocturno ante Lucem ejusdem diei and the Opinion of the Court was clear That the Plaintiff should be barred for the said Statute provides for ordinary Travel as in the case of Archpole who came to his Inn after Sun-set ante Noctem in tempore diurno which is an usual time for Travellers to come to their Inn but the Law doth not receive any in protection of this Statute which travel in extraordinary hours for it is the folly of the traveller to take his journey so out of season and the inhabitants are not bound to leave their houses and attend the high-ways tempore Nocturno And another reason was alledged by the Iustices because that the said Statute appoints Watch to be kept in the time of night à festo Assensionis usque festum Sancti Mich. and this Robbery was done the 23 of April so out of the said time And afterwards Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff CCCIII. Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Devises SErjeant Fenner demanded the Opinion of the Court upon this Case A. devised Lands to his Wife for life and afterwards to B. his Son and his Heirs when he should come to the age of 24 years and if his Wife dyed before that his said Son should attain to the said age of 24 years that then J S. should have the said Lands until the said age of the said Son A dyed J. S. dyed the Wife dyed the Son being within the age of 24 years If the Executors of J. S. should have the Lands after the death of J. S. until the said age of the Son was the question Anderson and Periam conceived that he should not for this Interest limited by the Will to J. S. was but a possibility which was never vested in him and therefore could not by any means come to his Executors Rhodes and Windham doubted of it And Fenner put the Case 12 E. 2. Fitz. Condition 9. where Land is Mortgaged to J. S. upon payment of Money to the said J. S. or his Heirs such a day and before the said day J. S. by his Will deviseth That if the Mortgagor pay the Money that then A. B. shall have them that this Devise of that possibility is good which Case all the Iustices denied And Windham put the Case between Welden and Elkington 20 Eliz. Plowd 519. where Lessee for years devised his term to his Wife for so many of the years of the said term as she should live and if she dyed within the term that then his Son Francis should have the residue of the years not incurred Francis dyed intestate the Wife dyed within the term the Administrator of Francis had the residue of the term and yet nothing was in Francis the intestate but a possibility A Lease was made to one Hayward his Wife and one of his Children Habendum to Hayward for 99 years if he so long live and if he dye within the said term that then the said Wife should have the said term for so many of the years as should be to come at the time of the death of her Husband and if she dyed also within the said term that then the Child party to the Demise should have the same for so many of the years of the said term as should be not expired at the time of the death of the Wife And the case of Cicell was cited Dyer 8 Eliz. 253. A Lease was made to William Cecill pro termino 41 annorum si tam diu vixerit Et si obierit infra praedictum terminum extunc Eliz. uxor praedict Will Cicell habebit tenebit omnia singula praemissa pro residuo termini praedict incompleti si tam diu vixerit Et si praedict Eliz. obierit infra terminum praedict Tunc Willielmus Cicell the Son c. shall have and hold it pro residuo termini praedict completi And it was holden by Catlin and
Dyer that these Remainders were void for the term is determinable upon the death of William Cecill the Father and the residue of the said term cannot remain And by the Lord Anderson the Remainders of the term limited ut supra are utterly void for every Remainder ought to be certain but here is no certainty for it may be that the first possessioner of the term may live longer so as he in the Remainder cannot know what he shall have And such was also the Opinion of Rhodes And he put the Case between Gravenor and Parker 3 4 Phil. Ma. Dyer 150. A Lease was made to A. for life by Indenture Et provisum fuit by the same Indenture That if the Lessee dyed within the term of sixty years then next ensuing that then his Executors should have in right of the Lessee so many of the years as should amount to the number of sixty years to be accounted from the date of the Indenture and it was holden That that secondary Interest to the Executors was void and that the words concerning the same did sound in Covenant CCCIV. Trin. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was A made B. and C. his Executors Executors Action they took upon them the charge of the Administration and afterwards B. dyed and now an Action of Debt was brought against the surviving Executor and the Executor of the other Executor and the Writ was abated because against the surviving Executor it ought only to be brought Pasc 30 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCV Smith and Babbs Case SMith brough an Action upon the Case against Babb for stopping of Water incessanter decurrent by his Land Action upon the Case Stopping of Water by which his Land was drowned and his Grass rotted Exception was taken to it because it is not alledged That the Water had so run time out of mind Gawdy Iustice If the Water hath run there but for one year if the Defendant hath diverted it so as he hath drowned the Plaintiffs Land the Action will lye well enough Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVI Basil Johnsons Case BAsil Johnson one of the Clerks of the Chancery Priviledge of a Clerk in Court. was impleaded in the Common Pleas by Bill of Priviledge by an Attorney of the said Court and now Basil came into Court and shewed that he is one of the Clerks ut supra and prayed his Priviledge but the whole Court was against it because the Plaintiff is as well priviledged in this Court as the Defendant is in the Chancery and was first interessed in his Priviledge by the bringing of his Writ but the Defendant was not entituled to his Priviledge before the Arrest and afterwards by the award of the Court the said Basil was ousted of his Priviledge 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVII Collier and Colliers Case Prohibition BEtween Collier and Collier the Case was That the Plaintiff was Sued for Incontinence in the Spiritual Court and there they would have him Answer upon his Oath if he ever had Carnall Knowledge of such a Woman upon which he prayed a Prohibition Vide inde F. N. B. 41. a. Register 36. Et nemo tenetur seipsum prodere But the Court would advise of it 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCVIII Mountney and Andrews Case Execution IN a Scire Facias by Mountney against Andrews of Grays-Inn upon a Iudgment in Debt the Defendant pleaded That heretofore a Fieri Facias at the Suit of the now Plaintiff issued to the Sheriff of Leicester by force of which the said Sheriff took divers Sheep of the Defendants and that as yet he doth detain and keep them It was holden by the whole Court to be a good Plea although he did not say That the Writ was retorned for the Execution is lawful notwithstanding that and the Plaintiff hath his remedy against the Sheriff Hil. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCIX Dawbney and Gores Case BEtween Dawbney Plaintiff and Gore and Gon Defendants in a Writ of Disceit In Arrest of Iudgment it was moved That two are accountable to one and the one of them accounts without the other that that is not any account and then no account can be assigned in that As to that it was said by Popham Attorney-General That notwithstanding that one be not compellable to account without his Companion and by way of Action of Account the one shall not account without the other unless the Process be determined against him and then he who appeareth hath accounted and the other against whom the Process is determined hath purchased his Charter of Pardon the account made by his Companion shall bind him Vide inde 41 E. 3. 13. Yet if one of the Accomptants will account willingly the same is a good account And in account if one confesseth and the other pleadeth in bar the confession of the one shall bind the other and such was the Opinion of the Court. Another matter was moved in this case because that one Tedcastell and Swinnerton being accountable to the said Gores and Dawbney they have accounted to Dawbney only and he alone hath accepted of the account and that is not any account therefore no desceit but the Action of Account doth remain To which it was answered by Popham That the same was a good account being accepted by Dawbney and should bind the Gores for an Account is a personal thing as an Obligation which may be released by one of the Obligees Vide 14 E. 4. 2. Where one was accountable to two and the one of them did assign Auditors before whom the Accountant is found in Arrearages and thereupon both of them brought Debt upon Account and well And so none of the Exceptions were allowed by the Court. Mich. 33 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCX Trivilians Case THo Trivilian Tenant in tail of White Acre Black Acre and Green Acre leased White Acre for years to B. and Black Acre to C. and afterwards made a Feoffment of all three Acres to F. and others by Deed in which Deed was comprised a Letter of Attorney in which he ordained Harris and three others his Attorneys joyntly and severally to enter in the Premises and every part thereof in the name of the whole and possession in his name to receive and afterwards to make Livery c with other ordinary and usual words and it was expressed in the said Deed of Feoffment that the Feoffment should be to the intent to perform his last Will and afterwards one of the said Attorneys entred into the Land demised for life and expelled the Tenant for life and made Livery and Seisin to the Feoffees accordingly and afterwards the said Harris another of the Attorneys scil one of the Ioynt Lessees being one of the three Attorneys made Livery of the Land demised for years and after the Feoffor in the time of Queen Eliz. by his last Will devised That the Feoffees should be seized of the
Bayliff of his Lord could not do better than admonish the said Bayliff of his duty for it concerned the Honour of his Master and also his Inheritance in the said Liberty But if the said Townsend had been a meer stranger to the said Earl so as no such privity had been betwixt them the same had been clearly Maintenance in Townsend as it was lately adjudged in that Court in the case of one Gifford where the parties being at Issue and a Venire Facias to the Sheriff to retorn a Iury a stranger wrote to one of the Iurors who was retorned in the Pannel praying him to appear at the day and to do in that cause according to his Conscience and the same was adjudged Maintenance And afterwards upon full hearing of the cause the said Townsend by the Sentence of the Court was acquitted of any Maintenance with great allowance and approbation of many Lords of the Counsel there present Bromley Cancellario tantum exclamante CCCXXVII Mich. 15 16 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN a Writ of Partition the Defendant prayed in Aid the Plaintiff counterpleaded the Aid upon which Issue was joyned and found for the Plaintiff It was the Opinion of the Court That it was peremptory for the Defendant And the Plaintiff shall have the Partition scil Quod fiat Partitio and the reason thereof is for the delay of the Plaintiff and for the vexation of the Country who are to try it otherwise it had been if it had been adjudged against the Defendant upon a Demurrer CCCXXVIII Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN a Formedon of a Manor the Tenant pleaded Ioynt-tenancy by Fine with J. S. The Demandant averred the Tenant sole Tenant as the Writ supposed and upon that Issue was joyned and found for the demandant Vpon which a Writ of Error was brought and Error assigned in this That whereas upon Ioyntenancy pleaded by Fine the Writ ought to abate without any Averment by the Demandant against it the Averment hath been received against the Law And by Southcote at the common Law If the Tenant plead Ioyntenancy by Deed the Writ should abate without any Averment but that was remedied by the Statute of 34 E. 1. but Ioyntenancy by Fine doth remain as it was by the common Law for he hath punishment enough in that because by that Plea if it be false he hath by way of conclusion given away the Moiety of the Land in demand to him with whom he hath pleaded Ioyntenancy and the Law doth not intend that he will so slightly depart with his Land for the abatement of a Writ Else in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant confesseth himself to be Villain to a Stranger the Writ shall abate without any Averment of Frank-estate for the Law intends that the Tenant will not enthrawl himself without cause Wray to the same intent But the Demandant may confess and avoid the Fine as to say That he who levied the Fine was his Disseisor upon whom he hath before entred c. And if Tenant in Fee-simple be impleaded and he saith he is Tenant for life the Remainder over to A. in Fee and prayeth in Aid of A. the Demandant shall not take Averment That the Tenant the day of the Writ brought was seized in Fee. Note That in this Fine Ioyntenancy was pleaded but for parcel and it was holden by ●ray and Southcote That the whole Writ should abate as in a Writ against many the misnosmer of the one shall abate the whole Writ against all the Defendants and so where the Demandant enters into parcel of the Land in demand if the Land in demand be one entire thing it shall abate the Writ in all In this Case the Demandant ought to have in his Writ a Foreprise of the Land parcel of the Land in demand whereof the Ioynt-tenancy by Fine is pleaded for this dismembring of the Manor and destruction of the Land whereof the Ioyntenancy is pleaded is peravail and beneath the Gift whereof the Formedon is conceived and therefore in respect of the title of the Demandant it remains in right parcel of the Manor and therefore it ought to be demanded accordingly with a Foreprise But if A. gives to B a Manor except 13 Acres in Tail there if after upon any Discontinuance the Issue in Tail is to have a Formedon in such Case there needs not any Foreprise for the said 10 Acres were never severed from the Manor upon the Gift But if Land in demand be several as 20 Acres but two this Foreprise is not good Vide Temps E. 1. Fitz. Br. 866. Praecipe unam bovat ' terrae except a Selion and the Writ was abated for every demand ought to be certain but a Selion is a parcel of Land uncertain as to the quantity in some places it is an Acre in some more and in some less Another point was That because that the Tenant hath admitted and accepted this Averment scil Sole Tenant as the Writ supposeth if the Court notwithstanding the admittance of the Tenant ought without exception of the party ex Officio abate the Writ And Wray conceived that it might for it is a possitive Law As if a Woman bring an Appeal of Murder upon the death of her Brother and the Defendant doth admit it without Challenge or Exception yet the Court shall abate the Appeal 10 E. 4. 7. And Vide the principal Case there Non ideo puniatur Dominus And if an Action be brought against an Hostler upon the common Custom of the Realm and in the Writ he is not named Common Hostler and the Defendant doth accept of such a Writ without any Exception unto it yet the Court shall abate the Writ ex Officio Vide 38 H. 6. 30. CCCXXIX Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. NOte this Case A. makes a Feoffment in Fee to B. and binds himself only to warranty without more B. is impleaded and voucheth A. who enters into the Warranty and loseth so as Iudgment is given against B. and also to recover in value against A. who before Execution dyeth It was the opinion of the Court that B. should have Execution in value against the Heir of A. CCCXXX Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A. Seized of Lands in the right of his Wife for the term of the life of the Wife made a Feoffment in Fee to the use of his said Wife for her life In that case the wife is remitted and it is not like Townsends Case Plowd Com. 111. for in that case the Entry of the Wife was not congeable for she was Tenant in tail which Estate was discontinued by the Feoffment of her Husband Periam Iustice cited Si●enhams case Baron seized in the right of his Wife for the term of the life of the Wife They both surrendred and took back the Land to them and a third person And it was holden that the Wife was not presently remitted but after the death of her Husband
Tenants and therefore ought not to joyn c. It was Adjourned Temps Roign Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCCLVII The President of Corpus Christi Colledge Case NOte It was holden by Cholmley Serjeant Plowden and many others in the Case of the President of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford That if the said Master or President of any such Colledge by his Will deviseth any Land to his Colledge and dyeth such Devise is void For at the time when the Devise should take effect the Colledge is without a Head and so not capable of such Devise for it was then an imperfect Body And so it was holden by the Iustices upon good advice taken thereof CCCLVIII Temps Roign Eliz In the Kings Bench. IN a Warrantia Chartae the Defendant said that the Plaintiff had not any thing in parcel of the Land the day of the Writ brought If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant aliens and afterwards vouches the Vouchee is not bound to enter into the Warranty But here in this Case it may be That at the time that the Plaintiff requested the Defendant to warrant he was Tenant of the Land in which Case the warranty is attached and then if ever the Land be recovered against him he shall have this Writ and of this Opinion was Brown Iustice For the Land which the Defendant had at the time of the request is bound by the request but if he alieneth after the request he shall not have the Warranty CCCLIX Mich. 9 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. A Man seized of a Manor in which there are divers Copy-holds and the Custom there is That if any Copyholder leaseth his Land above the term of one year that he shall forfeit his Copyhold A Copyholder committed such a Forfeiture and afterwards the Lord leased the Manor for years and the Lessee entred for the Forfeiture and Weston said that his Entry was not lawful for although that the Heir may enter for a Condition broken in the time of his Ancestor because he is privy in blood yet the Lessee or Feoffee cannot do so for he is a Stranger such a one of whom an Estranger shall not take advantage Dyer If this forfeiture be preserved by Homage and enrolled in the Court Rolls the Lessee may well afterwards enter for by the forfeiture the Copyhold Estate is void and determined as if a Leafe for years be made rendring Rent upon Condition to cease if the Rent be not paid here presently by the not payment the Interest of the term is determined and of that the Grantee of the Reversion shall have advantage CCCLX Mich. 10 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Action upon the Case was brought for stopping of a way The Plaintiff declared that the Duke of Suffolk was seized of a House in D. and let the same to the Plaintiff for life and that the said Duke and all those whose Estate c. have used time out of mind c. to have a way over the Land of the Defendant to the Park of D. to carry and recarry Wood necessary for the said House from the said Park to the same House and further declared That the Defendant Obstupavit the way It was moved by Carus That upon that matter no Action upon the Case lay because the Freehold of the House is in the Plaintiff and also the Freehold of the Land over which c. is in the Defendant But if the Plaintiff or the Defendant had but an Estate for years then an Action upon the Case would lye and not an Assize and it is not material If the Plaintiff had but an Estate for years in the Park quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam It was also holden That this word Obstupavit is sufficient without any more without shewing any special matter of the stopping as the erecting of any Gate Hedge Ditch c. for Obstupavit implyes a Nusance continued and not a personal disturbance as forestalling or saying to the Plaintiff upon the Land where c. that he should not go over or use the said way for in such case upon such a disturbance an Action upon the Case lyeth But as to a local and real disturbance the word Obstupavit amounts to Obstruxit and although in the Declaration is set down the day and year of the stopping yet it shall not be intended that it continued but the same day for the words of the Declaration are further By which he was disturbed of his way and yet is and so the continuance of the disturbance is alledged and of that Opinion was the whole Court. Leonard Prothonotary He hath declared of a Prescription habere viam tam pedestrem quam equestrem pro omnibus omnimodis Carriagiis and upon that Prescription he cannot have a Cart-way for every Prescription est stricti juris Dyer That is well observed and I confess that the Law is so and therefore it is good to prescribe habere viam pro omnibus Carriagiis without speaking either of a Horse or a Foot-way CCCLXI. A. Enfeoffed B. to the intent that B. should convey the said Land to such person as A. should sell it A. sold it to C. to whom B. refused to convey the Land and thereupon he brought an Action upon the Case against B. And by Wray Chief Iustice and Gawdy Iustice here is a good consideration for here is a trust and that which is a good consideration in the Chancery is in this case sufficient Shute Iustice was of a contrary Opinion And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXII Sir Richard Lewknors Case SIr Richard Lewknor seized of Wallingford Park Ante 162. made a lease thereof for years and dyed the Lessee granted over his term to another excepting the Wood the term expired and an Action of Waste was brought against the second Lessee by the Coparceners and the Husband of the third Coparcener being Tenant by the Courtesie Shuttlewood and Snag Serjeants did argue That the Action would not lye in the form it was brought and the first Exception which was taken by them was because the Action was general viz. Quod fecit vastum in terris quas Sir Roger Lewknor pater praedict ' of the Plaintiff cujus haeredes ipsae sunt praefat ' Defendent demisit And the Count was that the Reversion was entailed by Parliament unto the Heirs of the Body of Sir Richard Lewknor and so they conceived that the Writ ought to have been special cujus haeredes de Corpore ipsae sunt For they said that although there is not any such Writ in the Register yet in novo Casu novum est apponendum remedium And therefore they compared the Case to the Case in Fitz. N. B. 57. viz. If Land be given to Husband and Wife and to the Heirs of the Body of the Wife and the Wife hath Issue and dyeth and the Husband committeth waste the Writ in that case and the like
But all the Court held the contrary and that the Copy should bind the Feoffee and the ceremony of admittance was not necessary For otherwise every Copyholder in England might be defeated by the sole act of the Lord viz. his Feoffment But the Lord by his own act which shall be accounted his folly hath lost his advantages viz. Fines Heriots and such other Casualties Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXV Boxe and Mounslowes Case THomas Boxe brought an Action upon the Case against John Mounslowe That the Defendant slandred him in saying That the said Thomas Boxe is a perjured Knave and that he would prove the said Thomas Boxe had forsworn himself in the Exchequer c. and supposed the said words to be spoken in London 4 Feb. 28 Eliz. Et praedict ' Johannes Mounslowe per Johannem Lutrich Attornatum suum venit defendit vim injuriam quando c. Et dicit quod praedict ' Tho. Boxe actionem suam versus eum habere non debet quia dicit quod praedict ' Thomas Boxe being one of the Collectors of the Subsidies before the speaking of the said words viz. 27 28 Eliz. in Curia Scaccarij apud Westm ' did Exhibt a Bill against the said John Mounslowe containing That the said John being assessed in ten pounds in Goods the said Thomas Boxe came to him and demanded of him sixteen shillings eight pence which the said John Mounslowe did refuse to pay and that demand and refusal was supposed to be in London in Breadstreet Et pro verificatione praemisiorum ad●unc ibid ' Sacramentum Corporale per Barones praefat ' Thomae Boxe praestitit The said Thomax Boxe swore the said Bill in substance was true ubi revera the said John Mounflowe did not refuse per quod the said John Mounslowe postea viz. praedict tempore quo c. dixit de praefat ' Thoma Boxe praedict verba c. p●out ei bene Leuit The Plaintiff replyed that the Defendant spake the words de injuria sua propria absque causa per praefat Johannem Mounslowe superius allegata Et hoc petit quod inquiratur per Curiam praedict defendens similiter And a Ven●re Facias was awarded to the Sheriffs of London and it was found for the Plaintiff and damages 400 l. And now it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that there was no good Trial nor the Issue well joyned for the Issue doth consist upon 2 points triable in several Counties viz the Oath which was in the Exchequer and that ough to have been tryed in Middlesex and the matter which he affirmed by the Oath viz the demand and the refusal to pay the subsidy and that was alledged to be in London and is there to be tryed and the Issue viz. de 〈…〉 propria goeth to both for the ubi revera will not amend the Case as Penam Iustice said and both are material For the Defendant ought to prove that the Plaintiff made such Oath and also that the substance and matter of the Oath was not true for otherwise the Plaintiff cannot be proved perjured And therefore the Counties here if they might should have joyned in the Tryal And the Opinion of the Court was against the Plaintiff For Anderson and Wincham said That if this Issue could have been tryed by any one of the Counties without the other it should most properly and naturally have been tried in Middlesex where the Oath was made for the Perjury if any were was in the Exchequer But they said The Issue here was ill joyned because it did arise upon two points triable in several Counties which could not joyn whereas the Plaintiff might have taken Issue upon one of them well enough for each of them did go to the whole and if any of them were found for the Plaintiff that he had sufficient cause to recover Gawdy moved that it should be helped by the Statute of Ieofails which speaks of mis-joyning of Issues Anderson The Issue here is not mis-joyned For if the Counties could joyn the Issue were good but because that the Counties cannot joyn it cannot be well tryed But the Issue it self is well enough Windham and Rhodes were of the same Opinion but Periam doubted it Anderson said That if an Issue tryable in one Court be tryed in another and Iudgment given upon it it is Error And afterwards Lutrich the Attorney said That it was awarded that they should re-plead Nota quod mirum For first the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 30. speaks of mis-joyning of Process and not mis-joyning of Issues and admit that this Case is not within any of those Clauses each of them being considered by it self yet I conceive it is contained within the substance and effect of them being considered together Also I conceive it is within the meaning of both Statutes viz. 32 H. 8. cap. 30. 18 Eliz. cap. 14. for I conceive the meaning of both Statutes was to waste delays circuits of Actions and Molestations and that the party might have his Iudgment notwithstanding any defect if it were so that notwithstanding that defect sufficient title and cause did appear to the Court. And here the Plaintiff hath sufficient cause to recover if any of the points of the Issue be found for him For if it be found that the matter and substance of the Oath be found true which might be tryed well enough by those in London the Plaintiff had cause to recover Wherefore I conceive that the Verdict in London is good enough and effectual And note that Rhodes said that he was of Counsel in such a case in the Kings Bench betwixt Nevil and Dent. CCCLXVI Mich. 19 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 3 Leon. 103. THe Case was A. granted B. a Rent-charge out of his Lands to commence when J. S. dyes without Issue of his Body J. S. dyes having Issue and the Issue dyeth without Issue Dyer said That the Grant shall not take effect for J. S. at the time of his death had Issue and therefore the Grant shall not then commence and if he dyeth then not at all by Manwood And Dyer and Manwood said If the words had been to begin when J. S. is dead without Issue of his Body then such a Grant should take effect when the Issue of J.S. dyes without Issue c. And they said That if the Donee in tail hath Issue which dyeth without Issue the Formedon in Reverter shall suppose that the Donee himself dyed with Issue for there is an Interest And there is a difference betwixt an Interest and a Limitation For if I give Lands to A and B. for the term of their lives if either of them dyeth the Survivor shall hold the whole But if I give Lands to A. for the lives of B. and C. now if B. or C. dyeth the whole Estate is determined because it is but a Limitation and B. and C. have not any Interest CCCLXVII Temps Roign
in a way to the Church and that by reason of the custom of the Land and not in their Person Vide 7 E. 4. 26. Where it is pleaded That all the Inhabitants within such a Town have used to have Common there and for a Township to have a way to the Church and by Danby it is good and Littleton said it ought to be pleaded by way of Vsage and 18 E. 4. 3. All the Inhabitants of such a Town time out of mind have used to have Common c. Where a difference was taken where the Prescription is in the Person and where in the Land. 15 E. 4. 29. Cooper Inhabitants of a Town may well prescribe and he vouched Bracton 222 223. Quando acquiritur ex longo usu sive constitutione cum pacifica possessione continua non interrupta ex scientia negligentia patientia Dominorum Et etiam omitti potest per negligentiam and he vouched Britton 144. Common is obtained by long sufferance and also may be lost by long negligence c. The Case was adjourned CCCLXX Mich. 5 Jac. In the Common Pleas. TEnant for life of a Rent acknowledgeth a Statute and releaseth to the Terr-tenant the Statute is forfeited It was holden by Cook and two other of the Iustices in Communi Banco That the Rent as to the Conusee was in esse CCCLXXI IT was holden by Yelverton in his Reading That if a man makes a Lease for two years and confirms the Estate of the Lessee for 20 years it is a good confirmation for 20 years because that all is but a Chattel CCCLXXII IF 2 Ioyntenants are for life and the one grants his Estate for the life of his Companion it was holden to be a Forfeiture for first it is a Severance of the Ioynture and then a Lease for the life of another CCCLXXIII Mich. 5 Jac. In the Common Pleas. TWo men were joyntly bound in an Obligation the one is Principal the other is Suerty the Principal dyed the Suerty took Administration and the Principal having forfeited his Obligation the Suerty made an Agreement with the Creditor and took upon him by Bond to discharge the Debt In Debt brought by another Creditor of the Intestate upon fully Administred pleaded by the Administrator it was a Question if upon shewing of the Obligation and that he had satisfied it and contented it in his proper Debt he should be relieved upon that Plea. It was adjudged he should not because by the joyning with the Principal the Debt became his own Debt CCCLXXIV IF Land be given to A. and B. for the life of C. the remainder to the right Heirs of A. or B. who shall survive It was holden That if A do release to B that the remainder was destroyed And if Land be given to one in Tail and if J. S. comes to Westminster such a day the remainder to J. S. in Fee if the Estate-tail descends to two Coparceners who make Partition now if J. S. come to Westminster the Fee shall not accrue because the particular Estate is not in the same plight as it was before CCCLXXV Mich. 5 Jac. In the Common Pleas. IT was resolved That a Copyholder was not within the Statute of W●●ls CCCLXXVI Mich. 5 Jac. In the Common Pleas. A Man makes a Feoffment with warranty If the Feoffee brings a Warrantia Chartae against the Heir who pleads riens per discent at the time of the Voucher and it is found for the Tenant It was holden That the Plaintiff should never after have Execution of Lands which after descend for that it is peremptory for the Demandant CCCXXLVII Mich. 5 Jac. adjudge acc ' THe Queen hath the Isle of Garnsey and cognisance of Pleas within it for her Ioynture A man within Garnsey being disturbed to present to a Church which is void brings a Quare Impedit in Communi Banco It was holden in this Case That Garnsey is an Island where our Law runneth not but it is otherwise of the Isle 〈◊〉 Man c. And it was said That if the King grants cognisance of Pleas a man shall not have cognisance of Quare Impedit Assise Redisseisin c. CCCLXXVIII Mich. 5 Jac. In the Common Pleas. NOte It was resolved by the Iustices That if a Parson takes a Benefice above the value of 8 l. with a Dispensation and afterwards takes a 3 l. Benefice that the first Benefice is void by the Statute of 21 H. 8. cap. 13. CCCLXXIX 44 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. NOte It was said that it was adjudged 44 Eliz. in Banco Regis That if Lessee for life granteth his interest to his Lessor that the same shall not enure as a Surrender because there wants words of Surrender but shall enure by way of Grant only CCCLXXX Hil. 5 Jac. In the Kings Bench by Cook. IT was holden by Cook Chief Iustice 1 Roll. 844. Syderf 445. If a man seized in Fee deviseth that after the death of his Son without issue that J. S. shall have his Lands that in that case the Son hath an Estate in Fee determinable and that the Remainder is good Mich. 5 Jac. In the Kings Bench. CCCLXXXI Balls Case A Copyholder pleaded That the Custom of the Manor was that every Copyholder for life might appoint in the presence of two others that such a man should have his Copy-hold after his death without any Surrender to his use and that the two Tenants should assess for his Fine what Sum they pleased so as it was not lesser than had used to be paid where the Lord would assess a reasonable Fine and it was adjudged that it was a good Custom Pasc 6 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXXXII Glascocks Case A Copyholder alledges the custom to be That all the Tenants within such a Manor in Essex had used to cut down Trees to repair their Copyhold and Freehold Tenements within the Manor and also to sell their Trees at their pleasure And adjudged a good custom Mich. 1 Jac. In the Common Pleas Rot. 854. CCCLXXXIII Sapland and Ridlers Case IT was adjudged after long Argument That where the custom of a Copyhold Manor was to admit for life and in remainder for life at any time when there is but one Copyholder for life in possession And during the minority of the Heir within the age of 14 years his Guardian in Soccage in his own name admits a Copyholder in remainder for life that it was a good Admittance according to the custom and he was Dominus pro tempore well enough as to that purpose although it was objected by Walmsley That the Guardian is but a Servant and not Dominus but because it was agreed that he had a lawful interest the admittance was good And so it was adjudged Pasc 3 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXXXIV Duke and Smiths Case IT was agreed That if he in the Reversion suffereth a Common Recovery to Vses his Heir cannot plead that his Father had not any thing at the
time of the Recovery for he is estopped to say that his Father was not Tenant to the Praecipe and therefore it is a good Recovery against him by way of Estoppel CCCLXXXV Mich. 6 Jac. In the Kings Bench. IN a Writ of Error brought upon a Iudgment given in Communi Banco in an Ejectione firmae upon a Lease of a Running Water it was agreed by the Court That no Livery could be made of Running Water because it is fugitive but otherwise it is of Water in a standing Pool for that is certain and peramount and of that Livery ought to be with a dish of part of the Water CCCLXXXVI Duncombs Case In the Common Pleas. THe Grantee of a Rent-charge for life acknowledgeth a Statute and afterwards he released to the Terr-tenant It was the Opinion of Cook Chief Iustice in Communi Banco that the Rent after the Release should be put in Execution upon the Statute CCCLXXXVII The Opinion of Popham Chief Justice in the Kings Bench. IT was the Opinion of Popham Chief Iustice That if a man covenant to stand seized to the use of himself for life the remainder to the use of his Executors that in that Case the Executors shall take to the use of their Testator But if a man covenant upon good consideration to stand seized to the use of the Executors of a stranger that the word Executors is a word of Purchase and they shall take to their own use CCCLXXXVIII Mich. 7 Jac. In the Common Pleas. COok Chief Iustice put this case If the custom of a Manor is that every Tenant at his death shall pay his best Beast for a Heriot if a Feme sole who is Tenant for life of this Manor taketh a Husband and afterwards dyeth if the Lord shall have a Heriot Dodderidge the Kings Serjeant said that he should not because that the Wife had not Goods Mich. 7 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCLXXXIX Wards Case AN Information was against Ward and his Wife for his Wives not coming to the Church upon the Statute of 28 35 Eliz. It was said by Cook Chief Iustice That the Husband is chargeable for the Recusancy of his Wife and he said there needed no Conviction but before an Information the Husband shall not be chargeable for his Wife but where he is named with the Wife and he said That the King had a Fee-simple in their Lands for he hath it to him and his Heirs and Successors until conformity with satisfaction of the Arrearages Vide Statut. 28 Eliz. Rastal Tit. Corone Mich. 3 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXC Wheelers Case A Copyhold custom is That a Woman shall have a Free Bench quam diu se bene gesserit and live chaft and she is incontinent of which the Lord hath not notice and the Lord admits her Tenant It was holden it should bind the Lord although he had not notice of the Incontinency Mich. 5 Jac. In the Star-Chamber CCCXCI Edwards and Wattons Case NOte for Law in the Star-Chamber If a man write a scandalous Letter unto another and put his name to it if the party who writ it publisheth the same either before or after the delivery an Action upon the Case lyeth against him at the Common Law But if the party who writes it doth not publish it yet he may be sued for the same in the Star-Chamber And it was said in this Case That he who receives Books which are written against the Religion established in the Kingdom and shews them to others with Comments of them he runs into a Praemunire by the Statute of 4 Eliz. CCCXCII Rolls tit Waste THe Case was A. made a Lease of White Acre to B. upon condition he should do no Waste in which there was a Fish-pond stored with Carps Pikes and their Fry C. destroys all the Fish B. being upon the Land for which A. enters 1. If the destruction of all the Fish and their Fry be Waste within the Statute of Gloucester It was said that it was for they are parcel of the Inheritance as are Deer within a Park enclosed But it was adjudged 29 Eliz. in Communi Banco in Moyle and Ewers Case That where a Lease of a Manor was in which was a Warren of Conies and the Lessee destroyed the Conies that it was not waste for they were ferae naturae and the Land bettered by them and such was the Opinion of Walmsley Iustice although the Conies were in a Warren paled and enclosed with a Wall but the destroying of Doves in a Dove-house is Waste And it was adjudged in Sir Francis Palmers Case 9 Jac. in B.R. That although the cutting of Vnderwood was not Waste yet the eradicating of it was Waste The other matter was If the destruction of the Fish by a Stranger the Lessee being upon the Land were waste it was said it was waste for qui non vetat peccare cum possit jubet and it was said That if a man commit waste or suffer another to do it he did incur the penalty in the Statute But in this case it was said That a Condition to defeat an Estate should be taken strictly As if a Custom be that if a Copyholder for waste done shall forfeit his Estate if a stranger doth the waste it is no Forfeiture for three things in Law shall be taken strictly Conditions Customs Penal Laws As if the Custom be That an Infant at the age of 15 may make a Feoffment he cannot make it by Attorney And it was adjudged 1 Jac. in Communi Banco in Woodleys Case So the Statute of 5 E. 6. a Penal Law is That a man shall not buy any Victual to sell the same again Yet it was adjudged That where a man buys Meal and makes the same into Starch and sells it he may well justifie the sale thereof and it is out of the Statute because it is not the same thing Pasc 8 Jac. In the Kings Bench. CCCXCIII Wards Case IT was adjudged in this Court That if a Mill be set upon Posts that no waste lyeth for it and that a Copyhold might be of a Mill as it was adjudged in Green and Harris's Case Also it was said That there is a real and personal Forfeiture of Copyhold Lands Real is not necessary to be found by the Homages as was resolved in Brocks Case but otherwise it is of a Personal Forfeiture And Hil. 8 Jac. a Woman Copyholder built a new House upon the Land and it was agreed to be a Forfeiture Pasc 8 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXCIV Brown and Tuckers Case IF a man have Estovers to such a House 4 Co. 84. and he enlargeth his House or buildeth more Houses or Chimneys the Estovers remain to all the Houses and Chimneys which were there before and not to those added or new builded as it was adjudged Pasc 8 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXCV Batcliffe and Chaplins Case 1 Roll. 623. IN an Ejectione firmae between Ratcliffe and Chaplin upon not
guilty pleaded it was given in Evidence That time out of mind a Custom had been used and that proved by Witnesses that the eldest Heir be it Male or Female should inherit the Land and that it appeared in the Court Rolls of the said Manor of which the Land in question was parcel two Presidents to prove that the eldest Sister ought to inherit and that the youngest Sister should have nothing in the Land the one President was 8 Eliz. and the other 18 Eliz. In the other side in disaffirmance of the custom it was given in Evidence divers Court-Rolls 6 H. 4. and especially one President That both Sisters should inherit as Coparceners did by the common Law notwithstanding which the Iury found for the custom in regard they upon their own knowledge knew the usage of the Country and that in divers places it had been so used in the Hundred within which this Manor was But in this case it was agreed by the Court That if the custom had been that the eldest Sister only should inherit yet by that custom the eldest Aunt or the eldest Neece should not inherit the Land And so it is in the case of Borough English where the custom is That the youngest Son shall have the Land it doth not give it to the youngest Vncle for customs shall be taken strictly and Foster Iustice said That so it was adjudged in one Totnams case And in the Argument of this case it was said by Cook Chief Iustice That there are two Pillars of Custom one the common usage the other that it be time out of mind and therefore upon the Evidence given to the Iury the Court enforced the parties which maintained the custom to shew Presidents in the Court-Rolls to prove the usage and he said that without such proof and that it had been put in ure although it had been deemed and reported to have been the true custom yet the Court could not give credit to the promise by Witnesses Pasc 8 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXCVI Arden and Goads Case IN an Action of Trespass upon the Case for divers Goods the Declaration was of Trover and Conversion of them to the Defendants use Vpon Not Guilty pleaded they were at Issue and there an Inventory of the Goods was given in Evidence to the Iury as the Goods were apprised by Vpholsterers And in this Evidence another Point did arise These Goods were taken in Execution and delivered to the Defendant by the Sheriff and afterwards the Owner of the Goods against whom the Execution was awarded made a Deed of Gift of them to the Plaintiff by these words scil He granted all those Goods which were late put in Execution Cook Chief Iustice said That Quacunque via data that Deed could not entitle the Plaintiff to the Goods for it is a Dilemma for Posito that the Goods were put in Execution then they did not pass and admit that they were not put in Execution he did not grant but only those Goods which were in Execution and so there is an opposition and afterward Iudgment was given for the Defendant Pasc 8 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXCVII The Earl of Rutland and Spencers Case THe case was 8 Co. 55. The late Queen Elizabeth granted to the Earl of Rutland the Office of Parkership and Constable of c. Habendum from the time of his full age for life and also by the same Patent she granted him the Stewardship of a Manor Habend ' praedict ' Officia pro termino vitae per Deputatum suum vel Deputatos suos c. eidem Officio pertinent ' in tam amplis modo forma c. Volentes quod subditi nostri sint auxiliantes assistentes to him And after that one as Steward to that Court came and made Proclamations and also did the Deputy of the Earl of Rutland And thereupon the Earl of Rutland brought an Action upon the Case against the other In this case three Points were moved by Nicholls Serjeant 1. If a Stewardship granted by the King might be exercised by a Deputy without such authority given him in his Patent And he took a Difference between an Office of Trust and other Offices as in 28 H. 8. of a Carver c. and 11 E. 4. 1. the Office of the Chancellor of the Exchequer and such Offices cannot without special Authority be assigned over 39 H. 6. 34. Of the Office of Marshal per se vel sufficient ' Deputatum c. Nevills Case in the Commentaries Offices of trust which are inheritances may be executed by Deputy 8 Eliz. Dy. 248. A Steward may be retained by word and he said There is a difference between a Deputy and an Assignee for an Assignee can forfeit but his own Estate but a Deputy shall forfeit the Estate of his Master and therefore if a Steward grant his Office for life who hath the Office in Fee the Grantee shall forfeit no more than his Estate for life 2 E. 6. Br. If the under Steward make Admittances it is good and yet he is but a Deputy but if it be out of Court then it ought to be by a special Custom Vide 2 Eliz. Dyer The Office of Chyrographer granted for life and exercisable by a Deputy And he said That in these Letters Patents the intent shall be taken beneficially for the Subject and that for the Honour of the King if the King be not deceived in his Grant. Vide 6 E. 6. Dyer 77. Dodderidge to the contrary and he took a difference between Offices of Trust granted for life and those which are granted in Fee for he who hath it but for life cannot assign them over for the Grantor did not intend that another person should have the Office unless express mention were made in the Grant of Assignees But when the Office is granted in Fee there is no such confidence put in the person of the Grantee for his heir shall have it who is a person not known to the Grantor But in all cases the Grantee is elected for his skill I agree 10 E. 4. 10. he may make a Deputy by special words but then that Deputy by those words cannot make a Deputy That a Steward is an Officer of trust is proved for he enters Plaints in the Court and Surrenders and although he hath not a Iudicial Place yet he hath a Ministerial Place and the Lord and Tenants repose their trusts in him And it is also an Office of Skill Vide 21 E. 4. 20. That the Office of the Keeper of a Park Steward c. cannot be assigned without special words of Assignees And as to the Case which was put by Nicholls 8 Eliz. That one may make a Steward by word and therefore an Assignee for life by word it is a Non sequitur And he said That for another cause in the Patent it self no Deputy in this case could be made for although the words are Habendum Gaudendum c.
Offic ' praedict ' per Deputarum suum sive deputatos suos the same had been good if there had been no Habendum before There was an Habendum before in the Patent But here are three several Habendums which are as three several Grants and the defect of the one shall not be supplyed by the other 22 H. 6. 11. 2. Assises are maintainable for two Offices although they be by one and the self same Grant And those words Volentes c. in the Patent are nothing to the purpose for the Grant it self is determinable by the Body of the Grant and the Clause de Assistantes shall not supply that Vide 20 H. 6. 1. Land given to two Haeredibus with warranty Haeredibus suis Vide 13 E. 3. Grants 63. Throgmorton and Tracies Case Plow Com. 18 H. 8. Br. Lovels Case and so in our Case the clause of Assistantes makes nothing to the matter for reddendo singula singulis it extends to no more than passed and was granted before in the body of the Grant. The second Point which Dodderidge argued was If there was a sufficient Disturbance and he held that there was not and therefore the finding of the Iury not good And the Iury hath not found the vi armis and he said That when the Writ is vi armis there ought to be some violence and taking of something and some actual thing is to be done Vide F. B. 86. 92. 43 E. 3. 20. 8 R 2. Title Office. 48 E. 3. 25. 16 E. 4. 11. 2 E. 3. 40. But in this Case there is but a threatning at the most but no force is used and there the Writ is ill and there is no sufficient Disturbance to maintain this Action The Case was adjourned Trin. 11 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCXCVIII Cookes Case IN a Writ of Intrusit Maritagio non satisfacto It was found for the Plaintiff but no damages were assessed by the Iury and the value of the Marriage was found to 50 l. and now the Question was If the same might be supplyed by a Writ of Enquiry of Damages and prima facie the Court seemed to be of opinion it could not for where a man may have an Attaint there no damages shall be assessed by the Court if they be not found by Iury and the Court would advise of it but afterwards the same Term it was adjudged That no Writ of Enquiry should Issue forth But a Venire facias de novo was granted Vide 44 E. 3. Thorp acc ' CCCXCIX MOuntague Serjeant demanded of the Iustices their opinions in a Case upon the Statute of 3 Jacobi of Recusants in the behalf of the Vniversity of Oxford The Case was If a Recusant Convict to avoid the said Statute grants his Patronage for years to one of his Friends in trust if the Grant was void or not within the said Statute The Iustices refused to deliver their Opinions in this Case for they said That this Point might judicially come in question before themselves and such they said was the Answer of Hussey in 1 H. 7. in Humphrey Staffords case When King Hen. 7. came in Banco and demanded a question of them but yet tacite they seemed to agree that such a lease of the Patronage was void by the said Statute and they said That they would not have the Vniversity to be discouraged in the case which implyed their Opinions to be accordingly And 21 H. 7. was vouched that the Patronage was only matter of favour and not valuable And in this Case Cook said Quod apertus Haereticus melior est quam fictus Catholicus Trin. 11 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCC Grubhams Case THe Case was this Grubham made a Lease to one by Deed-poll Habendum to him and his Wife and to his Daughter successive sicut scribuntur nominantur in ordine and afterwards dyed his Wife dyed and if it was a good remainder to the Daughter was the Question Harris Serjeant It was void and not a good remainder for the incertainty Et vide Cook 1 part Corbets Case In all Contracts and Bargains there ought to be certainty and therefore in 22 H. 6. If a Feoffment be made to two Haeredibus it is void although it be with warranty to them and their Heirs Vide 9 H. 6. 35. Where renunciavit totam Communiam doth not amount to a Release because it is not shewed to whom he released And so in 29 Eliz. in Banco Regis in Windsmore and Halbards Case where an Indenture was to one Habendum to him and his Wife and a third person and it was holden that it was void by way of Remainder to any of them But the Court was of Opinion in the principal Case That the Daughter had a good Estate in Remainder and that the Case did not differ from the Case in the Lord Dyer where a Lease was made by Indenture to one Habendum to him and to another sicut nominat in Charta and that those words made the Grant certain enough and so in this Case sicut scribuntur nominantur in ordine shall be sicut scribuntur nominantur in eadem Charta But they agreed That a Lease made to three Habendum successive was not good for the incertainty Hil. 9 Jac. In the Kings Bench. CCCCI Price and Atmores Case IN an Ejectione firmae it was agreed by the Iustices Where a man possessed of a term for 60 years by his Will made his Wife his Executrix and devised all his term and interest to her and if she dyed before the term ended that the same should remain to his Son and the Heirs Males of his Body the Son dyed the Executrix entred and claimed as Legatee and assigned the term over the Executor of the Son entred that his Entry was not lawful for the Son had but a Possibility and no Interest for by the devise of the whole term the whole Interest was in the Wife and when it was in her it could not remain over otherwise if the Land had been granted to her for life and if she dyed that it should remain as before And note that 25 Eliz. it was adjudged in Communi Banco that such a Possibility could not be released And 29 Eliz. in Hammingtons case that it could not be granted Trin. 11 Jac. In the Common Pleas. CCCCII. The Bishop of Exeter and Sir Henry Wallops Case NOte in this case it was adjudged That the King by a special Proviso in the Statute of 21 H. 8. of Plurality might give to any of his Chaplains as many Benefices as he pleased But otherwise it is of a common person for they are stinted by the Statute Mich. 12 Jac. In the Kings Bench. CCCCIII Glover and Archers Case THe case was Tenant for life made a Lease for 21 years 10 Co. 127 128 2 Cro. 127. 309. ib. rendring Rent at Mich. and the Annunciation or within 13 Weeks of any of the said Feasts After Mich.
which Ayliffe concessit Wray Chief Iustice was absent in the Star-Chamber Trin. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. XLV Harvey and Harveys Case Suit for Legacies Prohibition CLare Harvey libelled against Sebastian Harvey the Executor of Sir James Harvey their Father for a legacy bequeathed to him by his Father in his Will. By which he willed that after his death his Goods should be divided and parted betwixt his Children according to the laudable custom of London and averred in his libel that the Goods and Chattels whereof the Testator died possessed amounts to such a sum and that it belonged unto him being one of his children to demand so much Virtute Legationis praedict The Defendant came and prayed a Prohibition and Wray Chief Iustice conceived he ought to have it for here is not any legacy but the Testator setteth forth his meaning that his pleasure is that the custom of London should be observed in the disposition of his Goods and the said Clare is put to his Writ de rationabili parte Bonorum But yet afterwards a special Consultation was granted Pasc 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. XLVI Sandersons Case Leet NOte It was adjudged by the Court that Pound-breach is not inquirable in a Leet for it is not a common Nusans But Rhodes Serjeant said that excessive Toll is inquirable in a Leet Vide Book of Entries 390. XLVII Pasc 37 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Abatement of Writ IN a Quare Impedit by the Queen exception was taken to the Writ because the words were quod permittat ipsam praesentare ad Rectoriam de D. where it ought to be ad Ecclesiam the Court awarded that the Writ should be openly amended in Court by a Clerk of the Chancery Amendment XLVIII Pasc 27 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Pleadings IN a Writ of Entry for Disseisin the Tenant said that the House in demand is within the City of London and that the said City is an ancient City and that King Henry 3. concessit Civibus Civitatis praedict quod non implacitentur de terris tenementis suis c. extra Muros Civitatis praedict and said that he himself is a Citizen of London and demanded judgment of the Writ and to the Pleading he further said Sed illis rectum teneatur infra Civitatem praedictam secundum Consuetudinem Civitatis praedict Exception was taken to the Plea because the Tenant did not shew before that by their custom they ought to be impleaded And by the Opinion of the whole Court the Tenant ought to have shewed that the Citizens for their lands there ought to be impleaded in the Hustings c. And the general words in the Plea Sed illis rectum reneatur infra Civitatem praedictam secundum consuetudinem Civitatis praedict do not supply the defect aforesaid And afterwards it was awarded that the Tenant plead Ouster Mich. 21 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. XLIX Hunt and Sones Case AN Action upon the Case by W. Hunt against W. Sone Assumpsit 2 Leon. 107. Owen 42. 3 Cro. 118. 1 Roll. 29. 30. ibid. The Plaintiff declared Quod cum idem Hunt was seised in his Demesn as of Fee of certain lands and shewed the same in certain praedict Sone in consideration that the said Hunt permit the said Sone occupare terras praedict ab eodem die 20 Julij 27 Eliz. usque ad secundum diem Novembris which should be in Anno 1589. assumed and promised that he the said William Sone ad festum omnium Sanctorum proxime sequend 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ac ab inde annuatim durante dict termino 20 l. 5 s. ad festa Annunciationis Beatae Mariae ac omnium Sanctorum per aequales portiones solvend eidem Hunt bene fideliter contentare vellet at licet praedict W. Hunt permisit praefat Sone occupare terras praedict a dict 20 die Julij 27 Eliz. Usque ad secundum diem Novemb. 28 Eliz. Licetque etiam post dict 20 diem Julij 27 Eliz. ante praedict diem secund Novemb. An 28 Eliz. dict fest omnium Sanctorum An. 27. Supradict ac fest Annunciationis Beatae Mariae Virginis ac fest omnium Sanctorum 28 Eliz. praeterierunt praedict tamen W. Sone dict 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad praedict fest omnium Sanctorum proxime sequend post permissionem assumptionem praedict ac aliam 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad fest Annunciationis 28 Eliz. ac alia 10 l. 2 s. 6 d. ad fest omnium Sanctorum An. 28. Eliz. superdict nondum solvit The Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff entred into parcel of the Premises 6 October 28 Eliz. eadem occupare eundem Sone non permisit upon which they were at Issue and it was found for the Plaintiff it was moved in stay of Iudgment that the Plaintiff had no cause of Action before that all the Term was expired for it is an entire Assumpsit and cannot be severed by action and therefore it was said that if I promise to pay you 10 l. viz. at such a Feast 5 l. and at such a Feast other 5 l. there before the last day of payment no Action lieth for the sum of 20 l. is one sum entire But if I promise to pay another at Easter next 10 l. and at Midsummer as much here they are several Assumpsits and upon default of payment of the first sum an Action will lie without excepting the latter payment But at last the Court agreed That Iudgment notwithstanding that exception should be given for the Plaintiff and that the Declaration was good enough as well in respect of the Exception aforesaid as also that the word Licet was effectual enough to set forth the permission L. Hil. 31 and 32 Eliz In the Common Pleas. A. Disseised B. of two Acres of Land and leased one of them to C. at will and the other Acre to D. at will and they entred accordingly B the Disseisee by Lease leased both Acres to E. for years and entred into one of the Acres in the name of both and sealed and delivered the Lease to E. It was holden by the Court to be a good Lease to maintain an Ejectione firmae of both Acres LI. Mich. 32 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 2 Cro. 655 656 plus 2 Roll. 416. Johnson versus Smart cont A. Seised of certain Lands and having two Sons devised part of his Lands to his eldest Son in tail and the other part of his Lands to his younger Son in tail with this clause in the Will that if any of his Sons dyed without Issue that then the whole Land should remain to a stranger in Fee and dyed the Sons entred into the Lands devised to them respectively and the younger Son died without issue and he to whom the Fee was devised entred It was adjudged That this Entry was not lawful and that the eldest Son should have the Land by the implicative devise Mich. 32 Eliz. In the
all the Iustices in the Case between Townsend and Pastor two Coparceners are in the use of a Manor after the Statute of 1 R. 3. the one of them enters and makes a Feoffment in Fee of the whole Manor that this Feoffment is not only of the moiety of the Manor whereof she might lawfully and by the said Statute make a Feoffment but also of another moiety by disseisin Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXVII Bulwer and Smiths Case BUlwer brought an Action upon the Case against Smith and declared how that H. H. had recovered against the Plaintiff in the Common Pleas 20 l. and before Execution died and that the Defendant knowing that at D. in the County of Norfolk malitiose deceptive machinans to Outlaw the Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment in the name of the said H.H. c. in performance of his said purpose at W. in the County of Middlesex took out a Capias ad satisfaciend in the name of the said H.H. against the now Plaintiff upon the said Iudgment directed to the Sheriff of London and Non est inventus being returned upon that took out an Exigent in the name of the said H.H. which Writ by the procurement of the Defendant was retorned and then the Plaintiff was Outlawed and afterwards the Defendant in the name of the said H. H. took out a Capias utlagatum against the Plaintiff directed to the Sheriff of Norfolk by force of which the Plaintiff was arrested and imprisoned for two months until he had gotten his Charter of Pardon by reason of which Outlawries the Plaintiff had forfeited all his Goods and Chattels and upon the said Declaration the Defendant did demur in Law and the principal cause of the demurrer was because that the Action might have been laid in Middlesex where the wrong began scil the Capias ad satisfaciend the Outlawry for this imagination at D. in the County of Norfolk set forth in the Declaration cannot give to the Plaintiff this Action But if divers conspire in one County for to indite one and they put the same in Execution in another County the Party aggrieved may lay his Action in which of the said two Counties he pleaseth 22 E. 4. 14. for a Conspiracy is more notorious than an imagination imaginatio est unius conspiratio plurimorum And in this Case the Deliverance of the Capias at D. in Norfolk is but accessary and the suing of the Process aforesaid at Westminster is the principal upon the part of the Plaintiff it was said that such an action might be laid in the County where the Plaintiff was wronged and the Plaintiff is not tied to lay his Action in the County where the original matter which was but conveyance to the said wrong was done A imprisoned upon a Capias ad satisfaciend in Middlesex escapes into Surrey the Action upon the escape shall be laid in Surrey Reteiner of a Servant in one County who departs in another County the Master shall lay his Action in which of the said Counties he will 15 E. 4. 18 19. 41 E. 3. 1. A Writ of Disceit was brought in the County of York and the Case was that in a Praecipe quod reddat of Land the Tenant shewed forth a Protection at Westminster the which was allowed for a year and within the year the Tenant stayed in the County of York upon his own occasions the said Writ of Disceit was holden to be well laid for there the wrong began notwithstanding that the Original i. e. the casting of the Protection was in Middlesex for the disceit is that the Tenant contrary to the pretence of the Protection continued at York for the Protection was quia Moraturus And always where the cause of the Action consists of two things whereof the one is matter of Record and the other is matter of Fact there the Action shall be laid in such County where the matter in fact may be more properly tried Vide 11 R. 2. Fitz. Action sur le Case 36 Br. Lieu 84. in the principal Case at Bar the Court was of Opinion that the Action was well brought in the County of Norfolk Another Exception was taken to the Declaration because the Plaintiff hath there set forth whereas his true name is John Bulwer by which name he now sues he was sued and outlawed by the name of John Buller and then the now Plaintiff upon that matter was never sued nor outlawed and then is not grieved by the Defendant but John Buller for here in his Declaration there is not any averment that John Bulwer and John Buller are one and the same and not divers Persons But the Exception was disallowed for the whole Court held that for As much as the Plaintiff hath declared that he by the name of John Buller was sued and Outlawed the same is an averment in Law c. and amounts to so much Another matter was objected because it appeareth in the Declaration that H. H. was dead before this Process was sued and then the Outlawry was erronious and so the Plaintiff is not at any mischief but that he may reverse the Outlawry by Error as in Conspiracy the Defendant pleads that the Indictment upon which the Plaintiff is arraigned is vitious and erroneous and so his life was never in jeopardy But as to that it was said by the Court that the erronious proceedings of the Defendant shall not give advantage to himself but because the Plaintiff was vexed by colour and reason of the Outlawry and put to his Writ of Error which cannot recompence the loss and damage by him sustained by reason of the Outlawry aforesaid it is reason that the Plaintiff have his Action wherefore Wray Chief Iustice ex assensu Sociorum gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff CXXXVIII Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. of Recusancy CErtain Persons were indicted upon the Statute 23 Eliz. for refusing to come to the Church and upon the same were Outlawed and now they came to the Kings Bench ready to make their submission and to conform themselves according to the said Statute and thereupon they prayed to be discharged But the Court would not receive such Submission but advised them to purchase their Pardon for the Outlawry and then to tender their Submission which they did accordingly and at another day came again and shewed to the Court their Pardon whereupon the Clerk of the Court asked them if they would conform themselves according to the said Statute who said they would wherefore they were discharged Mich. 27 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CXXXIX Christian and Adams Case Action for words AN Action upon the Case was brought for speaking these scandalous words of the Plaintiff scil the Plaintiff did conspire the death of the Defendant it was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment that upon the matter the Action did not lye for the bare conspiring of the death of a man
to it because it ought to be Liberam Elemosinam without puram perpetuam Also it ought to be with a double ee and not Elemosinam sed non allocatur● for as to the first Exception it is but Surplusage and as to the other it is the common course Another Exception was taken to the Writ because that the words are Quod clamat este jus haereditat ' sua without saying in jure Collegij An●er●on The Writ is good enough If a Parson pleads that he is seized he shall say in jure Ecclesiae for he hath two Capacities and without those words he shall be intended to be seized in his own right But if an Abbot plead that he was seized he needs not such words for that he hath not any other capacity And so of Dean and Chapter Mayor and Commonalty and afterwards the Writ was awarded good and that the Tenant should answer over Vide Liber Entries 236 237. It was also moved If the Colledge should count of his Seisin within 30 years because that the Corporation never dyes and then if he count upon his own possession And it was holden That if the Warden of the Colledge that now is was ever Seised he ought to count upon a Seisin within 30 years But upon the Seisin of his Predecessor he ought to count of a Seisin within 60 years as another common person For the change of the Head if such Seisin is as the dying seized and descent of a common person Mich. 15 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. CCLXXVIII Wood and Chivers Case IN Ejectione firmae between Wood and Chivers the Case was That the Bishop of Salisbury let the same Chivers the Manor of Lanington for 80 years for 40 l. rent payable at four usual Feasts upon Condition that if the rent be behind by the space of three Months after any of the Feasts in which c then a re-entry The Bishop dyed after confirmation J. S. was created Bishop who granted to R. the Office of Receiver of all his Revenues c. exercend ' per se vel Deputat suum and afterwards the Bishop made a special Letter of Attorney to the said R. to demand the rent and if it were behind to re-enter R. at the last day of the three Months came to the Capital Messuage of the said Manor an hour before the setting of the Sun for to demand the rent due at Midsummer then last past but none was there on the part of Chivers the Lessee to pay the rent for which R. left his Servant in the Hall of the said Messuage commanding him to stay there and if any came to pay the said rent that he give to him Notice thereof and afterwards he went out of the same House and walked in a Lane which was within the Gate of the House and did not return into the House until the Sun was set and then he returned and because the rent had not been paid he digged a Clod of the Land in the Name of the Bishop and so re-entred And afterwards the Bishop let the said Manor to W. for three years by Deed signed and Sealed and because C●●vers continued his possession notwithstanding the re-entry he made also a Letter of Attorney to M. to enter into the said Manor in the Name of the Bishop and to deliver the said Deed of the said Lease to the said W. upon the Land as his Deed and these two Deeds the Bishop in his Chamber delivered to the said W. but not as his Deed But he said unto him Here is the Lease and a Letter of Attorney to M. and he shall enter in my name and deliver to you the Deed of his upon the Land as my Deed upon the Land Whereupon he took the two Deeds and delivered them over to M. who by force thereof entred upon the Land c. An Exception was made because it doth not appear here that the Bishop delivered the Letter of Attorney to M. himself nor to the use of M. and then it may be taken that the Deed of Letter of Attorney was delivered to M. to keep only and not as his Deed. But that Exception was now allowed For it was holden that the Livery in the Manor was good enough and so the Letter of Attorney sufficient for in all Deeds of Feoffments in which Letters of Attorney are contained the Livery of the Deed is to the Feoffee only and no mention made of any delivery to the Attorney for by such Letter of Attorney no Interest is to pass but only an Authority And note It was resolved by all the Iustices That in the computation of these three Months there ought to be allowed to every Month 28 days And now we are to see if this Rent be well demanded because the demand was made an hour before Sun-setting and then the party went out and walked in the Lane till the setting of the Sun without any other demand And it was moved that this walking in the Lane which was not a common High-way but a private way and that the House of the said Farm was of the one side of the Lane and the Farm-land on the other and so the Land parcel of the Farm and then his walking there is a continuance of the demand quod Catlin concessir was the Lane a High-way or not for the Manor is on both side And it was agreed by all the Iustices That if the Lessor cometh to the Land before the last hour viz. in the Morning or in the Afternoon and demands the Rent and afterwards goes off the Land and is not there at the last instant of the day the same is not a sufficient demand although that return be presently after the Sun is set And by Gerrard Attorney General If the Lessor cometh upon the Land at the last day before the last instant as in the morning c. and demands the Rent and continues there upon the Land till the Sun be set without making any other demand yet the demand for the Manor is good enough for his presence there is the continuance of the demand Quod fuit concessum per totam Curiam And by Catlin If the Lessor after his demand in the Morning departeth off the Land and before the last instant returneth and stays upon the Land till Sun-setting there is the continuance of a demand without any further demand which Wray Chief Iustice concessit And it was holden in this case That where R. left his Servant in the House to stay there and to signifie to him that if any person came to pay the Rent that that was not any continuance of the demand for R. himself was but a Servant and he in that business could not make a Servant And Catline said That the Bishop himself might by word command his Servant to demand a Rent and to make a Re-entry Quod fuit concessum but in our Case R. had not commanded his Servant to make any demand And so here upon